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<br />			Page 2 of 5      									Benjamin (BJ)
<br />     		visited 49 out of 50 states, and most major cities)as well as Canada, Europe, and Japan. These
<br />     		travels exposed me to a wide variety of scenes and people, constantly pushing me out of my
<br />     		comfort zones and past my cultural biases.
<br />     		While living in Brooklyn from the late 90s through the late aughts, I bore witness to massive
<br />     		development changes. I lived in a quasi-legal, converted warehouse along the East River. At that
<br />     		time, it sat nestled between a recycling plant, a concrete plant, and a carpet factory. Now it is
<br />     		surrounded by luxury condominiums and skyscrapers. That wave of development, while bringing
<br />     		a ton of profit and prosperity to blighted and abandoned industrial neighborhoods, also had a
<br />     		well-documented gentrifying effect. Seeing this process unfold firsthand (indeed being part of it
<br />     		as a rider upon an early wave of artists moving to the neighborhood in search of affordable living
<br />     		space)taught me an incredible amount about the complexities of urban development. Nothing in
<br />     		this world comes without trade offs.
<br />     		Before moving to North Carolina, my wife and I worked with a few others on a project to convert
<br />     		the Strathmore Mill, an abandoned paper mill in Turners Falls, Massachusetts, into artist studio
<br />     		spaces. While the project was ultimately unsuccessful, it was a crash course in complications
<br />     		around redevelopment, zoning, town ordinances, environmental regulation, and financial
<br />     		challenges. I have applied this knowledge consistently ever since, from our search for a property
<br />     		to call home, through our many continued improvements restoring our circa 1957 house, as well
<br />     		as in sculpting our property back towards agrarian pursuits.
<br />     		Professionally, I work as a software engineering manager for Adobe. I've been doing web and
<br />     		tech work to pay the bills since the first dot com boom in the late 90s. This kind of work requires
<br />     		an incredible amount of focus, planning, collaboration, and foresight. I have learned to assume
<br />     		nothing, and to plan for worst case scenarios. My technical skills (reasoning, data analysis,
<br />     		software architecture, and distributed systems)are applicable to all manner of situations
<br />     		requiring a "systems thinking"[approach, such as town planning. I am no stranger to intricacy,
<br />     		process, and asynchronicity, having previously worked on projects spanning the globe from LA
<br />     		to Bombay, with multiple parties in multiple time zones in between.
<br />     		Overall, I believe I can bring a nuanced and passionate voice to the Chapel Hill Planning Board. I
<br />     		will lead with facts and data-driven analysis while listening well to the hopes and fears of my
<br />     		neighbors and communities. I will pull from my lived experience and wide array of skills to best
<br />     		adjudicate upon and improve our collective planning goals.
<br />     		Please explain your reasons for wanting to serve on this board
<br />     		Since moving to Chapel Hill, I have been paying close attention to the changes around Town.
<br />     		I've seen small independent businesses, like The Bookshop on Franklin Street, close due to
<br />     		market forces and increasing expenses. My neighbors and friends include several former city
<br />     		officials, and I've been soaking up their stories and learning from their decades of experience.
<br />     		As a founding member of the Southern Entryway Alliance, I've been especially paying close
<br />     		attention to issues involving the southern Chapel Hill ETJ, an area that lacks representation as
<br />     		we cannot vote for Mayor or Town Council. I want to represent my neighbors and the interests of
<br />     		our ETJs, especially as the seemingly inevitable pressure to build continues to grow.
<br />     		My hope for Chapel Hill is that we can achieve our development goals (especially increased
<br />     		housing)without unintentionally destroying the aspects of this community that make it such an
<br />     		incredible place to live. Chapel Hill has a storied art and music scene, known internationally for
<br />     		its vibrance. But I am seeing friends opt for other neighboring communities (or leaving the area
<br />     		altogether) due to lack of affordability.
<br />     		Similarly, I've been watching our green spaces (old forests, undeveloped lands, and farms)
<br />     		wither against the onslaught of seemingly insatiable growth. These forces threaten to
<br />     		permanently eliminate cultural and natural resources that we will never get back. I have been
<br />     		learning about our stormwater management policies, state-level as well as local regulations, our
<br />     		watersheds and the need to protect them, the continuing climate crisis and the inevitability of
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