Orange County NC Website
4 <br /> 1 a. Presentation of The Order of the Long Leaf Pine Award to Former Orange County <br /> 2 Commissioner Dr. Alice M. Gordon <br /> 3 The Board recognized former Orange County Commissioner Alice Gordon for receiving <br /> 4 The Order of the Long Leaf Pine ward from Governor Roy Cooper, the highest honor the <br /> 5 Governor can confer on individuals. The award recognizes her significant contributions to the <br /> 6 state and her community through her exemplary service and exceptional accomplishments. <br /> 7 <br /> 8 BACKGROUND: <br /> 9 Dr. Alice Gordon served as an Orange County Commissioner for 24 years, 1990-2014. Her <br /> 10 most outstanding contributions recognized by this award are in the areas of environmental <br /> 11 protection, school excellence, and improved regional transportation. Of these contributions, the <br /> 12 most memorable are as follows: (1) She created Orange County's innovative and national <br /> 13 award-winning Lands Legacy Program, which has now protected over 3000 acres of Orange <br /> 14 County's most precious natural and cultural lands (2) She championed excellent public schools, <br /> 15 with special attention for many years to the renovation of older schools, for which she was <br /> 16 recognized when the "Alice Gordon Science Building" at Culbreth Middle School was named in <br /> 17 her honor and (3) As Chair of the Durham-Chapel Hill-Carrboro Metropolitan Planning <br /> 18 Organization Board, she was co-leader of a successful cooperative effort to craft a multi- <br /> 19 jurisdictional agreement, the Triangle's first ever joint Long Range Transportation Plan, which <br /> 20 received a national planning award. She was also known as a public servant with integrity, who <br /> 21 always remained true to her core values. <br /> 22 <br /> 23 Environmental Protection. With the approval of her fellow commissioners, Alice Gordon created <br /> 24 the national award-winning Lands Legacy Program in 1998, the first comprehensive county land <br /> 25 acquisition program in North Carolina, which won a national planning award in 2007 for its <br /> 26 innovation. The program has protected some of Orange County's most critical natural and <br /> 27 cultural resources, such as forests, watershed riparian buffers, prime farmlands, and future <br /> 28 parklands. Also with the commissioners' approval in 1998, she created a new environmental <br /> 29 department (now part of the Department of Environment, Agriculture, Parks and Recreation) so <br /> 30 that environmental protection would be a separate function and focus of Orange County <br /> 31 government, a special advantage in this era of climate change. The Lands Legacy Program <br /> 32 and Alice's other initiatives to protect the environment will be among her most enduring <br /> 33 contributions to Orange County. Having the institutional structure for environmental stewardship <br /> 34 in place to protect critical resources, such as clean air and clean water, will help Orange County <br /> 35 mitigate some effects of a warming planet. <br /> 36 <br /> 37 School Excellence. Alice was a dedicated champion of high quality education for all public <br /> 38 school children in Orange County, and consistently supported the funding necessary to foster <br /> 39 school excellence because of her commitment to the success of all students. She led the effort <br /> 40 to pass the Schools Adequate Public Facilities Ordinance so that new schools would be built <br /> 41 when needed. She also promoted a systematic program to renovate all of the older schools in <br /> 42 Orange County, and worked toward that goal for many years. For her achievements, the Alice <br /> 43 Gordon Science Building at Grey Culbreth Middle School in Chapel Hill was named in her honor <br /> 44 in 2014. <br /> 45 <br /> 46 Improved Regional Transportation. Alice promoted public transit and improved regional <br /> 47 transportation planning, and she served as Chair of two multi-jurisdictional regional <br /> 48 transportation boards, Triangle Transit (now GoTriangle) and the Durham-Chapel Hill-Carrboro <br /> 49 Metropolitan Planning Organization. As Chair of the latter board, she led a cooperative effort to <br />