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By Kathleen Witte

Chapel Hill Transit is a staple form of transportation in Chapel Hill, Carrboro and on the UNC campus. But some of the buses are over 20 years old, and federal standards say that’s not acceptable.

Because the buses are so old, CHT maintenance has to spend more time and money on keeping them safe for passengers. The cost of intensive upkeep may even exceed the price of a new bus.

This video was reported as part of Carolina Week newscast produced by students at UNC’s School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Click here for more from Carolina Week.

The proposed CVS site located on Greensboro Street in Carrboro was attacked with “guerrilla gardening” on Saturday. Members of Carrboro Commune, Carrboro Greenspace and Croatan Earth First! joined forces to launch clay seed bombs over the fence and to plant a garden surrounding the site as a form of peaceful protest.

The same CVS building was used as a site of protest in February when it was occupied by Carrboro Commune protesters.

Protesters generally wish to see a community garden on the plot of land rather than a new CVS. A junior Chapel Hill student and Carrboro Commune member, Alanna Davis, attended the event. She told The Daily Tar Heel that the purpose of the protest was to promote the right of Carrboro residents to grow medicinal herbs and vegetables, as opposed to the dispersal of unsustainable and unhealthy pharmaceutical drugs.

“Choose Your Future: #GuerrillaGardening @ 11:00 AM on March 17!” tweeted Alex Berkman from the Carrboro Commune.

As the Chapelboro news site reported, one protester was arrested for causing traffic by chalking the street.


Filling the Void

Offshoots of the Occupy movement have certainly made their presence known in the Chapel Hill and Carrboro areas over the last few months, beginning with Occupy Chapel Hill‘s encampment setup in Peace and Justice Plaza, and culminating into the occupations of the proposed site for a 24-hour CVS, which was peacefully dispersed, and office space at 201 N. Greensboro Street Yates Motor Company Building, which ended in a highly publicized police raid.

Where It Began

The Occupy movement first arrived in Chapel Hill by moving in to Peace & Justice Plaza on October 15, 2011 to stage a protest in line with the original movement that began in New York City. The occupation lasted several months, until the movement decided to move off of Franklin Street last month to better focus on their goals rather than maintaining a camp.

While the town did not take action against the movement during their occupation of the plaza, they did respond after the fact by taking another look at town ordinances about protestors utilizing the space and their enforcement.

From The Daily Tar Heel‘s coverage of the revisiting of permitting for the plaza:

With the new ordinance, residents must have permits to hold events in the plaza that last more than three hours. Those permits must be applied for 48 hours in advance of the event — a point of contempt among council members because it would disallow spontaneous protests.

In the past, occupiers and others spent entire nights in the space, but now protesters can stay in the plaza only from 7 a.m. to 2 a.m.

The Yates Motor Company Building

Local anarchists took over the abandoned car dealership at 419 W. Franklin Street on Saturday, November 11, 2011 and occupied the space for nearly 24-hours before police cleared the building by force in a highly publicized raid that prompted discussions within the town on the use of force. The raid was only half of the story though.

According the Damon Seils, a member of the Carrboro Planning Board, a major issue that was left out of the discussions following the raid was why the protestors selected that building.

“The focus has been on the response, not the reasoning behind [the occupation],” Seils said. The Yates Motor Company Building was vacant for nearly a decade, and the issue of how to handle prominent commercial spaces being left unused in central locations is not a new one. Seils mentioned that the issue arose during local elections about four years ago, and emphasized that there needs to be a discussion held on how to respond to these situations and what actions are actually within the Town of Chapel Hill’s power to carry out.

The CVS Building

The latest occupation of a prominent commercial space left vacant took place when another group of protestors took over a building on 201 N. Greensboro Street in Carrboro that is the proposed site of a 24-hour CVS and office space. This protest was much shorter-lived, but ended peacefully and included a visit by Carrboro Mayor Mark Chilton.

From our coverage of the occupation:

Maria Rowan, a local activist who had set up a tent across the street with the “Nomadic Occupy” camp, was handing out pamphlets on the sidewalk outside the building. She wasn’t a part of the original group that moved into the building, but she said she supported what they were doing and wanted to see the forgotten office spaces converted into an area for locals, not a CVS Pharmacy.

