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Comments
What have we learned?
I don't argue with these recommendations (A-D, below) in general, but the report seems to generally brush off the criticisms from participants as naive or uninformed. It didn't seem like that in my reading of the survey responses in the report's appendix.
Interesting feedback from the theme group co-chairs:
I was frustrated to read this from the 2020 co-chairs:
Not to quibble but Brian Russell is 42, a former business owner, a parent, and a homeowner. Not exactly the target "young" demographic. He (and I, and people like us) are just a link to a whole world of people that don't know or care about local government, some of whom are coincidentally under 40.Sorry if I'm too snarky but this has been a pet peeve of mine since I am often the youngest person in the room (or I am treated that way). This was great when I was 20, not so much as I turned 30 and 40.And from the general public (127 respondents), I noticed that there are often around 20% negative responses, but the report didn't seem very interested in why this was. It's easy to write off the bad experiences as just poor communication or unrealistic expectations, but I think that's a very high amount of dissatisfaction for a process that needs to serve the entire community.
The actual interviews and survey responses in the appendices seemed to raise a lot more concerns than were reflected in the report. However the survey results are difficult to follow/reference as there are few headings and no page numbers.This was an interesting remark almost certainly talking about me. Of course I don't see my own beliefs as controversial but if they are, what is wrong with that in itself? (And in fact they have been validated by local voters quite a lot lately).
And there were a number of criticisms and concerns, some from the leaders and quite a lot from the public, expressed in the open-ended responses to the survey. For example, there were many comments something like this one: "Most of the people at the meetings I attended seemd to be older, white people, but I know the Town made many efforets to reach out to minorities and younger people." Does anyone think this might skew the results of the process? In fact, reading through the responses from the public, I think we might actually have LESS shared vision and values now than before 2020 started. People certainly have very fixed and very different ideas of what it was and what happened. Some complained that the process was dominated by people who want nothing to change, and others said it was all manipulated by real estate developers. And 17% of repondents said they are now less like likely to "be involved in future discussions and plans for community needs."I was pleased to see that if you look at how people said they got information about 2020, OP or unnamed blogs/web sites were mentioned repeatedly.So, any reason to think this report won't go on the same dusty shelf where the rest of the Comprehensive Plan resides? Did I just waste my Saturday night reading this thing? (Don't answer that last one, please.)
A glaring omission
Oh and one thing that is missing entirely from the report: any mention of the Chapel Hill 2020 Outreach Committee! I joined the committee just as 2020 was getting started and began to have concerns that it lacked the leadership to substantively reach beyond the typical middle-upper class, middle-upper aged activists who usually have the time and energy for this kind of thing.After pointing out this potential deficit, I was appointed to be a third co-chair of the Outreach Committee. But about 2 months later, I was asked to resign for tweeting that "Someday I want to go to a meeting where straight, white affluent men don't have the assumption that their ideas are a gift to the world." Which is still true. I think the Outreach Committee's absence from the report about outreach speaks volumes to its effectiveness. Sadly, my concerns seem to have been quite well-placed.
Another CH2020 Participation Survey
Apparently unsatisfied with the results of the survey results released two months ago, the town is now doing another survey on the same topic, again with support from the School of Government
Please do take this new survey if you have a few minutes. Some of the questions are not very well-designed but it makes ome very pointed inquiries about whether people felt the town was actually listening: http://bit.ly/VCDSbx