The Elizabethtown City Council met for a work session Monday.
City Administrator Ed Poppe asked the council for direction the city would like to take on downtown parking. Poppe said the city has made many attempts over the years to address concerns with parking at and around the public square, and noted that currently no enforcement mechanism is in place.
“We’ve had parking meters, we’ve taken parking meters off, we’ve put parking meters back, we’ve taken them off, we’ve limited parking around the square, we’ve limited parking on some of the side streets, so every option I think that has been explored has been explored in the past,” Poppe said.
Poppe said Elizabethtown Mayor Jeff Gregory attended a meeting of the Historic Downtown Elizabethtown Business Association and discussed parking concerns with several business owners. That Cute Little Shop Manager Kristin Kendall said parking on the square should be extended to longer than the current one hour limit, but currently the limits are being ignored.
“Just outside of our shop, there are four vehicles every single day that park there,” Kendall said. “It’s the same people from attorney’s offices that we have asked multiple times. We’ve called the cops to come and ask them to move and they just say ‘I’m too lazy and I don’t want to move.’”
City Council Member Marty Fulkerson said parking has been an ongoing conversation for as long as he has been on council. He said ahead of decisions on enforcement policy, the city should first address what is currently in place.
“First of all, we’ve got to get the signage,” Fulkerson said. “Either signage or or signage, because that’s like having an ordinance on the book and not enforcing it, so we need to get rid of that, clean that up, and second of all, can we not address these issues directly? I mean, we try to fix something, and if these people are violating it, they’re still going to violate it if we don’t have a conversation with them.”
Gregory said parking options will be included in the city’s upcoming Downtown Comprehensive Plan, and more conversation will be had.
Also meeting Monday was the Radcliff City Council, which met for a called meeting to go into closed session on which no official action was taken, and for a work session to discuss an upcoming budget amendment ordinance which Radcliff Mayor JJ Duvall said was the standard amendment following the end of a fiscal year. Radcliff CFO Chance Fox said only small adjustments in Parks and Recreation and Economic Development were necessary, but based on their department budgets it looks more significant.
“When planning has the smallest budget and you make increases, it tends to reflect more easily, so really the total of the two is about $133,000 and you’re looking at an $18.4 million budget, so if you do the math it’s a very small percentage,” Fox said.
The Elizabethtown City Council will next meet August 19, and the Radcliff City Council will next meet August 20.