“We’re suggesting a radical notion that the community, the people who actually live here, should determine what physically happens in the space where we live and not the capitalists and not the state and not a corporation somewhere else,” Rowan said.

The citizens of Carrboro will get to have a say in the matter with a public meeting regarding the request for rezoning of the property and a special use permit at 7 p.m. on March 1st at the Carrboro Town Hall.

What Is Being Done

While some protestors have taken to occupying these spaces as a way of bringing awareness to the issue, others are taking a more creative approach. Beginning in October 2011, the Chapel Hill Downtown Partnership received permission from the owner of the Yates Motor Company Building to utilize the front display windows for installation art pieces.

From a blog post about the installations by CHDP’s Meg McGurk:

As a community we have demonstrated over and over that we value public art. The irony of removing one persons artistic voice in order to install anothers is not lost on me. It begs some questions – does public art only hold value if it’s sanctioned? Is someones name scrawled jerkily on a window actually art? No doubt there is a beauty to street art. It can be brilliant and graceful, even in the simplest of flowing lines. I can certainly appreciate the emotion from which it comes.

The original installation, which was completed in December, filled the previously empty windows of the building throughout the Winter, was created by Adrian Schlesinger, a studio art major at UNC, and featured a loose interpretation on a holiday theme portrayed through silhouette depictions of the Chapel Hill community.

One of the window installations created by Schlesinger for the Winter. Photo courtesy of Chapel Hill Downtown Partnership.

When asked about her experience with doing the installation, Schlesinger said it was a learning experience for both her as well a CHDP. The Partnership decided they wanted to do this project and sent out a call for artists, and she responded with a proposal “comprised of painted banners and domestic objects. The installation illustrated light in darkness, warmth in winter, and people (silhouettes) convening in an vacant building.”

Schlesinger believes that art belongs both inside and outside of traditional gallery spaces and hopes the art she created has a positive impact on the building, the Partnership and the Town.

Bobby Funk, program director of CHDP, said the goal behind the idea was to be doing something good for the street and something good for the space, very mich in line with Schlesinger’s hopes for her art. Although he could not provide specifics, Funk believes utilizing the empty window space has achieved good for the building, increasing awareness for the vacant space in a positive light and potentially increased the possibilities for future redevelopment.

The Partnership also put together a video about the original installation by Schlesigner:

[vimeo width="600" height="370"]http://vimeo.com/33605684[/vimeo]

CHDP is continuing this project, with local artist Charles Chace currently installing his own creation that will adorn those windows for the Spring.

“This is the first time I’ve installed a vacant building,” Chace said. “It’s nice and quiet, and you get to people watch.” Chace received little notice from passersby when he first began the installation, but now people will stop and give him a thumbs up.

While art may be art, working in a vacant building poses several unique issues with this installation. “There is no back drop and people can’t come in, so I turned the back drop into the art,” said Chace. “From the outside you see all this color, but it blocks out the inside.”

"It's almost a better view from across the street because you don't get the reflections," Chace said. He is currently working on the first of two installations that will fill the building's front windows for the Spring. Eric Pait/reesenews

In Carrboro, members of Carrboro Commune are planning a guerrilla gardening day on March 17th to turn the unused lot at 201 N. Greensboro Street into a useable garden.

From the News & Observer’s coverage of Carrboro Commune’s plan:

The group called Carrboro Commune includes members of the local anarchist community and Occupy Chapel Hill-Carrboro movements. On Monday, Occupy said it did not endorse the building takeover, which ended when police ordered the demonstrators out or said they would arrest them.

“The Carrboro Commune, an open affiliation of community members concerned about the corporate domination of public space, will collaborate with other local organizations to transform the unused lot at 201 Greensboro Street into a vibrant garden providing edible, medicinal, and beautiful plants for the general public,” the group announced this morning.

A fence was put up around the building at 201 N. Greensboro Street after it was occupied by protestors. Eric Pait/reesenews

photograph courtesy of Ari Hires

Carrboro Arts Committee members teamed up with artists from the area to “yarn bomb” Carrboro this Saturday. Benches, railings, trees, sculptures and lamp posts were enlivened by colorful yarn decorations.

The Arts Committee hopes this stream of creativity will remind Carrboro of its artistic culture and heritage and will brighten the appearance and attitude of the community. They believe Carrboro is in dire need of “outdoor art.”

