August 2011

Carol Woods Mayoral Candidates' Forum

Date: 

Tuesday, October 25, 2011 - 3:00pm to 4:30pm

Location: 

Carol woods Assembly Hall, at 750 Weaver Dairy Road

OP Editors Meeting

We have some big ideas to discuss, so this should be pretty interesting. In addition to election plans, the standing agenda is:

  • Upcoming blog and calendar post ideas and assignments
  • Policy issues and technical tip for manmaging the site
  • Debrief the past month on the site
  • Next editors meeting date and and time

We will probably be at Southern Rail in downtown Carrboro, but check back as this could change. The meeting is open to the public as always!

Date: 

Saturday, August 27, 2011 - 3:00pm to 5:00pm

Location: 

Southern Rail, Carrboro

Campaign events

We are making a big effort this year to collect ALL the events that candidates are expected to attend on the OP calendar, and we are also categorizing them so that folks can see how much work folks are doing in each race.

Lots of openings on Orange County advisory boards

Info from the county below. Put your money where your mouths are, people!

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Release Date: August 8, 2011
Contact:  Donna Baker, Clerk to the Board of Orange County Commissioners, 919-245-2130

Orange County Seeks Applicants for Boards and Commissions

ORANGE COUNTY, NC – One major way citizens can have a positive impact on the future of Orange County is to volunteer to serve on the various County advisory boards and commissions.

The Orange County Board of Commissioners is recruiting citizen volunteers for the following advisory boards. 

 

Public Meeting on Proposed Boys and Girls Club Facility in Pine Knolls

Public Meeting on Proposed Boys and Girls Club Facility
Posted Date: 8/10/2011

A public forum will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 30, at the Pine Knolls Community Building, 107 Johnson St., to discuss a proposal to build a Boys and Girls Club facility on Johnson Street. The Pines Community Association has worked closely with the Boys and Girls Clubs of Eastern Piedmont to plan the Boys and Girls Club at the Pine Knolls Community Center. Plans include renovating the existing Pine Knolls Community building at 107 Johnson St. and building a new facility on Town-owned lots at 107A and 107B Johnson St.

The Town Council must approve the use of Town land for this purpose. When making such a decision the Council typically considers a wide range of issues, including the potential effect of the project on the surrounding community. Residents are invited to share their thoughts, opinions, and suggestions about this proposal to build a Boys and Girls Club facility in the Pine Knolls neighborhood.

If you cannot attend the meeting, please share your thoughts by email, telephone, or mail.
Telephone: 919-968-2819
Mail: Chapel Hill Parks and Recreation, 200 Plant Road, Chapel Hill, NC 27514
Email: bwebster@townofchapelhill.org.

If you would like to be included on an email distribution list dealing with the Boys and Girls Club project, send an email to bwebster@townofchapelhill.org.

Proposed Site for Boys and Girls Club in Pine Knolls

Download a high-resolution map

Date: 

Tuesday, August 30, 2011 - 7:00pm to 9:00pm

Location: 

Pine Knolls Community Building, 107 Johnson St., Chapel Hill

Vote Republican this Fall?

Many of you may assume - as I did - that all the elected officials in Orange County are registered as either Democrat or Unaffiliated voters. If so, then you would be wrong.

In the process of compiling information for a forthcoming spreadsheet of candidate information, I learned that Hillsborough Town Commissioner Evelyn Lloyd recently changed her registration from D to R. Just like that, we now have a Republican elected in Orange County - breaking many years of tradition. OK.

It's not unusual for one Republican to run in the lonely primary for County Commissioner in even years. Like it or not, it's understood that they will not be elected when put to a county-wide vote (especially since the Commissioners designed their district system to only barely change the status quo) but it's certainly their prerogative to run. It is even more Quixotic to run as a Republican in odd years when we elect our municipal leaders and our city school board.

Fracking in North Carolina

My Common Science blog this week in Chapelboro is about fracking  (To Frack or Not to Frack?), a relatively new technology to extract natural gas from deep underground shale formations.  There have been proposals to allow for this tecnology to be used in North Carolina including, potentially, in neighboring Chatham County.  Last month 400 people showed up for a cautionaly meeting about fracking in Fearington Village.

 After reviewing the benefits and risks, my view is that we will eventually need to extract this gas but should wait until some improvements in the technology are made to safeguard the evironment.  Check it out and let me know what you think.

