Council members say Boulder trip worth every penny
Some Urban County Council members were upset that the Herald-Leader reported how much the city was paying for each of them to attend last week’s Commerce Lexington leadership visit to Boulder, Colo.
During work session Tuesday, Councilman Jay McChord said the group that went to Boulder was the largest group — with the largest council turnout — in the history of the Commerce Lexington leadership visit.
“What you’re seeing is a new day of collaboration, a new day of working locally better together,” McChord said. “And I find it funny that some of those in the media have looked at certain aspects of this and pointed out, well look who went and look how much that cost and so forth when those same media outlets the last couple of years have spent a lot of ink talking about dysfunction and we wish people would work better together and so forth.”
“We want to make this the best 21st century city possible and we’re willing to take time out of our busy schedules to go and sit down and talk about those things and study places that do it real well,” McChord said.
Councilman Julian Beard said that he has been attending Commerce Lexington’s leadership visits nearly every year since 1974.
On that first trip to Charleston, S.C. in 1974, there was about 70 attendees, Beard said. “Entirely different make-up. Very few women, very few African-Americans on that trip then. A whole lot of golf bags, however. At the carousel when we got back (from Boulder), I think I only counted four golf bags this time out of 200 people so it was not a junket by any means. It was a very active business meeting.”
Most of the 18 city officials who went to Boulder were there on the city’s dime. In all, the city spent at least $22,225 on the trips of 15 city officials. That total does not include other incidentals, such as parking at Blue Grass Airport and meals that weren’t included as part of the trip.
The elected city officials who went to Boulder on the city’s tab were Mayor Jim Newberry and council members Andrea James, Beard, Don Blevins Jr., Dick DeCamp, Chuck Ellinger II, Linda Gorton, McChord, George Myers, David Stevens and Kevin Stinnett.
Vice Mayor Jim Gray and Councilmen Tom Blues and Richard Moloney’s trips to Boulder were either paid for by the companies they work for or by themselves.
“It was a useful trip, I think, for many of us,” said Gray, who didn't have any issues with the Herald-Leader's report.
“For the cost of a modest consulting assignment, we were able to touch, in a sense, a city that has many analogous experiences or geographies of Lexington,” Gray said.
At the end of work session on Tuesday, Newberry said that he has now been on 10 leadership visits.
“I thought this one was the best one for me in terms of hearing about things directly relevant to Lexington,” Newberry said.
During the course of the trip, he “repeatedly heard comments from people on the trip about how appreciative they were of your all’s presence and I was,” Newberry said. “And I hope that all of you found it to be as productive as I did.”
- Michelle Ku





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