Orange County NC Website
rd <br />1 Commissioner Pelissier said it is great to see how these summits and reports evolve <br />2 with the times. She referred to recommendation #2 under air and energy and the collaboration <br />3 with civic organizations, and she asked for specific suggestions for undertaking this. <br />4 Commissioner Pelissier referred to recommendation #3 on the incentives for green <br />5 building techniques. She asked if staff is aware of other places that have done this successfully. <br />6 David Neal said there will be discussion of this later on the agenda. <br />7 Commissioner Pelissier asked if there are there any priorities of the CfE that the Board <br />8 of County Commissioners should prioritize to address first. <br />9 Jan Sassaman said with regard to priorities, he would like to the CfE and the Board to <br />10 jointly come up with priorities. <br />11 Commissioner McKee said he is impressed by this report, and he commended the CfE <br />12 for an excellent job. He referred to the first item regarding land resources and the 12 percent <br />13 protection goal. He asked if this includes farmers in the voluntary agricultural districts and the <br />14 conservation easements. He said 12 percent of the County is a huge portion of acreage, and <br />15 he would like an opportunity to discuss why this percentage was chosen. <br />16 Loren Hintz said the report 10 years ago set this number at 10 percent, and the County <br />17 is already at 9 percent protected at one level or another. He said this is why 12 percent was <br />18 chosen. He said there are a number of ways to protect these areas. He said you need to have <br />19 corridors from one protected area to another, and many of these corridors are waterways. He <br />20 said no one has the specifics for reaching this number, and it is just a dream now. <br />21 Commissioner McKee said it is good to dream. He said the efforts of soil conservation <br />22 personnel to educate the farming community have resulted in an exponential increase in farms <br />23 enrolling in the voluntary agricultural district. <br />24 Steve Niezgoda said the maps he is referring to are shown on pages 27 and 28. <br />25 Chair Jacobs said he would like to see renewed support for the Lands Legacy program <br />26 listed as a common goal. He said he would hope that this would be part of the bond package, <br />27 and if so, that the CfE would take the lead in educating the public about why protected space <br />28 and natural areas are important for Orange County. He said there have been no decisions yet <br />29 about what would be on the proposed bond, and a committee will be put together to determine <br />30 this. <br />31 Chair Jacobs said Clerk to the Board Donna Baker was able to provide information on <br />32 past bonds, which showed that schools received 59.2 percent of the vote; the bond for parks, <br />33 open space and recreational facilities got 54.8 percent of the vote; the bond for senior centers <br />34 got 54.2 percent; and affordable housing got 52.4 percent of the vote. He said parks and open <br />35 spaces are typically the most popular bonds in the United States, and in Orange County, <br />36 schools are the most popular bonds, and parks and open spaces are second. <br />37 Chair Jacobs said a lot of the things the CfE is referring to are being worked on or <br />38 discussed by the Board. He said interviews are ongoing for a sustainability coordinator for <br />39 Orange County government, and that position will systemically address a lot of the issues that <br />40 have been raised. He said someone has to take a leadership role, and he is pleased that the <br />41 CfE is so dedicated. <br />42 Commissioner Dorosin said the report is outstanding, but he would challenge everyone <br />43 to take a broader view of what environmentalism is as it relates to the impact on social justice <br />44 issues. He said these things are interrelated, and he would push for them to look at the <br />45 impacts of these issues on vulnerable low wealth communities. He said the flooding that <br />46 occurred last year had a clear disparate impact on the most vulnerable people in the <br />47 community. He said it would be interesting to take the groundwater contamination maps and <br />48 overlay basic census data on whether these contaminated areas are concentrated in low wealth <br />49 areas. <br />