[Durham INC] Meeting Tuesday! Big Turnout Needed!
Pat Carstensen
pats1717 at hotmail.com
Mon May 23 21:41:35 EDT 2011
Draft April Minutes:
April
Delegate Meeting
First Presbyterian Church
INC April 25, 2011
Attending the meeting were:
Neighborhoods
Burch Avenue – Jennifer Skahen
Cross Counties – Pat Carstensen
Duke Park – Ian Kipp, Bill
Anderson
Golden Belt Neighborhood
Association – John Martin, DeDreana Freeman
Long Meadow – Jennifer Grady
Northgate Park – Mike Shiflett
Old Farm – David Harris
Old North Durham – Peter Katz
Old West Durham – Eric Heidt
Parkwood – Mike Brooks
TLNA – Susan Sewell
Watts Hospital Hillandale – Tom
Miller, Mike Woodard
Woodcroft – Scott Carter
Visitors
Jim Wise – News and Observer
Lynwood D. Best – City of
Durham, NIS
Rukea Womack – City of Durham,
Parks and Recreation
Tom Miller called the meeting to order, and members
introduced themselves. There was a
general round of thanks to DeDreana for the excellent transportation program
last month. Also please get your
dues in.
Lynwood Best announced that the next landlord training
workshop is May 18, 8:30 to 5, at the Solid Waste Management Auditorium. The cost is $5, and the workshop would
be useful for anyone who deals with rental housing. The brochure is at www.DurhamNC.gov/Departments/NIS/pdf/landlord_training_brochure.pdf.
Rukea Womack announced four events from Parks and Recreation: Eath Day (May 1, with stuff for kids,
as well as shredding and e-recycling), Bimbe (May 14, headliners drawing 12,000
folks downtown), 3rd Friday Concert Series, and Warehouse Blues
2011. More info at www.dprplaymore.org.
The March minutes should have shown Mike Shiflett being present. David Harris moved to approve minutes
with that correction, Ian Kipp seconded and minutes were approved.
David Harris moved to approve a resolution on Randy Pickle; see Appendix
A. Susan Sewell seconded and the
motion passed.
Randy Pickle had a seat on the
Captial Improvement Projects Panel; he was nominated for this seat by
INC. This committee meets once a month, starting at 8AM, and provides
citizen oversight on projects being done as part of Capital Improvement
Plan. INC doesn't have a
designated seat so we aren't guaranteed that our nominee would be appointed,
but delegates were asked to help find good people to serve on this panel. We will put something on the list-serve
about it. Susan Sewell moved and
David Harris seconded a motion to have the Executive Committee search for and
nominate a candidate; this passed.
There were a lot of things reported on the legislature:
· Billboards – The proposed bill would
allow more billboards, more cutting of vegetation, more digital billboards and
no local control over any of this.
Members of the legislative committee hearing the bill expressed concerns,
based on what they are hearing from citizens. A poll shows 4:1 public opinion against billboards and
stronger opinions on specific things in the proposed bill. They are negotiating on a new version,
but we don’t expect the “compromise” will be something we can live with. Check www.savetheview.org
for current information. The good
news is how much this bill has helped us link up with neighborhood groups
across the state.
·
Neighborhood Protection Overlay – The
deadline for new legislation to be introduced is past, so we will work on
building support locally to introduce legislation next year.
·
Homeowner Association Manager Licensing – A bill, stronger than the one last year and bundled with some other
ideas, has been introduced. Members of INC that are HOAs should take
a look at the bill since some of the new requirements could be
onerous to small and voluntary boards (it's good to have due process, but
some angry owners go way beyond due patience).
·
Theft of Copper and Other Metals – We looked at the question 2 years ago but never acted on a
resolution then. S616, introduced by Senator Atwater, would at least set
up a legislative committee to look at this issue. Bring information about damage that theft of metals is doing
in your neighborhood to the May meeting when we will vote on the resolution in
Appendix B.
·
Solar Panels – Carrboro wants to
prohibit HOAs from banning up solar panels, which seems to be against our
general philosophy of letting neighborhoods do what they think best.
·
Resetting Priorities on Transportation Projects – This could affect the East End Connector. It was referred to
the Transportation Committee.
·
Passenger Rail – Making accepting
federal money for high-speed rail harder would affect light rail in the
Triangle. This was referred to the Transportation Committee.
We discussed a number
of transportation issues:
·
Alston Avenue widening –
It’s not clear at this point what INC can or should do to help the neighborhood
on this.
·
Highway 54 study – They are trying to
plan for huge increases in traffic in what is already a failing
intersection. DOT worries a lot
more about cars stopped on the off-ramp on I-40 than how unpleasant it gets for
the neighborhood. The
neighborhoods in the area will continue to monitor the issue.
·
Traffic Calming – More enforcement seems
to be making a difference in Old North Durham. Burch Avenue has had some success with recording license
numbers of illegally parking cars in the neighborhood and telling the school who
is causing a problem. East Durham
is getting fatter streets while other parts of town are getting road
diets. We will have someone come
talk about PACE car program in June.
Because of the economy, we are getting a lot more for our money in
capital projects right now. David
Harris moved that we ask city council to fund the existing backlog of traffic
calming requests this year; Jennifer Skahen seconded
and after some discussion of whether to vote or wait until May, the motion
carried.
