Senator Wesley Meredith – N.C. Senate District 19 (Cumberland)

1. Why do you wish to serve or continue to serve in the NC General Assemble?

To continue the work started in 2011 to reduce taxes, over burdensome regulations, increase teachers pay and create jobs.

2.  What are the top three challenges facing North Carolina and how do you propose to address them through your office?

Jobs:  work with state and local government to make North Carolina the most business friendly state.
Education:  working to raise teachers pay to national average.
Taxes:  lowering taxes and reducing regulations to help businesses grow.

3.  There is a statewide issue with unmaintained roads in neighborhoods recently referred to as “orphaned roads.”  A bill was introduced in the General Assembly this year but did not move forward.  What are your thoughts for solving this problem?

SB 778 had an additional amendment added during the short session dealing with charter schools.  This is what stopped the bill from becoming law.  The bill needs to be re-introduced in the next long session.

4.  What NEW ideas or incentives can you suggest to attract business into the region?

I helped get an appropriation of 7.7 million dollars to start a residency program at Cape Fear Valley Hospital.  This will create 350 jobs with a pay range from $50,000 to $450,000.00.

5.  Do you support a further extension of a tax on services in North Carolina?  Why or why not?

Yes, we need to broaden the base so we can lower taxes for all North Carolinians.

William Richardson (Billy) – N.C. House District 44 (Cumberland)

Candidate Response:  William Richardson (Billy) INCUMBENT
N.C. House District 44

Fayetteville Regional Association of REALTORS®, Inc.

Serving REALTORS® in Fayetteville & surrounding areas

General Assembly Questionnaire – Page 2

Responses on this page will be published on the FRAR Government Affairs Page for review by our members and the public

 

  1. Why do you wish to serve or continue to serve in the NC General Assembly?

 

I have been blessed to have been raised, live and work in Cumberland County, where I also raised my children. I entered the draft just after the Vietnam War ended, and did not have the chance to serve. My parents taught me that I had a duty to serve my community and country.

 

I have also been blessed to be trained as an attorney and taught by great teachers such as Betty Herring, Dorothy Gilmore, and mentored by Judge Herring, Lester Carter, and Don McCoy, to name a few; the art of consensus building and what can be accomplished if we all worked together. I need to use these skills.

 

  1. What are the top three challenges facing North Carolina and how do you propose to address them through your office?

 

  1. Public Education – the solution is to enact comprehensive legislation which attracts, creates, maintains, and reenergizes our career teachers. To have the best schools we need to train the best teachers; mentor them, pay them professional wages, and watch for burn-out. We need to begin treating education like the distinguished career that it is, instead of a job that can be sacrificed.

 

  1. Jobs creation – Along with creating a sustainable career track in education, we need to refocus our efforts on developing our green jobs. North Carolina has slipped from its 4th place 0status of sustainable solar and industry employment, and continues to fall. Making sure that there are sufficient incentives for these industries to stay need to be a top priority. We also need to arm our Governor and communities with adequate and competitive economic incentive packages to level the playing field with South Carolina, Virginia, and Tennessee.

 

  1. Water Conservation – water, its use and sustainability effects all aspects of our lives, from our property values, to issues with resounding global impact. We owe it to ourselves, our children, and future generations, to conserve the second most precious resource we have.

  

  1. There is a statewide issue with unmaintained roads in neighborhoods recently referred to as “orphaned roads.” A bill was introduced in the General Assembly this year but did not move forward. What are your thoughts for solving this problem?

 

Unpaved roads cannot support business or industry, and adds additional stress on city service vehicles. It just makes good sense to pave these roads. I believe we need to enact a city/county/state supported and backed bond and infrastructure package matching a city’s commitment to improve its infrastructure. Our infrastructure is crumbling around us, and we will never have cheaper money.

 

  1. What NEW ideas or incentives can you suggest to attract business into the region?

 

I am a proud supporter of the Campbell Residency Program, which will bring over 300 high paying, skilled jobs to the region. Also, many of these highly trained professionals will stay post residency – studies show that over 50% settle within 50 miles of their residency. Further action that we can take is making North Carolina the higher education capitol of the world – the acceleration of our education services can be tapped into as a research and development feed, as well as one for human resources.

 

  1. Do you support a further extension of a tax on services in North Carolina? Why or why not?

 

No, I do not – it unfairly burdens middle income taxpayers and slows growth. The exception is taxing alcohol, smoking, gambling, and other vices.

Sanford City Council Approves Bicycle and Pedestrian Projects

The City of Sanford City Council on Tuesday, approved a local funding match requirement for bicycle and/or pedestrian projects for the Broadway Road Widening Project.

The approval of the local funding would commit the city to a 20% non-federal funding match of the total cost for the bicylcle and pedestrian improvements.