A group called Yarnboro!, made up of 12 knitters from the area, have helped the Carroboro Arts committee take on this project, which has been under development since last July.

 

More than $880,000 in losses from fire damage occurred in the year-ended June 30, 2011, according to the Chapel Hill Fire Department annual statistic report.

The Chapel Hill Fire Department  responded to 2,048 fires that year, and the older homes and apartment complexes near campus may be the most fire-hazardous housing and the most popular housing for UNC students.

Older homes

“For an older home it is certainly important that the electrical system and wiring be inspected and updated to current standards,” Mary Blevins, assistant fire marshal at the Chapel Hill Fire Department, said.

“You often have things that have been adapted as time goes by and may not be adapted appropriately,” she said.

Resident forgetfulness may be another fire-starter.

“We have an awful lot of things that plug in and get hot and require heat,” Blevins said. Sometimes people get distracted and leave things on, she said.

Between July 1, 2010 and June 30, 2011 the Chapel Hill Fire Department received 4,723 calls, an increase by 9.5% from the year before. Blevins said the main cause of fires in Chapel Hill was cooking incidents.

“Hopefully you won’t leave and go to the store with food on the stove, but sometimes people do,” said Blevins.

Apartments

While the Chapel Hill Fire Department attends to more fires in single-family homes than apartments, Blevins said that more people are injured or displaced in apartment complexes because of the close proximity of the dwellings.

The Carrboro Fire-Rescue Department inspects condos, apartments and multi-family dwellings and can catch risks in those homes before a fire occurs. If a fire does happen, a smoke alarm, also called a smoke detector, could save lives by notifying residents of the blaze.

Robert Maddry, fire marshal for Carrboro Fire-Rescue Department, explained that smoke alarm should be located on each level of the house, inside every bedroom and preferably in the hallways of sleeping areas. These should be interconnected so that if one alarm goes off, they all will.

Maddry said residents should replace the batteries in the alarms them twice a year — in the spring and fall.

“Change your clock, change your batteries,” he said.

Smoke alarms have a usable life span of 10 years, Blevins said.

Fire prevention tips

Blevins and Maddry provided several tips that will help prevent fires in a variety of dwellings:

  1. Install working smoke alarms throughout your home.
  2. Always use a lid if you are cooking with grease or anything flammable.
  3. Do not leave anything cooking unattended, set a timer and carry it with you.
  4. Do not cook while you are tired or distracted.
  5. Do not leave appliances, such as dryers, running while you are out of the house.
  6. Make sure cigarette butts are dowsed in water and properly disposed in a non-combustible container.
  7. Make sure outdoor fire pits are kept small and far from combustible construction or loose leaves.
  8. Use a single power strip instead of multiple extension cords.
  9. Have a fire extinguisher easily accessible and know how to use it.

Maddry suggested homeowners get in touch with the local fire department to receive information on fire prevention programs and information on fire safety.

This article was reported for the 253 Reporting class at UNC’s School of Journalism and Mass Communication.

Esther McCauley was one of the first members of Chapel Hill’s African-American community to break the mold of training school-based education.

But Chapel Hill’s former African-American-only training school is no stranger to her.

An attendee of the Orange County Training School – one of the first public education institutions for African-American youth living in Chapel Hill and Carrboro in the 1900s – McCauley and her former schoolmates were on hand Feb. 2 to honor its legacy.

Hallowed ground

On Feb. 2, alumni and former students of the Orange County Training School converged on the grounds of their alma mater, located on the corner of Caldwell and McMasters streets, to return the school’s cornerstone to its original home, where Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Elementary School 11 will soon stand.

Tracing the Timeline

  • 1916: The original Orange County Training School opens on Merritt Mill Road for African-American students only.
  • 1924: Following a ruinous fire in 1922, the Orange County Training School is rebuilt near the present-day Northside community.
  • 1948: The second Orange County Training School is renamed Lincoln High School following pressure from parents.
  • 1951: Lincoln High School becomes Northside Elementary School after a new Lincoln High School is opened on Merritt Mills Road at the site of the original Orange County Training School.
  • 1966: The CHCCS system is desegregated ; African-American and white students begin attending the same schools.

