Bridget Hayes Former Brookville Town Council Ward 2

Bridget Hayes Former Brookville Town Council Ward 2 Bridget is a leader. She values service to her community and she will tell it like it is. Council member, Ward 2

08/20/2025
07/28/2025

Let’s start with a little tough love, your town isn’t special. Not when it comes to its problems.

Now before you start drafting an angry email, hear me out. Every place has its unique charms, its history, its character, its people. That’s worth celebrating. But the struggles you’re facing? Not unique. Not even close.

Vacant properties? Check. Frustrated residents? Yep. Business owners demanding more parking as a cure-all? Join the club. These are the greatest hits of struggling communities everywhere.

And honestly, that’s good news.

Because when problems are common, so are the solutions. You don’t need to reinvent the wheel.

Too many towns chase the illusion of uniqueness. They commission hyper-tailored reports, expecting silver bullets. They pay extra to hear their own problems dressed up in fresh fonts. But if your downtown is empty, your storefronts are crumbling, and your residents are disengaged… well, the solutions aren’t elusive. They’re just unglamorous.

It’s like fitness. Most of us don’t need a celebrity trainer or a custom macro plan. We need to move more, eat better, and sleep. Same goes for civic health. You don’t need a one-of-a-kind civic transformation blueprint. You need to do the basics really well.

And what are those basics?
• Increase local ownership. More people living, working, and investing in your place because they care about it.
• Improve appearances. Make your town look like someone gives a damn, because that signals to others that they should, too.
• Create social opportunities. Build the kinds of spaces and experiences that bring people together.

That’s your core routine. Like push-ups and salads for your city. You can do fancier things once the basics are in place, but not before.

Now, if your town truly is the civic equivalent of Serena Williams, by all means, go for the custom playbook. But if it’s more like the rest of us, flawed, hopeful, trying—just start with what already works.

This isn’t about settling. It’s about focusing. It’s about progress over posturing. And it’s about putting limited time, energy, and money into things that move the needle.

You don’t need to be special. You need to get to work.

07/24/2025

Top 10 in the nation. Top of mind for business. Indiana.

Think about it… take that risk and start a small business in Brookville. BE BOLD IN BROOKVILLE!
07/23/2025

Think about it… take that risk and start a small business in Brookville. BE BOLD IN BROOKVILLE!

Why most employees will never get rich…

74% of the world’s richest people are entrepreneurs.

12% are full-time investors.

8% made it through sports.

4% through entertainment or art.

And a tiny fraction made it as employees—but even they became rich through equity, not salary.

The truth?
If you want wealth, you must move from earning a paycheck to owning assets.
Employees work for money.
Entrepreneurs and investors make money work for them.

🔥 The path to freedom isn't just about working harder… it's about thinking different.

It is so exciting to see the progress on the Brookville Sports Plex. The fence poles are in!
07/22/2025

It is so exciting to see the progress on the Brookville Sports Plex. The fence poles are in!

07/22/2025

I was glad the council followed their policies about applying for grants and proud to protect the town in a contract change.

Standing alone while doing the right thing doesn’t scare me; keeping quiet does.

07/22/2025

I’ve mostly stopped posting about parking. I figured I’d beaten that dead horse back to life, then to death again. I assumed anyone following me had heard enough about publicly subsidized car storage.

But, I was wrong. Again.

Recently, I shared a meme about parking and by the following day the comments section had turned into the Thunderdome. So let me say this as clearly as I can, parking isn’t the problem.

Actually. parking is the problem. Just not the one you think it is.

Parking is not what’s holding your downtown back. In fact, it’s a distraction from what really is, your lack of an attraction. That’s right. You don’t have a parking problem, you have an attraction problem.

Here’s the proof-
•Cities that add parking never see a revitalization boom.
•After new parking goes in, another excuse pops up, and more parking is suddenly “needed.”
•Events with big crowds? People always find a way, walk, bike, Uber, shuttle, whatever. They show up because there’s something worth showing up for.

And great businesses? They never complain about parking, because they’re a draw. They have what people want, goods, services, atmosphere. No one says, “I was going to eat at that incredible new restaurant, but the walk from my car was inconvenient.”

Need an analogy? I’ve got analogies
•Fast and Furious 9 would still have flopped even if the theater had more seats.
•The Pittsburgh Pirates won’t win more games if they add new rows.
• TGI Friday’s could add a hundred more tables, but the zesty onions popper nachos still won’t be any good.

Adding capacity doesn’t fix a bad product. It just gives you more empty space to manage.

The truth is, people are drawn to places that draw them. No one plans a trip to visit a parking lot. People go places to experience beauty, connection, culture, fun. And those things, those attractions, get sacrificed every time we tear down a building to make room for cars.

You want a thriving downtown? Focus on being a draw:
• Raise standards for building owners.
• Enforce codes.
• Beautify your streets.
• Create great public spaces.
• Make room for pedestrians, not just their vehicles.
• Invest in experiences, not asphalt.

And for the love of Jane Jacobs, stop listening to bad business and building owners complain about parking. You know, the ones who don’t invest in their space, don’t have a marketing budget, don’t have a business plan and also park in front of their shop.

A successful city, like a successful business, doesn’t complain about access, it builds something worth accessing.

So rest your fingers, brave keyboard warrior. Step away from the antique doll shop owner with a theory. Stop chasing more spaces and start creating places.

Because the great cities? The ones everyone flocks to? They don’t have parking problems. They have people problems, too many of them. Because they got the formula right:

Pretty streets + high standards + inviting spaces = no one cares where they parked.

Havin Fun at the Franklin County 4-H Fair!!!
07/17/2025

Havin Fun at the Franklin County 4-H Fair!!!

I will post where Brookville stood at the end of 2024.
07/16/2025

I will post where Brookville stood at the end of 2024.

Fiscal year 2025 has closed and the State of Indiana reports approximately $2.5 billion in state reserves, State Comptroller Elise Nieshalla announced Tuesday.

Indiana’s year-end fiscal report says the reserves include:

💰 $676 million General Fund.
💵 $41 million Medicaid Contingency and Reserve.
💳 $706 million Tuition Reserve.
💸 $1.1 billion Rainy Day Fund.

🔗 Full Story: https://www.wishtv.com/news/politics/indiana-fiscal-year-2025-reserves/?utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook_WISH-TV

07/08/2025

Another meeting, more vile comments (aka “baiting) directed towards me and a detection of a little smile for trying to bring me down. Evil will never overcome good. Leadership seems to be evading some people who need it. Jealousy abounds.

Address

Brookville, IN
47012

Telephone

+13149172060

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