Orange County NC Website
<br />attended by Representative David Price as well as several key regional religious leaders to <br />discuss a range of issues including Homeland Security and the treatment of immigrant families. <br />Neloa Jones, CaCommissioner of Rogers Road Collation and Environmental Racism (written <br />statement attached and hereby incorporated as part of the official Minutes), and a resident of the <br />Rogers Road-Eubanks community, made the following specific requests: eliminate Eubanks <br />Road, identified as site 669, from the list of sites to be considered for the waste transfer station; <br />half all solid waste activities in the Rogers-Eubanks community no later than November 2009; <br />honor the promises made to the Rogers-Eubanks Road community over the past 35 years for <br />having endured the negative impacts of solid waste activities; and coordinate efforts to identify <br />and apply for public financing to connect residents of the historic Rogers-Eubanks neighborhood <br />to safe and clean water and sewer services. <br />b. Ann Arbor Report <br />7:53:28 PM Council Member Kleinschmidt remazked that Ann Arbor was a more urban <br />community, with the city being half again the size of Chapel Hill and Carrboro together. <br />Mayor Foy stated an ongoing debate in Ann Arbor regarded their height limits being raised from <br />10 stories to 20 stories, and noted Chapel Hill was debating on moving to 10 stories. He said <br />they had developed a north campus a significant distance from the main campus which was now <br />incorporated into the fabric of the city. Mayor Foy said the north campus was distant, isolated, <br />suburban, and basically dead. So, he said, it was a cautionary tale for them as to what they did <br />not want UNC to do with its new campus. <br />Commissioner Jacobs stated he was struck by how well organized they were, noting they had an <br />energy office within their local government, and they were attempting to incorporate energy <br />efficiency and sustainability into every government decision made. He said an anomaly was that <br />they had two bus systems, one run by the city and one by the university, with buses sometimes <br />passing each other on the road. Commissioner Jacobs said it was also striking that the <br />Chancellor had accompanied them on the trip, and he continued to be refreshingly engaged in <br />being a part of the community and to bring the university relationship with the community to a <br />higher level. <br />Commissioner Dancy said she had learned that Ann Arbor was involving their citizens in <br />development projects much as Hillsborough did, in that they required developers to meet with <br />citizens prior to coming to the Town with a project so that many issues were worked out <br />beforehand. <br />c. Introduction of new Orange County Economic Development Directors <br />(Bradley Broadwell, Orange County & Dwight Bassett. Town of Chapel Hill) <br />8:00:33 PM Brad Broadwell, Orange County's new Economic Development Director, <br />introuduced himself and provided some brief information regazding his background and interests. <br />Dwight Bassett, Chapel Hill's new Economic Development Director, introuduced himself and <br />provided some brief information regazding his interests, backgrounds, and current work. <br />