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Paul E. Osborne

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Paul Edward Osborne


Mayor of Campbellsville
Taylor County, Kentucky
In office
January 1, 1999 – December 31, 2002
Preceded by Robert L. Miller
Succeeded by Brenda Allen

Born July 23, 1939
Campbellsville, Kentucky
Residence Campbellsville, Kentucky
Occupation Businessman
Religion Southern Baptist

Paul Edward Osborne (born July 23, 1939) is a retired real estate broker who served a four-year term as the mayor of Campbellsville in Taylor County in central Kentucky from 1999 to 2002.

Osborne unseated the 33-year-incumbent Republican Robert L. Miller in the election held on November 2, 1998. Municipal offices in Campbellsville are elected on a nonpartisan basis.[1] At the time of Osborne's election, the Fruit of the Loom plant, the largest employer in Taylor County, was closing its operations after forty-six years. Amazon.com later moved into Campbellsville to fill part of the large void in employment there.[2][3]

Osborne noted that Fruit of the Loom had signaled a decade before its closing that it might eventually move to Latin America. However, because of the long-term stable employment in Taylor County, local officials were caught off-guard. Not long after the underwear plant ceased operations, the Indiana-based Batesville Casket Company also closed its Campbellsville operations. Amid the economic readjustment, Campbellsville had to re-tool its industrial recruitment efforts. In October 1998, a month before Osborne's election as mayor, the city and county governments formed the Team Taylor County Industrial Development Authority, usually known as Team Taylor County, and established a strategy to recruit manufacturing, service, and distribution businesses to Campbellsville.[3]

The Taylor County assets at the time included (1) location and accessibility to domestic and Canadian markets, (2) an abundant work force, (3) sound infrastructure, (4) the low cost of conducting business, (5) state financial incentives for business growth, and (6) available education and training opportunities through Campbellsville University, which among other studies offers a Master of Business Administration program. Beginning with Amazon.com in 1999, ten other companies soon located or relocated to Taylor County.[3]

Osborne did not seek a second term in 2002 and was succeeded by the city's first female mayor, Brenda Allen. He is co-owner of Osborne-Humphress Real Estate.[4]

Osborne is one of the forty trustees of Campbellsville University. He came to Campbellsville as a professor of mathematics at CU, then Campbellsville College.[5] [6]Cite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag

After leaving the mayor's office, Osborne was later elected to the 12-member Campbellsville City Council.[7] He is no longer a council member.[8]

Over an extended period of time, Osborne wrote essays of his lifetime memories primarily for the benefit of his grandchildren. In 2016, the expanded collection of essays was released as a book, A Mayors Diary, which examines both personal and business matters. Osborne recalls that when he took office as mayor, Taylor County had a 26 percent unemployment rate: "People will be surprised about what happened once I took office. I found some issues and I addressed them." Osborne describes his book as "factual" and free of negativity."[9]

References

  1. Rebecca Cassell (February 12, 2011). Community icon dies at age 83: Robert L. Miller was mayor of Campbellsville for 33 years. Central Kentucky News-Journal. Retrieved on February 21, 2011.
  2. Wayne Tompkins (June 18, 2005). Fruit of the Loom's closing tore at fabric of life in Campbellsville. Louisville Courier-Journal. Retrieved on February 24, 2011.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Faith Weekly (Summer 2002). Bridges: Team Work Makes the Dream Work: After Factories Close, Leaders Unite to Turn Economy Around. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Retrieved on February 26, 2011.
  4. Campbellsville Real Estate: Osborne-Humphress Realty Company. osborne-humphress.com. Retrieved on February 24, 2011.
  5. CU Dedicates School of Education. campbellsville.edu (September 30, 2009). Retrieved on February 26, 2011.
  6. Board of Trustees - Campbellsville University, 4, 2021}}
  7. Calen McKinney (August 18, 2014). General election ballot positions set. Central Kentucky News-Journal. Retrieved on August 22, 2014.
  8. City Council | City of Campbellsville, accessed June 14, 2021}}
  9. Paul E. Osborne (info-about.in), accessed June 14, 2021}}