Orange County NC Website
2 <br /> 1 Chair Price dispensed with reading the public charge. <br /> 2 <br /> 3 Public Charge: The Board of Commissioners pledges its respect to all present. The Board asks <br /> 4 those attending this meeting to conduct themselves in a respectful, courteous manner toward <br /> 5 each other, county staff and the commissioners. At any time should a member of the Board or <br /> 6 the public fail to observe this charge, the Chair will take steps to restore order and decorum. <br /> 7 Should it become impossible to restore order and continue the meeting, the Chair will recess <br /> 8 the meeting until such time that a genuine commitment to this public charge is observed. The <br /> 9 BOCC asks that all electronic devices such as cell phones, pagers, and computers should <br /> 10 please be turned off or set to silent/vibrate. Please be kind to everyone. <br /> 11 <br /> 12 Arts Moment— No Arts Moment was available for this meeting. <br /> 13 <br /> 14 2. Public Comments (Limited to One Hour) <br /> 15 <br /> 16 a. Matters not on the Printed Agenda <br /> 17 Robb Levinsky said he wanted to speak on the land use planning process and Buckhorn <br /> 18 area plan. He said there has not been much public engagement, and this plan will effect the <br /> 19 County for generations to come. He said it would have significant impact on those who deserve <br /> 20 input. He said his concern goes beyond the scope of the plan, and residents live here because <br /> 21 they value the rural residential character of the County. He said rural buffers should be <br /> 22 developed between Mebane and Efland. He said industrial development projects are like a <br /> 23 cancer, ruining everything in their path. He said nothing in the plan sets appropriate limitations, <br /> 24 and Orange County does not want to be the next Newark, New Jersey. He urged the Board to <br /> 25 please choose wisely. <br /> 26 Catherine Matthews read the following statement: <br /> 27 Hello County Commissioners. I'm back. First let me thank you for your World Water Day <br /> 28 proclamation and then let me thank Commissioner Greene for attending our World Water Day <br /> 29 Celebration in Efland. I wish more of you could have attended this event to learn about our <br /> 30 efforts to preserve clean water and undisturbed land in Orange County. I'm here tonight to ask <br /> 31 you how you intend to respond to our President's climate agenda. <br /> 32 <br /> 33 One of Biden's goals is to conserve nearly a third of US land and ocean waters by 2030. Biden's <br /> 34 proposal, known broadly as 30 by 30, is to preserve 30% of our lands and 30% of our ocean <br /> 35 waters by 2030 (9 short years away). Currently, only 12 percent of the country's land and 26 <br /> 36 percent of its oceans are protected. <br /> 37 <br /> 38 While Biden's goal is laudable, I think we need to look at our past in North Carolina to see how <br /> 39 this national goal might be enacted. Twenty years ago the General Assembly and Gov. Hunt <br /> 40 declared that North Carolina should add 1 million more acres of protected land as parks, <br /> 41 forests, natural areas, farmlands, etc. before the end of 2010. In 2020, 10 years later, North <br /> 42 Carolina finally attained that goal. <br /> 43 <br /> 44 North Carolina's population continues to grow along with greater land development pressures <br /> 45 for conversion of private farmlands and forests to intensive development. With the kind of <br /> 46 demands on limited water supplies, consequences of a changing climate, diminished food <br /> 47 production, need for outdoor recreational opportunities, 11% is simply not enough! <br /> 48 The bottom-line, of course, is "what is enough?" What percentage would guarantee not only our <br /> 49 survival, but the biodiversity of planet Earth. E. O. Wilson, a preeminent biologist at Duke <br /> 50 University, said that we must conserve 50%. Wilson makes his argument clear in a 2016 book, <br /> 51 called Half-Earth. <br />