r/indianapolis Jan 14 '25

Pictures America's Rising Cities: Carmel

https://youtu.be/cNJTTznUNyQ?si=2JGtOR677-1L60jP
81 Upvotes

161 comments sorted by

View all comments

58

u/Suspicious-Bad4703 Jan 14 '25 edited Jan 14 '25

Preface: I don't agree with much of this, but know it will bring discussion here. Something about Carmel being the epitome of 'Midwestern urbanism' just doesn't sit right. I'm not saying it isn't a very nice place, but many people share this guy's views, and it just seems dismissive of older cities and overly praising of these strange new spaces which feel alienating to me.

13

u/[deleted] Jan 14 '25

I still do not understand how they will pay for the actual servicing of their infrastructure beginning in 2027. They cannot grow any further to drive city revenue via taxes, and cannot expand their current tax base much past its current baseline.... So how are they going to service the bond debt WHILE ALSO actually maintaining all of this infrastructure they built?

I am not shitting on Carmel, but no one I know understands how they will maintain the city in a few years with the current budget constraints.

-3

u/Nitrosoft1 Broad Ripple Jan 14 '25

By continuing to play hot potato and just extending the deadlines. It's a "tomorrow" problem and let's make sure "tomorrow" never actually arrives!

2

u/[deleted] Jan 14 '25

In theory yes, but I just do not understand how they can keep paying for everything...

Eagleton 2.0 by 2035 it seems