This was on the city's website. Congratulations, Kristin!
Mark
---------------------
Rosselli Takes Over As Director Of Community Services Department
City Manager J. Russell Allen today named Kristen Rosselli director of
the City of Raleigh Community Services Department, effective
immediately. Ms. Rosselli had served as the department’s interim
director since Hardy Watkins retired as director on Jan. 1, after nearly
12 years in the position.
“Kristen Rosselli has demonstrated the leadership and passion for
working directly with citizens to build a better community,” Mr. Allen
said. “She is very creative and brings a communication and management
style that is extremely collaborative.”
The City’s Community Services Department provides innovative services
and programs to enhance the quality of life for citizens and
neighborhoods in Raleigh. The department’s main focus is citizen
involvement and volunteer services.
Ms. Rosselli has been a City of Raleigh employee since 2003 when she
joined the staff of the Police Department as a strategic initiatives
manager. After nearly five years working in the Police Department, she
moved over to the City’s Budget Office where she has served as a budget
and management analyst for 13 months.
Prior to joining the City, Ms. Rosselli was owner of The Rosselli
Network, a community-based health, safety and quality-of-life consulting
service in Durham and Kansas City, Mo. She also served as chief of
planning, development and communications for the Community-Backed
Anti-Drug Tax Program of the Jackson County, Mo., Prosecutor’s Office
and as total store strategist for Hallmark Cards Inc. in Kansas City.
Ms. Rosselli holds a bachelor’s degree in marketing from Indiana
University and a master’s degree in public administration from North
Carolina State University. She is a 2008 graduate of the Municipal
Administration Course offered at the University of North Carolina-Chapel
Hill.
Prepared by:
John Boyette
Public Affairs Specialist
Public Affairs Department
For More Information Contact:
Kristen Rosselli
Director
Community Services Department
310 West Martin Street, Suite 201
Raleigh, NC 27602
919-996-6100
http://www.raleighnc.gov/portal/server.pt/gateway/PTARGS_0_2_306_210_0_43/h…
A neighbor in Oakwood passed this on. A late-model Nissan Xterra SUV was
involved in a fatal hit-and-run last night. It looks similar to this:
http://is.gd/uSVp
Here's the NBC-17 story: http://is.gd/uT0h
Please call the number below if you see this vehicle and help spread the
word. Thanks!
Mark Turner
East CAC
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [Historic Oakwood] - please be on the lookout
Date: Mon, 27 Apr 2009 14:55:08 -0000
A friend of mine, who used to live with my current housemate, was killed
last night on his scooter near downtown Raleigh while driving home from
his mother's house. He was 25 years old. The car that hit him didn't stop.
Police are looking for a mid-2000s or newer yellow Nissan Xterra SUV,
partial N.C. license plate of YSS. The vehicle should have front end
damage. It was last seen speeding eastbound on I-40 toward Hammond
Rd/Person St.
Anyone with information is asked to call the Crash Reconstruction Unit
at 919-369-2365. If you see an SUV around town that even comes close to
matching this description, please call it in. Thank you.
Sorry. Forgot the agenda attachment.
Paul
paulbrant(a)mindspring.com
----- Original Message -----
From: paulbrant(a)mindspring.com
To: rcac(a)eastraleigh.org
Cc: Candy Fuller; Christopher Allen; Ed Rosenberger; Harold Coleman; Heather Santiago
Sent: 4/20/2009 9:05:30 AM
Subject: Comprehensive Plan 2030 Update Proposed Revisions
FYI and action. You may wish to notify others on your e-mail lists.
Paul
paulbrant(a)mindspring.com
Hello fellow CAC leaders.
I mentioned this to a few CAC chairs at last night's meeting and thought
others might also be interested.
A bill is pending in the North Carolina Legislature to effectively
prohibit municipalities from providing Internet service the way they do
water, sewer, police and fire protection, etc. The bill, House Bill 1252
ironically called the "Level Playing Field Act," would impose onerous
restrictions on cities attempting to provide communications to their
citizens. It could jeopardize Raleigh's new downtown wireless Internet
project, among others.
As CAC leaders, you all know how vital communication is for our
neighborhoods. You are also aware of our "digital divide" - that many of
our citizens cannot afford the high cost of broadband Internet. Some
healthy competition would do wonders for this, but this bill would strip
the ability for cities to provide their own, affordable Internet service
to their citizens.
Wilson, NC built its own, state-of-the-art fiber-optic network providing
voice, video, and Internet service to its residents. By all accounts it
is a smashing success! Wilson subscribers pay $35/month for a system
that puts anything Time Warner Cable or AT&T offers to shame. It's twice
as fast! Not only that, Wilson's system has been an economic stimulus
for the city, keeping jobs in Wilson and attracting new jobs.
