Syracuse, N.Y. — Tyus Battle, one of the highest-rated players in the Class of 2016, will take an official visit to Syracuse University on May 22-24.
Adam Zagoria of Zagsblog.com first reported the news. Battle’s father, Gary, has confirmed the official visit to syracuse.com.
Battle is a 6-foot-6 guard from Gill St. Bernard’s School in Gladstone, N.J. He has already taken official visits to Duke and Louisville. He plans to visit Michigan this weekend.
Battle has made several previous unofficial visits to Syracuse. His first trip came in the summer of his freshman year of high school. Most recently, he attended the Syracuse-Duke game at the Carrier Dome during the 2013-14 season. Syracuse won that game in overtime.
Gary Battle said an official visit would give the family a chance to get more time with SU coach Jim Boeheim. They will also see more of the SU campus and talk to academic officials.
Connecticut, Kentucky, Ohio State and North Carolina are also recruiting Battle. The NCAA allows recruits to take up to five official campus visits, but Battle’s father said four might be enough.
“This could end at any time,” he said. “We don’t look at it like you have to take x number of visits.”
When Towanda Long started her blog for working moms on work-life balance, she never imagined it would get her a front row seat for a town hall meeting at Imaginon with the president on Wednesday.
“I’m definitely excited…looking forward to it!,” Long said Tuesday. She has three daughters and holds down a full-time job, and she wants to make sure the president hears what she has to say.
“I would love to know what people in the Obama administration do for work-life balance.”
The issue that is likely to take up most of the agenda here is equal pay for women.
A recent report shows that on average, women in the workplace make only about 78 cents for every dollar a man makes in the same job.
While he’s not running in 2016, the president knows it will be a hot-button issue in an election where candidates on both sides will be trying to appeal to women voters, and he figures to get some tough questions on it on Wednesday.
But it’s not the only tough question he’s likely to face.
Lena Gott is an accountant and a stay-at-home mom. She’s also a blogger who calls herself conservative and instead of equal pay she wants to ask the president about the growing cost of entitlements.
“What’s going to happen when the country cannot afford to pay those programs…in addition to everything else that we fund?” she asked Tuesday.
The event is scheduled to start at 2:30 p.m. at the Imaginon library.
President Obama will visit Charlotte Wednesday to talk to about 50 people about families and women in the workplace.
Workers have started getting the Spangler Library inside ImaginOn ready for the presidential visit.
“We are bringing cooks, we are bringing home decorators. We are bringing people who are working every day,” said Lisa Stone, who started a nonpartisan blog for women called BlogHer.
Stone, who will come from California to moderate the meeting, said the issue that figures to dominate the discussion is equal pay for women in the workplace.
“I was not surprised, because the issue of equal pay is crossing party lines and of enormous interest to our community,” Stone said.
She will help select the audience from about 100 bloggers in the Charlotte area who post on her blog site.
Obama’s visit will come just days after Hillary Clinton announced her presidential candidacy. A discussion of women’s issues in what has been a swing state for the last two elections may be no coincidence.
“When you talk about equal pay, this is a bread-and-butter daily issue that affects people on a daily basis,” said Dr. Eric Heberlig, a political science professor at UNC Charlotte.
The presidential visit will create some traffic issues for several hours on Wednesday.
Police are planning for the visit, which will start with the president landing at 1:50 p.m. and end with his departure just before 5 p.m. Police will close streets to clear the way for the motorcade to and from uptown Charlotte.
“We will do so on a rolling basis, so we’ll try not to keep a road closed unless necessary. Otherwise we will try to open and close it as he rolls through,” Deputy Chief Jeff Estes said.
Estes said some areas around ImaginOn in uptown Charlotte might be closed to pedestrians as well.
Presidential Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton called for comprehensive immigration reform Tuesday at Rancho High School in Las Vegas, saying it’s necessary to keep families from pulling apart.
“We can’t wait any longer for a path to full and equal citizenship,” Clinton said, surrounded by six people at the table before an audience of 33. Her roundtable discussion had six young people with family members who have faced struggles in the immigration system.