SOURCE: Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools District History Timeline

Built in 1916, the Orange County Training School was initially opened as a Rosenwald School. These schools were built to further African-American education around the country.

They were funded in part by Sears and Roebuck founder Julius Rosenwald, who offered matching grants to communities pushing to expand education opportunities for African Americans.

Few Rosenwald Schools have been preserved today, which highlights the importance of remembering them, McCauley said.

“When this school was built, the members of the community had to finish it,” McCauley said. “It’s a piece of history.”

The struggle for equality education

The Orange County Training School became Lincoln High School in 1948 following widespread pressure from parents in the community, who wanted their children to receive the same education as other students, McCauley said.

Although McCauley attended Orange County Training School, she graduated after the name was changed.

Prior to this change, the school taught skills such as masonry and sewing, rather than giving an education like other schools in the district did.

“We didn’t understand the meaning of training, and we were tired of being trained,” she said.

In 1951, the school became Northside Elementary School following the opening of a separate Lincoln High School at a different location.

Robert Campbell, president of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro NAACP, attended elementary school at Northside Elementary.

“Education goes beyond training someone to maintain a job,” Campbell said. “Education takes you to the point to do critical thinking and reasoning, but when you train a person, they are limited to what they can explore.”

Paying homage to history

The cornerstone dedication allowed alumni and former students to remember and share the school’s historic importance with the community. McCauley and Campbell caught up with fellow attendees and alumni to trade memories about their time at the school.

“It gave the community another chance to come together and reminisce about the past,” Campbell said. “You see the importance of the focus on education, something that had been deprived for so many years.”

The ceremony featured a sharing of other aspects of the school’s history, including photographs and diplomas. The soon-to-be built elementary school plans to display the cornerstone and other historical memorabilia, said Stephanie Knott, spokeswoman for Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools, in an email.

“It’s the history that makes us aware to do things better,” Campbell said. “They cleaned the stone up pretty good and let it become part of the future.”

Alumni are invited to attend opening events for the new school in the future, including a ground-breaking ceremony next month and the dedication of the school in fall 2013.

“I think the opening of a new school on the site is an opportunity to celebrate the accomplishments of those who came before us,” Knott said.

Students who attend the school may also receive opportunities to interact with these alumni by interviewing them and recording or illustrating their stories, Knott said.

“CHCCS is delighted to restore an educational facility to this site where so much learning was achieved, and where so many memories were made.”

This article was reported as a part of the JOMC 253 Reporting course at UNC’s School of Journalism and Mass Communication.

Whether you’re relying on the joy of seeing Joe Jonas dance to BeyoncĂ©’s Single Ladies to get you through the day (and channeling the “Single Ladies” vibe for confidence), blubbering over The Vow or playing the gift-guessing game with your sweetie, there’s no pink, fuzzy doubt about it: Valentine’s Day 2012 has arrived. Chocolate and flower sales are through the roof, students are getting engaged and Carrboro is having a food truck rodeo.

I’m sorry, wait, what was that?

Yep, a food truck rodeo. A few food trucks will set up shop Tuesday from 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. at the Carrboro Farmers’ Market and a portion of the proceeds will go to TABLE and the Inter-Faith Council for Social Service. They’ll also be collecting canned goods.

Guest list:

If you check out the food truck rodeo, Tweet at us (@reesenews) and let us know what you think. Otherwise, check back afterwards to see what went down.

Happy Valentine’s Day!

Anti-capitalist demonstrators briefly moved into an abandoned building in Carrboro on Saturday afternoon. But they left shortly past 7 p.m. after police warned them they would be arrested, The Daily Tar Heel reported.

The occupiers entered 201 N. Greensboro, just a 10-minute walk from the abandoned Yates building in Chapel Hill that was taken over by “Occupy Everything” demonstrators and pushed out in a controversial police raid.

See the reesenews photo story of the Yates building occupation, and read a journalist’s first-hand account of his arrest from the same event.

Occupiers build a bench for inside the building. "We're 'squatters,' but we don't want to 'squat'," one worker says. Lauren Russell/reesenews

On Saturday, the occupiers handed out information pamphlets reading “Welcome, once again, to an experiment” that stated they planned to make the building a permanent community center. Mayor Mark Chilton and at least three members on the Board of Aldermen were present, and Chilton entered the building several times to speak to the demonstrators.