Now, I'm not saying Raleigh necessarily *should* go out and build its
own network - that would have to be decided by the folks in the Big
Chairs. But why remove the right for us to even consider it?
President Obama's stimulus authorized over $4 billion dollars to improve
our nation's broadband infrastructure. That's money Raleigh could be
using to connect its neighborhoods for the 21st century - and more
importantly, provide JOBS for our citizens. The restrictions House Bill
1252 would prohibit this stimulus money from being spent. No new
networks, no new jobs.
If you think Raleigh should be allowed to decide its digital future for
itself, or if you don't believe billion-dollar companies like Time
Warner Cable and AT&T need protection from tiny towns like Wilson,
please contact your representatives and let them know how you feel.
I sure would like some of that stimulus money ...
Here's a link to HB1252:
http://is.gd/sNUZ
The bill will be in the Science and Technology Committee Wednesday
morning. Please contact the committee members ASAP:
http://is.gd/sKJ1
Here's a website that follows this issue:
http://savencbb.wordpress.com/
Here's the system Wilson built, called Greenlight:
http://www.greenlightnc.com
Here's what a municipal system could do for Raleigh:
http://www.newsobserver.com/opinion/columns/story/1152083.html
Regards,
Mark
Ken,
Is it possible for you or a member of your staff to send the list of Comp Plan 2030 items to be discussed at the above meeting to me and the other CAC Chairs? I understand there are at least 20 or more items concerning the Land Use Map that were not covered at the last meeting and followup items from the previous meeting. It may be just as easy to provide us with copies of the info provided to the PC COW members if it is available in electronic form. You can use the "all reply" to respond as I have copied my fellow RCAC members on this request.
Regards,
Paul Brant
NECAC Chairman
paulbrant(a)mindspring.com
Dwayne,
I have several comments which I will try to frame in a logical and understandable way regarding the Grant Program
1.Because the CAC territory includes ETJ areas beyond city limits I would like to see the grant program extend to these areas as well. My rationale is based on the fact that permit and development fees are paid to the city by the ETJ based citizens. All city regulations apply to the ETJ so why not engage these residents in a program sponsored by the city and federal government?
2. The requirement to have a tax ID and bank account is an impediment to the program and should be eliminated.
3. There should be a requirement for before and after pictures rather than just after pictures for physical improvements since there is no way to be certain projects selected were not already completed in an earlier time frame than the request for grant. I don't see anything that would prevent that from happening.
4. Page 3 Item 2 bullet: "At least (4) neighborhood organizational meetings must be held annually." Comment: We can hardly get people to attend the CAC meetings let alone additional neighborhood organizational meetings. Perhaps it would be sufficient to ensure that their group is represented and report at our CAC meetings once a quarter as their project proceeds. I think 2 people every month is burden and will be difficult for us to monitor. People don't always sign in at our meetings despite our best efforts and it will lead to conflict. So having them have an actual reason to attend once a quarter to give a report would be more practical to track and ensure they are attending.
5. Page 3 Item 3 states "Food may not be purchased...." I think that this should be allowed but no more than 10% of the funds used for that purpose.
6. Page 3 Item 4 : Rental of yard equipment should be allowed as long as receipts are provided as an alternative to purchasing and storing.
7. Page 3 Item 6 : There should be the ability to employ individuals and neighborhood businesses even if the city can provide the required service. Most activity for grants will likely take place on weekends and holidays so making it mandatory to use city staff is impractical. Hiring unemployed people is a good opportunity to help the community. City staff already have enough work to do.
8. Page 3 Item 7&8 seem at odds. Why would someone go to the trouble of giving an easement which has to be recorded and filed with the register of deeds without receiving compensation at least for the expenses associated with that process. I think if there are reasonable and justifiable expenses to obtain easements that grant money should be used for that purpose. It is a good means to an even better end.
9.Page 3 Item 10 line 3 typo for the word approved (approved )
10. Page 4 Item 15 : If a project is to take a bunch of disadvantaged kids to Pullen Park why would it be wrong to provide money to purchase ride tickets? There are many public facilities and events that charge admission and fees that should be waived for a grant program activity or funds from the grant should be available.
11. Page 4 " Match Requirements": I would still like to see Community Services publish a grant application format that would satisfy the grant program request elements. Leaving it to each group to come up with their own letter and format seems inefficient for both parties.
12.Page 4: " Match Requirements 4th bullet, line 2 typo: from the vendor to substantiate (or substantiate).
