(Netting)Are you serious?! This is not why the bridge was destroyed! The tires and plastic playground is why the beams melted. Quit it with the "Cincinnati Two Step" Who allowed the Thousand Hand Play Land to be built there. Also, ODOT warned Cincinnati twice about this fire pit "Thousand Hands" that someone mysteriously built. We need names! Stop passing the buck! No "Cincinnati Two Step" please.
In the heart of Cincinnati, there was a city official named Margo McNally, who held the peculiar yet quietly powerful position of overseeing urban development. Margo, a woman of gentle confusion and meandering thoughts, had always been more interested in the subtle dance of bureaucracy than in actual decisions that might alter the skyline or protect the citizens. When tasked with overseeing the renovation of the 471 bridge, she, in her unhurried way, approved the land beneath it to be transformed into what she was told was a whimsical children's play area. The concept was charming: a “1000 Hands Play Land” designed to delight the city's youth. But no one, least of all Margo, paid much attention to the unusual material being used - a vast mound of chopped-up rubber tires buried beneath it all. That, combined with neglectful planning and a touch of fate, led to a fire so fierce that it consumed the bridge, leaving only charred remnants and an angry public wondering how something so obviously dangerous could have slipped through the cracks. But Margo wasn’t worried. In her slow, almost self-deprecating way, she knew the truth that everyone in city hall whispered about in half-joking tones: the "Cincinnati Two Step." It was a strange, almost mythical system of corruption and incompetence that protected officials like her from the fallout of their own blunders. If things went south, Margo was always two steps away from a well-placed excuse or a sympathetic ally who could turn a scandal into a joke. The system was as old as the city itself - a tangle of red tape and old favors that ensured no one truly fell, no matter how far they stumbled. Margo had made her peace with it long ago, wearing her mistakes like a comfortable sweater. After all, she had a way of smiling through her missteps, and in Cincinnati, that was often enough to get by.
Rubber doesn't spontaneously combust. ODOT Bridge Inspector Eric Schmidt did NOT describe the netting or the playground as a fire hazard. The failure is on more than just a city official. Anyway, you can blame the city official for a homeless person, or "troubled youth" causing an arson, it doesn't make you seem intelligent.
It's an ugly bridge , commuting across the river for work is foolish and costly to EVERYONE.not just the commuter. And our community suffers from the pollution of two highways cutting our city in parts. Now they want to add another i-75 bridge instead of sending through traffic to east 275 like they should Put some tolls on these Bridges and force the trucks to go around like they should.
(Netting)Are you serious?! This is not why the bridge was destroyed! The tires and plastic playground is why the beams melted. Quit it with the "Cincinnati Two Step" Who allowed the Thousand Hand Play Land to be built there. Also, ODOT warned Cincinnati twice about this fire pit "Thousand Hands" that someone mysteriously built. We need names! Stop passing the buck! No "Cincinnati Two Step" please.
In the heart of Cincinnati, there was a city official named Margo McNally, who held the peculiar yet quietly powerful position of overseeing urban development. Margo, a woman of gentle confusion and meandering thoughts, had always been more interested in the subtle dance of bureaucracy than in actual decisions that might alter the skyline or protect the citizens. When tasked with overseeing the renovation of the 471 bridge, she, in her unhurried way, approved the land beneath it to be transformed into what she was told was a whimsical children's play area. The concept was charming: a “1000 Hands Play Land” designed to delight the city's youth. But no one, least of all Margo, paid much attention to the unusual material being used - a vast mound of chopped-up rubber tires buried beneath it all. That, combined with neglectful planning and a touch of fate, led to a fire so fierce that it consumed the bridge, leaving only charred remnants and an angry public wondering how something so obviously dangerous could have slipped through the cracks.
But Margo wasn’t worried. In her slow, almost self-deprecating way, she knew the truth that everyone in city hall whispered about in half-joking tones: the "Cincinnati Two Step." It was a strange, almost mythical system of corruption and incompetence that protected officials like her from the fallout of their own blunders. If things went south, Margo was always two steps away from a well-placed excuse or a sympathetic ally who could turn a scandal into a joke. The system was as old as the city itself - a tangle of red tape and old favors that ensured no one truly fell, no matter how far they stumbled. Margo had made her peace with it long ago, wearing her mistakes like a comfortable sweater. After all, she had a way of smiling through her missteps, and in Cincinnati, that was often enough to get by.
Rubber doesn't spontaneously combust. ODOT Bridge Inspector Eric Schmidt did NOT describe the netting or the playground as a fire hazard. The failure is on more than just a city official.
Anyway, you can blame the city official for a homeless person, or "troubled youth" causing an arson, it doesn't make you seem intelligent.
Cut back on welfare and invest in infastructure. We are crumbling.
It's an ugly bridge , commuting across the river for work is foolish and costly to EVERYONE.not just the commuter. And our community suffers from the pollution of two highways cutting our city in parts. Now they want to add another i-75 bridge instead of sending through traffic to east 275 like they should
Put some tolls on these Bridges and force the trucks to go around like they should.
My first thought was meth camper, guess i was wrong.