Kenny Book has been a city commissioner for Winchester for more than half of his adult life, and after two years out of office, he wants to return to finish what he helped begin.
With nearly three decades of experience on the Board of Commissioners, dealing with city budgets and projects, he believes he can contribute.
“There is a lot of things that need to be done,” he said.
One of those things is finishing the Seventh Street project to get heavy truck traffic out of residential neighborhoods on the northeast side of town, including Magnolia, Elm, and Seventh streets.
“We have some money from the state to do the Seventh Street project, we just have to get it done,” he said.
The multi-million-dollar project, planned several years ago, extends Seventh Street to Ky. 627 and Veterans Memorial Parkway near Interstate 64 to avoid having heavy trucks traveling through the residential area.
The project was originally intended to avoid truck traffic on Seventh Street to Gates Precast, but Book said the project would also curtail other truck traffic. He said the state gave the city money to do the project and extended the deadline until next year.
Another priority for Book is finishing the Depot Street project by including restrooms for the Winchester-Clark County Farmers Market and other events.
He wants to restore an old railway passenger car for the restrooms to reflect the history of the railroad line and the former train depot, which was demolished in the early 1980s.
The area is rich in history. North Main Street near the railway depot was one of the locations for the 1967 comedy film “The Flim Flam Man,” and the train stop was part of President Harry S Truman’s 1948 whistle-stop tour.
Several years ago, the city restored the street’s original brick surface and later added a canopy for the farmers market.
“They have talked about putting in restrooms on Depot Street for years,” Book said. “By putting in an old passenger train car, it would save the city money.”
“I was the one to bring up putting Winchester on the west end of the canopy to help identify the old train depot,” he mentioned.
Book, 75, served 28 years on the Winchester Board of Commissioners until he lost a re-election bid a couple of years ago.
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For 41 years, he was married to Betty L. Book, who died in 2022.
He has two stepdaughters, Michelle Edge and Marie Dunn, six grandchildren, nine great-grandchildren, and another one on the way.
Book earned an associate’s degree in higher accounting and business administration from Kentucky Business College in Lexington in 1974. From 1978 until 2016, when he retired, he owned Book’s Bookkeeping and Tax Service.
According to the archives of The Winchester Sun, Book has served on several government boards and been involved in several organizations, including the Generations Center, the city commission’s public works and insurance committees, the Winchester-Clark County Parks and Recreation Board, the Clark County GIS Consortium, the Strodes Creek Conservancy, and the Kentucky Waterways Alliance.

