Disclosure:
Most of my blog posts are usually pretty random in nature -
short bursts of thought based on a topic that is trending around our city at a
given time. This entry, however, has
been much more thought out and contemplated than any other. The premise, as broad as it might sound, came
to me in an epiphany-type moment, and its doctrine is something I am trying to
spread to as many people as possible.
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Why Louisville Will Be Great
A friend of mine once described Louisville as a sort of
suitcase town for young people: Hundreds
of children with great ambitions grow up here and leave for college, ultimately
landing in one of our country’s great cities (New York, Los Angeles, Chicago,
D.C.) where they spend their 20’s climbing the corporate ladder until they
eventually get tired of their toil and return to Louisville to marry and have children
in their middle-aged years. “If we could
only keep those kids here after college,” he’d lament, “we’d really start to be
something.”
I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but the vibe around this
town is changing. The aura of mediocrity
and stagnation is starting to be swept away and we actually are progressing – a
word many people might not understand around here considering it took 50 years
to decide on an east end bridge and 30 years to merge our city and county
governments. And while currently most of
this progress has been driven from the top there is a new wave of enthusiasm
coming down the proverbial pipeline as a perfect storm is taking place locally.
With the recent decline in the economy, and the subsequent
lack of new jobs being available to recent college graduates, many more
individuals who previously would have moved to much larger cities after their
schooling are now returning to Louisville to start their adult lives. This has created a swell of young people who
are educated, hungry for success, and eager to make their own way in life. What’s interesting, though, is that
Louisville currently doesn’t have the capacity to employ all of these people so
many of them are literally having to find their own path – via startups,
self-employment, and the chasing of dreams.
The result of all this has been a generation of kids who all grew up
together, went their separate ways during college, and have now recongregated
to begin their lives in the city that they love. This has created an undergrowth, beneath the
large influxes that the Mayor’s office has generated, that is spawning and
searching for greatness. What’s awesome
is that, since Louisville could probably be considered the largest small town
in the country, everyone knows everybody and we see each other constantly, creating
a type of synergy that this city has not have experienced since the 1920’s and
30’s. And Louisville is the benefactor. This synergy has only been aided by the fact
that this is the age of technology and Louisville’s young people are a mobile
and energized group who will get behind any and every cause they deem worthy,
with organizations like YPAL, The Bachelors Club, GLOW, and Junior League
leading the charge. And with social
media accelerating the flow of ideas and thoughts, people around town are
meeting and interacting like never before.
Gone are the days of having to use cocktail parties and other social gatherings
for the purposes of networking. You now
can meet someone and know their entire life story in a matter of minutes using
Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn. In fact, my
company recently hired someone who we found on linkedin by simply doing a
search of our competitors and messaging anyone we thought we might have a
connection to. This type of job search
would have taken several months 10 years ago, but it lasted about 2 weeks given
the technologically advanced climate we currently find ourselves in. On any given night around town I can talk to
a friend about their personal training business, their new boutique clothing
shop, or the climate of corporate lending at area banks. For any given need that I have in business
and in life I know a person I can go to immediately an get it taken care
of. Any idea that I have that I think
could be successful or meaningful, I know a person I can talk to about bringing
it to fruition. That’s not just me
either, that’s anyone who’s a young, engaged, and interested business person
around the city, and our ranks are growing!
These interactions will only continue to grow and become more meaningful
over the coming decades as we all progress and become executives, leading entrepreneurs,
and nationally renowned in our fields. Imagine
the topics of discussion that will enhance our city in 10-20 years when our
conversations occur in City Hall or a board room on Main Street, as opposed to
Molly Malones or Heine Brothers . That’s
when we will really make strides, and THAT’S why Louisville will be great!
The foundation has already begun to be laid too. With the approval and ground breaking of the
Ohio River Bridges Project, the completion of the KFC Yum! Center, and the
revitalization of Downtown we have shown the naysayers and doubters that “YES!”
we can get things accomplished. We had our
doldrums of the 70’s, 80’s, and 90’s, but this is a new era. No longer are the old aristocratic powers in
charge. No longer will the many be
controlled by the desires of the few.
That is what held Louisville back. Organizations like River Fields, which uses
environmental servitude as its guise to stall advancement in the east end, and
people such as Barry Bingham who, for all his good, used his newspaper to
control the thoughts of the local population, will no longer be tolerated and
they will be eradicated. The new wave of
Louisville’s power brokers will be progressive, tolerant, and hell bent on
seeing the city succeed, not just focused on their own interests because what
our forefathers somehow missed is that the city’s success is everyone’s success and when the pot gets
bigger your slice of the pie will as well!
Louisville’s future is bright and full of potential. In the coming decades we WILL have light
rail, we WILL have an NBA team, we WILL be recognized for our greatness. These days we think it’s so cool that we get
mentioned in a magazine as being the “Best Town For Men” or “A Top Weekend
Getaway” – why can’t that be the norm? I
don’t know about you, but I think we’re BETTER than Indianapolis. I think we’re BETTER than St. Louis. And I think we’re BETTER than
Cincinnati. It’s time we realize our
full potential and begin achieving it. For
the past several years the Mayor’s office, GLI, and the local tourism boards
have branded Louisville as “The Possibility City” as a way to lure
outsiders. But that should really be the
message to our own constituency! It is
possible for us to compete with the who’s who of cities in the south because we
have more to offer and, at our core, are much more progressive. This new wave of Louisvillians are out to
prove that, and I can’t wait to be a part of it.
The day is coming when Louisville will be great again and it's because you and I want it to be. The train is leaving, folks, and I hope you're on it because Louisville will once again be Major League.
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