Orange County NC Website
5 <br /> 1 reasonable and unflappable, and Commissioner Jacobs brings so much knowledge on many <br /> 2 issues. He wished good luck to them both. <br /> 3 Chair Dorosin echoed everyone's comments, and said Commissioner Burroughs had <br /> 4 grown as a commissioner in the last 4 years. He said he appreciated the grace, openness and <br /> 5 thoughtfulness that she brought to the position. <br /> 6 Chair Dorosin said Commissioner Jacobs was a mentor to him, and he learned a lot <br /> 7 about being the Chair from watching him. He said his historical knowledge will certainly be <br /> 8 missed, and will present some challenges while also signifying real change. He said he <br /> 9 appreciated Commissioner Jacobs' candor, and his giving of praise and encouragement, as <br /> 10 well as critique and constructive criticism. <br /> 11 Chair Dorosin introduced Senator Foushee and Representative Graig Meyer and asked <br /> 12 them to come to the podium for a special presentation. <br /> 13 Representative Graig Meyer thanked Commissioner Burroughs for her service, and said <br /> 14 he is here tonight with a special recognition for Commissioner Jacobs for his service, not only to <br /> 15 the County, but to people of the State of North Carolina. He reviewed the following highlights of <br /> 16 Commissioner Jacobs' years of service: <br /> 17 <br /> 18 In 1985, Barry Jacobs applied to and was granted a seat on the Orange County Planning <br /> 19 Board, the beginning of his public service journey. Within six months of appointment he was <br /> 20 elected Chair of the Board. Barry Jacobs served on the team that created the Orange County- <br /> 21 Chapel Hill-Carrboro Joint Planning agreement, which celebrated its 30th anniversary in <br /> 22 October. In 1995 he was appointed as Orange County Representative to the Board of Directors <br /> 23 of OWASA, where he served for five years. <br /> 24 <br /> 25 He was elected to the BOCC in 1998. As commissioner, Jacobs worked to create the Orange <br /> 26 County Lands Legacy Program, which provides for the acquisition and protection of highly <br /> 27 important natural and cultural resource lands. In the past 20 years, the county's natural areas <br /> 28 and farmland protection programs have leveraged $5 million in state and federal grants and <br /> 29 protected more than 3,000 acres of land. <br /> 30 <br /> 31 Commissioner Jacobs has ensured Orange County pays a living wage to all county employees, <br /> 32 and has continually supported funding for the Orange County and Chapel Hill- Carrboro City <br /> 33 Schools, taking pride in making sure every single school has a full time nurse. <br /> 34 He also supported the commercial redevelopment plan for the Fairview community in <br /> 35 Hillsborough, including the redevelopment of the Fairview Community Park. <br /> 36 <br /> 37 Commissioner Jacobs has been a champion of historic preservation, becoming the site <br /> 38 supervisor of the Historic Moorefields Estate in 1978. He created a nonprofit, Friend of <br /> 39 Moorefield, to assume responsibility of the property. He has advocated for additional historic <br /> 40 sites within the state through nominating all of them for the National Register of Historic Places. <br /> 41 These sites included the Greensboro Train Station, the Edenton Peanut Factory, the Durham <br /> 42 Hosiery Mill, and the Glencoe Mill Village Historic District. <br /> 43 <br /> 44 Representative Meyer said we would be remiss if we did not thank Commissioner <br /> 45 Jacobs for his service to all of us, for his role as a freelance writer, authoring five books, <br /> 46 hundreds of articles on sports history and the environment for newspapers, magazines, and the <br /> 47 internet, writing multiple copies of fans guides to ACC basketball and continuing through today <br /> 48 as a weekly sports columnist for the Raleigh `News and Observer,' fostering one of our many <br /> 49 favorite things about North Carolina: basketball rivalry. <br />