I find it so funny that when i was in high school at Abbeville everybody gave then Gov. Edwards such a hard time about building too many hospitals in Lafayette with illegal contracts and the overabundance of hospitals ended up being responsible for a huge economic boom in the area after the oil business slacked off.
Yeah, I remember when a moratorium was placed on new hospital construction back then. If I recall, it targeted a massive planned development called Lafayette Centre, which included a hospital, and right about where the new Lourdes medical center is currently being built. There's some irony for you. Joseph Canizaro was the developer if memory serves.
Anyway, I think its remarkable how well Lafayette has done and continues to do when faced with the recent downturn in the oil industry. Even when it was thriving only a couple of years ago, it was surpassed locally by the medical industry in terms of direct employment numbers. I read somewhere that Lafayette's medical employment was nearly double that of Shreveport! Something to the tune of 17,000 here vs 8 or 9 grand up I-49.
now if the city could just bulldoze johnson St and its two thousand billboards, Lafayette might actually be more pleasing to the eye. God that street has been out of control for years
Well, there's a plan.
http://www.improvejohnston.org/current_plan.html
really that is fantastic. Remember the 70's and the 80's when billboards and mass commercialism was the thing in Lafayette. I thought Johnson street was going to continue all the way to Abbeville.
Just read the plan and its good except for the part about keeping the existing billboards. It will take years to get rid of that clutter. The ordinance should require all businesses to take them down now.
If you look at one of the pages on the site, it morphs the current billboards with monument style signage. Nice to visualize Johnston St. that way with the buried utilities.
Back on subject, I think the arrival of Pixel Magic to the LITE Center is huge! And I dare say that the LUS Fiber initiative will, and already has in many respects, foster growth in the high-tech sector where super-computing and massive bandwidth is a must. We are ahead in that game folks! Other cities have been watching if Lafayette, LA can pull this off.
We have.
So in addition to the oil and medical industries thriving here, we officially have a third one that I predict will grow beyond what we could have envisioned ten years ago.
Oh yeah, I can't resist saying:
Enter the GEEK!
To a neighborhood near you.![]()
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