Orange County NC Website
10 <br /> 1 Chair Bedford said the Seymour Center works with Chapel Hill Transit on Senior issues. <br /> 2 She encouraged them to connect with the Department on Aging for that support as well. <br /> 3 Vice-Chair Hamilton said she noticed that Alliance Health is not on the list of partners. She <br /> 4 said they fund mental health services for residents on Medicaid and uninsured in Orange County <br /> 5 and other counties. <br /> 6 Jimmy Price said they were not listed, but Alliance does the training for GoTriangle staff. <br /> 7 <br /> 8 The Board moved to public comments. <br /> 9 <br /> 10 2. Public Comments (Limited to One Hour) <br /> 11 a. Matters not on the Printed Agenda <br /> 12 Vivian Herndon Latta said she and Gwendolyn Benjamin are here tonight to speak about <br /> 13 their food bank at the Mt. Zion AME Church in Hillsborough. She said they have been warned that <br /> 14 the food supply may not be as steady as it has been previously. She said many seniors rely on <br /> 15 their food bank and is asking the Board to consider providing funding to help fill this gap. She said <br /> 16 food insecurity is a real problem in Orange County, and they would like to be able to continue <br /> 17 helping community members. <br /> 18 Pastor Gwendolyn Benjamin said the food bank is staffed by volunteers from the church <br /> 19 and the broader community. She said she would like information on how to apply for funding for <br /> 20 the food bank and looks forward to continuing the relationship with the commissioners. <br /> 21 Ashley Parker said she lives in Northern Orange County and appreciated last week's <br /> 22 presentation from the Agricultural Presentation Board. She said there were thoughtful questions <br /> 23 asked from the Board, and she would like to answer those questions from her perspective. She <br /> 24 said farmers need one acre per person to be able to feed the population. She said that <br /> 25 Commissioner Hamilton had asked what that looks like in Orange County. She said that currently <br /> 26 there is only enough productive farmland in Orange County to feed 30% of the population. She <br /> 27 said they do not produce enough food and that removes people from agriculture. She said that <br /> 28 everything that is consumed is created by a farmer somewhere. She said agriculture should be <br /> 29 supported because it affects everyone. She said that it was implied that the county's hands are <br /> 30 tied but they can set a realistic budget that they can afford and that will not tie the hands of their <br /> 31 children and grandchildren. <br /> 32 <br /> 33 b. Matters on the Printed Agenda <br /> 34 Maxecine Mitchell said she is from the Chestnut Oaks community and that residents in <br /> 35 her neighborhood are shocked by their property reappraisals. She said they have investors who <br /> 36 call trying to buy their homes a lot. She said properties around there are selling for a lot, but their <br /> 37 properties are limited due to the rules of the watershed. She said the homes are being resold for <br /> 38 a lot more and are not remaining affordable. She asked how the number could go from $169,000 <br /> 39 to $299,000. <br /> 40 Sandra Clinton said she lives in a townhome community in Hillsborough built by Habitat. <br /> 41 She said she is a senior citizen on a fixed income. She said that her affordability is based on a <br /> 42 fixed income and her taxes are going to go up and make it unaffordable. She also expressed <br /> 43 concerns about the tax revaluation. <br /> 44 Joann Mitchell said she lives in the Efland area and is a habitat owner and a mortgage <br /> 45 free homeowner. She said that she is the president of Homeowners United of Orange County and <br /> 46 that is a countywide organization representing all Habitat for Humanity neighborhoods. She said <br /> 47 there are income requirements that must be met to qualify for a Habitat for Humanity program. <br /> 48 She expressed concerns with the process for revaluating Habitat homes in the county. <br /> 49 Kate Whetten said she works at Duke University and lives in Orange County. She said <br /> 50 that they have laid off three people so far and looking at further. She said that this is only the tip <br /> 51 of the iceberg of the economic impacts of federal decisions in this area. She said this is a time <br />