Arnold|News|
Open Houses in Arnold for March 5 and 6
Four homes in Arnold will host open houses this weekend.

I'm a native Chicagoan and grew up in every part of the city: attended grade and high school in Hyde Park (south side of Chicago), in my adult years I worked Downtown in the Loop and lived in the Lakeview area (north side), and spent a lot of my free time in the Bucktown area (west side) before Bucktown was gentrified.
BTW - The east side of Chicago is called Lake Michigan.
Besides my hometown I've lived in Wisconsin and Kentucky. I attended college in those states. I've worked in California.
Throughout those experiences, I've learned that the little things are what makes people . . . people. And I've learned that the little things can separate people.
I've always tried to listen, watch people's reactions, and understand the culture of an area. There are marked differences between Chicago and San Francisco. There are nuanced cultural differences between Northside Chicagoans and Southside Chicagoans. The easy differences are the lives of the rich and the poor . . . and sometimes I wonder who has the better life.
Being able to live in those areas is easy. Being accepted and understood in those worlds takes time.
As a writer, I hope can provide an insight to those differences.
If you see me around Arnold or the St. Louis area, please introduce yourself.
The day is a little easier when there's a friendly face.
Four homes in Arnold will host open houses this weekend.

The Arnold Police Department provided the following information for the weeks ending Feb. 26 and Feb. 19.
Despite tornado warning sirens at 11 p.m. on Sunday, Arnold received little damage. About 3,600 Jefferson County homes lost power overnight but only about 50 homes were without power by 6 p.m on Monday.
City Administrator Matt Unrein will send important, but not urgent, messages to residents with social media accounts.
The city council approved modifications, needed for the public safety, to the sump pump ordinance. Violators could be fined $1,000 per day.
A $22,000 guardrail would protect subdivision homeowners from errant drivers traveling into their neighborhood.
The City of Arnold needs residents' suggestions about the city's future.
City Council members voted to oppose a state proposal eliminating the state income tax and replacing it with a higher sales tax. Member said the plan would boost sales in neighboring states and cause a fall in cities such as Arnold and St. Louis.
The city's minority population had the greatest growth. The number of Asians in Arnold increased 146 percent during the last 10 years. The number of blacks increased nearly 97 percent. The Caucasian population increased 2.5 percent.
The following information was provided by the Jefferson County Sheriff's Department.
Canceling the concert was the least costly decision, said Greg Hall, Arnold's director of administration
Every Thursday, ArnoldPatch will provide a listing of open houses, up to 10, in the Arnold area.
The singer canceled his Feb. 19 performance after he was injured in a fal.
Community Development Director Mary Holden is asking business owners and the Arnold Chamber of Commerce to attend and discuss possible changes at the next Planning and Zoning committee meeting in March.
Two trivia night events — one to fight cancer, another to benefit a church — to help Arnold residents.