Orange County NC Website
• Town will lead by following through on 2014 commitment, and leave room for community to use this <br />plan to move other recommended initiatives forward. The education component will be the hardest <br />component. <br />• Town has adopted the plan and has asked the Task Force to wait while they work on hiring additional <br />staff to help move these initiatives forward. <br />• A large hurdle for Carrboro is that many of their residents are renters and they have less control over <br />their home's efficiency. Another hurdle is the large proportion of English -as -a- second - language <br />residents. <br />• Crook offered the idea that Carrboro's model plan might be picked up by other municipalities. <br />• Kaiser asked about how the Task Force divided up the work. The group initially broke into committees <br />and came up with a category and tangible recommendations under that category, and then they <br />volunteered to write the sections. <br />• Randy Dodd wrote the introduction and unified the formatting and assembled all the pieces. <br />• Becker asked what feedback the plan has gotten from the public. The Town sent out a survey which <br />had a good response and had several forums in Town Hall associated with other events. Many people <br />also emailed Randy Dodd with comments. <br />• The biggest push -back was from the Save Bolin Creek group about the recommendation to finish a <br />greenway to connect through the Town. <br />VI. Orange County Climate Resilience Assessment — Bouma led discussion of Regional Effort: <br />In June of 2016, Sustainability Managers from Cary and Durham invited other local government <br />sustainability staff from Orange County, Wake County, Chapel Hill, and Raleigh to attend initial meetings. <br />Monthly meetings were held at TJCOG to convene potentially interested project partners to discuss <br />shared interests in assessing the resilience of the core of the Triangle. The County Sustainability <br />Coordinator and Emergency Services staff participated to assess possible benefits to Orange County. A <br />proposal was solicited and has now been received from The National Environmental Modeling and <br />Assessment Center ( NEMAC) to complete a joint resilience assessment which would cover the 7 local <br />governments. NEMAC is a national center based in Asheville that wrote the "U.S. Climate Resilience <br />Toolkit" for the Federal government. <br />• This assessment would use the information and public input from the comprehensive plans and <br />hazard mitigation plans of all participants, and model likely impacts of severe weather events and <br />other hazards within the context of a rapidly changing society and climate. <br />• Funding is available to complete the first two phases of the six phases proposed and the remaining <br />funding has been requested in the FY18 budget. <br />• Once vulnerabilities are assessed and strategies are created to increase resilience they can then be <br />incorporated into the County's FEMA- mandated mitigation plan. <br />VII. CFE Committee Break -out Sessions - <br />Air and Enerav Committee Meetina Notes: <br />• The Air and Energy committee will continue to monitor the proposed budget cuts at EPA and the <br />possible impacts on Orange County. <br />