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BOH agenda 022416
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BOH agenda 022416
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Date
2/24/2016
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Regular Meeting
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Agenda
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BOH minutes 022416
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ORANGEPOLITICS <br />PROGRESSIVE PERSPECTIVES ON ORANGE COUNTI, NC. <br />The Candidates Respond: Why Are People Poor? <br />Submitted by OP Editors on February 8, 2016 - 11:00am <br />Nine candidates are running for the Orange County Board of Commissioners in the upcoming Democratic <br />primary election on March 15. <br />• At Large (1 seat): Andy Cagle, Matt Hughes, Mark Marcoplos <br />• District 1 (2 seats): Jamezetta Bedford, Mark Dorosin, Gary Kahn, Penny Rich <br />• District 2 (1 seat): Bonnie Hauser, Renee Price <br />OrangePolitics asked the candidates to answer five questions, and all provided responses. Today and on each <br />of the next four Mondays, we will post the responses to one question. We begin today by posting the <br />candidates' responses to the first question: <br />Why are people poor? What tools or programs is the county using and /or should the county use to <br />address poverty? <br />The candidates cited a number of reasons for why people are poor, many naming lack of access to education <br />and affordable housing. Some candidates acknowledged that institutional racism continues to play a role in <br />poverty, though discussion of this issue was limited. A few candidates simply said the reasons were <br />complex but did not provide specifics. <br />The candidates discussed a number of tools to address poverty. The Family Success Alliance — spearheaded in <br />2014 by Commissioner Mark Dorosin and UNC pediatrician Michael Steiner —was named by several <br />candidates as a key tool. We would like to see the Family Success Alliance target more systemic causes of <br />poverty, such as racial inequity in many of our local systems, such as policing, education, the judicial system, <br />and employment, and none of the candidates discussed this. A few candidates cited living wage policies as a <br />tool, noting that the county's recent living wage policy moved all employees (full -time, part-time, and <br />seasonal) to $12.76 per hour. This is an important step, and we would love to see the county move closer to <br />what the Town of Carrboro is doing with a living wage floor closer to the cost of living in the county, which <br />no candidate mentioned. A couple of candidates provided specific examples of other tools currently in use, <br />such as the Social Justice Fund and the HOME Consortium (mentioned by Penny Rich) and new tools such as <br />a "poverty ombudsman" (mentioned by Mark Marcoplos). <br />The candidates' responses are provided below. <br />1= =__ = =1 <br />
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