Ami
Vitori is front page Journal news!!! And Starbucks Channel’s
“UPSTANDERS” series titled Saving Middletown, is a must see. Go
to starbucks.com/upstanders
to
read the script.
Ami
Vitori has provided exactly what Middletown has needed for decades …
the spark, the example and the inspiration for others to follow in
her footsteps to save our city! And she and her family did it
with very little assistance from the city; assistance which she
immediately put to work and used to best advantage. May
she be blessed with all the success that her vision and hard work
deserves. Her
knowledge, enthusiasm
and life experience would be
a much needed asset to city council as well.
The
rest of us need to remember it takes more than one person, it takes
everyone who is able, to make a contribution.
There
is just one caveat for Ami regarding city council and city management
… Decades of mismanagement, poor decision making and cronism has
caused damage, invited more problems and prevented Middletown’s
recovery, as much or more than all the external socio-economic
pressures have caused.
City
government may be the source of and reason for what is
seen as negativism being expressed so often. City hall needs to
encourage business, not put up more and more road blocks like zoning,
signage and facade restrictions. City hall has given away or sold
properties for $1 and provided grants and other financial assistance
to pals and vulture-like speculators who have absorbed all this while
leaving their purported project properties to literally rot. City
hall has neglected to hold these speculators legally responsible,
therefore we get no return on the tax dollars spent and we are left
bankrupt and holding the bag (dilapidated buildings and eyesores).
In the Journal
article, Mayor Mulligan gives credit to former city manager Judy
Gilleland and Perry Thatcher, among others, for their vision of
revitalization; but several of the very projects initiated under them
are now among the abandoned or never started projects – such as the
deteriorating Manchester Inn (planning from 2015 never acted upon)
and the Sonshine Building, First National Bank (empty) and the CG &E
Building. (virtually abandoned by Cincinnati State - which now barely
exits in Middletown).
Mr
Adkins, our current city manager writes up city business, presents it
to council and expects all to be approved without any discussion.
Citizens are almost totally removed from the governing process. The
Sunshine Laws have no meaning here in Middletown. Citizens have
either become apathetic or are fearful of retaliation for pointing
out city hall’s shenanigans. All of this is quite evident if you
read the MUSA forum (most recently Bobble-heads under Communuiy
Revitalization). In brief, THE CITY GOVERNMENT NEEDS AN OVERHAUL
that will make all of Ami Vitori’s hard work on Torchlight Pass
look tiny.
MUSA
followers - In case you haven’t read The Journal News article, it’s
good news except for Mr Mulligan’s attempt to give credit where it
was NOT due.: Middletown
gains highlighted in show By http://www.mydaytondailynews.com/staff/ed-richter/" rel="nofollow - - -
Staff Writer
Short
film focuses on positive impact of Torchlight Pass founder.MIDDLETOWN
— Nearly a decade ago, Forbes Magazine identified Middletown among
America’s 10 fastest-dying cities.
This
week, Middletown is back in the national spotlight as its
revitalization efforts will be among 11 communities featured in
season two of “Upstanders,” an original Starbucks series. The
episode is titled “Saving Middletown.”
The
five-minute film features the story of Ami Vitori, founder of
Torchlight Pass, a dining and retail destination, and how she gave up
a successful career and tapped her retirement fund to rebuild her
struggling Rust Belt hometown, according to Starbucks. The film also
includes a number of Middletonians such as J.D. Vance, Ken Cohen,
Wilbur Cohen, Heather Gibson and Richard Isroff.
Through
short films and audio books, the stories can be accessed
through starbucks.com/upstanders and
also are being streamed through partners Amazon Video and Audible.
Other “Upstanders” stories focus on support for veterans, the
opioid epidemic, juvenile incarceration, refugee resettlement,
climate change, and creating economic opportunity and equity.
“Ami’s
story, and others like it in ‘Upstanders,’ reveals a different
side of America than we often see on television or in our
social-media feeds,” said Rajiv Chandrasekaran, “Upstanders”
executive producer, author and former Washington Post editor. “These
stories are set in small towns and big cities, from coast to coast,
and they introduce us to people just like Ami who are fearlessly
challenging the status quo and making our communities better. We are
proud to work with Ami and thank the city for the warm welcome we
received when filming this episode in Middletown.”
On
Wednesday, city officials hosted an invitation-only screening to
celebrate Middletown being portrayed in a positive light and
highlighting the work done by many over the years to revitalize the
city and the downtown district. More than 40 people attended.
Mayor
Larry Mulligan noted the changes in the downtown area as he looked
back to when Middletown was an All-American city in the 1950s and the
various challenges it faced over the years since. “There was a time
it looked like a Hollywood movie lot,” he said.
Mulligan
praised past leaders such as former city manager Judy Gilleland, who
envisioned using the arts and entertainment to begin the
revitalization, as well as Jay and Linda Moorman of BeauVerrre
Riordan Stained Glass Studios, the Pendleton Arts Center, the late
Perry Thatcher whose properties helped to bring Cincinnati State’s
branch campus as well as the founding the Broad Street Bash, the
Windamere Event Venue, the forming of the Community Building
Initiative, and trips to Paducah, Ky., and Greenville, S.C., to see
how other cities transformed their downtowns. He also noted the city
saw 24 businesses open last year.
Mulligan
said Vitori, a fourth-generation Middletonian, returned to her
hometown and “jumped in with both feet” as she and her family
worked to prevent the former TV Middletown building from becoming an
eyesore as they created Torchlight Pass. “It’s a good positive
message that highlights the good things about Middletown. We’re not
without our warts and faults. We still have things to work on.”
Vitori,
who is one of five people seeking two open seats this November on
Middletown City Council, also credited the people before her who have
been working to revitalize the city and hopes this national publicity
continues to help Middletown move forward. She said her fellow
downtown business owners continue to work together and help each
other. “Lots of people came in the past few years to make things
happen,” she said. “I hope this story can continue to grow. It
speaks to what other small towns can do.”
------------- "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil, is for good men to do nothing" Edmond Burke
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