Category Archives: media

Are There Really Too Many Planners in Certain Metro Areas?

Recently, I was made aware of and responded to this series of threads on Twitter, that among my colleagues in the D.C. area, there’s a concern over how many practitioners of place,  especially planners, exist in the metro area and how many folks want to be planners by name, versus just doing the work in many different aspects of the field.
 
I’ve heard this before, from planners and related advocates, architects, engineers and others who do community work of all races and from all other regions of the U.S. I’m not surprised and I do know why I hear this so much.
 
I’ve talked about it before, but as I’ll mention in the final section, I want to shift my thoughts and takes back to this site, where I own the server space and have plenty of room to link to things. 
 

Why There’s Merit in the Too Many Planners Argument 

First,  few clients exist in need of architecture and building services as well as transportation planning and operations, that don’t already have existing contracts and people they use. Even for general environmental planning, or acceptance of environmental injustice, there’s a drought. Your client base/employment options are limited greatly.
 
The one most people are aware of are government entities, which have all kinds of requirements to ensure fairness and equity in the awarding of work contracts to firms, but sometimes can be cumbersome and create competitive environments. Also, for legal reasons, which yes, have merit, you have to be careful what you talk about and who you talk to when it comes to these competitions. Which can be hard when most of the people you compete with were at one point studio classmates or internship cubemates. Or even better, roommates or lovers. Plus, if you elect to work in-house with a government entity, you have other ethical considerations and gag orders, which again, are often necessary. Finally, some things, like public transit, just make more sense to be governed by you know, the government and for their privatization to be regulated, if there’s privatization at all.
 
Or, you work with private for or non-profit developers, without government funding, some who are in the business to create things that make our world better and some are in the business to take from others and make gobs of money from themselves. Now for-profit doesn’t always mean capitalist monster, just like non-profit doesn’t always mean charitable and for the people. Many places need to build or renovate homes, build or renovate transportation systems and honestly, build or renovate a lot of other pieces of the built environment or society. However, there’s even a limit there to how much people can build and operate.
 
Speaking of the nonprofits, you could be or work with an advocacy group with a dash of service provision, but you’re often getting your money from government grants, private grants or private banks, so there’s not that much difference from what I mentioned above. There’s also a size issue, some contracting firms might as well be power brokers, while others like me are just small shingles.
 
Basically, if you’re new to the idea of planners/architects/engineers/contracting, all these firms operate and build like law firms and attorneys as well as media outlets and journalists. We also have lawyers in our clubhouse too and they can tell you what their lives have been like as they’ve seen a shortage in labor and emphasis on big versus small especially over the last 10 years. And this site, if you haven’t already picked that up is a journalistic outfit ;).
 
The next big argument against a growing class of capital p planners is the public will of the citizenry.  Some well-meaning folks, as well as your usual villains in many jurisdictions and metro areas, fail to provide adequate funding, maintenance and even just the creation of adequate transportation, housing, environmental quality, and education systems. For that, I do suggest that more people with a good grasp of land use planning, construction, and operations, run for elective office and approve budgets that fund these things, as well as go to public meetings, especially ones that offer you the chance to pick budget items to fund or for items that are in active stages of construction or pre-construction, where changes can be made.
 
Then there’s human prejudice, marginalization and power dynamics unrelated to land use and planning, that still affect the profession. This encompasses the lingering hurt and harm done to those of us who started as enthusiasts or hobbyists of architecture or transportation systems, as well as the marginalization of community groups or communities period, especially black, brown, queer and poor groups.
 
Plus, some groups just don’t talk to each other or talk over each other. I can’t tell you how many arguments, especially online, would be solved if the two entities would do a thorough review of the bodies of work and life experiences that have been shared, on the internet, as well as in offline resources. Not just professional work, but considering how lived experiences affect how people see the world, especially the environment which we all battle over.
 
All this gets wrapped up into how we interact and I think that to go forward, we have to address this elephant.

How This Affects Me Directly

This conversation hits me so much because it’s directly related to why I’m going through a tough time. 
 
In doing my reader’s survey, I learned that many of you started following me (or at least those of you still paying attention enough to fill out my survey), in or after 2014. Since that’s the case, you may have only realized in passing how much the loss of my dad in 2013 has reshaped almost every aspect of my life. I think that taking a detour into what brought me to this post today, which has been discussed in other parts of the site before, is valid because some of you have yet to peruse the archives!
 
