Archive for the ‘Raleigh City Council’ Category

Grant for Tree Inventory

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

Trees with GPS? NeighborhWoods gets a more detailed inventory?  Read on:

Raleigh Awarded Matching Grant For Street Tree Inventory Effort

On Nov. 3, the Raleigh City Council accepted a $10,000 matching grant from the North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources (NCDENR) for the second phase of the City’s Street Tree Inventory Project.

In the first phase of the project, the City of Raleigh purchased GPS units and began collecting detailed information on City-owned trees. City staff will accumulate data on the number, condition, size, species and locations of the trees. The information, once completed will include valuable data on more than 100,000 street trees, and will be entered into the City’s computer network. The $10,000 grant and its matching funds will be used to complete the data collection effort (with volunteers and interns from North Carolina State University), provide training for Tree Steward volunteers, and allow for further integration of the data into various City-maintained computer systems. (more…)

Zoning Public Hearing Set for New Year

Sunday, November 1st, 2009

PUBLIC HEARING SET TO DISCUSS CONDITIONAL USE ZONING PROCESS

On January 19, 2010, the Raleigh City Council will hold a public hearing to discuss a proposed text change to the City ‘s conditional use zoning process. At Wednesday ‘s Council meeting, the City ‘s planning staff was directed to review the 25-year history of the process and draft a text change.

The proposed text change will require that the neighborhood meeting for rezoning petitions take place prior to an applicant ‘s submittal of the petition and include other benchmarked dates regarding submittal of conditions. The January 19 meeting will be held at 6:30 p.m. in the Council Chamber.

DDNA Meeting Notes October 2009

Saturday, October 17th, 2009

Over 30 people attended the monthly meeting of the District D Neighborhood Alliance (DDNA) on the morning of October 17, 2009. After introductions, we talked about who we would like to have as special guests for future meetings. Upcoming guests include Captain Perry, Tom Stafford, and Kristen Rosselli. The group reviewed some upcoming items for City Council, had introductions from the Downtown Living Advocates, Renaissance Park neighborhood, and member announcements.

The November meeting for DDNA will be held at Renaissance Park. Elizabeth Byrd to coordinate pot luck breakfast. (more…)

2030 Plan Amended and Adopted

Friday, October 16th, 2009

We reported earlier when the 2030 Comprehensive Plan was approved by City Council. Last week, the plan was amended and adopted.

COUNCIL AMENDS AND ADOPTS THE 2030 COMPREHENSIVE PLAN

The Raleigh City Council on Wednesday [October 7, 2009] adopted the 2030 Comprehensive Plan after agreeing to make three minor amendments to the document.

The first amendment changes the Wilmont/Vann/Lundy Drive area from moderate density to low density residential on the future land use map. The Council also approved an amendment to the Cameron Village area that will allow retail on both sides of Oberlin Road between Clark Street and Everette Street. The amendment requires a lower intensity of use on the west side of Oberlin Road. Finally, the Council approved minor edits to the text of the Parks, Recreation and Open Space Element.

The Council considered amending the designation of a parcel of land located at Women’s Club Drive and Glenwood Avenue that is designated Neighborhood Mixed-Use. However, the Council made no changes.

Source: http://bit.ly/1cxTJy

The Flyer That Got Me Angry

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

This is an opinion piece about the recent city council race and does not necessarily reflect the views of all the members of the Lineberry Alliance. The views expressed in this article are solely those of the author.

It’s one week past the local Raleigh City Council elections in Wake County and the race in District D was hotly contested. Thomas Crowder, incumbent, and challenger Ted Van Dyk put their names in the ring for two years of public service on city council. I was happy with the way things were going in the race until I got a flyer in the mail that called out the District D Neighborhood Alliance (DDNA) and pretty much discounted months of volunteer work that I, and many others, personally committed. This is where Van Dyk made his mistake in the race (besides entering) and undermined District D neighborhoods. I quickly made a parody of the flyer and posted it to Facebook.

Ted Van Dyk campaign flyer

Ted Van Dyk campaign flyer

I was pretty upset about the obvious fabrications and the negative tone from the “positive voice” promised in the mailing. I wasn’t the only one who thought about mocking the flyer as you’ll see in the post-election poke: (more…)

Renaissance Park 2009 Candidates Forum

Monday, September 28th, 2009

At last evenings candidates forum, September 27, 2009, hosted by Renaissance Park in their cozy club house, almost 50 citizens attended to learn more about Raleigh City Council District D and At-Large candidates for the upcoming election on October 6, 2009. Each District D candidate gave a brief introduction to themselves and why they are running for City Council. Moderator Moe Johnson then presented each candidate with five questions. At-Large councilors were then introduced and provided their platform. Questions from those in attendance followed.

Candidates in attendance

At-Large

District D

Questions and answers

Disclaimer, the following is my best effort attempt to capture the questions and answers from the candidates. I invite anyone in attendance or the candidates themselves to post any updates or corrections by contacting me or in the comments. The questions (after the first five) are paraphrased to get right to the topic.

Opening remarks from Renaissance Park resident and moderator, Moe Johnson. Renaissance Park is a new neighborhood, which means they are new at community activism. There is a desire to get involved in city government and this is one of the first projects to start that involvement for their community. (more…)

Do endorsements matter?

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

This is an opinion piece on the candidates running for the District D seat, Raleigh City Council, and does not necessarily reflect the views of all the members of the Lineberry Alliance. The views expressed in this article are solely those of the author.

After settling in yesterday from a long day in the office, I skirted through some rain drops to get the mail. In it, a first batch of political mailers for the election on October 6, 2009. One from each candidate running in District D. Incumbent Thomas Crowder and challenger Ted Van Dyk. I publicly support Crowder for the District D seat and lately, have been scratching my head trying to understand why Van Dyk is challenging Crowder’s City Council seat. A review of the two cards today lead me to think about how the candidates are positioning themselves.