Forum for CHCCS School Board candidates sponsored by PAGE, NAACP, and PTA Council

News ReleaseSeptember 13, 2011

For Immediate ReleaseContact: Emily Martine (919) 933-5222Margaret Samuels (919) 699-4400Lalanii Sangode (919) 636-7557 School
Board Candidates Forum Set for September 28
Chapel Hill, NC -- Candidates for the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Board of
Education will respond to questions from the public at a forum to be held on
Wednesday, September 28th from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Council Chamber of Chapel
Hill Town Hall.The forum is sponsored by the district PTA Council, the Chapel Hill-Carrboro
chapter of the NAACP Education Committee and the Chapel Hill-Carrboro chapter
of Partners for the Advancement of Gifted Education (PAGE).School board candidates who have accepted the invitation to participate
in the forum are James Barrett, Jamezetta Bedford, Mia Burroughs, Kris
Castellano, Mike Kelley and Annetta Streeter.Commenting on the first-time partnership of the three sponsoring
organizations, PTA Council President Margaret Samuels said, “It’s very exciting
that these organizations that work on behalf of families are collaborating. The
questions will be truly encompassing. I hope representatives of all the PTAs
will attend.”The school district traditionally has been supportive of educational
excellence, she said, but the PTA Council is concerned about the prospect of
additional budget cuts, and the effect of those cuts on funds that the District
has set aside for a rainy day. She said the public will also be interested in
the proposed quarter-cent sales tax and its impact on the school budget.The Council continues to be concerned with closing the achievement gap
between white students and minority students, this and decreasing the
suspension and expulsion rates has been the focus of the NAACP .“We’re concerned with equity and accountability, and seeing that there
is follow-through on the data that is collected and how to gain a quality
education for all students,” said Lalanii Sangode, a member of the NAACP
Education Committee. “We want to know why we continue to lag in reading and
math, why that varies from one school to another.”Emily Martine, chair of PAGE, said that she believes all three
sponsoring organizations want schooling that will enable children to meet the
demands of working and thriving in the twenty-first century. “Our community should aim for excellence, and that includes making sure
that all children are appropriately challenged and stimulated to reach their
true potential,” she said.  “We hear district administrators beginning to talk about a challenging
and engaging educational experience that provides growth for every child,” she
said, “but the primary measure of success -- which puts
tremendous pressure on our teachers and many students -- continues to be the
percentage of students who score at proficiency level on end-of-grade tests. We look forward to hearing the candidates’ views on measurements that go
beyond proficiency and beyond EOGs, and to their ideas on how best to prepare
all students to think critically and creatively.”Ms. Sangode said there is value in parents actually being present with
the people who represent them on the school board, and that parents need to
know directly about such matters as how disciplinary policies affect them, how
standardized tests are used, how parents can advocate for their children &
be supported in Individual Education Plans for their children, and what
resources are available to them.Navigating the system was a concern expressed by both Ms. Sangode and
Emily Martine.“The gifted plan is long, complex and not fully understood by the
majority of parents in our district,” Ms. Martine said. “The school system
currently is not recognizing the gifts of a lot of bright kids who may not have
had the preparation or opportunities other kids have had, or who are not native
English speakers, or are twice-exceptional learners, or who don’t raise their
hands and speak up in class.““In part our goal is to ensure that all students receive an equitable
education that gives them the tools to attend college. We know that there are
African American students with wonderful gifts, and we know that there is
little funding for gifted and the nurturing portion of gifted education,” Ms.
Sangode said.“It’s all relevant,” she said. “If something is affecting one segment of
the community, it’s affecting all of us, they are all our children.”Members of the public may submit questions for the candidates online through
the end of September 21st. The form for
submitting questions is at www.ChapelHillPAGE.org.For more
information visit Chapel Hill-Carrboro NAACP: www.chapelhill-carrboro-naacp.org/ CHCCS PTA Council: www.chccs.k12.nc.us, click on “Family
Resources” then “PTA.” Chapel Hill PAGE: www.ChapelHillPAGE.orgThe Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools PTA council and Chapel Hill PAGE
are also on Facebook.

Date: 

Wednesday, September 28, 2011 - 7:00pm to 9:00pm

Location: 

Chapel Hill Town Hall, Council Chambers

Chapel Hill 2020: Our Town, Our Vision

The Chapel Hill community and the Town Council have asked for a new Comprehensive Plan to reexamine the vision for Chapel Hill and to plan together for our community's future. the new planning and visioning document will create a framework for the community to guide the Town Council in managing Chapel Hill's future over the next 20 years.

Chapel Hill 2020 is a plan that involves Chapel Hill, every community, every race, every age, every culture, every corner.
What is in Chapel Hill 2020 will directly affect you -- your values, your ambitions, your family, your future. You have made Chapel Hill your town, and we want to hear from you.

 

First Meeting

Tuesday, September 27th, 2011
East Chapel Hill High School
500 Weaver Diary Road, Chapel Hill NC 27514

5:00 – 6:00 pm Project Open House
6:00 – 8:00 pm Stakeholder Meeting

 

Date: 

Tuesday, September 27, 2011 - 5:00pm to 8:00pm

Location: 

East Chapel Hill High School

BOE Axes the Student Vote...in 45 Minutes

Today, the Orange County Board of Elections voted to take early voting away from the UNC Campus.  The early voting site at Seymour Senior Center would remain unchanged, but the second early voting site would be moved from the Morehead Planetarium to the Quik-E-Mart in University Square.  While this may not seem like a big deal, moving the UNC student body's primary voting site off campus is the wrong thing to do.  Below is the email from Town Manager Roger Stancil:

 

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