By Aaron Gershon
University of Kentucky School of Journalism and Media
The restaurants are getting far more than retail stores. The
report shows that The Brown Barrel ($4,180), Goose and Gander ($2,910) Don
Jockey ($2,410) were the only three businesses to get more than $1,000 in "Midway Bucks."
University of Kentucky School of Journalism and Media
Mayor Grayson Vandegrift said Tuesday that he is setting up
an ad hoc City Council committee to design a grant program for small businesses, using covid-19 relief funds, in place of a third round of vouchers that citizens
can redeem at the businesses.
The committee will be Council Members Stacy Thurman and John
Holloway and City Clerk-Treasurer Cindy Foster.
The move comes after Midway merchants expressed displeasure
with last week’s 3-2 council vote to send residents two more rounds of $50
vouchers, at $40,000 per round, rather than making direct grants of up to $2,000 to businesses, as
Vandegrift first suggested.
The mayor said restaurants, not retailers, were the main
beneficiaries of the vouchers, and Tuesday he cited reports from local
businesses of their redemptions to prove his point.
The Brown Barrel and Blind Harry's got the most vouchers. (Google photo) |
Eleven retail stores redeemed a total of $2,300, an average
of $209; the highest was $430.
After the council voted for two more rounds of voucher instead of grants, 19 business people signed a letter warning that
"without significant assistance or the lifting of pandemic restrictions .
. . by the end of 2020, there will be more closed stores in downtown Midway
than would be open."
In response, Vandegrift said he would ask the council to
appropriate $40,000 for the grant program. Tuesday, he said the ad hoc
committee would work on the exact details. "The committee will propose the
details and the parameters as well as the potential paying scale of
grants" hopefully for the council’s consideration July 6, he wrote.
"We've all agreed that time is of the essence for these
businesses," he said. "We need to move as quickly as we can for
them, regardless of what is decided."
The letter from the merchants noted
that a grant program was clearly authorized by the relief bill but the voucher
program was not. Vandegrift has said he thinks it will be approved.
In his latest statement, he said he is talking with the state Department for Local Government and the office of Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who sponsored the bill, “to get as much
guidance as possible” and would report to the council on at the July 6 meeting.
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