Lexington Local Pulse
Good morning, this is Lexington Local Pulse for Thursday, June eighteenth. We wake up today keeping an eye on the sky. The National Weather Service in Louisville says we start off mostly cloudy with a small chance of a morning shower or rumble of thunder, then we brighten to mostly sunny this afternoon with highs in the upper seventies and a southwest breeze around ten to fifteen miles an hour. That means we can plan most outdoor plans, but we grab an umbrella just in case for the late morning and keep an ear out for any pop up storms tonight. From city hall, Lexington city leaders are continuing work on the new budget that shifts more money toward road repairs and neighborhood traffic calming, especially around Nicholasville Road, Richmond Road, and the North Broadway corridor. We are also seeing ongoing discussions about affordable housing incentives near downtown and around New Circle, which could shape what kinds of apartments and townhomes get built over the next few years. On the jobs front, local listings show several hundred openings across health care, warehousing, and hospitality, with the biggest clusters near the University of Kentucky campus, Hamburg, and the industrial parks off Georgetown Road. Starting pay for many entry level roles is now in the mid teens per hour, with some warehouse and skilled trade roles pushing into the low twenties. In real estate, local agents report that in the past week roughly a few dozen single family homes go under contract across Fayette County, with typical sale prices sitting in the mid three hundreds. Homes near Chevy Chase and around Tates Creek Road continue to move quickest, often in under two weeks if they are updated and priced right. For culture and fun today, LexFun4Kids highlights a busy family calendar. We have Nature in Your Neighborhood this morning, a bug hunt at McConnell Springs, and special activities at the Kentucky Children’s Garden. Later today, Thursday Night Live returns at Henry A Tandy Centennial Park downtown, and Southland Jamboree brings live bluegrass to Moondance Amphitheater. Tonight, country artist Nick Shoulders is in town for a show, and Juneteenth events continue with film and arts programs around downtown and the UK area. At our libraries, Lexington Public Library hosts children’s programs through the day, and Lexington Children’s Theatre is sharing a Mariposa Butterfly performance this afternoon, a nice option for families looking to stay cool. On the school front, local high school athletes are wrapping up summer ball and off season conditioning; coaches are already talking about strong showings from track and baseball standouts in city meets earlier this month. Public safety officials report no major citywide emergencies overnight, but Lexington police do respond to a few vehicle break in calls near apartment complexes off Man o War and Hamburg. Officers remind us to lock our cars, remove valuables, and leave porch lights on, especially along side streets off Richmond Road and Alumni Drive. Police also continue traffic enforcement on New Circle Road and Harrodsburg Road after several recent speeding crashes. A small feel good note to end on: neighbors near Woodland Park come together this week to refresh the community garden beds, with extra produce pledged for local food pantries as summer harvests kick in. It is a reminder of how our small blocks can make a big difference. Thank you for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe so you never miss a morning update. This has been Lexington Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
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