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Now: The Reds have finished their first season at Great American Ballpark, which was wedged squarely between Cinergy Field and U.S. Bank Arena. Broadway Commons is still a parking lot. And Jim Tarbell is on city council, working overtime to breathe new life into Over-the-Rhine and make it a viable arts and culture center.
"As a result of that terrible decision," Tarbell says, "I ran for council. That was the straw that broke the camel's back."
Tarbell didn't win his 1997 campaign for a council seat, but when Bobbie Stern resigned her post early he was asked to fill in. He's been there since.
"I can't lay claim to anything major," Tarbell says, "other than the Arts and Culture Committee. I hope to remain involved and have an influence there."
He sighs while bemoaning the lack of green space downtown and still hopes that Broadway Commons can be something more than a parking lot.
"It's on the edge of Mount Adams, Over-the-Rhine and the expressway," he says. "Broadway is right in the middle of all of that, the largest, most conspicuous properties." He'd like to see the area as a mixed-use development with a focus on housing but states that "developers can't reach an agreement with the owners."
And the county can't raise enough tax revenue to get The Banks going, stalling the very reason to put the Reds on the riverfront in the first place.
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