May 2011

Chapel Hill Voter-Owned Election Public Information Session

The Town of Chapel Hill's Voter Owned Election Program will be discussed at a public information session scheduled at 7 p.m. Wednesday, July 6, in the Council Chamber of Town Hall, 405 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.

The program for the public funding of local municipal election campaigns is voluntary and is for candidates choosing to run for Town elective office. Prospective candidates who choose to participate in the program must demonstrate a level of public support and comply with spending restrictions and reporting requirements as established by the Town program in order to receive public funding.

The information session will be of special interest to persons considering becoming candidates and potential candidates' campaign managers and to treasurers in the municipal election for the Town of Chapel Hill on Nov. 8, 2011, and others interested in local election issues. Voters this November will be electing a mayor and four Council members.

On July 16, 2007, the Town of Chapel Hill received authorization from the North Carolina General Assembly to establish the program for public funding of local municipal election campaigns. Chapel Hill is the first local government in North Carolina to have received this legislative authority.

A Voter Owned Election is a comprehensive system that provides candidates a voluntary option for a new way to run for office. Candidates who are registered with the program agree to:

  • Collect a large number of $5 to $20 qualifying contributions to demonstrate community support 
  • Limit campaign spending 
  • Agree to comply with strict administrative rules

In return, participating candidates receive limited amounts of campaign dollars from a publicly financed fund to be used only for allowed campaign expenses.

For more information, visit www.townofchapelhill.org/voe.

CONTACT: Kim Strach or Amy Strange, NC Board of Elections: 919-733-7173

Date: 

Wednesday, July 6, 2011 - 7:00pm to 9:00pm

Location: 

Chapel Hill Town Hall Council Chambers- 405 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.

Early Voting in Orange County

In fall 2010, more than 900,000 people voted prior to Election Day in North Carolina. Our state currently allows local counties to provide early voting sites for periods up to three weeks before Election Day. Here in Orange County, early voting is particularly popular. On the final days of early voting in 2010, the line at Morehead Planetarium snaked  through the planetarium, down the stairs and across the quad as professors, residents and students lined up to vote.

OWASA Board Responds to Carrboro and Chapel Hill

When the Carrboro Board of Aldermen voted on March 1 against a request by OWASA to amend the Water and Sewer Management, Planning and Boundary Agreement (WSMPBA) -- and the Chapel Hill Town Council followed suit on April 25 -- the local water and sewer utility found itself in need of a compromise or a new strategy.

WILPF 31st Triennial Congress

 For more information, contact:Tana Hartman, 619-6546 (c) OR Miriam Thompson, 919-370-4114  

The 31st triennial congress of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom  (WILPF) opens on June 1 on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel  Hill, hosted by the League’s Triangle branch.  Its theme, “End War – Local to Global,”  will be explored by such outstanding speakers as Rev. Dr. William Barber II, President of  the North Carolina NAACP; Kathy Kelly, head of Voices for Creative Nonviolence; and  Madeleine Rees, former head of office of the U.N. High Commissioner of Human Rights  in Bosnia and international Secretary General of WILPF. 

Kelly will speak on her recent visit to Afghanistan Friday, June 3 in Chase  Hall, Ridge Road, UNC campus, 12 noon, free.  Rev. Barber’s keynote speech “The Long  Road to Freedom, Equality and Justice” on Friday, June 3, is also free to the public, 7  p.m., Hanes Arts Center on campus.   A reception and film gala on Saturday,  June 4 will begin at 6 p.m., Hanes Arts Center, with the film “The Whistleblower,”  an expose of sexual atrocities perpetrated during the Balkan war, showing at 7:15 p.m.  Discussion with Rees and Donna Bickford, Director of the Carolina Women’s Center,  regarding the film and human trafficking will follow.    

Workshops will examine such issues as “Corporations v. Democracy;” “Water for Life,  Not for Profit;” nuclear energy, the status of women. For more information: www.trianglewilpf.org , or contact 919-370-4114 regarding  registration, scholarship, transportation and volunteer information.

Date: 

Wednesday, June 1, 2011 - 3:00pm to Sunday, June 5, 2011 - 11:30am

Location: 

SASB Hall, 450 Ridge Road, UNC Campus;

OWASA Public Hearing

From a recent e-mail:

The OWASA Board of Directors invites customers to participate in public hearings on Thursday night, May 26th regarding:
 
·         proposed rate and fee increases, including a potential 2% increase in monthly water and sewer rates;
·         the draft budget for Fiscal Year (FY) 2012; and
·         the draft FY 2012-16 Capital Improvement Program (CIP)
 
The public hearings will be part of an OWASA Board meeting at 7:00 PM in the Chapel Hill Town Hall, 405 Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. The meeting will be televised live on local cable channel 18.
 
Citizens are invited to attend and speak at the public hearings and to provide comments for the OWASA Board by e-mail to webmaster@owasa.org, by letter to 400 Jones Ferry Road, Carrboro, NC 27510 or by fax to (919) 968-4464.  Written comments will be public records and they will be provided to the OWASA Board.
 
Highlights
 
·         OWASA is a non-profit, community-owned agency with cost-of-service rates.
·         The proposed 2% increase in monthly rates would add $1.66 to a typical residential bill for 5,000 gallons of water and sewer service.
·         The proposed operating budget of $19.1 million for FY 2012 is about $500,000 more than the current budget.
·         The primary reasons for the proposed rate increase are higher costs for chemicals used in water and wastewater treatment, and an expected increase in the cost of maintaining OWASA’s equipment, water and sewer lines, and drinking water and wastewater plants.
·         1.5 employee positions have been eliminated in the FY 2012 budget. Since 2004, OWASA has reduced its workforce by 14%.
 
