Lowell’s Bluegrass Vehicle Report

Today, we are pleased to release the Bluegrass Vehicle Report 2009.  Using state registration data, Lowell's compiled statistics on vehicles in seven Bluegrass counties.  We've put the results together in a fun and informative format which shows details about the automotive marketplace in and around Lexington.

In addition, Lowell's is releasing Lowell's School ToolsSchool Tools is a companion guide to the report which helps teachers, parents, and student create their own fun and interesting findings from the automotive data.  More about School Tools can be found here.

Among the more interesting results from the Report:

  • Toyota is the #1 brand of vehicle in Lexington.  The 33,624 Toyota vehicles on the road put Toyota ahead of both Ford (31,018) and Chevrolet (29,712).  Toyota nameplates are on 15.4% of the cars on the road.
  • A lot of Toyotas.  All of those Toyotas, placed end-to-end, could fill all 4 lanes of New Circle Road, completely encircling Lexington.
  • A lot of gas.  Lexington drivers consumed over 156 million gallons of gasoline in 2008 — more than enough to fill Rupp Arena from floor to ceiling.

You can see all of the results here:

Or, you can download a PDF of Bluegrass Vehicle Report 2009 (1886.4K).

[where: 111 Mechanic St, Lexington, KY 40507]

Lowell’s School Tools

Lowell's is pleased to release School Tools, which is a companion guide to the Bluegrass Vehicle ReportSchool Tools is designed to help teachers, parents, and students develop their own interesting real-world insights about cars in the Bluegrass.  Along the way, they will engage their skills in research, creativity, and applied mathematics.

The School Tools guide is meant as a starting point – please adapt it to your particular needs and the particular aptitudes of your students. 

School Tools is free to teachers, parents, and the general public.  All we ask is that you give us suggestions for making it better, and that you share your stories about how you used School Tools.  We can't wait to see what you do with it!

Or, you can download a PDF of School Tools 2009 (5804.0K)

[where: 111 Mechanic St, Lexington, KY 40507]

Toyota is the top brand in Lexington

On Thursday, Lowell's will release the Bluegrass Vehicle Report, which will look at the kinds of cars central Kentuckians drive.

One surprise finding:  Toyota is now the top brand (or "make") of vehicle on the road in Lexington, surpassing both Ford and Chevrolet.  Obviously, as Toyota specialists we're pleased.

We'll have all of the details in the Report later this week.

[where: Lexington, KY]

Taxes, Taxes, Taxes

I'm quite a bit different than my business-owning peers — I actually don't mind paying taxes. I get a lot of benefit from those taxes: providing for our common defense, local police and fire protection, and a pretty great infrastructure (by world standards), among many other services that our governments provide.  It is my duty as a citizen to financially support the governments that protect and enable our freedoms.

I feel this way even though those services and those governments should be much more efficient and much less bureaucratic than they are.  So I'm not a typical all-taxes-are-evil type of business owner…

But I hate dealing with taxes.Tax-burden

When I bought this business, I knew that I was going to have to deal more with taxes and payroll issues than when I was an individual employee of a corporation. (Unlike many businesses, we don't send our payroll or most of our taxes out to other professionals. Yet.)

But I totally underestimated the crushing administrative burden of the variety, frequency, and complexity of tax payments.  Besides dealing with federal, state, and local governments (which I expected), I quickly learned that each entity had many different types of taxes, each with different weekly, monthly, and quarterly schedules, and each out-of-sync with the others.  There were many taxes which we paid and documented on a regular basis which had to be re-documented periodically.  Then, in January, the schedule gets jumbled from every other tax period.  It is needlessly complicated and time-consuming. 

Again, I'm a willing taxpayer (although I'd always welcome paying less).  But I don't want to be a tax expert.  And I don't want to be forced to hire one.  And I don't want to spend so much time managing our taxes when it should be spent managing our business… 

There must be a simpler way for businesses to contribute to their governments. 

A scar upon our city?

