Washed-Out Dams, Parking Decks, and Double Standards (Fay. City Council)

Hurricane Matthew wiped out dozens of dams in Cumberland County and Eastern North Carolina.  Many Fayetteville residents with empty community lakes have called on the City of Fayetteville to assist with repairs.  After all, the city is spending thousands on storm-water maintenance and collecting fees from taxpayers to address flooding issues.

The city has declined direct assistance to the affected residents, stating repeatedly through its leadership that it can’t use public money to repair their private dams:

City staff emphasized that its hands were tied as far as how much the city could do.

Deputy City Manager Kristoff Bauer emphasized that the city could not spend public money on private dams.

Councilman Jim Arp, who represents Loch Lomond, said he wants to find a solution to restore the lake. But he and Crisp said they are concerned about spending city money on private dams.

“It has to benefit all the taxpayers of Fayetteville,” Arp said.

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“Say they’ll clear it up another day”

The legislature has delayed, yet again, the cleanup of Jordan Lake.  The lake has become tainted with algae blooms due to runoff and development in the Triad and Triangle.   If you live in Cumberland County, this matters to you.  Jordan Lake is fed by the Haw River.  The Haw River joins with the Deep River below the Jordan dam, and this junction marks the start of the Cape Fear River (and a great cat-fishing spot).  The Cape Fear River flows through Fayetteville where it is used for your drinking water.

I grew up fishing and camping at Jordan, and I like clean drinking water (as all human beings should), so I’ve been frustrated to see the overall decline of the lake.  With increasing development upstream, the problem is getting worse.

Cape-Fear-Map1

In 2009, rules were put in place by our legislature to attempt to curtail pollution in the lake.  These rules were costly for developers in the surrounding metropolitan areas of Greensboro, Durham, Cary, etc.  They required stream buffers, retention ponds, and other ways to limit runoff into the watershed.

Developers didn’t like the rules, so they gave money to powerful Republican candidates who took control of the legislature in 2010.  The legislature has delayed the implementation of the rules four times over the past decade.  This week makes five.  Developers are happy.

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Trickle-Down Hatred

We’ll start this post at the top, with our president and his way of communicating with the American people.  His supporters call him “unfiltered,” his critics, “untethered.” Regardless of which side you’re on, it should be obvious to you that things are being said in public that weren’t said before.  Lines are being crossed and in some respects, obliterated all together.  Nothing’s off the table anymore.

In my opinion, Trump’s particular “brand” of leadership has lowered the nation’s discourse in a rather significant way.  Trashing other people is now acceptable and even appreciated.  Social media and the ability to hide behind a keyboard add fuel to the fire.  It’s now o.k. to broadcast hate as long as you can rationalize that the object of your disdain is somehow worse or different from you.

Here’s an example:  it’s Memorial Day, 2018, and we have a story in the Fayetteville Observer where a candidate for Cumberland County commissioner is posting charts on his Facebook page that compare Democrats to Nazis.  “It says both the Democrats and Nazis hate Jews, and adds that Democrats also hate white people. It says they both favor socialism, censorship and media mind control, and that both worship the government.”  The candidate defended the post as tit-for-tat.  “That comes out of Democrats all the time,” he said.

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Poor timing: Why four-year terms are a bad idea

Guest Post by Bill Bowman 

Come on, folks! Four years terms for our elected officials? Are you kidding? Is this community so sadistic and hell-bent on fulfilling that predetermined and haunting conclusion that Fayetteville and Cumberland County will always find a way to rip defeat from the jaws of victory?

No doubt Fayetteville is experiencing a growth spurt stimulated by the new $38 million baseball stadium and the Houston Astros’ 30-year commitment to play ball in the city. Currently, we have about $100 million of new economic development in downtown Fayetteville. This is a good thing, but the prevailing question in the minds of many residents is “does this community have the dedicated, intelligent and business-savvy leadership capable of managing growth of this magnitude?” Many think not.

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Rep. Szoka on Teacher Pay: At least you’re not a farmer (Audio)

Republicans in the legislature have begun to spin their response to the massive teacher rally that will take place in Raleigh tomorrow.  “Misinformation” is being spread, they argue.  “Union thugs” are organizing the march, not real teachers.  Regardless of the spin, it’s going to get interesting on Jones Street.   This is no small rally.

As a whole, there seems to be a massive divide between the thoughts of knowledgeable Republican legislators and the feelings of teachers.  You could hear it on the airwaves this morning in Fayetteville:

On a local talk show, Representative John Szoka (R-45) expressed amazement and laughed when asked why teachers are so unhappy that they are marching on Raleigh.

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