When he was living, my dad was a very an active force on how I approached the built environment. From him teaching me how to ride and care for a bike, to me going along on some of his electrical contracting jobs and sometimes to the school buildings he helped maintain, to the way he never met a stranger and how proud he was of my achievements (my degrees were on HIS resume), he had a very outsized presence in my life and loved being part of my online stories and life.
 
He also understood what it’s like to struggle with the ups and downs of having a professional services business, and also needing a job to pay benefits. He went through open discrimination on the job. When I would cry about my own similar issues, instead of just leaving things as that’s the way it is (and he would say that in a Walter Cronkite voice impression), we would scheme about how to change and fix it. Neither of us would accept no for an answer and we didn’t accept that just because that’s the way it is, that’s the way it should stay. Then, all of a sudden, 50% of him was gone due to a major accident in 2010 and finally, all of him was gone over Memorial Day weekend of 2013.
 
Not having my parent to debate the ways of the world unconditionally with, lurched me into a state of trying to find that in other family members, friends and colleagues. It, along with the awareness of middle-class, suburban Black American police shootings and other random racialized violence and incidents, plus microaggressions that ballooned in my post-graduate school, post-2013 working environments drew me into the state of rage that James Baldwin so eloquently illustrated. It also fuels, much like Baldwin, my want and love of travel and moving away from bad situations.
 
Additionally, my mom and several other family members with similar experiences of racism and business-making are more private people and that’s why I share very little of them on here. While I love how connected the Internet makes us, I’m a firm believer in respecting privacy and that some things will always remain secret.
 
However, I wouldn’t have felt the need to move so much, if one, there were other options professionally to fix the mistake that got me fired from my design services firm in Greensboro in 2014 and the dating life I’ve not really had anywhere, especially given my sensitivity to partners, namely male, respecting my brain and ambitions. Plus, political work often leaves you with more enemies than friends and such a critical analysis of what’s wrong with society, it’s very difficult to see and embrace what’s working right. I’m dealing with the opposite of what my colleague Chuck Marohn has shared recently. There’s very little of the negative I don’t see, I just don’t comment on everything and clearly, this website has been stringing cobwebs as I just realized this is my first full blog post that isn’t a newsletter copy I’ve written in 2018.
 
When I left North Carolina for Kansas City in 2015, I felt like I was giving up on North Carolina, as I discussed in great detail last year. I felt like I couldn’t be a die-hard supporter of the betterment of my home state without being in said state. On the other hand of the lack of urbanist media focus on North Carolina, alternatives to car transportation, alternatives to certain kinds of single and multi-family housing, and the issues mentioned above,  made me believe that I couldn’t do what I wanted to do in North Carolina.
 
I brought that baggage with me to Kansas City, along with the pull of a partner who lived in what I considered the optimal environment for urbanist debate and planning, as it had some of the functions that we all advocate for, as well as again, a class of folks who love to debate and talk about it constantly. I would no longer get teased or harassed for only talking about this at the expense of other things. (Mind you, doing anything, including being an urbanist, in excess, is a recipe for disaster).
 
So when I left Kansas City for D.C. in 2016, my goal was to establish myself in that greater collective of urbanist minds thinking through solutions on a national level.
 
However, as has been well documented, this moving back east plan backfired.
 
I’ve barely made any real money, wrecked my credit and ability to have credit lines, barely had health insurance and healthcare and of course, the relationship that was the foundation of my move to D.C. broke down. Somehow I’ve managed to scrape by, but it’s taken me moving all around and thankfully, folks still finding value in these kinds of writings on the sense of place and the experience of being out in the world. That and finding a flexible barista gig that will finally come with full benefits. And before that, having a community up in Baltimore that took me in when things got really tight and tough in D.C.
 
Additionally, in many cities, including the ones in my home state, as well as the greater Kansas City region, we are a very culturally in-tune people and in cities where rail, bike-share, and enhanced bus services are available, we do park our cars and use those services. We also know how to park our cars and walk down our one-two main streets. And yes, there may only be a couple, but they are well utilized. This happens across class and race lines as well. I had to learn this the hard way as well, that I’ve been way too pretentious for my own good, in assuming that other cities would never be capable of the urbanity I so wanted from them.
 
Finally, having traveled and worked in so many states and the District of Columbia, I’ve found that every state and the District has some form of discriminatory or structural issue that causes marginalization. Plus, migration as a whole creates multiple cultural awareness and needs to balance one’s personality with one’s environment.

So What Now?

