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My Vision

Stronger Economy

Radcliff is full of potential; potential for more jobs, more local business growth, and a future where families have long-term stability. By working with business owners, entrepreneurs, and community partners, Radcliff can become a place where businesses want to invest and where residents can build prosperous lives. When our economy is strong, our community is strong.

Supporting Families

Stronger families make a stronger Radcliff. By ensuring residents can renew IDs and licenses locally, improving transportation and safe sidewalks, and expanding wraparound services, including homelessness support and clear, accessible communication, the city can remove barriers and help every household thrive.

Safer Communities

Safety is more than policing; it’s unity, collaboration, and trust. It’s neighbors looking out for one another, resources that prevent problems before they start, and leadership that listens to every voice. Strengthening community partnerships, expanding prevention initiatives, and ensuring every neighborhood feels protected and valued are key to building a safer Radcliff.

The How?

Radcliff can move forward by using every available tool wisely, including Kentucky’s Public-Private Partnership, or P3, legislation. P3s allow local governments to work with private businesses, nonprofits, educational institutions, and community partners to support public projects without placing the full burden on taxpayers. Used responsibly, this approach can help Radcliff stretch taxpayer dollars further while improving infrastructure, expanding workforce development opportunities, supporting small businesses, and bringing more investment into our community. The how also includes creating a grant writing committee to actively seek state, federal, nonprofit, and private funding so we are not leaving money on the table. It means bringing community leaders, business owners, churches, nonprofits, educators, Fort Knox partners, and residents together for regular roundtable discussions so resources are not wasted and efforts are not duplicated. It means building safer, more connected neighborhoods by initiating block parties and community events throughout Radcliff, not just in the center of the city or at a park, so every neighborhood feels seen and supported. And it means working with the new mayor and city council to establish consistent town hall meetings where residents can ask questions, share concerns, and be part of the solutions. Radcliff’s progress should be planned, coordinated, transparent, and focused on making taxpayer dollars work harder for the people who call this city home.

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