Orange County NC Website
33 <br />Attachment E <br />MEMORANDUM <br />Memorandum to: Carrboro Mayor and Board of Aldermen <br />From: Mike Brough <br />Subject: Rogers Road Proposals <br />Date: November 7, 2012 <br />County Attorney John Roberts, Chapel Hill Attorney Ralph Karpinos, and I met November 6t` to <br />discuss the managers' October 16, 2012 recommendations for constructing a Community Center <br />to serve the Rogers Road area and to extend sewer lines into this area. We also discussed Mark <br />Dorosin's October 23, 2012 letter recommending that, not only should sewer lines be extended <br />into this areas, but that homes should be connected to the sewer lines at public expense. We <br />agreed on the conclusions set forth below in paragraphs 1 -5. The thoughts set forth in paragraph <br />6 did not occur to me until after our meeting, and therefore have not been endorsed by the other <br />attorneys.: <br />1. Statutory authority exists for the towns and the county to cooperate in operating and <br />funding a community center located in the Rogers Road area, and there are a number of ways in <br />which this could be accomplished. However, as we understand it, the current proposal is that the <br />county and/or the towns would pay Habitat $500,000 to construct the facility, on land provided <br />by Habitat, and then Habitat would lease the center to RENA, who would operate it, presumably <br />in accordance with RENA Neighborhood Center Business Plan (Attachment B to the Agenda <br />Item). The attorneys do not believe it is legally permissible for the county or the towns to <br />expend public funds to fund the construction of a building on land the county does not own, <br />under circumstances where the building would then be leased to a private organization that <br />would use the facility to run programs of its choosing. The county could, of course, construct a <br />community center on land it owned or leased, but it would have to put the project out for bids in <br />accordance with applicable statutes. The operation of a community center would require annual <br />appropriations. The county could provide staffing through its own employees or it could <br />contract with an organization such as RENA to run programs, but these would have to be open to <br />the general public. In short, there are many options for legally accomplishing the objective of <br />providing a community center that would benefit the residents of Rogers Road, but the current <br />proposal is not one of them. <br />2. Orange County, Carrboro, and Chapel Hill, as owners of the Greene Tract, and the <br />County, as owner of other property used for solid waste disposal, could petition Chapel Hill to <br />annex any properties owned by these governmental entities within the portion of the Rogers <br />Road area that is located in Chapel Hill's ETJ or Joint Planning Area, and Chapel Hill could do <br />so (subject to the possible exception that, if the area to be annexed was not contiguous to the <br />existing town limits, than no lots within a subdivision could be annexed unless the entire <br />subdivision was annexed). However, this would enable Chapel Hill to extend sewer lines only to <br />those areas so annexed. <br />