I hope that with this post, it’s clear, to both new and old followers and colleagues, exactly why I decided to leave North Carolina, come and go from Kansas City and come and go to the Greater Washington/Baltimore region, as well as travel often and broaden my ideals of land use and environmental thought, planning and doing. 
 
Additionally, this is how I would like to address the elephant of too many planners in too few places.
  • Acknowledge that all cities are different, and have different land use and planning needs, therefore creating many urbanisms/rualisms/placeisms, etc. Also, I’ve debated replacing my references to urbanism, with placeismPlaceism is the concern with all aspects of land use and natural environments, urbanism focuses mostly on the densification of those environments.  Dr. Lisa Schweitzer has a great breakdown of how she uses the terminology and echoes things I’ve said in this post and in prior posts. I also invite anyone who is unfamiliar with the urban to rural transect to get to know more about that and use that to help as you advocate formally, design and build things and especially in these online arguments where people want to create a utopia in ten tweets. Also, feel free to engage ways that the transect is limiting and build upon this to establish a standard of broadening how we talk about the environments we inhabit. Coming to terms with the differences in terrain and resources is also helpful if you’re in the field in a jurisdiction that doesn’t have some of the infrastructure you want and need, to start productive conversations with people about that, that may yield the support system that you absolutely need to not go crazy like I did and jump off the proverbial cliff. Finally, let’s get out of the habit of saying X person or groups of people suck for having to drive or having to live in a cul-de-sac or only being able to  shop at Walmart, when we need to be yelling at public officials, proposing new ordinances and maybe suing dishonest developers for creating this environment. Everyone shouldn’t have to be a planner to make sure we don’t get mistreated as citizens.
  • You don’t have to be a capital p planner, capital a architect, capital d developer, capital e engineer or some other bold-faced title to make it in this world, but it makes it easier if you have a history of discrimination or marginalization to have this layer of professional knowledge. This was the core of the most recent tweets, that you don’t have to be a planner to make a difference. However, we need to absolutely acknowledge that for some folks, especially from marginalized and disrespected backgrounds, it’s not so much that they need to have the job title, but the security of the letters next to their name or a paper certificate to be taken seriously. Let’s also make sure we stop making people feel the need to over-credential just to get paid what they are worth or recieve job and project assignments on which they will be excellent. 
  • If someone says they want to launch a career in a land use and planning related field, offer to sit down with them and launch out a plan. You can plan a career and not get afoul of reporting requirements for government grants or even threaten your own job and space in the profession. I will say that in one conversation where I heard there were too many planners in D.C. and I was one of them, this person gave me some excellent book recommendations and jobs to consider. The tweet stream I reference also has good ideas of how other jobs can still allow you to make places better and stronger.  Additionally, I’ve added a resources section to this site and developing some offline resources to help you and others make the right decisions about where to plant yourselves in the greater land use world. In the meantime, my short guide on figuring out your career in this world. Also, don’t be as stubborn as me and not listen when people do offer to help until it’s almost too late.
I wrote this post because I wanted to spell out in more than 250 characters tied into multiple threads, how much this subject of who does what in the land use and planning world, affects me. I feel like so much is lost in the current environment of Twitter and Facebook, where we value hot takes and yelling at the choir of our individual Facebook groups, over the long-form solution making that even venues like this often don’t meet.
 
I also want to establish a standard for myself and our profession going forward. That we all sit at a big table,  and there’s room for all of us, as long as we come to sit there with mutual respect and the mind that we will push for solutions, even if that solution is to do nothing and let things be. No one is perfect all the time, but no one is beyond reproof, restitution or forgiveness either.
Finally, this site is about to look very different and will no longer just be me sharing ideas and resources. I’m looking forward to returning in a few weeks with new things that I believe will help us all become better at what we do. In the meantime, introducing my Resources page and my job/opportunities b

Never heard of me before this post? come over here and let’s get to know each other better.  This platform doesn’t have a paywall,  but I still need to eat. Buy me a meal via PayPal or Cash App, or many meals via Patreon.

 

Placebook: The Optimistic Southerner

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Today I ran across an article that captured the essence of why I’m out here writing this page, and developing an even bigger platform. Essentially, to tell the story of the citified Southerner.  Like these guys and also these guys, I’m trying to tell a different, but valid story. Of the Southerners we all know. The Southerners that are usually black or white, but increasingly Hispanic or Asian, from an Arabic country or the jungles of Vietnam. The Southerners that because they   open their mouths and sprout out intelligent things through the twang are an object of shock and awe. The Southerners that consume sushi one night and then fried chicken or bone-in fried fish with their hands the next.  And of course, we defy all stereotypes, including the ones I mentioned here.