Proposed rate and fee increases
 
Single-family residential water use by OWASA customers averages about 4,500 gallons per month. (OWASA’s bills are rounded down to the nearest 1,000 gallon increment.)
 
Examples of bills for individually-metered residences:

 
Water and sewer use per month
Current bill
Bill with proposed rates
Increase
2,000 gallons
$44.04
$44.92
$0.88
3,000 gallons
$56.65
$57.79
$1.14
4,000 gallons
$69.26
$70.66
$1.40
5,000 gallons
$81.87
$83.53
$1.66
6,000 gallons
$95.90
$97.84
$1.94
7,000 gallons
$107.93
$112.15
$2.22
8,000 gallons
$123.96
$126.46
$2.50
 

As indicated above, a typical residential customer uses 4,000 to 5,000 gallons per month.
 
Rates are also proposed to increase about 2% for businesses, master-metered multi-family developments and institutional customers, who pay “seasonal” water rates; and for irrigation-only customers.
 
The one-time “service availability” or capacity fees for initial connections to the OWASA system would increase about 3.4%, which reflects the 5-year historical average increase in the construction cost index.
 
Any customer who wishes to have an estimate of bills with the proposed rates is invited to call Public Affairs at 537-4267 or send an e-mail towebmaster@owasa.org. Estimates are based on water use in the last year.
 
OWASA is a public, non-profit agency with cost-of-service rates
 
OWASA’s cost-of-service rates are calculated to fund operating and maintenance costs; debt payment obligations; infrastructure replacement, renewal and improvements to maintain reliable, quality service; reserves necessary to be financially sound; and sustainability initiatives and investments.
 
OWASA has no shareholders. OWASA is owned by the community in the same sense that public facilities such as local streets and parks are owned by the community.
 
Infrastructure investments/capital improvements
 
One of OWASA’s highest priorities is renewing, replacing and improving its “infrastructure” of pipelines, treatment facilities, etc. to ensure reliable, quality service to current and future customers. Cash funding of new capital projects and debt payments for previously completed projects account for about 45% of OWASA’s monthly bill.
 
The proposed $9.9 million capital budget for FY 2012 includes $3.4 million to replace aging water lines; $3.2 million to complete the Bolin Creek sewer replacement; and various projects at our water and wastewater treatment plants, pump stations, etc.
 
The proposed 5-year CIP for FY 2012-16 is about $63 million and it includes $35.5 million for renewal, replacement and improvement of water and sewer lines to maintain the reliability and quality of our services; and $21 million of work at our two treatment plants.
 
Debt payments on bonds issued to help pay for capital projects
 
The FY 2012 budget includes $8.8 million of debt payments on bonds issued since 2001. OWASA funds its capital improvements with a combination of long-term bonds, which are paid off over time, and net revenues available in a given year. The FY 2012 budget for debt payments is about $900,000 less than the FY 2011 budget. About 20% of OWASA’s debt is in variable rate bonds, for which interest rates have fallen due to market conditions.
 
Other budget items
 
·         $600,000 for capital equipment.
·         $650,000 annual contribution to the capital and rate stabilization reserve funds.
 
Financial sustainability
 
In accord with financial management policies adopted by the Board of Directors, the proposed budget for FY 2012 is designed to meet objectives for financial sustainability, including the amount of financial reserves and the ratio of net income to debt service. These are among the key performance measures on which OWASA’s creditworthiness is based. Continuation of OWASA’s strong credit ratings translates into lower interest rates on bonds, which mean lower costs to OWASA customers.
 
Budget process
 
The OWASA Board may make decisions on the budget, capital program and rates in June.
 
FY 2012 will begin on July 1, 2011 and end on June 30, 2012.
 
The normal effective date for changes in OWASA’s rates is October 1stfollowing the public hearings in May and adoption of the annual budget, etc. in June.
 
For more information:
 
·         Additional information on the budget and capital program and a summary of current and proposed rates are available by clicking here. If you receive this information in paper form, we invite you to visit the OWASA website,www.owasa.org, click on About OWASA and then click on Performance & Financial Information.
 
·         Stephen Winters, Director of Finance and Customer Service, 537-4230 orswinters@owasa.org

Date: 

Thursday, May 26, 2011 - 7:00pm

Location: 

Chapel Hill Town Hall, 405 Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard

OP Editors Public Meeting


Date: 

Saturday, June 11, 2011 - 3:00pm to 5:00pm

Location: 

Foster's Market, 750 Martin Luther King Jr Blvd, Chapel Hill, NC

What took the Commissioners so long to act on Rogers Road?

The news this week that the Orange County Board of County Commissioners has voted to charge a new tipping fee at the landfill to raise money for remediation in the Rogers Road neighborhood - a move that seemed somewhat ham-fisted to municipal governments (see below about that) - reminded me of a very interesting conversation I had last month. I attended oral history performances by a UNC class that conducted interviews with civil rights activists. Two students had worked closely with David Caldwell and Gertrude Nunn and learned about their neighborhood's 3-decade challenge of trying to get justice for living with the landfill that serves all of Orange County.

One grad student who is very familiar with local politics turned to me afterward and asked the same question that was in my mind: our County Commissioners have to be one of the most liberal boards in the state. How is it that the Rogers Road neighborhood has been stymied by them repeatedly, instead of being championed by the environmental and social justice advocates on the Board?

Stop "managed care" waiver that stomps on disabled people

Developmental disability civil rights are getting stomped on. I emplore you all to read this and act on it quickly if you all really care about people. Our rights are being taking away.

letter to governor

write to the governor about this issue and please help stop the destruction of what people with developmental disabilities have had to live with .i wrote a very simple email that stated   i am a 52 year old informed self-advocate and i am asking you to veto senate bill 316 and house bill 424.

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