Inter-Neighborhood Council
Making Better Neighborhoods
Http://www.rtpnet.org/durhminc
Minutes of Meeting of May 25, 2004
REPRESENTATIVES PRESENT
|
Pat Carstensen |
Cross County |
* Barker French |
|
|
Cheryl
Sweeney |
|
Paul
Cornsweet |
Morehead
Hills |
|
Mike Shiflett |
|
Randy Pickle |
|
|
Risa
Foster |
Trinity
Heights NA |
Dale
Stouch |
Placid
Valley |
|
C.
Duane Clark |
|
Mike
Palmer |
Duke-Durham
NbhdPartnership |
|
Fred
Foster, Jr. |
Old
Farm |
Bill
Anderson |
|
|
Lorisa Seibel |
|
Lynwood D. Best |
City of |
|
R. Gaye Weaver |
Old |
Deb
Cristie |
Colony
Hill |
|
Tonia Weeks |
|
Helena Cragg |
Old |
|
Jessica
Thompson Eustice |
|
Alice
Bumgarner |
|
* Speaker
Administration and Announcements
President Cheryl Sweeney opened
the meeting, and members introduced themselves.
Fred Foster announced a Durham Voter Coalition candidate forum on June 8
at NCCU.
§
Budgets
for NC courts are set by the legislature.
§
The
felony caseloads are going up. Because
resources have not grown as fast, the number of pending cases and the age of
cases are going up. As a consequence,
bail gets reduced or cases get plea bargaining, and defendants are back on the
street.
§
NC
is pitifully behind in technology – citations need to be typed into the
computer, for example.
§
§
Some
changes proposed are that Hardin will fast-track the worst offenders, the administrative
court will speed minor cases, and the Herald-Sun will publish quarterly statistical measures and actual cases that represent
successes or failures of system.
§
People
are asked to lobby governor and legislature for $300,000 for 2 additional ADAs, 2 clerks, and 1 digital recorder.
§
INC will vote in
June about whether to support the
Doggie (and kitty) doo-doo – A significant number of people
still do not clean up after their pets when they defecate in parks or on other
people’s property. The result is ugly,
bad when playing children get into it, and unhealthy when it runs off into
streams. It has been a major item on
Duke Central Re-zoning – Duke is planning what to do on their central
campus. University/College (UC) zoning
should support the developments that Duke and the neighborhoods have agreed on
(hotel, medical student housing, bookstore, restaurants, bowling alley,
etc.). UC, which has limited retail and
is pedestrian-friendly mixed-use, is Duke’s preferred zoning. However, a representative of Duke has
mentioned General Commercial (GC), which would attract much more outside
traffic, have more commercial space, and compete with
Duke Durham Neighborhood Partnership – Mike Palmer went over some
things they are doing. They work with established
groups. For example, on affordable
housing, they work with Self-Help, Habitat for Humanity, and the Land Trust. They have helped the 6 neighborhoods of SW
Central Durham to collaborate more. With
NCCU, they have gotten a $4.5M grant for after-school programs. They are also working on access to affordable
health care like the clinic in
COP (Citizen Observer Patrol) – Mike Shiflet
talked about COP, which is now only in District 2 but deserves to be spread to
Districts 1, 3 and 4. It lets citizens supplement
police (doing things like elderly checks).
Some people who are reluctant to talk to police will tell COP volunteers
about problems in their neighborhood. It
would cost about $8-15K to start (pay for administrative health screens,
insurance, etc.)
Other updates / items:
§
Nominating
Committee – INC
elects officers in September so delegates are asked to consider serving on a
Nominating Committee.
§
§
UDO and
Comprehensive Plan –
There will be public meetings on these in June. See the Planning Department’s
website.
§
Minutes – April minutes were approved.
§
Billboard bill – Letters went out to
Adjournment – The meeting adjourned with a reminder to look at the
events listed at the bottom of the agenda.
Billboard Bill
Correspondence
Dear members of
At its April 27th delegate meeting, the InterNeighborhood Council of Durham (INC) voted to
re-iterate its opposition to the so-called "billboard bill," Senate
Bill 534. Even if billboards are the only named structures in the bill, the
bill will undermine the use of amortization and therefore, the ability of local
governments to use zoning and other regulatory tools to protect neighborhoods
from visual blight, dilapidated buildings, and inappropriate uses such as junk
yards, nightclubs, and adult entertainment.
The InterNeighborhood Council
of Durham (INC) is a private, nonprofit coalition of
If you have any questions or concerns, please
feel free to contact President Cheryl Sweeney at 919-220-0404 or scjdurham@aol.com.
Sincerely,
Patricia Carstensen
INC Secretary
From : Catotti,
Diane <dcatotti@ci.durham.nc.us>
Thanks,
Pat! take care, Diane
§
- ---
Mr. Carstensen,
Thank you for your input on this matter and
relaying the position of the
InterNeighborhood Council.
I also do no support SB 534.
Rep. Paul Miller.
§
- ---
Pat,
At the County's meeting with the legislative
delegation last week, we went on record against Senate Bill 534, the
"billboard bill." While the bill is labeled the billboard bill, I
pointed out that the bill would prohibit the amortization of other
nonconforming uses such as junk yards, making it much more difficult to clean
up areas of our community.
Ellen
§
- ---
We are opposed to bill and have let legislators know
this loud and clear.
Best to you and Ed. Becky Heron