I’m linking to this article one more time just to make sure you pay attention. And for those of you who are fellow citified or even just dignified on the farm Southerners, be proud. And as our friend Killer Mike says on another part of that very page, give back to your community. And in my special way of giving back, I give you the news:

There will be a DuckHead store in downtown Greensboro, along with the relocated corporate headquarters of Prospect Brands.

An outside law firm has determined that the $750,000 loan from the City of Greensboro to the International Civil Rights Museum and Center was valid despite the lack of signature on the contract.

The Greensboro City Council has formed a committee on East Greensboro. The meetings are open to the public and the next one will be held at 4 p.m. on April 17th.

This News and Observer editorial on outgoing Raleigh planning director Mitchell Silver captures perfectly what many of us feel about him moving up and us losing him as a leader in planning in the state. Also nice, these editorials on the RDU Airport land and the Raleigh mayor’s speechthat focused on transit and transportation.

Beloved Raleigh barbecue joint Clyde Coopers will reopen with some of its original touches right around the corner, while making way for a new mixed-used development in downtown Raleigh.

New apartments are planned on South Elm-Eugene Street in Greensboro, near the I-85 interchange.

A report has confirmed that Wilmington’s roads are in bad shape. However a food truck rodeo was successful and raised money for local nonprofits, and a troubled housing community is improving.

Cumberland County Commissioners are working on a plan for the arsenic-tainted wells in one community.

The Lumbee Tribal Council is questioning a loan to purchase the  North Carolina Indian Cultural Center and only has two weeks to make a decision before the opportunity is given to the general public to purchase.

Charlotte Mecklenburg Schools has revealed their teacher tenure plan. Wake County Schools will hold off on introducing its behavior grade system.

Charlotte-area residents spend over 40 hours in traffic a year according to a study commissioned by an organization that supports highway construction. This same organization presented statewide figures on cost savings from repaired roads and pushed for more road projects statewide.

Charlotte home prices have also increased by 7.2% in January.

The Asheville City Council has approved the I-26 connector route. In addition, the City of Asheville is set to explain all the new rules for zoning and planning along Haywood Road, which includes an area dedicated to live-work spaces and smaller setbacks to the road for new buildings. Water rates may also go up in Asheville.

Popular Asheville eatery White Duck Taco will open it’s second location later this spring. The Asheville VA will also open more clinics.

Governor McCrory has requested federal storm recovery money.

And finally, not really urbanist related, but the Durham Bulls will be dressed up as R2-D2 for their May 4th game. And the Winston-Salem Dash has been purchased by the owners of the Chicago White Sox, which will also ensure the lease of the ballpark from the City of Winston-Salem is extended and allows the ballpark to not draw on taxpayer funds for maintenance.

 

 

Placebook: When Billboards Work

 

Hate has no place in our city bilboard by Flickr user Steve Rhodes
Good billboard with a good message. Photo by Flickr user Steve Rhodes

One of the things those who rail against the  enroachment of  consumerism in our daily lives especially hate are billboards. I’ll admit, there’s something charming about seeing a barn sign, an old-school painted Coca-Cola sign or those hand-painted peach signs on the way to Myrtle Beach. Yet, when it comes to regular old billboards that dot the interstates and the suburban stroads of life, I could do without them. Especially the ones that flash.  I also think, as a marketing and media maven, that I’m immune to advertising.

But then I got sick with a nasty sinus infection and cold. I was trying to go to my regular primary-care after hours clinic, but thanks to a thunderstorm, they’d been knocked right back out of power.  I then went to the nearest CVS minute clinic. Not enough time or people to see me. So I put my tail between my legs and planned on what home remedy might work next. As I was making the drive home, I happened to look up and see a massive billboard for another urgent care clinic. I’d seen it time and time again, enough to ignore it.  But there it was, providing me information about a service I might need, when advertising actually performs a public service. I was on the wrong side of the road, but I pulled over and turned down the street it was on.

Two hours and two nice PA’s (and only $60 out of pocket) later, I now have all that I need to finally shake this sickness and get back to all of the things I love and a few new ones I hope to add.

I say all this to say, even the ugliest parts of our built environment have a purpose sometimes. Of course, I’d loved it better if that massive billboard had been a hand-painted red cross sign, but then would I have seen it in the oversizedness of everything else in that warehouse district. Probably not. And with that, your daily news:

Nice write up on The Farmery, the portable food market that’s currently housed at the Raleigh City Farm.

