Blogs

newsobserver.com blogs

Slade Appointed to Vacant Seat

The Board of Aldermen just appointed Sammy Slade to finish the last few weeks of John Herrera's term.

The Town Clerk administered the oath of office and Slade went to sit with the Board.

"Don’t feel nervous Sammy, because you get to do this again
in three weeks," Mayor Mark Chilton said.

Slade was elected to fill one of three open seats last week, but the Board of Aldermen decided to appoint him early so he could go ahead and get started.

Slade may start early as Carrboro alderman

Newly elected Carrboro Alderman Sammy Slade may get to start a few weeks early.

The board plans to seat its newly elected members -- incumbents Jacquie Gist and Randee Haven-O'Donnell are the others -- at an organizational meeting Dec. 1, according to Town Clerk Sarah Williamson.

But Mayor Mark Chilton suggested back in August that the board apppoint the newly
elected alderman to finish the last few week's of John Herrera's term, according to a memo from Alderman Dan Coleman to his colleagues. Herrera resigned unexpectedly, saying he had moved, remarried and wanted to spend more time with his family. His resignation helped pave the way for Slade, whom he endorsed.


"Unless anyone disagrees, I would like to ask Mark [Chilton] to arrange with the
clerk and with Sammy that this would be our first order of business
next week," Coleman says in the e-mail.

That would give Slade three meetings to settle in. The board has meetings scheduled Nov. 10, 17 and 24, according to Williamson.

Election morning

In Carrboro, Mayor Mark Chilton is seeking a third term. He is being challenged by political newcomer Amanda Ashley and Brian Voyce, who ran for mayor in 2007.

There are three open seats on the Board of Aldermen.

Incumbents Jacqui Gist and Randee Haven-O'Donnell are seeking re-election. Challengers Sammy Slade, Sharon Cook and Tim Peck are all vying for a seat.

Polls close at 7:30 p.m. Be sure to follow OrangeChat and look for election stories on chapelhillnews.com this evening.

What are your predictions?

Respect the chicken, farm tour participants agree

Joe Carlson’s co-op on Hillsborough Road slaughters chickens three or four times a year.

They place the bird in a cone so the head sticks out. One person slices the bird’s neck. The other holds the body firmly but gently until it bleeds to death in about a minute.

“It certainly is a gruesome thing,” Carlson told about two dozen
people at the second annual Urban Farm Tour on Saturday. “But I certainly believe life and death are huge facts of life.”

Farmer Kille found guilty of forgery

Carrboro farmer Marilyn Kille was found guilty  this morning of common law forgery for altering the plans for her barn to include an accessory apartment.

Orange County District Court Judge Joe Buckner sentenced Kille to a 15-day suspended sentence, a year of unsupervised probation and a total of $475 in fines and court costs. Assistant District Attorney of Jeff Nieman requested a mental evaluation of Kille, but the judge did not order it.

Tour organizers cancel chicken slaughter

From Sammy Slade:

"We, the Carrboro Greenspace collective, are very sorry that some people have been upset by the inclusion of the Chicken processing skillshare as part of the Urban Farm Tour. We didn't anticipate the controversy it would cause. Our reasoning was that if we are serious about creating a sustainable food system, animal processing must be a part of the discussion.  We do sincerely appreciate your very real concerns and the willingness to engage in this conversation. We feel continuing this conversation is absolutely crucial for our long term efforts in creating a sustainable small-scale food system which is what the Urban Farm Tour is about. As such, instead of the original skillshare  we are inviting the community to participate in an honest and respectful discussion starting at 3:30pm at 'The Bog' (Pleasant Street and Crest Street in Carrboro)."

Chapel Hill-Carrboro farm tour may put off chicken slaughter

Organizers of Saturday's Urban Farm Tour may cancel a public chicken slaughter after a complaint to Town Hall.

The annual tour shows examples of small-scale sustainable
agriculture at about a dozen sites in Chapel Hill and Carrboro. Planned workshops included honey harvesting, lasagna bed preparation and a slaughter of chickens for a community “stone soup” at the end of the event. 