13. Page 5: Item 3: Mailing address for EIN application is incorrect. Current address is Internal Revenue Service, Att: EIN Operation, Cincinnati, OH 45999 and according to the IRS takes 4 weeks to process.
14. Page 5 Item 4: Fax # is incorrect. Current # is 1-(859)-669-5760 and it takes 4 business days to acknowledge by return fax not 10 days
Thanks for the opportunity to comment. Sorry for the delay.
Paul Brant
NECAC Chairman
paulbrant(a)mindspring.com
Trying to administer grants to unorganized groups sound difficult. How about allowing CACs to get money for the sole purpose of organizing whichever groups are willing? Then the newly organized groups can apply for grants on their own.
Justin Fisher
3026 Lion Ridge Court
Raleigh, NC 27612-4235
colfisher(a)yahoo.com
256-656-5162
--- On Thu, 4/2/09, Ana Pardo <acpardo(a)gmail.com> wrote:
From: Ana Pardo <acpardo(a)gmail.com>
Subject: [RCAC] Reminder: Neighborhood Improvement Grant Program Review
To: "RCAC" <rcac(a)eastraleigh.org>
Date: Thursday, April 2, 2009, 2:23 PM
Hey everyone,
This is a friendly reminder: tomorrow is the deadline to get our comments to Dwayne regarding changes to the Neighborhood Improvement Grants Program! Does everyone have a copy of the most current program description? If not, let Dwayne know by e-mailing him at Dwayne.Patterson(a)ci.raleigh.nc.us.
Please post your comments to RCAC(a)eastraleigh.org, so that they may be seen by everyone and perhaps spark more comments from others.
To get the ball rolling, a couple questions:
At the March workshop we discussed whether or not CACs should be eligible to apply for funds through the Neighborhood Improvement Grants Program. There was a lot of debate regarding this. Some people felt that CACs should NOT be eligible because they aren't technically "neighborhood organizations" and that the money should go directly to neighborhoods. Many of those same folks also felt that CACs shouldn't be eligible for grant funds because they don't have a structure in place for dealing with money.
Others thought that unorganized neighborhoods, which would otherwise be ineligible for city funding, could benefit from grant funds secured by a CAC. A CAC could use the funds to help the neighborhood organize and thereby directly help the neighborhood establish its own organization while also solidifying that neighborhood's connection with the CAC to which it belongs.
What do y'all think about this issue?
If CACs were allowed to apply for city grant funding, how do you think the money should be administered?
If CACs are not eligible for these grants, what are some other routes by which grant funding can be made available to help unorganized neighborhoods get organized?
What about the requirements for checking accounts and tax ID numbers? Is that too much of a burden for unorganized, low-income and/or aging neighborhoods, or will the grant funds be impetus enough for those neighborhoods to self-organize?
I look forward to hearing folks' responses!
Ana Duncan Pardo
Chair, Hillsborough CAC
Chair, RCAC
(919) 818-5933
-----Inline Attachment Follows-----
_______________________________________________
RCAC mailing list
RCAC(a)eastraleigh.org
http://www.eastraleigh.org/mailman/listinfo/rcac
Russ and Rodger,
I have had a chance to look at the background material provided by Dale Crisp for the Council Agenda on Tuesday and am sending you my thoughts now that I have a better picture of what is being proposed. Everywhere you look there are significant increases in usage and connection fees but no mention or evidence of cost cutting proposals. The 17% increase for all water users seems to be split 7.5% to cover increased operating costs, 6% to cover lost revenue due to fewer new connections, water conservation and imposed water restrictions due to drought conditions; 3.5% to pay back developers an increase of $3.9M in reimbursement fees for previous over sizing of lines to benefit future development.
It looks like the Director of PU is also recommending the city wait until the new updated billing system is in place before implementing the tiered rate billing the Council wants to have in place sooner rather than later. Looking at the justification it appears a reasonable recommendation given the current system has some capacity and stability issues. There is no specific recommendation on how that tiered billing will be implemented so until a proposal is on the table there is not much to address.
The Water Conservation Incentive initiative has merit (transferring $500,000 from the reuse water project surplus)but it is really a drop in the bucket, so to speak, covering only 3500 toilet replacements on a base of 167,000+ residential dwellings. Also, I see the Sewer Nutrient Fee will increase by $200 to help fund this initiative which is really asking new customers to pay for existing customers to upgrade there home plumbing. Anyway, there are probably double that number of toilets (300,000) out there that are not up to current conservation standards so 3500 is a small number but it is a start. Of course, extra conservation measures are what caused the budget shortfall so presumably being overly aggressive on an incentive plan would add to that issue if significant cost cutting measures are not likewise addressed. It seems to me customers could be rewarded with a 1 or 2 % billing reduction if their previous year's monthly usage was used as a baseline so that if the current matching month was less they could receive the reduction. This would help keep water conservation on everyone's mind and encourage all consumers to conserve to get the bonus on billing. Perhaps that should be worked into the new billing system as a capability similar to the type of bill we get from Progress Energy (although they do not offer a similar bonus but it is worth pursuing there as well).
