KOCO’S KOLBY TERRELL HEARD FROM BOTH SIDES. THE RESIDENTS IN THIS NEIGHBORHOOD BEHIND ME HAVE BEEN GEARING UP TO FIGHT AGAINST AN AMPHITHEATER THAT COULD GO IN RIGHT ACROSS THE STREET. YOU CAN SEE THE SIGNS THEY’VE MADE, AND RIGHT NEXT TO THEM, SIGNS THAT WANT TO SEE THE VENUE COME INTO TOWN ARE POPPING UP. PEOPLE DON’T WANT IT HERE, ESPECIALLY ESPECIALLY IF YOU LIVE CLOSE. SIGN AFTER SIGN DOTS THE LAWNS OF PROTESTING NEIGHBORS NEAR VANDERBILT AVENUE AND FRISCO ROAD WHO DON’T WANT AN AMPHITHEATER NEARBY. BUT NOW THEY’RE ACCOMPANIED BY SIGNS FROM PEOPLE IN SUPPORT OF THE PROJECT. I BELIEVE THAT GROWTH IS GOOD. JOBS FOR PEOPLE ARE GOOD. MORE JOBS FOR PEOPLE ARE GOOD. I LOVE LIVE MUSIC MYSELF. PEOPLE WILL COME TO THE RESTAURANTS IN TOWN, YOU KNOW, WHEN THEY’RE BEFORE THEIR SHOW. I MEAN, I THINK IT WOULD BE GREAT. IT’S THE SAME PLAN …

MAID: a family's traumatic story
Israel, Iran, and the Nuclear Endgame (Bonus Episode): Casey Babb and Hussein Aboubakr Mansour for the Promised Land
Groups prepare arguments for, against Yukon amphitheater [Video]
Categories

MAID: Canadian health care's 'quick fix'
Working with First Nations on an Indigenous fire stewardship protocol could go a long way: Karen Restoule in The Hill Times