By Lauren McCally
Besides
the Chocolate Stroll, which will held Saturday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., the MBA
also discussed a St. Patrick’s Day event, movies in the courtyard and many
other events scheduled throughout the year.
University of Kentucky School of Journalism and Media
The
Midway Business Association had plenty to talk about at its monthly meeting
Wednesday, with Saturday’s Chocolate Stroll kicking off a long list of events
planned this year.
Members
also discussed the possibility of using the MBA’s growing bank account to help
others, such as Midway Renaissance and Northside Elementary, with advertising
for events. They also discussed the fall festival, the possibility of an RJ
Corman Railroad dinner train stopping in Midway, and potential solutions for
downtown parking.
The St.
Patrick’s Day event is set for Saturday, March 14, from 2 to 6 p.m. with
vendors and a band, but no parade as in recent years, President Cortney Neikirk
said. It will feature a blessing of the keg and a leprechaun.
At their last meeting MBA members discussed a
possible dinner train stop. One member said Corman executive Noel Rush, who
handles a lot of the railroad’s community bookings, told her that he would
think about what the MBA was trying to do.
Elisha
Holt, coordinator of the fall festival and other events, said local merchants
who want to participate in the festival Sept. 19-20 “do not fill out the
application online because in order to get the discount they need to do a paper
one, since there are no discounted applications on the digital one.” Those need
to be filled out by June 30.
Although applications typically go out around Feb. 10, Holt
said they were sent out before the first of January, and 29 vendors had already
accepted, all of which are return vendors. Fall festival meetings will start
being held in March. Holt mentioned that Country Boy Brewing would sponsor the
festival stage again.
Neikirk
said the fall festival account has grown to $42,000, following profits of
$38,500 last year, and the association has almost $13,000 in other accounts.
She said
the MBA will use some of that money to help Renaissance advertise its three
Midsummer Nights in Midway, which have been scheduled cooperatively. “Their
events help us, so we’re going to advertise for them,” she said.
Renaissance members staff City Hall during weekend events to
make public restrooms available, and the group does an annual Midway Heritage
Day in the fall that the MBA makes part of its events schedule.
Neikirk
said the MBA could cooperate with other groups that hold events, such as
Northside Elementary School. “It gets us all connected with each other,” she
said.
Holt
said events have also been scheduled in cooperation with Versailles businesses.
“We are trying to play very nicely with Versailles,” she said, noting that
every summer weekend will have some sort of event in Woodford County.
The
final topic at the meeting was shortage of parking, especially for employees of
restaurants and shops. Neikirk said she has talked to the restaurants and is
trying to help them find a place for their employees to park somewhere other
than the Main Street area.
“You see people drive through, and there’s
nowhere to park, and you watch them drive right out of town,” Neikirk said.
“And that’s the thing, nobody’s going to park at Wallace Station to walk
downtown.”
Neikirk proposed that restaurant owners come together to see
if a local church would be willing to rent its parking lot every day but Sunday
for use of the employees, but said she is unsure if that will happen.
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