October 10, 2008 03:05 pm
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Kirk Street is not suited for project
This concerns the proposed construction of a housing project on Kirk Street.
It’s identical to the one proposed to the city commissioners in 2001/2002. Gene Meyers and the same developers are back again, hiding plans from those adversely affected by their 48 “townhouses,” giving no notice to neighbors so we could voice our concerns before asking the commission for a letter of support.
We’re dismayed and disappointed by Kevin Gunderson’s and Larry Brown's votes for the project. We appreciate and thank Paula Hogsten and Cheryl Spriggs voting against it, noting that the issue had once again been sprung on the commission and wanting citizen input before the board made a decision.
Meyers and associates again waited until the last minute to obtain a letter of support by the October 20 deadline because they know it’s not good for our community. There still are citizen concerns, not changes.
Traffic has increased on Kirk and adjoining streets because of the development of Hospice and Wal-Mart. Kirk is still too narrow for the project, has no sidewalks, and buses don't travel it. It's a hazard to emergency vehicles, especially fire trucks encountering another vehicle en route to an emergency call.
A blind spot on top of the hill is dangerous now, without construction equipment and extra cars a 48-unit housing development will bring. This not only affects residents living on Kirk, but all who have to use Kirk as access roads to our homes. There's no light at the intersection of the hazardous four-way stop where Pollard, Blackburn and Kirk streets meet.
Why not build some decent, affordable single-family homes to enhance and blend in with the neighborhood rather than destroying it. This would benefit both the landowner and the city of Ashland.
Tammy Howard and Audrey Lemon, Ashland
The foundation of nation is at stake
This election is the most critical one in our nation’s history. The future of our nation’s foundation is at stake. If the liberals win, our foundation will no longer be based on the traditional Judeo-Christian morality.
It will gradually but assuredly be based on an ever shifting, ever moving foundation.
If the liberals win, the damage can't be stopped with elections two, four or forty years from now. America will forever be changed. We will keep seeing a gradual and growing hostility toward people of faith, especially Christians. The morals of our nation will continue to decline. I cannot overemphasize the importance of this election. That is why I urge you to vote and encourage your family members, friends, Sunday School class and church members to vote. America's future — the future of your children and grandchildren — is at stake.
Alice Click, Mount Alto, W.Va.
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