Orange County NC Website
� 5 <br /> THE DEVELOPMENT OF A COMPREHENSIVE QUALITY GROWTH STRATEGY AND <br /> COMMUNITY BUILDING PLAN FOR ORANGE COUNTY <br /> Carrboro, Chapel Hill, Hillsborough and the unincorporated areas of Orange County are <br /> at a crucial period in their history. The next twenty years could well determine whether Orange <br /> County will continue to be an attractive, desirable place to live. With the improving economy <br /> and national recognition of our area as a good place to live, work, and retire, we face <br /> tremendous development pressures. There are various possibilities. We could become like Los <br /> Angeles with urban sprawl from Caswell to Chatham and Durham to Alamance. The <br /> environmental, social and economic consequences of this picture are not pleasant to contemplate. <br /> Another possibility is that the four governing bodies working together with each other <br /> and the citizenry could develop an Orange County model as determined by the values and visions <br /> of the people. This would not be an easy or a quick task, but the prospect we face without <br /> working together to preserve the quality of life we enjoy now, but are beginning to lose, is <br /> worth the effort. Without this we face increased environmental degradation, increased social <br /> problems, and increased taxes and expenses for citizens. <br /> Any one of these issues makes it imperative that we work together to develop a <br /> comprehensive quality growth strategy and community building plan. As we have grown in the <br /> past twenty years, one of the losses we have experienced is a shared sense of community. This <br /> is evidenced by increasing violence, an increasingly transient population, and lack of knowledge <br /> of our neighbors, among other things. To try and correct this, it is important that a community <br /> building plan is included in the quality growth strategy. <br /> Building community in the context of this effort has two components. First we need to <br /> assess the entire County's perspectives on issues relating to quality growth. Once assessed, we <br /> will need the "community" itself to reach consensus on resolving these issues. Attempting to <br /> reach such consensus - reaching out to understand others - is, in fact, community building. <br /> The second component is the development of a process for maintenance of community <br /> in every part of the County. With growth, we must make sure that we better our community, <br /> improve our relations with each other, and hopefully lay the foundation for future generations <br /> to lead fulfilling lives. If these are the tenets of our work together, then developing a process <br /> for nurturing community is imperative. <br /> At the September, 1993 conference on Shaping Orange County's Future, which was <br /> sponsored by the Assembly of Governments, nationally recognized quality growth planner <br /> Dr. John DeGrove said that we could grow smart or we could grow dumb. The way to grow <br /> smart, he said, was to develop a comprehensive quality growth strategy and the place to start <br /> was with Carrboro, Chapel Hill, Hillsborough and the unincorporated areas of Orange County. <br /> As a result of this conference, the four governing bodies - Carrboro, Chapel Hill, Hillsborough <br /> and Orange County - appointed a Steering Committee to design a process for developing a <br /> community building and comprehensive quality growth strategy. <br /> After numerous meetings, the Steering Committee submits the following proposal which <br /> sets into motion the quality growth strategy discussed by Dr. DeGrove and adds to it a <br /> community building component. <br /> 1 <br />