Before entering the building, the occupants marched with drums and hung banners around the front of the building. Although the group identified with the demonstrators who took over 419 Franklin St., only a few of the voices behind the bandanas were familiar, and one demonstrator said he wasn’t from the area and didn’t even know about the event. There wasn’t a clear leader among the occupiers, and no one knew when exactly the decision to move in had been made.

Mayor Mark Chilton speaks with Maria Rowan, who pleads that the mayor let the demonstrators say in the building. Lauren Russell/reesenews

At 6:00 p.m. Mayor Chilton was sitting in the dark inside the building as the occupiers filled plates from vats of food and sawed wood in the adjacent room to build benches. Chilton quietly blended in, and he said he was assessing if damage had been done. One of the occupiers asked him if anyone had seen a gas can.

“We’re approaching this from the town’s perspective in a different way,” Chilton said about this compared to the occupation and evacuation of the Yates building.

He said he hadn’t given the police any direction at that point.

Maria Rowan, a local activist who had set up a tent across the street with the “Nomadic Occupy” camp, was handing out pamphlets on the sidewalk outside the building. She wasn’t a part of the original group that moved into the building, but she said she supported what they were doing and wanted to see the forgotten office spaces converted into an area for locals, not a CVS Pharmacy.

“We’re suggesting a radical notion that the community, the people who actually live here, should determine what physically happens in the space where we live and not the capitalists and not the state and not a corporation somewhere else,” Rowan said.

There will be a meeting at 4 p.m. tomorrow to talk about what to do with the space, she said.

Michelle Johnson, who is a member of the Board of Aldermen, said she was teaching a yoga class across the street earlier that afternoon and heard yelling. She came outside to see some people on the roof and a parade of people drumming as they took over the building.

Johnson was bothered by the pamphlets the group was handing out because they suggested the space was definitely going to be turned into a pharmacy when the board was going to vote on it in the future.

A police officer inspects the generator lighting the building after taking it from the occupiers. Lauren Russell/reesenews

Johnson said she was also concerned that this anarchist group would be lumped into the “Nomadic Occupy” group, which had set up a camp of a few tents and cooking space across the street. She said not all the nomadic occupiers supported the building takeover.

“I’m all about social movements, and I think people need to have conversations before they decide to act,” Johnson said.

The property rests diagonal to the Carrboro Police Station, and at least four officers came to watch and block off the parking lot closest to the building.

After being given until March 1st to move out of Abbey Court without having to pay steep daily fines, Director Judith Blau has found a new home for the Human Rights Center of Chapel Hill and Carrboro.

The new location, located on Barnes Street, about two blocks away from the Abbey Court apartments, was purchased by Blau over the semester break after visiting several potential locations with other members of the HRC staff. The house is smaller than the combination of the two apartments they have in Abbey Court, but despite that inconvenience, Blau felt it was the best location they could find and they will still be able to replicate current programming and activities.

Following the purchase, Blau commenced renovations on the property but work is currently on hold pending decisions by the Carrboro Planning Department.

According to Blau there will be two public hearings: One hearing will address the use of the house as a community center and another to receive approval for the workers’ center. She hopes the first hearing will be near the final move out of Abbey Court on March 1st.

“It’s exciting, but it’s also scary,” Blau said. “We don’t want to disappoint the kids (in our after school program).”

Blau’s vision for the center includes an extension on the back of the house to better accomodate the center’s after school program and provide space for a workers’ center to serve local day laborers. Until the renovations are approved and completed, Blau said the program will operate in shifts as to not overcrowd the limited space.

The Human Rights Center in Carrboro  is facing steep fines that would force the organization to move out of its apartments in Abbey Court. The founder, Sociology Professor Judith Blau, is circulating a petition to give the center a grace period to relocate.

According to the petition, the homeowner’s association plans to fine the organization $200 a day, which the group wouldn’t be able to pay on the two apartments it rents. It will be decided on Thursday whether the fines will begin immediately or be delayed so the group will have time to finish the school year’s programs and move.

The center, founded in 2009, offers free programs and services to the residents of Abbey Court, including an after-school program, nutrition classes, and ESL and computer literacy programs.