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How to save a town

Posted on 2/5/24 at 6:51 pm
Posted by Odysseus32
Member since Dec 2009
9776 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 6:51 pm
(no message)
This post was edited on 3/12/24 at 4:10 pm
Posted by fr33manator
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2010
133411 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 6:54 pm to
quote:

How do you save a dying Louisiana town?



Kill it, kick out all the problem aspects, and start over from scratch.

That or nuke it from orbit

Posted by DevilDagNS
Member since Dec 2017
2959 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 6:54 pm to
Elect a child as mayor.

Sincerely,

City of Bogalusa
Posted by RatherHunt
Louisiana
Member since Feb 2021
159 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 6:55 pm to
Release a virus to cut down on population and line your pocket with kick backs from enforcing vaccination and boosters.
Posted by Long Ball Larry
Baton Rouge
Member since Apr 2021
1509 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 6:56 pm to
Ask Youngsville
Posted by Deplorableinohio
Member since Dec 2018
7208 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 6:57 pm to
Burn it down.
Posted by Bryno1960
Off River Road
Member since Aug 2013
3321 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 6:58 pm to
When you all figure it out, please let my hometown of Bogalusa know!
Posted by OU Guy
Member since Feb 2022
24628 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 6:58 pm to
Posted by nugget
Abrego Garcia Fan
Member since Dec 2009
15670 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 7:01 pm to
Hornbeck is incentivizing people who work from home to move there. They’re giving up to 50k if you move from out of state. Thousands of people are moving there from New York and California.
Posted by BHM
Member since Jun 2012
3854 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 7:14 pm to
Jobs. They must have jobs. Helps to be within 30 miles of a good size city. Scott and Youngsville are doing well because they are close enough to Lafayette for example. The further in the boonies, the harder it would be. People will only travel so far from their job to home.

Towns further from highways and cities are doomed unless a major employer moves in. Nobody wants to live in Ville Platte and work in Lafayette. There are no jobs nearby to support growth. Property values plummet and then they start moving in. Crime goes up. Then it’s over.
Posted by deltaland
Member since Mar 2011
100499 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 7:15 pm to
Depends on the town. A lot of rural towns boomed due to a railroad, mine, local factory, etc. That can’t be saved without massive regulatory and trade policy overhaul that brings back domestic manufacturing and mining. Even a lot of former medium sized river port towns don’t see the action they used to because of improved highway systems and central hubs being more efficient to ship to a major city and truck it from there down the interstate.

Rural America used to be way less accessible via highways so shipping to a rural town via rail or river was more efficient and this allowed local factories there to receive raw materials in bulk. Rural America won’t ever fully die due to agriculture but the days of industry being built in those towns so they’ll thrive isn’t coming back. It’s more efficient to be located near a city for manufacturing and shipping outwards from a central hub
Posted by Ponchy Tiger
Ponchatoula
Member since Aug 2004
48834 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 7:30 pm to
Do the opposite of what is happening in Bogalusa.
Posted by HempHead
Big Sky Country
Member since Mar 2011
56532 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 7:30 pm to
I tried to do the opposite - save a town from rampant development with no appreciation for anything except growth for its own sake. I failed. So, I go searching for more windmills.
Posted by MemphisGuy
Germantown, TN
Member since Nov 2023
13729 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 7:33 pm to
quote:

How do you save a dying Louisiana town?

Start Here:

Posted by stout
Porte du Lafitte
Member since Sep 2006
179578 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 7:33 pm to
quote:


Hornbeck is incentivizing people who work from home to move there. They’re giving up to 50k if you move from out of state. Thousands of people are moving there from New York and California.



I dont think the whole town of Hornbeck is worth $50K

Is the population still under 500?
Posted by Havoc
Member since Nov 2015
37648 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 7:34 pm to
This is inspired by the recent Roadhouse discussions isn’t it
Posted by member12
Bob's Country Bunker
Member since May 2008
33051 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 7:35 pm to
Bringing new business in helps but it doesn’t solve everything. People will just commute from outside town if structural issues in the city are not resolved.

Has to be organic and deliberate efforts to improve and make the place attractive. The locals have to want it and they have to sweat the small stuff.

It starts with simple things like cleaning up the litter, calling the cops when people break the law, patching potholes, and reporting broken street lights to Entergy for repair. Then it moves on to applying for state or federal grants to redevelop sidewalks or refurbish historic buildings. Then it gets to a new restaurant or coffee shop. Then maybe some new residents come in or a festival of some kind.
This post was edited on 2/5/24 at 7:38 pm
Posted by OWLFAN86
Erotic Novelist
Member since Jun 2004
194652 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 7:38 pm to
tax credits, well placed bribes, foreign ownership
Posted by magildachunks
Member since Oct 2006
34959 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 7:38 pm to
Step One: Get rid of the good-ole boy network in local office.

Step Two: don't elect anybody who's lived there more than a decade to take their spot.

Step Three: ???

Step Four: Profit.
Posted by Warfox
B.R. Native (now in MA)
Member since Apr 2017
3764 posts
Posted on 2/5/24 at 7:39 pm to
BRING MANUFACTURING BACK TO AMERICA!
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