Aah... 10 days of not so R&R in the great Buckeye State. One of the things about living 1,500 miles from the family is we don't get there often enough. But we still had a good time. My wife and I did take a few days to have some fun.
We visited former 6 News reporter Shaun Hegarty and his wife, who now live in Toledo, Ohio. It's ironic that he works across the street from my old station. His new house has a basement ... I'm so jealous.
It's amazing how much can change in three years. I got a fresh perspective on several things that have been hot topics here in Corpus Christi.
First ... Corpus Christi has to truly have some of the WORST roads in the county. I always joked that Ohio had much worse roads than the Coastal Bend. The key difference is they actually fix them. I can say we literally travelled over 100 miles of freshly paved roads.
My hometown of Mansfield, Ohio has probably one of the best plans to keep city streets maintained. Back in the 1970's the city was in financial trouble and the roads were in really bad shape. The city's main drag - Park Ave. West was in such bad shape, signs were posted along the road warning drivers to drive at their own risk.
The city proposed a tax that would go exclusively to repave roads. I can't remember if it's a sales, income or property tax. But I do remember it was a very small amount to the taxpayer. A community oversight committee selects which roads get paved and they make sure to spread the resurfacing projects evenly across the city.
A prime example, I grew up in an inner city neighborhood. My little side street was resurfaced twice while I was growing up. Compared to a Corpus Christi road it didn't need the work, but it had several patch jobs and so it was slated to be resurfaced.
When I was home last week, I counted about ten different streets that were in some stage of repair. Some had their surfaces grated others had received their first or second coats of blacktop. I know we're maxed out on our ability to levy sales taxes, but I would hope city council can work on a plan to develop something that would guarantee our street repairs.