On the Golden Belt Resolution,
the re-zoning and street closing are apparently on hold. A charette planning the area is
scheduled for late May. The
neighborhood decided to support a minor special use permit for the new building
behind the church.
Looking at the city and county
budget hearings, one of our older resolutions was against unreasonable fees –
planning is supposed to be self-funding so developers sometimes feel like they
“deserve a yes” because of how much they have paid in fees and good ideas such
as down-zonings get discouraged.
Tom will make these comments in the budget hearings.
There were a number of
neighborhood reports.
·
Burch Avenue became a
National Historic District in September 2012, and folks are starting to take
advantage of the tax credits. Watts
Hospital-Hillandale has developed some information they can share.
·
Old West Durham – The
neighborhood will support the new apartment complex. The neighborhoods around Ninth Street have presented their
comments on the draft rules, and mostly have questions on how to preserve plans
once they are approved.
·
Old Farm – West Point
Park is still waiting to hear what state wants to do with Black Ridge. Since the only copy of the Development
Plan for the site has gone missing, some kind of re-zoning will have to happen.
·
Goldenbelt – Come to the
house tour on May 1 and see the wonderful things happening to
formerly-boarded-up houses.
·
Duke Park – Come to the
house tour on May 7, which starts at the historic bath house. The
neighborhood also brought up the concern that the city's coffers are filled by
taxes paid by affluent neighborhoods, but the distribution is overly lopsided
toward lower-income neighborhoods.
As an example, the recent opening of the 2800 sq ft community center in
Walltown cost $9 million, while Duke Park has begged for decades for attention
to its historic bath house of the same size. The city estimates the conversion to a community center
would cost one tenth the Walltown expenditure, yet has offered just $150k
towards that effort. Such
"Robin Hood funding" may eventually result in the loss of an Historic
landmark, the continued decline of restrooms that the City declared
"unacceptable" over 12 years ago, and a missed opportunity of
creating a community center at a fraction of the cost. Bill Anderson said that such examples
must be examined in detail to fully understand the general concern. Chairman Tom Miller asked that it be
revisited in detail at next month's meeting, so that INC can develop a
position.
·
Old North Durham – The
neighborhood has been trying to take responsible positions on Old North Durham
Park and on the Duke Diet and Fitness Center, and generally finding out how
messy being responsible can be. (Short version of a long conversation).
The meeting adjourned.
Appendix A: Resolution on Randy Pickle
WHEREAS, Randall W. Pickle was a
devoted friend and neighbor to the people of his own neighborhood, Forest
Hills, and to the ordinary citizens of Durham wherever they might reside; and
WHEREAS, Randy Pickle brought
energy compassion, commitment and fun to Forest Hills as its advocate,
representative and spokesman; and
WHEREAS, he was twice proclaimed
a “Neighborhood Hero” by the InterNeighborhood Council of Durham upon the
nomination of his neighbors in Forest Hills; and
WHEREAS, he was active the in
business and affairs of the InterNeighborhood Council of Durham as his
neighborhood’s delegate and as an officer; and
WHEREAS, his contributions
extended from parks and recreation to transportation issues, budgetary matters,
public safety, communications, environmental protection, and zoning; and
WHEREAS, he embraced every such
issue with passion and authority, but without rancor or ill will; and
WHEREAS, Randy departed this
life suddenly on April 15, 2011 without warning and without reason for regret:
NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED by
the delegates of the InterNeighborhood Council of Durham duly assembled that
the InterNeighborhood Council by these presents honors the life and service of
Randy Pickle, gentleman, scholar, entrepreneur, activist, devoted husband,
neighbor, and friend.
Appendix B: Resolution on Theft of Copper and Other
Metals
Whereas, the current laws
respecting the theft of copper, including the latest revisions passed by the
North Carolina General Assembly, have not been successful in stemming the tide
of copper theft; and
Whereas, though the economic
downturn has decreased the price of copper, the magnitude of the problem is
only increasing, and the injury done to the community is substantial; and
Whereas, the State of North
Carolina and the several counties and municipalities are facing an extreme
budget shortfall, and that such a shortfall is not helped by the fact that
metal recyclers do not report metal sales to the taxing authority, and this
results in a tremendous amount of untaxed economic activity.
NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS HEREBY
RESOLVED that the InterNeighborhood Council of Durham thanks Senator Atwater
for introducing S616, asks the legislature to pass the bill to set up a study
committee, and asks the committee to look into alternatives which cause all
metal transactions to be reported to the Revenue Office, linked with a valid
tax id number of the metal seller, for all transactions above $10.00.
From: tom-miller1 at nc.rr.com
To: inc-list at durhaminc.org
Date: Sun, 22 May 2011 23:53:45 -0400
Subject: [Durham INC] Meeting Tuesday! Big Turnout Needed!
Dear Neighbors: Rick Hester, Housing Code Administrator for the City of Durham, and Constance Stancil, the city’s Director of Neighborhood Improvement Services, will be with us Tuesday night to talk about code enforcement issues. Let’s give them a big INC welcome with a big turnout! Make sure that your neighborhood has at least one delegate present, but of course, everyone is welcome. Thanks, Tom Miller
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