But news that chickens would be killed at this year’s event upset resident Gina Burns. She wrote to town officials saying the chicken killing was inappropriate for a private lot and could lead to slaughter of other animals kept for food. 

Chicken kill raising questions in Carrboro

The Urban Farm tour this Saturday has raised questions in Carrboro. As correspondent Rebekah Cowell reported in Wednesday's Chapel Hill News, organizers plan to slaughter three or four chickens at one of the 15 sites on the tour and then serve the chicken in a community "stone soup" at the end of the event.

Alderwoman Joal Hall Broun wants to know if the county has any rules for how the chickens may be killed and whether any special rules apply to serving the chickens to non-relatives. Town Attorney Mike Brough has recommended the town contact the Orange County Health Department and find out. "If they have a concern, they can deal with it," he wrote in an e-mail.

Hall Broun said she thinks the town also has a role to play.

"If they are having a publicly announced chicken kill and they are going to advertise to using those chickens in a public event; then I want to insure that whatever public health regulations, there may be, if they exist, be complied with," Hall Broun wrote in an e-mail to the town. "I buy my chickens at Weaver Street and Whole Foods, so I know where my chickens are coming from. Additionally, while I ate my grandmother's dead chickens, I knew her to be a person who believed cleaniness was next to Godliness."  

Gist questions Greenbridge's enviro cred

At last week's forum, the Sierra Club asked Carrboro candidates if they supported more "high-rise" development. In Carrboro, high rise means five stories, half the 10 stories going up at the nearby Greenbridge project.

Alderwoman Jacquie Gist criticized Greenbridge, which will feature innovative technology that cuts energy use and which many say is a model for future environmentally friendly, in-fill development.

Last she head, Gist said, Greenbridge developers were counting on out-of-town investors and rich alumni coming to games to buy their units, some of which will cost more than $1 million. (She was referring to this story in The Daily Tar Heel.)

"That's real enviro," she said.

Carrboro candidates differ on growth

Candidates for Carrboro Board of Aldermen showed slight differences in a question on growth at last week's forum. The Sierra Club does not let all the candidates answer all the questions at their forums. Here are answers from those who were allowed to answer. (Remember, the Sierra Club holds a forum for candidates for Chapel Hill Town Council at 7 p.m. this Wednesday in Chapel Hill Town Hall.)

Do you support more high-rise buildings in Carrboro? [Background: Carrboro has a five-story limit, half as tall as Chapel Hill, where the Greenbridge condominiums will rise
seven and 10 stories, the planned 140 West Franklin condos, eight
stories.]

Amanda Ashley, running for mayor, called for a moratorium downtown until the town sees the effects of the five-story projects already approved. Several of those projects are on hold because of the recession. "Let's digest the pig before we go slithering after any more," she said. 

Mayor Mark Chilton said he would supports high rise development in the Harris Teeter/Carr Mill Mall area because the infrastructure supports it. "I don't know if I would call five-story 'high rise,'" he said.

Sharon Cook said she was glad the town limited development to five stories and would evaluate projects case by case. "If I wanted to live in a big urban city I wouldn't have been living here," she said.

Incumbent Jacquie Gist said she voted against five stories when the board set the limit and would do so again. The only place she believes that height is appropriate is in the ArtsCenter/Cat's Cradle shopping center, where Gist publicly agonized over the planned redevelopment before ultimately supporting it. She questioned the premise that higher-rise development in the downtown area will keep pressure off the town's outskirts. She also said 'I am terrified about what the rents in those [high-rise projects downtown] are going to be, not only for the residents but for the businesses."

 

 

 

Cars View All
Find a Car
Go
Jobs View All
Find a Job
Go
Homes View All
Find a Home
Go

Want to post a comment?

In order to join the conversation, you must be a member of newsobserver.com. To register or to log in using your existing account, click here.
Advertisements