Locations:

  • Sidewalk portion – new sidewalks on the north side of Broadway Road from Horner Boulevard to Thornwood Drive and a small portion of the south side from Horner Boulevard to Rosser Road
  • Bike lane portion – installing a 4′ bike lane on both sides of Broadway Road from Horner Boulevard to the city limits

Timeline:

  • Now that the 20% match is approved the consultant will begin design work this month
  • Funds will NOT be needed until a projected 2018 timeline or when the construction of the project is complete

Projected Cost to City of Sanford:

  • Sidewalk = $86,940
  • Bike Lanes = $44,614
  • Modifications US 421 Bypass = $41,417

To view the proposed sidewalks and bike lanes for Broadway Road Widening project click ↓

sanfordbikelanemap

Mayor Chet Mann – “This is a very great start for something significant for Sanford.”

City Council Work Session – Council Sends Downtown Property Ordinance Back to Staff

The Fayetteville City Council directed Monday evening to send the proposed Downtown Vacant Property Ordinance back to staff and also advised staff to meet with stakeholders to begin dialogue regarding the ordinance.  The suggestion by Council was to meet with various property owners, Chamber of Commerce and the Fayetteville Regional Association of REALTORS®.  The only opposing vote was councilwoman Kathy Jensen.

To view the background and proposed ordinance click herehttp://www.gad.fayettevillencrealtors.com/alert-vacant-property-ordinance-on-city-council-agenda/

What Was Said:

Councilman deViere – I make a motion to move this item to the September work session. Staff can have the opportunity to meet with REALTORS® and bring back a document with input.  I’ve talked to the Chamber and REALTORS® last week….their input needs to be gelled into this ordinance before a public forum.

Mayor Robertson – You said you spoke to the Chamber?

deViere – They want input and discussion on it.

Councilman  Arp – There is concern of many stakeholders on the language and that it is very over reaching in that it will define what a property owner can sell or not sell their property for.  I’ve had to direct staff to take action outside of downtown on property.  We are going to focus on downtown and not the rest of the city?  You need appropriate stakeholders engaged like the Unified Development Ordinance. We need due diligence before we go down this path.

Mayor – Mrs. Jensen you’re bighting your tongue…do you want to say something?

Councilwoman Jensen – (no response)

Mayor – Maybe after 18 months staff will get it right.

ALERT! Vacant Property Ordinance on City Council Agenda

Fayetteville City Council will discuss a proposed downtown Vacant Commercial Property Ordinance August 1 @ 5:00 p.m. in council chambers.  If Council approves the proposed draft, the ordinance will be placed on an upcoming agenda as public hearing.  Details of the ordinance are below.  To read the ordinance in its entirety please click here     Vacant Property Ordinance – Final

To view the footprint the ordinance will be implemented click here   vacantordinancefootprint

Highlights (from City memo)

Purpose

  • To ensure public safety within Fayetteville’s Primary Dire District and only applies in this District
  • To minimize the risk of damage from fire, flooding or other hazards of vacant commercial properties
  • To deter crime and theft of materials from vacant commercial properties

Registration required

  • Voluntarily initiated
  • Within 30 days of the owner receiving a Notice of Registration Requirement

Registration fee

  • Annually – $1,000

Exemptions

A building that is ACTIVELY listed with a licensed North Carolina realtor and offered for sale for no longer than one calendar year shall be exempt from the registration fee provided the building is offered at a price not to exceed 20% above the assessed value as documented by the Cumberland County Tax Administrator.  This is adjusted annually using a correction methodology provided by a local appraiser.  Proof of such tax value and realtor listing shall be required annually in order to renew the exemption.  A similar process is used for properties to be leased.  Additionally, properties with a building permit demonstrated to be necessary to prepare the property for occupancy, lease or sale may also be exempt.

Additional requirements

  • Maintenance standards
  • Security requirements
  • Local agent required for out-of-area owners
  • Quarterly life-safety inspections

Penalties and appeals

  • Violators must establish a plan for corrective action acceptable to the Planning and Code Enforcement Director
  • Failure to register – $500
  • Failure to annually register – $500
  • Failure to maintain – $.20 per square foot up to $500
  • Failure to submit a plan of corrective action – $500
  • Failure to implement plan of corrective action – $.20 per square foot up to $500
  • Appeals – Board of Appeals

NCDOT – Public Information Meeting RE: HWY 211

The North Carolina Department of Transportation will hold an open-house for the proposed improvements.

Location:
N.C. 211 from U.S. 15-501 in Aberdeen to S.R. 1244 (West Palmer Street) /S.R. 1311 (Mockingbird Hill Road) in Raeford.

Date:
Thursday, July 28, 2016
4:00 – 7:00 p.m.
West Hoke Middle School
200 NC 211 West, Raeford

Details:
15.4 miles
NC 211 will be widened to a four-lane divided roadway with grass medians.  Potential safety improvements may include limiting left-turn movements, adding run lands and limiting the number of driveways onto NC 211.15.4 1

To view road construction details please follow the link below↓

https://www.ncdot.gov/download/projects/publichearings/R-5709_Handout_July2016.pdf