By the way, a friend of mine serves on a neighborhood commission in Columbus and was quoted in the media with the most awesome HP verdict ever: "We said there’s no way they can can rip down that old historic building,
because it’s super cool and in good shape,” said Sudy
Italian Village Retail Proposal Gets Lukewarm Reception | ColumbusUnderground.com
HP is a matter of people serving on boards being passionate about their community and their role in it. We have sheeple who don't dare challenge the Junta or demand a stronger vision for the community, or at least
A vision, in most part because that's the deliberate reason they were chosen for their roles. Notice what happens when someone like Anthony McDermid, who personally tried redeveloping the KerMac and India Temple, gets to vote on tearing it down. Was it Gigi Faulkner that they totally replaced? Who was the other architect that Cornett chose to not reappoint?
The point I'm making is that the politics of these things are more open than we realize. Citizens standing up to be heard and demand a civic vision can give these board members the cover they need to do the same, at least in subtle ways. The board members, whether it be DDRC, BOA, BUD, whatever - they all really do want to do the right thing for the most part, but it's really hard. They know they will be sacked if they go out on a limb.
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