The workers that are working to bring power back to businesses that still don’t have it (and a few more that were added to the totals due to today’s thunderstorm) have been sleeping at area businesses due to lack of hotel rooms.

The ghost project on Winston-Salem’s MLK Drive.

Business license taxes could be limited statewide.

Lots of good changes coming to Greensboro’s Harlem Bistro, including a name change.

The state is still struggling to make deadlines to process food stamp applications.

A High Point branch of Meryl Lynch Wealth Partners moves into High Point’s downtown, while the Rol-a-Rink will shut down at the end of the month, leaving only one skating rink in High Point.

The Asheville school system is readying the first STEM themed school in Western North Carolina.

The state DOT has begun repaving I-40 near Asheville.

The Blue Ridge Parkway is no longer the National Park Service’s number one site.

Some Charlotte leaders believe that Charlotte’s current workforce is not strong enough to compete locally. Yet a Chinese coal firm will bring 60 local jobs to the South Park area as it relocates its U.S. operations.

Charlotte Douglas Airport will not be getting a solar farm.

The UNC system has set aside its construction budget requests, but not its operating requests after it’s original budget request was sent back.

Meanwhile, veteran public school teacher pay is 46th in the nation and new teacher pay is 48th.

The projects hoping to get a piece of the Wake County hotel-motel tax money.

Questions are being raised about Durham police informant payments.

The Wilmington drawbridge repairs are almost finished.

The City of Wilmington will not be holding its annual Nautical Festival this year.

Mixed-use development planned in Pender County near US 17.

Greensboro has about a middle-of-the-road amount of douchebags and Durham has one of the lowest numbers of the top 100 cities of the countryaccording to this study.

Misuse of the Jordan Soccer Complex has also led to restrictions on the Cape Fear River Trail in Fayetteville.

The NC utilities commission chair is subpoenaed due to the coal ash spill saga.

Around the Nation: the The latest in the NYC building collapseyou can buy solar panels at Best Buyyour rail trail is probably safe and how some of Silicon Valley’s farming startups could be more harmful than helpful.

Placebook: We’re on the Move, Again.

So I’ve decided to let the cat out of the bag. First and foremost, meet:

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For now, the site will just be this daily email/news roundup (which will be renamed Daily News). In addition, I hope to add original coverage and opinions around state and local government, transportation (all modes), buildings and architecture, and education. Go ahead and bookmark www.ncplacebook.info.

So what will happen to The Black Urbanist? The Black Urbanist will become my editorial blog, allowing me to still have a voice on issues affecting placemaking and communities of color. However, with this change I can address the need to have a more comprehensive coverage of placemaking issues throughout the state of North Carolina.

Also, for the next few weeks, I’ll still be posting Placebook here, so everyone can get used to going to our new home and I can get a few bugs worked out. If you are reading in email, you will still get Placebook, but there will soon be options to subscribe to just the Daily News, to our articles and blogs feed and to a few other things we hope to pilot with over the next few months.

I want to thank everyone who continues to read, share, suggest, proofread and like this work on the social networks. Everything I promised on Monday content wise will happen and you will see not only me, but a few others create something that makes the case for a better North Carolina and presents us with a better image to the world. I’ll also be reaching out to a few of you about special opportunities to work with and share content with North Carolina Placebook.

News from North Carolina

All it took was an email for Trader Joe’s to pull back out of Greensboro again.

But look on the bright side, the ACC Basketball Tournaments are here in Greensboro for the next two weeks.

Break-ins are causing Winston-Salem/ Forsyth County Schools to question whether its mobile classrooms are safe.

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools will not sue the state, but ask for changes in regards to the new tenure policy.

High Point wants to finally name a street after Martin Luther King, Jr.

Batman came to Charlotte yesterday as well.

State leaders pushed for more public-private partnerships at a conference in Charlotte.

New reports have revealed issues with the Union and Gaston counties Department of Social Services.

Ferry tolls may go up.

There are more corrugated pipes at Duke Energy power plants throughout the state, similar to the one at the Dan River spill.

Wilmington wants to establish a special downtown taxing district, similar to Greensboro’s Downtown Greensboro, Inc.

And of course, we share this sentiment on reporting on the cities, with our friends at the new Triad City Beat.

News and Lessons from Elsewhere

Ok I lied, but I wanted to get this one link out from friend of the blog James Rojas about what influenced his decision to become a placemaker and how it ties into the Latino Civil Rights struggle.

