Orange County NC Website
14 <br /> <br />not a blunt instrument, but rather is the wrong instrument, and likely to do as much harm as 1 <br />good. 2 <br />Billy Holloway said he lives across the road where the large flag flies now. He said the 3 <br />residents live on private property, and went through the appropriate channels to site this flag, 4 <br />and now the Board is trying to change the rules in order to suit other people who live nowhere 5 <br />near this flag. He said people do not have to travel this way if this flag offends them. He said 6 <br />the County has purchased property adjacent to his, and has made a commitment to working 7 <br />with him through the development of the property. He said he is concerned that he is unable to 8 <br />trust the County at its word, because if it can up and change the rules any time it pleases, the 9 <br />County may do the same to him. He said everyone has the right to do as one pleases on one’s 10 <br />own land, but the County appears to be judging people for their choices. 11 <br />Ken Rothrock said he has practiced law for over 37 years in Orange County, and he 12 <br />said the constitution sets out specifically what governments can do. He said if the government 13 <br />moves to infringe on any right, one should ask why. He said the abstract refers to the need for 14 <br />uniformity of size and number of flags on one’s property. He said he wonders why it is 15 <br />important to ensure uniformity, when Orange County is such a diverse community. He said it 16 <br />makes no sense for the County to seek such uniformity. He said Michael Harvey reported that 17 <br />staff chose for only three flags to be permitted because staff did not have enough time to think 18 <br />any further through the issue. He said if staff has not had enough time to think, then the 19 <br />process should pause. He said this proposed amendment seems to violate the equal protection 20 <br />clause a little bit in how it treats citizens. He said if one has a big home, one can enjoy a much 21 <br />bigger flag, but one with a small home is not afforded the same opportunity. He said this is 22 <br />allowing wealth to determine one’s expression. He asked if the Board would seriously consider 23 <br />why it wants to amend the UDO. 24 <br />Waddy Davis said he is from Chapel Hill, and is a combat veteran of Vietnam. He said if 25 <br />one can burn a flag if a public place, then one should be able to fly a flag of one’s choice and 26 <br />size. He said if the BOCC legislates the size of the flag on the personal property, he wonders 27 <br />what it will legislate next. He thanked the BOCC for its service, and urged the Board not to 28 <br />adopt this amendment. 29 <br />Angelique Lawyer said she is a retired Army nurse, and had a visceral reaction when 30 <br />she learned of this agenda topic. She said she has observed multiple large confederate flags in 31 <br />the County, and the Confederate flag means something different to an African American than to 32 <br />a white person. She said whites largely see it as a symbol of southern heritage, while African 33 <br />Americans largely see it as a hateful racial affront. She is in favor of the proposed amendment. 34 <br />William Carrington said he is a native of North Carolina, and is a Civil W ar historian, an 35 <br />expert on flags, and an author. He said there is as much misunderstanding and confusion out 36 <br />there, as there is accurate information. He said the constitution is often misquoted, all the way 37 <br />up to the U. S. Senate. He said he has not see the flag on Highway 70, but said it is the Army 38 <br />of Northern Virginia pattern battle flag, which is not the flag used by the Ku Klux Klan. He said 39 <br />this flag was a piece of military hardware, which came about after some duration of the civil 40 <br />war, when a flag was needed that did not look like the flag of the United States. He said he is 41 <br />offering his expertise to anyone that is interested in discussing some real history on flags. He 42 <br />said he is not taking a side, and he understands both sides of the issue. He said he believes 43 <br />that Confederate memorabilia belongs in museums. 44 <br />Latarndra Sky read a quote from the Mayor of New Orleans: “They are not innocent 45 <br />remembrance of benign history. These monuments celebrate a fictional, sanitized confederacy 46 <br />ignoring the deaths, ignoring the enslavement, ignoring the terror that it actually stands for”. 47 <br />She said she was proud of the courageous act of the Mayor, because it was action taken in the 48 <br />absence of crisis. She said she has had to talk with children who question if they are hated, or 49 <br />do not belong here. She said when someone who has never experienced those feelings makes 50