“It is at heart a family issue,” Clinton said.
This is the former secretary of state and first lady’s first visit to Nevada since she announced her candidacy on April 12, and is part of a tour of early voting states. Her tour has included stops in Iowa and New Hampshire; she plans to visit South Carolina after Nevada.
Her Las Vegas appearance is being broadcast live by C-SPAN.
Clinton’s approach at the event is in keep with efforts to soften her image and place her in a low-key, intimate setting with a question-and-answer format, instead of a large speeches.
Rancho’s student body is about 70 percent Hispanic, and Clinton’s round-table discussion will include young people who are eligible for the Dream Act. About 30 percent of Nevada’s population is Hispanic.
In the Silver State and across the nation, immigration reform is a growing issue, with an estimated 11 million undocumented Hispanics in the United States.
Advocates for immigration reform have pressed for giving a legal status to undocumented residents, while conservative Republicans have argued instead for incremental changes and increased border security.
Clinton rose to fame when her husband, Bill Clinton, ran for and won the presidency in 1992.
After eight years as the nation’s first lady, Clinton became s a U.S. senator representing New York. Her bid for the Democratic nomination in 2008 failed to Barack Obama. Clinton became secretary of state in 2009, holding the position until 2013.
It’s not the first time for a Las Vegas high school to be a backdrop for a high-profile immigration announcement.
President Barack Obama visited Del Sol High School on Nov. 21 to tout his efforts at immigration reform, and he signed documents for his executive orders aboard Air Force One while at McCarran International Airport. Those orders help undocumented immigrants with children born in the United States.
In January 2013, Obama was at Del Sol High School to announce he is pursuing comprehensive immigration reform.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
Contact Ben Botkin at bbotkin@reviewjournal.com or 702-387-2904. Find him on Twitter: @BenBotkin1
Residents Tuesday urged local officials to look at stricter building rules near the Blue Ridge Parkway to protect views and other aspects of the popular national park.
Of the 12 residents who spoke at a meeting of the Buncombe County Board of Commissioners, 11 supported a move by the elected officials to look at tighter rules near the parkway.
Speakers such as Hugh Stephens pointed to sections of the parkway in Roanoke County, Virginia, where subdivisions have been built next to the famous road known for mountain and pastoral vistas.
“If we have too much development too close, we ruin the scenic beauty and it is gone forever,” said Stephens, the past chairman of the nonprofit group Friends of the Blue Ridge Parkway, Asheville chapter.
After the comments, commissioners voted 7-0 to study the “the protection and adequacy” of a special county zoning district along the parkway, the country’s second most popular national park.
CITIZEN TIMES
Construction near parkway may face restrictions
Buncombe planning staff and the county’s appointed planning board will consult federal parkway personnel and review the county’s Blue Ridge Parkway overlay zoning district. Planners will report back with recommendations to commissioners. Commissioners could then vote on recommendations such as stricter building rules or incentives for developers to build away from the parkway or to help homes or other structures blend in with surroundings. Such blending in was done with homes in the Ramble subdivision near U.S. 25, officials said.
The parkway has 469 miles running through Virginia and North Carolina. Of that, 48 miles run through Buncombe. The county has regulatory power over land near the parkway that is not in the city of Asheville or in national forestland.
There are current county steep slope rules that affect land near the parkway to the north of Asheville, said county Planning Director Jon Creighton. Those rules put limits on building height and impervious surfaces such as pavement. The rules also require screening.
To the south of Asheville, county rules near the parkway limit buildings to 40 feet and require screening if the structure can be seen from the parkway, Creighton said. There are no limits on impervious surfaces.
Along with residents, speakers included parkway superintendent Mark Woods, who said the most important parts of the park are the places where people can see mountains, valleys and other natural wonders.
“Visitors value those unspoiled scenic views that make the parkway famous,” Woods said.
Woods said parkway economic benefits include $863 million spent annually in local “gateway regions,” spending he said supports about 14,000 jobs.
Those benefits can be at risk when the views are ruined, said Chairman David Gantt, the primary proponent of the rule review.
