First
Impressions
Well, the buzz is spreading. Yes,
the MAD (Murphy Arts District’s) opening week buzz is taking off. Folks are
scrambling to get tickets, and they’re flying off the shelf. We’ve loaded up,
and I can’t wait. The buzz is already spreading through the mid-south, and
after the MAD promotion group’s advertising recent soiree through New York City,
national publications will pick up the story, and we can expect the September
27th grand opening to be eagerly awaited by thousands from all over
the country who will roll into El Dorado. And it will continue week after week,
as top flight entertainment and great food pulls in the crowds.
Of course, as I
have said before, these several hundred thousand guys and gals coming to the
entertainment district will bring a healthy boost to the overall state’s
economy, and a real uptick to South Arkansas. Yes, El Dorado will be the
destination for thousands, and we hope some of those several hundred thousand
festival goers will like El Dorado so much they’ll move here, and up-tic the
economic growth and reverse our population decline. I’m convinced, if we take advantage of this
influx, South Arkansas will see a new boom that will rival the 1920s oil boom.
However, we may have a little problem as we
try to give our visitors a good first impression. Uh, well maybe more than a little problem. So
what about first impressions? Do they matter? I met Vertis, my wife, while
swimming in the Smackover Swimming Pool. Did she make a good first impression?
Well, we’ve been married longer than I can remember, so I would say Vertis in a swimsuit made an excellent
first impression. Now, let’s just do a “what if”. What if Vertis had looked
like North West Avenue in that swimsuit? Well, I would probably have ended up a
confirmed bachelor living in a Greek Monastery. So just for a moment let’s say
Mabelle and Billy Ray Jones from Tulsa arrive to see ZZ Top, and they drive
into El Dorado on North West Avenue. I can hear them now: “Look, Billy Ray, they have a giant, abandoned Wendy’s sign. I wonder
if they have a historical marker, and oh, look; I’ll bet they don’t have to
worry about mowing all those blank parking lots.” “That right Mabelle, and see
all those electrical lines. I’ll just bet all those stores have electricity,
and just check out this turn lane. It’s a turn lane as far as the eye can see.
Wow, this looks like a town we might want to relocate to.” Or maybe they
might say, “My God, Billy Ray, have you ever seen anything so ugly? Speed up and
check this eyesore off our list.”
Okay, now we’ve
seen the good, bad, and the ugly, so how can we turn ugly North West Avenue
into Vertis in her swimsuit? I guess
that requires some action by the Mayor and the City Council. Yes, of course it
does, and that begs the question: If North West Avenue is such an eyesore why
hasn’t the City, and/or the City Council done anything about it? Yes, they will
mumble something like “We don’t have the
money.” But I’ve offered to buy 50 crepe myrtle trees, and all the city has
to do is plant them in the green space along the street. Nope, they won’t take
me up on my offer, and I would just bet, with a little work, I could line up
several hundred trees to be donated. The city owns the right-of-way on both
sides of the street, and nothing can keep the city from planting trees or other
landscaping, which will cover up some of the ugly. But it’s not just the Mayor
and Public Works Director; the City Council can pass a sign ordinance, similar
to the one that disappeared from the books, and they can also take a page from
Fayetteville and pass a landscaping ordinance to green up those blank ugly
parking lots.
Of course,
killing the endless turn lane on North West Avenue is almost just too much to
hope for, but what if the turn lane was landscaped all the way from Hillsboro
to the bypass intersection, with just a few breaks across it? Yes, that’s a big
job, but it’s the right thing to do. If El Dorado Festivals and Events can
spend a hundred million dollars to add 500 jobs and thousands to our population,
it seems the city could at least give us a fighting chance to attract permeant
residents by sprucing up the eyesore
of South Arkansas, North West Avenue. If you agree that North West
Avenue need a face lift, then every time you see the Mayor or a City Council
Person, tell them to get busy and do something about the eyesore of South
Arkansas.
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