On the front of Crowder’s mailer is a picture from his campaign kickoff. A few folks I noticed, Mayor Charles Meeker, At-Large Councilor Stephenson, former Raleigh City Councilor Anne Franklin, Linda (Planning Commission member) and Rufus Edmisten (former NC Secretary of State), and many more. On the left, a list of supporters. Real people who work with and know Thomas. Flipping the mailer over, testimony from neighborhood leaders around District D. I recognize the names (besides mine) because I work with these leaders on neighborhood matters. I think this association is important and I’ll touch on it later.

“A politicians brand is made up of the actions they take and the people they surround themselves with.”

(more…)

UPHA 2009 Candidates Forum Q&A

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

At last evenings candidates forum, September 14, 2009, hosted by University Park Homeowners Associations (UPHA), over 50 citizens attended to learn more about Raleigh City Council At-Large, District D, and Mayoral candidates for the upcoming election on October 6, 2009.  Each candidate gave a brief introduction to themselves and why they are running for City Council.  Moderator Mike Reider then presented each candidate with questions from the audience.   Don’t forget to see the additional resources at the end (or share your own tools to help others in the comments).

Candidates in attendance

At-Large

District D

Mayor

Questions and answers

Disclaimer, the following is my best effort attempt to capture the questions and answers from the candidates.  I invite anyone in attendance or the candidates themselves to post any updates or corrections by contacting me or in the comments.  The questions are paraphrased to get right to the topic.

Q: Transportation: What are the first steps needed to bring light rail and bus services to Raleigh (to catch up to with Charlotte)?
A: Meeker

  1. Approve the first phase plan for additional bus services (75 new buses)
  2. Get the ½ cent sales tax passed (a county decision) which will probably occur this time next year

Q: Financing: How does Raleigh raise funding for the Little River reservoir project?
A: Enloe
Bring economic develop to downtown and all of Raleigh; it’s a shame that we have minor league baseball in Durham and Zebulon [and not Raleigh].  What about pursuing an NBA franchise for downtown Raleigh?  Sports are businesses.  General increase in revenues in downtown Raleigh can help raise the needed funds.

Q: Financing: How do we improve roads, pay down debt, save money, and lower taxes at the same time?
A: Hudson
Focus on looking through goals to cut areas in public works, i.e. look for things like no idol policies to cut fuel costs.  Look for cheaper vehicles (extend the use of vehicles where we can).  Not just use bonds to fund parks, look for state/federal money to use a mixture of funds.

Q: Entrepreneurship:  How will your entrepreneurial experience serve Raleigh?
A: Kunz
Had a privileged upbringing.  Had a dream, to start his own business.  There is risk involved.  The  entrepreneur spirit is not dead, but it’s not being cultivated.  One objective is to look more in-depth at the budget.

(more…)

2030 Plan Approved, N&O Covers Change Flurry

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

Our plan, our city, and our future

On September 8, 2009, the City of Raleigh website reported City Council Conceptually Approves Comprehensive Plan. I want to first start by commending Mayor Meeker and City Council for approving the plan. Next, a round of applause to the city staff, particularly Mitch Silver and Ken Bowers from the Planning Department, for their dedication and numerous hours put into this project. I was extremely impressed with the level of engagement from the District D Neighborhood Alliance (DDNA) and the expertise, patience, and perseverance they provided during the entire 10-month process.

2030 plan approved

City Council approved the 2030 Comprehensive Plan

However, I was not impressed with recent News & Observer coverage of the 2030 plan which belittled the free consulting work that DDNA provided over the past 10-months to City Council and the citizens of Raleigh. (Reference: Council adopts new vision for growth, Late tweaks add conflict to city plan)

These articles fail to mention that the DDNA group was following the process made by the planning department and city council. We presented our recommendations at the public hearing on August 13, 2009. Then we finalized those changes at our August meeting and submitted them to Councilor Crowder per the process the Mayor prescribed at the conclusion of the public hearing.

Unlike the N&O, I’ve been providing updates for DDNA on our participation with the 2030 Comprehensive Plan. This started in December 2008 when DDNA started to organize into citizen lead focus groups to review the plan. This was shortly after the plan was being rolled out and numerous public sessions were in the works. We started setting dates to meet, taking advantage of the many public sessions. We set milestones for the short time frame we had to review the plan during the holiday season. (more…)

City council candidates forums

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Are you ready to cast your ballot on Tuesday October 6, 2009? Wait, there’s an election? Yes, there is. Political signs are popping up around the district and the city. Municipal elections for Raleigh City Council and the Wake County Board of Education, seats that probably effect your everyday life the most at the local government scene, will be up for grabs. For City Council, you get a chance to vote on four seats: Mayor, District D, and two at-large seats.

Voter information

Wake County Board of Elections – www.wakegov.com/elections/. Note: September 11, 2009 is the last day to register or update your registration for this years election.

Candidates forums

There are several candidates forums being held in September. This is a great chance for you to get to know the candidates better and understand where they stand on certain issues.

Raleigh City Council Candidate Forum
Thursday, September 10, 2009
6:30 – 8:30 p.m., doors open at 6:15 p.m.
Temple Beth Or, 5315 Creedmoor Roadd, Raleigh
Sponsored by: WakeUP Wake County &
League of Women Voters of Wake County

UPHA Candidate’s Forum
Monday, September 14, 2009
Forum starts at 7:00 p.m.
Brooks Ave Church of Christ
(corner of Brooks Ave and Rosedale)
District D, At-Large, and Mayoral candidates will be in attendance