I have to admit I wasn't engaged in the discussions surrounding "the Dame block" and the CentrePointe development in downtown Lexington last year.  I didn't frequent the places on the block, and I didn't follow the day-to-day developments as the debate raged about what to do with the block.  I don't have a sentimental attachment to the issue.

But, today, two aspects of the CentrePointe project have struck me:

  1. The rapidity with which the the Webb Companies razed the buildings, leaving behind a crater of rubble.
  2. The complete lack of any visible activity since.

Only one thing is now missing from the CentrePointe development: Actual development

CentrePitThe Webbs promised Lexington that CentrePointe construction was to begin in December.  Now, a month later, activity is yet to begin.

The company asserts that it is waiting for various state approvals in order to begin construction.  Apparently, some of that includes permission to begin blasting an even-deeper pit for the complex's parking garage.  (Blasting…  Sets a nice ambiance for downtown businesses like ours.)

This is an extremely poor economic and financial environment for initiating a major real
estate development project.  One has to wonder: As the financial system has crumbled faster than the Dame block was demolished, do the Webbs
really have the financial horsepower (or backing – they haven't named their "private backers") to pull off a project of this
magnitude?

One also has to wonder…  Why did they proceed with razing the block if they were (and are) awaiting basic approvals to begin construction?  Prudence would dictate waiting until approvals were in hand.

Finally, one wonders…  Who is accountable for this scar upon our city if, perchance, the unnamed Webb financers do back out?  CentrePit, indeed.

Update, 1/24:  CentrePointe is supposed to house a J.W. Marriott hotel.  This morning, this bit of sunshine from NPR, including the following:

Still, it's hard for many businesses and people who don't have the very best credit ratings to get loans.

Arne Sorenson is the chief financial officer of the hotel corporation Marriott International.

"There are clear signs of improvement, I think," he says, "not withstanding that there is an abhorrence of risk."

Sorenson
says it's still almost impossible to get funding for new hotels, even
for low-risk projects that he says make sense right now
. He says banks
just aren't lending enough money. And that hurts the economy.

At
Marriott alone, he said, "there are thousands of jobs that are not
being created that normally would be created. And that's entirely due
to the lack of credit available to fund new hotel projects."

[where: E Main St & N Limestone St, Lexington, KY 40507]

Lowell’s is underwriting WUKY

Once in a while, we get a chance to do something which does good for our community while also doing well for ourselves. 

We've found such an opportunity with public radio.  We've long admired the quality reporting and programming of National Public Radio and our local public radio stations. 

So we are pleased to announce that Lowell's is the newest underwriter for WUKY 91.3 FM, public radio at the University of Kentucky.  Our first of many underwriting announcements (kind of like an ad spot) will run at 7:09 AM on Morning Edition.  Other announcements will run on All Things Considered, Marketplace, and (a personal favorite) Car Talk.  (You might remember our post a few weeks ago about Lowell's on Car Talk.)

We are also proud to announce that Lowell's is the first underwriter of WUKY's HD Radio programming.  WUKY is the first station in Lexington to offer HD programming, and has 3 separate HD broadcasts which you can hear with an HD radio, or via webstream:

  • WUKY Main: WUKY's usual mix of news and adult rock, which can also be heard at 91.3 FM on standard radios or over an internet connection here.
  • WUKY HD-2 ("Wookie 2"): Adult rock 24/7, with a webstream here.
  • WUKY HD-3 ("Wookie 3"): All news all the time, including many NPR and BBC programs not formerly available in Lexington: Talk of the Nation, Day to Day, Diane Rehm, and other news, with a webstream here.  (As a news junkie, I'm often camped out at the WUKY 3 webstream…)

We are proud to sponsor listener-supported public radio.  Please listen with us!

Too much confidence

Driving back from Louisville to Lexington in the rotten weather earlier today, I saw 15 vehicles which had spun off of the road.  A couple of them had flipped over.  11 of the 15 were trucks or SUV's (and both of the flips were).

Too much confidence is a bad thing.  Be careful out there, no matter what you drive.

[where: i-64, Frankfort, KY 40601]