InterNeighborhood Council Delegate Meeting Tuesday March 25, 2008 In Attendance Deanna Crossman Walltown Janet Hitti Parkwood Donna Allison N Durham Chuck Clifton Long Meadow Carolyn Paige APS of Durham Susan Glowacz APS of Durham Brenda Howerton Tarleton West Marty Wilaby Hope Valley North James Chavis PAC1 Grace Wakeman Morehead Hill Tyler Waring Downtown/Cleveland Holloway Scott Carter Woodcroft Bertha Johnson City of Durham Rhonda Parker DPR/City of Durham Sheri Allen Old Oxford Cindy Boak Old Oxford Pamela Henry Mays OOCA Patrick Baker City of Durham Pam Meyer Durham County Bill Anderson Duke Park Myer Sugg TLNA Craigie Sanders Grove Park Mike&Cheryl Shiflett Northgate Park Rosemarie Kitchin Falconbridge Melissa Rooney Fairfield Pat Carstensen Cross County Meeting called to order at 7:05pm. SmartCommute Challenge - Kirsten Reberg-Horton Pledge to try a new method of transportation between April 15-May 30th (bike, walk, carpool, bus, etc). They can help with a pledge drive in your neighborhood and have signs for front yards if you would like to promote awareness of the challenge. They ask you to spread the word, if you're interested, in your community newsletters and neighborhood listservs. Last year they saved 2.3 million commuting miles! Check out www.GoTriangle.org if you need help finding new routes or suggestions. Also, if you're interested in actively participating, contact Kirsten at
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. Waive fees for neighborhood associations at Parks and Rec – Chuck Clifton Long Meadow formed their neighborhood association 1.5 years ago and have made significant progress connecting the neighborhood and ousting drug dealers, etc. They now meet monthly with 15-22 people and are having difficulty finding a meeting place. However, the Lion Park community center is in their neighborhood with 6 meeting spaces, but they charge the neighborhood $35/hour. They have asked for a fee waiver and was denied because they weren't a 501(c)3. They appealed and were denied even a reduced rate. Longmeadow has proposed a resolution proposing a fee waiver at parks and rec facilities for neighborhood meetings. They ask we endorse the resolution. Parks & Rec response: they would like to offer a partnership where a neighborhood association is asked to volunteer their time regularly in exchange for time at the community center (for example, as part of a youth mentoring program, or Adopt-A-Park or Adopt-A-Trail 4-6 times per year). Please present the resolution at your next neighborhood meeting and we will discuss and vote in May (April is the INC Meet the Candidates meeting). Suggestion modifications: "any appropriate City meeting facility," "for neighborhood business meetings" Open discussion: Items of Interest for Upcoming Budget City/Co managers, Budget and Management Services Directors (Bertha Johnson and Pam Meyer) Concern: Neighborhoods established in the 1930s and 1940s have willow oak street trees that are rapidly reaching the end of their life expectancy. The neighborhoods will take a big hit when they're all lost (values, crime, utilities). We need to replace them. Response: General services has a tree program and was discussed at coffee with council. Their budget was set today and does have money set aside for the tree program. Concern: Keep Durham Beautiful is growing exponentially in size and performance and would like an assistant for the leader. Concern: Bicycling facilities on city streets and trails. Are there funds to expand facilities. Response: Matching funds exist for bike lanes and amenities in new development. Concern: Save money by asking that money that goes to non-profits be providing a service that should be provided by the city (and not double dipping with the county). Also, non-profits should target private fundraising if not for essential city services. Also make them accountable to show benefit. Concern: Identify neglected houses and fine and penalize them until they are in compliance. Use the funds acquired to benefit the community. Concern: Recommend that non-profits do more canvases and reach out to the communities more. Be more personally active in the community. Concern: ComNet is gaining popularity. With the neighbors doing all the canvassing, we encourage that there are funds to fix/repair street-level deficiencies that are identified to keep the momentum going. Concern: Request a Neighborhood Liason in the City Managers office that can canvas the community and identify needs, help bridge the gap in communication between the neighborhoods and city offices. Concern: YMCA received $70,000 per year previously. Schools are outsourcing their after-school programs to organizations that are private with closed boards and there is no oversight. Want oversight. Concern: Stop serving lunch at the shelter to drug addicts without providing other services and letting drug addicts wander back onto the