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Louisville Is Moving to Nonpartisan Local Elections. Here’s What It Means for Neighborhoods.

This post is part of our ongoing, experiment-in-public series using AI to speed up analysis of issues affecting the City of Louisville and Metro Council. Kentucky’s House Bill 388 makes Louisville’s mayor and Metro Council elections nonpartisan. The law took effect January 1, 2025; the first ballots without party labels will be in 2026. (Legislative … Continued

Done Deal: Community Foundation of Louisville Delivers Bridge to Community Ownership

Back in March we described how we are helping community members in the Park Hill/Algonquin neighborhoods address an imminent issue impacting their wellbeing.  We were committed to supporting them in their fight for a healthier, more sustainable neighborhood. Working together, this group of residents and concerned community members not only worked with the owners of the … Continued

Paying for Participation: How Our COAB Project Invests in Community Voices

Here’s a number worth celebrating: $109,000.That’s how much the Park Hill/Algonquin Community of Opportunity project (COAB) has put straight into neighbors’ pockets since 2022—roughly 10 percent of every project dollar—through MoCaFi pay cards. These stipends compensate residents for the time and expertise they contribute while shaping the future of a 17-acre former chemical plant into … Continued

Ownership Power: Residents Claim the Future of Louisville Neighborhoods

Urban renewal done the old way is broken. From the Atlanta Beltline to waterfront “revitalizations” nationwide, gleaming projects have delivered upside to landowners while pricing longtime residents out of the very neighborhoods they built. The pattern is so predictable it feels baked into the system: capital gathers land early, values spike, renters get the eviction … Continued

Budget Blueprint: Navigating Louisville Metro’s Fiscal Journey

The process for creating and passing a fiscal year budget for Louisville Metro Government involves several key steps, coordinated between the Mayor’s Office, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), and the Louisville Metro Council. The fiscal year runs from July 1 to June 30. Here’s an overview of the typical process: 1. Departmental Budget … Continued

Nia Center Sale: Will Louisville Let the Community Lead This Time?

Louisville has no shortage of bold ideas for economic development, but too many of them still launch before residents have a seat at the table. The latest example: the Transit Authority of River City’s plan to sell the TARC-owned Nia Center to Goodwill— a move that blindsided the small businesses now housed there and sparked … Continued

8 Hours, One Big Proof: How CFN’s Hackathon Sprint Clarified the CivicPulse Vision

On May 7, CFN stepped into a one-day hackathon hosted by our partners at Slingshot. Our role wasn’t to write code—we were the client, testing whether AI could really solve a pain point we see every day: neighbors can’t act on issues hidden in four-hour council videos and shrinking local-news columns. We aim to empower … Continued

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