In any case, businesses look at decisions related to businesses when they consider potential growth or expansion into an area. Yes, they look at other factors such as supporting infrastructure, tax abatement opportunities, surrounding demographics, and population as well but more than anything a business wants to know if a city will be supportive or restrictive once the shovel is put away and the customers begin to come. They don't understand or trust a governing body that decides cases based on arbitrary personal concerns or feelings. If you'll vote to restrict a tattoo parlor because you think they're beneath you, who's to say you won't vote against a "Super Target" because you had a bad shopping experience once or a UPS Distribution Center because you have an adversity to the color brown?
To add insult to injury, the city attorney has to instruct you on how to reverse a decision you JUST MADE? I really hope I heard that one wrong...
Having met and spoken with Marcus Knight, I know him to be an intelligent and formidable leader so it pains me to know he has to endure association with this nonsense. I'm pretty sure, somewhere in the far corners of the city offices is a private room that he uses just to scream at the top of his lungs in frustration! If that's the case, someone should clear a path, prop the door open and wait for it... he'll be visiting that room soon.
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