street. Concern: Emphasize services for the homeless and those in need, encourage training/shelter. Concern: What is the budget trend for the police force in the coming year. Has heard there has been loss in the police dept due to higher pay in surrounding cities. Response: Pay classification study for all city employees that will be completed in May. The police budget will be presented tomorrow, so they don't know yet. They do want more officers, as well. Concern: Neighborhood advocate with legal/planning experience – is there talk of funding for that position? Response: The request is in the budget, not yet committed to. Concern: Have one shift per week that police walk their neighborhoods instead of driving through to get them interacting and talking with their police. Response: Problem is staffing. Patrol officer complaint is that they are jumping from call to call until they are off and don't have time to interact with neighborhoods. There is also intense competition for police retention and Durham has a reputation for being a great training ground, so we have a lot of loss after a few years on the force here to other small communities that offer higher pay. Concern: Charge problem properties with their tapping our police resources so greatly (50-100 calls per year). Response: Getting top ten locations in each district that have the highest number of calls to the police dept. Concern: Police as frustrated as the neighborhoods for seeing the people that are arrested one day back out on bond the next. The revolving door is frustrating and can lead to police force loss. Also, need better facilities for police substations (example, district 1 was just closed for health issues). Concern: National Night Out has great police turnout that never attend PAC2 meetings. Have an equivalent event two or three times per year to get neighborhoods more active. Updates: Thanks to all who helped with the Neighborhood Hero Awards – they were a great success! Parks&Rec – summer camps starting, Art Walk – April 5th-6th CCB Plaza (Sat 10-7:30, Sun 1-6pm) Earth Day -- Durham Central Park 1-6pm April 19th Adopt-a-Park/Trail – contact Rhonda Parker (
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) More info at www.durhamnc.gov/departments/parks APS of Durham – now has full-time vet, cat facilities enlarged and communal now, new development director, April 19th Gala at Washington Duke, May 17th walk at Wallace Wade (bring your pet!) Keep Durham Beautiful - Monday April 28th Croasdaile golf tournament Collection boxes in the Right-of-Way – the matter is being investigated – complicated – in the works is regulation to govern them TMLS listings – neighborhood field is now totally editable Neighborhood Revitalization Taskforce is developing a home owner education workshop in June to learn about mortgages – would be great of INC to participate Tree save resolution was sent out to the listserv – will be discussed and voted on in May John Schelp – West Durham hike with history through natural and urban areas – April 12th, meet at NC School Science and Math at 9am – look for announcements on the listserv Earth Day also has several creek cleanups organized – look for one near you! Announcements INC Candidate Forum – as our April delegate meeting - come 30 minutes early and bring two friends! Casual interaction and then an opportunity to speak for 2 minutes about their platform. The DA and Co Commissioner panels afterward. Resolution: Whereas, neighborhood associations and associated neighborhood watch programs are a crucial element in crime prevention, and Whereas, regular neighborhood meetings are the foundation of these neighborhood associations, and Whereas, many neighborhood associations lack both space for regular meetings and the funds to rent meeting space according to the current schedule of fees at the City of Durham Parks and Recreation, and Whereas, neighborhood associations are organizations formally recognized and encouraged by the City of Durham, and Whereas, neighborhood associations are an integral part of successful government in the City of Durham for the following reasons: 1. They play a central role in the Durham Planning Department's Organization Notification Directory Program, 2. They are an integral vehicle for neighborhood engagement by the Department of Neighborhood Improvement Services' Community Relations Coordinators and 3. They provide focused and consistent feedback on a range of issues to the elected officials and staff of the City of Durham; Now Therefore, the Durham INC requests that the City of Durham make public meeting space at all Parks & Recreation facilities available to all neighborhood associations registered with the Durham Planning Department at no charge to these neighborhood associations and require no deposit for the use of these facilities. Meeting adjourned at 9:10pm.
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