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The Chapel Hill Affordable Housing Technical Assistance Group concluded its meetings on Tuesday May 17th by finalizing a draft of a 1-page Affordable Housing Strategy (below). The one-pager has been emailed out to all those who attended a focus group and feedback sought. The final Strategy will be presented to the Town Council on Monday, June 13th with participation of all Group members.
I believe this is a comprehensive strategy that, once passed by the Chapel Hill Town Council, will allow Town staff to move forward with it’s work to support and provide a broad range of affordable housing without having the need to continually seek approval of the Council.
write to the governor about this issue and please help stop the destruction of what people with developmental disabilities have had to live with .i wrote a very simple email that stated i am a 52 year old informed self-advocate and i am asking you to veto senate bill 316 and house bill 424.
Developmental disability civil rights are getting stomped on. I emplore you all to read this and act on it quickly if you all really care about people. Our rights are being taking away.
The news this week that the Orange County Board of County Commissioners has voted to charge a new tipping fee at the landfill to raise money for remediation in the Rogers Road neighborhood
- a move that seemed somewhat ham-fisted to municipal governments (see
below about that) - reminded me of a very interesting conversation I had
last month. I attended oral history performances by a UNC class that conducted interviews with civil rights activists.
Two students had worked closely with David Caldwell and Gertrude Nunn
and learned about their neighborhood's 3-decade challenge of trying to
get justice for living with the landfill that serves all of Orange
County.
One grad student who is very familiar with local politics
turned to me afterward and asked the same question that was in my mind:
our County Commissioners have to be one of the most liberal boards in
the state. How is it that the Rogers Road neighborhood has been stymied
by them repeatedly, instead of being championed by the environmental and
social justice advocates on the Board?
When the Carrboro Board of Aldermen voted on March 1 against a request by OWASA to amend the Water and Sewer Management, Planning and Boundary Agreement (WSMPBA) -- and the Chapel Hill Town Council
followed suit on April 25 -- the local water and sewer utility found itself in need of a compromise or a new strategy.
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