Placebook: For the Love of the Press

 

Newspaper Dispensers in Downtown Greensboro. Photo By Kristen E. Jeffers

Well, here we are at the end of February. My people have celebrated their history and everyone has taken the time to celebrate love. Here on the blog this month, I’ve taken several moments to express how much I love various parts of cities, and my hometown and places outside of the city. However, I want to end this month of looking at love by talking about my love of the press.

One of the things my dad did on the  side when I was a kid was  deliver papers for the recently merged Greensboro News and Record, which he still referred to affectionately as the Daily News. One day he took me to the newsroom.

I think that was probably the beginning of my love affair with the press. Between that and watching WFMY News 2, then reading The Rhinoceros Times (it was only the Rhino as a nickname then) and somewhat agreeing with some of the Beep callers, then growing out of the views after I picked up my first Independent Weekly in Raleigh, returning home to meet YES! Weekly and now greeting the Triad City Beat with open arms, I have a special love for my local media.  Oh and of course I have a digital subscription to the New York Times and I did to the Washington Post when it was pay-walled, because I’m a solid media nerd.

Some folks will say that having so many papers and platforms is clutter. I can agree, but only in the sense that I too suffer from information overload. I too feel things more when I read them in print or hear them in an official setting such as a podcast or TV show. Yet, what I truly love about our media world, is that it is a free world. At least here in the United States. People may express views that are good and bad, and some that are even slanderous and libelous. Yet, we have protections that allow us to express views and leave them as views and to deal with views that are wrong-headed or physically harmful, by gathering as a people or going one-on-one to solve them. That is the beauty of the free press and that is why I love it so much.

So as I come to you from my little platform, I am constantly grateful for the opportunity.  So grateful, that I’m doing what I can to make it bigger, better and above all a service not just to clearing my head, but a service to those of you who want to know things to help others and help yourselves live better lives. A couple of days ago, I mentioned that I had news about the future of this space. I’m not ready to give everyone the goods just yet, but I do want to invite you to subscribe to my email list, for a sneak peek at what’s to come. If you are reading this in the email, get ready, it will be a fun ride.

And with that, I’m going to give you a taste of what I thought was great in the many papers, blogs, TV news websites and the like that I think you need to know. Thanks again for loving me too and may our March march in like a lion, so we can end it like a lamb:

News from North Carolina

Everyone who has filed thus far for election in North Carolina.

The internal Greensboro city police review board is under review.

People are complaining about the panhandlers at Friendly Center in Greensboro. Yet, for the panhandler featured, it’s just one piece of an attempt to string together a living for his family after a recent job loss.

A dollar surcharge on tickets at the new Greensboro performing arts center could go to helping other nonprofit arts organizations.

After receiving an offer of 2 million dollars for the old Forsyth County sheriff’s building in  downtown Winston-Salem, the county commissioners may start a formal process to sell it off.

United Therapeutics, a Maryland-based life sciences company, is almost ready to move into its new location in the heart of the RTP, revamping one of the original park buildings for itself.

Yadkinville turns a beat up old building into a cultural anchor.

Pine Street Flowers in Durham hopes to rekindle an old florist shop, along with aid local florists and gardeners with selling their wares close to home.

Wilkes County residents are fighting against two new industrial-grade chicken farms.

Asheville’s Haywood Street Parking Facility demolition is set to start on March 11.

What has come of this year’s city budget process in Charlotte.

Wake County Commissioners has ceded some control of the school construction process back to the school board. Guilford County Schools has renewed their superintendent’s contract.

The Fayetteville Public Works Commission is suspending putting ammonia in the water for the month of March.

A former Wilmington golf club is set to become a development of single-family and town homes.

News and Lessons from Elsewhere

Why we (Americans) don’t walk. This person doesn’t drive in Los Angeles and is ok.

I commend and wish the best of luck Dr. Amara Eniya, who hopes to take her knowledge of urban planning and good governance and become the next mayor of Chicago.

How to make bike lanes on the cheap. Also, the worst hills around the country for bikes.

How the Cleveland garment industry echoes the Greensboro garment industry.

What start-up culture looks like in Detroit.

What land banking is looking like in New York State after it’s first two years. In NYC, a man turned an opportunity to be photographed eating chicken into a opportunity to let folks know about his crusade to maintain current standards at the New York Public Library.

Governing asks if it’s time to lift the ban on tolling interstate highways.

And finally, a great historical sketch on the Pullman Porters and their fight for fair wages and justice, as we conclude Black History Month.