News
September 6, 2008
Louisville metro mayor: 'We are better off today'
Small-town leaders tell Kanawha colleagues system works

LOUISVILLE, Ky. - After reaching consensus that metro government is probably a good idea for Kanawha County, representatives from most of the county's towns and cities, county officials and leaders of the local business community started talking about how the sell the idea to voters.

Local mayors, county officials and others met with Louisville Mayor Jerry Abramson on Thursday to hear about how metro government works in Kentucky before splitting up into groups that demonstrated how the concept works in different government departments.

On Friday, local officials met with mayors of three of Jefferson County's smaller cities to help ease fears that metro government robs small towns of their identities and robs citizens of a voice in government. Louisville and surrounding Jefferson County voted in 2000 to combine their municipal and county governments into a huge, countywide government centered in Louisville.

Mayors of three communities in the combined area said Friday that they maintain their rule and city councils under the arrangement.

"We are better off today," said Byron Chapman, mayor of the 6,000-resident community of Middletown. Although Chapman said he originally voted against consolidating the city and county governments, he said metro government has helped the Louisville metro area as a whole.

"The back-and-forth conversation is there now," he said. "It's not mine, it's not yours, it's ours."

Middletown maintains its own zoning control, garbage pickup and public works department for its citizens, but the town does not maintain its own police department. The neighboring towns of Anchorage and Prospect do have their own police departments.

Prospect Mayor Todd Eberle and Anchorage Mayor W. Thomas Hewitt said officials in the larger Louisville government take them more seriously than under the old system, and said they see local communities banding together more for the common good.

After meeting with the mayors, Kanawha County's delegation started talking about how to convince Kanawha County residents that metro government should be adopted back home.

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Posted By: Petah (8:32pm 09-11-2008)
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Wow is this treason or what?

Posted By: LL (5:33pm 09-08-2008)
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WHO WENT TO LOUISVILLE

Posted By: Tidbit (4:28pm 09-08-2008)
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Booger, seems you can't read too well or just don't comprehend what I wrote. The solution is more people on the County Commission. Representatives from county wards or however you would want it broke down. The other issue is addressing the Charleston Mayor and City Council, at every Commissioners meeting, in regards to attracting more people and businesses to Charleston. Maybe even annexing Dunbar into Charleston and disolving that Town. We don't need Metro, we just need leaders and not lawyers. Seems you have no solution other than Metro, now you have another so stop being a 'No Metro Hater'! and see the future through eyes other than the 3 member panel.

Posted By: LL (2:52pm 09-08-2008)
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Does anyone have a list of mayors who went to louisville, with d. jones, and the king. Is this a secret or what. or are they the only two who went. and i might add at tax payers expense.

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