Growth & Development
On Wednesday, September 19th, the community will be gathering to
discuss the Steering Committee structure, purpose, and application
process for the MLK/Estes Drive Focus Area (recommended name: Central
West Focus Area). This meeting will be held from 5:00-6:30pm in the HR
Training Room, second floor, Town Hall, 405 Martin Luther King Jr.
Blvd., Chapel Hill.
In order to prepare for Wednesday’s meeting, a survey has been
developed with the purpose of collecting information in advance of the
meeting. Please complete this survey and provide us with your thoughts!
The survey can be found at the following link: Steering Committee Survey
The information from this survey will be compiled and will be a part
of the discussion during the Wednesday, September 19th Recommendation
Meeting #2.
Please complete the survey by noon on Wednesday, September 19th. The
responses from the survey will be published on this blog by Friday,
September 21st.
For more information about this process, please visit www.townofchapelhill.org/estesdrive
Date:
Wednesday, September 19, 2012 - 5:00pm to 6:30pm
Location:
HR Training Room, second floor, Town Hall, 405 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Chapel Hill
SAPFO isn't perhaps the most interesting topic the BoCC deals with, but it will become critical if we have to stop all development in town. Agenda (link below) for our joint work session with the county and both school systems includes discussion of some modifications to SAPFO.
Date:
Thursday, September 13, 2012 - 7:00pm
Location:
Southern Human Services Center
Sent to the Chapel Hill Town Council on 9-10-12:
Dear Chapel Hill Mayor and Town Council:
I wish to thank those of you planning to vote against approval of the Charterwood development on September 12, 2012. It shows your recognition of the terrible precedent being set by the developer’s legal maneuver of merely recombining property tracts in order to circumvent neighborhood rights associated with the protest-petition.
Today 70 Orange County residents traveled to Bloomington, Indiana for a Inter-City Visit to learn how their community deals with challenges related to public policy, student housing, economic development, and other questions. These trips are only as valuable as the information we bring back to Orange County, and I hope that through my tweets, posts on Orange Politics, and work when I return to Chapel Hill, I can provide insights into our trip and improve our community.
Most of the first day was travel from Chapel Hill to Bloomington. I started the morning by boarding a shuttle bus from University Mall at 7:00 AM, and didn’t arrive in Bloomington until 2:30 PM. That being said, I already have ideas and thoughts about how we can improve Chapel Hill based on experiences in Bloomington.
The Town of Chapel Hill invites the community to participate in information sessions about zoning opportunities
for the Ephesus Church Road-Fordham Boulevard area.
To reach as many residents as possible, meetings with identical
presentations will be held on Thursday, Sept. 20, from 8 to 9:30 a.m. in
the Council Chamber of Town Hall, 405 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., and
from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Church of the Holy Family, 200 Hayes Road.
Current community discussions about the Ephesus Church Road-Fordham
Boulevard area are being initiated by the Town of Chapel Hill as part of
its work to implement the Chapel Hill 2020 comprehensive plan. In a
collaborative community process, residents and Town staff will identify
appropriate form and zoning regulations in and near Ephesus Church Road
and Fordham Boulevard. Technical assistance with the focus area
initiative will be provided through a $20,000 grant to the Town from the
Mayors Innovation Project.
At the Sept. 20 meeting, the Mayors Innovation Project consultant
team, comprising Scott Bernstein of the Center for Neighborhood
Technology and Hazel Boyrs of PlaceMakers, will present information
about zoning opportunities for the area. All community members are
invited to participate in the process and share their ideas. It is
anticipated that the consultant team will return to Chapel Hill to
present their initial recommendations for community consideration.
The 123-acre area surrounding the intersection of Ephesus Church
Road and Fordham Boulevard was the subject of an earlier study adopted
by the Town Council on Feb. 28, 2011. The Ephesus Church Road-Fordham
Boulevard Small Area Plan, led by the Town's Economic Development
Division, defines land future land uses and offers solutions to the
transportation network to encourage reinvestment.
The focus area is located near the intersection of Ephesus Church
Road and Fordham Boulevard and extends from South Elliott Road to north
of Ram's Plaza. It was one of six areas included in Future Focus
community discussions that took place in spring 2012 during the
development of the Chapel Hill 2020 comprehensive plan. The plan focused
on areas most likely to change in the future due to vacant land,
underdeveloped sites, and their location along transportation and
transit corridors.
Questions and ideas are welcome. For those unable to attend the
information session, there will be opportunities for future involvement.
To be added to the email distribution list for the Ephesus Church
Road-Fordham Boulevard Focus Area, contact compplan@townofchapelhill.org or 919-968-2728. To find more information, visit www.townofchapelhill.org/index.aspx?page=1656
Date:
Thursday, September 20, 2012 - 7:00pm to 9:00pm
Location:
Church of the Holy Family, 200 Hayes Road
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