There are a number of charts and summaries dealing with the relationship of Raleigh's water and sewer rates and connection fees compared to other municipalities. Water rates for Raleigh are in line with Charlotte, Fayetteville, Greensboro and Durham all of which are at the lower end of the scale and are larger towns like Raleigh. There are others that charge more but are smaller towns, many of which are dependent on Raleigh water. One thing you realize when looking at this comparison there are many different ways to justify the charges. You may recall in a recent N&O article on tiered water rates there was much confusion over what was the typical water usage per SF residential dwelling. The consultant stated 6000 gallons, the city said 6 ccf which is 4488 gallons and my own view was closer to 7000 gallons. The N&O had 6000 gallons in their Feb article on the subject. In any case, I notice that in the details of the comparison the base for SFR use is 250 GPD which equates to 7500 gallons per 30 day month. The city claims the average family unit is 2.5 people so that would translate to 100 GPD per person. Given most families are 3-4, and some larger, the family of 4 would use 400 GPD and 12,000 gallons per month. A far cry from the 4488 that the city said was the average family usage and they would see no increase (in fact some decrease) in rates over the current billing approach.
Setting that aside for the moment and looking back at the various billing bases by municipality in the report you find billing for new connections based on pipe/meter size, or square feet of the building, or number of bedrooms in the dwelling, or per lot, or in the city versus outside the city, and water used at a variety of rates. Raleigh has an acreage ( explain that to an average citizen)fees for water and sewer separately, plus a meter connection fee and usage fees. Now they want to add something they call a "W/S Capacity Replacement Fee". The new "impact" fee would be based on the $10 per gallon ( no details justifying this number)and the 250 gallon per day average per dwelling(so on one hand Public Utilities acknowledges that 250 gallons per day or 7500 gallons per month is average for new connection capacity planning and yet in their proposal for tiered rates they say it is really 4488 gallons per month or 6ccf; go figure!). That that would be a total of $2500 per new connection; a 154% increase in connection fees over Y09 fees. Even without this new fee, the fees are being increased another 42% (on top of this year's 53%) due to the special $500 Water Nutrient fee and $200 Sewer Nutrient fee increases proposed for Y10.
The comparison of water rates based on Y09 numbers places Raleigh in the lower 3rd of rates along with Charlotte, Durham, Fayetteville and Greensboro. In looking at that picture it appears that initial connection fees based on higher fees for the larger users is allowing lower rates for the average SF users in other cities. This is similar to the telephone network principal that business customers with higher usage subsidized residential rates to keep service affordable for the average user.
Given the complexity and variety of billing methods I think it is time for Raleigh to select a method that is easy to understand and easily defended. I would clearly state that there is a need to replace and plan for additional capacity when new connections are made to the system. This is capacity replacement costs that need to be borne primarily by new users. They need to combine all the various fees into one fee for water and one for sewer and come up with a method to distribute costs based on the type of connection. For residential it should be the size of the connection/ meter (3/4" being typical of Residential)and so much per bathroom (or "sink" room). In truth bedrooms and square feet do not relate very well to water usage but bathrooms, kitchens and laundry rooms sure do. Then as the size of the connection is increased and the number of "sink" rooms increases the cost of the connection goes up. Wake Forest and Charlotte have done a good job of pipe size related fees and that makes sense to me. This would then be the new "impact" fees. Then the rates can be set with a sold base point say of 6000 gallons per SF dwelling as tier one and an incentive plan implemented with a bonus % for reducing water usage from last year to this year based on a monthly comparison. I think most people would understand the fees and be encouraged to conserve to reduce their costs. Beyond that the City needs to find ways to cut operating expenses (at least 10% in my opinion)and I have not seen any ideas put forward up to this point.
Finally, there is a need to educate the public on what the 17% increase will do, ie break it down in pieces help them understand why this level of increase is essential for the sound and stable management of this vital City service whiling maintaining our excellent bond rating. With that explanation we need the cost management initiatives that go along with sharing the grief of higher bills.
Paul Brant
NECAC Chairman
paulbrant(a)mindspring.com