“The Blue Ridge Parkway is worthy of special protection and considerations,” Gantt said as part of a resolution he read.
Most members of the public who spoke agreed. Joel Mazelis, who lives near the intersection of Ox Creek Road, listed some people and groups who benefit from parkway tourism.
“It affects the guy who owns the convenience store, the artists, the dining spots who buy some of their food from the small local farms,” he said.
Swannanoa resident Dee Dee Styles said even structures far from the parkway can have a visual impact and should face some regulation, including color and type of paint.
“You will notice that some houses clearly stand out and others you have to look a little harder. It’s because they are painted specific colors with specific amounts of reflectivity,” she said.
Don Yelton of Jupiter was the one speaker to disagree with more regulations, saying tax breaks should be given to homeowners to make adjustments such as paint color. Yelton suggested taxing expensive homes near the parkway more.
Commissioner Brownie Newman said higher taxes on nearby homes was probably not constitutional, but he supported using incentives as well as tighter rules.
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — It’s been 11 years since North Carolina lawmakers told public schools when the school year could open and close.
But local school boards remain unwilling to dismiss their insistence that they and not the state should decide when classes are out for summer in their areas. A new politically diverse coalition of advocates and dozens of lawmakers agree with them.
State law tells nearly all traditional public schools they can’t start earlier than the Monday closest to Aug. 26 and end no later than the Friday closest to June 11.
“We believe in local control,” said Kathy Hartkopf with North Carolina FreedomWorks, a limited-government group that’s working with liberal organizations and established education associations in seeking relief. “We do not believe the calendar (law) represents any kind of local control.”
But the coalition’s creation and the introduction of more than 40 bills at the legislature this year seeking to either repeal the law, obtain individual exemptions for 75 districts or move back the school start date apparently won’t be enough for changes.
The law originally approved in 2004 after pressure from the tourism and real estate rental industries and parents seeking to preserve traditional summer breaks is working fine, according to Senate leader Phil Berger, R-Rockingham. Before the law, nearly all districts were opening classes by early August.
“We don’t want to revisit the issue of preserving the summers for the kids, for the parents so that people can take their vacations and our businesses that depend on summer tourism (to) have an opportunity to flourish,” Berger said.
As proof of that disinterest, a bill passed by the House before a parliamentary deadline last week — basically a placeholder from House Republicans designed to spur discussion with senators on school calendars — was quickly moved in the Senate to a committee where bills GOP leaders don’t like sit and die. Another nine Senate calendar bills already were in the Ways Means Committee.
Calendar law opponents haven’t changed the crux of their other arguments since 2004. They also say the lack of flexibility harms student performance and makes it harder for students to take advanced classes at community colleges because high school first semesters don’t end until January.
“The clear message is one size doesn’t fit all,” said Rep. Tricia Cotham, D-Mecklenburg, a former high school assistant principal. “I think filing all those bills says this isn’t working.”
The flood of bills filed to help school districts likely was caused by a particularly bad winter this year that gave Piedmont districts extremely limited dates for makeup days, said Paige Sayles, a Franklin County school board member and president of the North Carolina School Boards Association.
Sen. Tom Apodaca, R-Henderson, the Rules Committee chairman, said tweaks to the calendar law over time have made it easier for school to comply.
Since 2013 districts can choose to have either 185 days or 1,025 hours of instruction. Both had been required previously. Districts can extend daily instructional time and either schedule fewer days, like Wilkes County schools have done, or increase the number of potential snow makeup days in reserve. The rules already didn’t apply to charter or year-round schools.
Changes also have been restrictive, too. Waivers are no longer allowed for individual schools that have specialized curricula, for example.
The coalition called LOCAL, or Let Our Calendar Authority Be Local, opposed the contents in the House bill that passed last week. The bill didn’t give any new tools to districts in adjusting their calendars. An amendment that would have repealed the calendar date requirement nearly passed — a reflection of stronger support in the House. The issue is still alive for this year.
“We’re hoping it’ll at least start the conversation with the Senate,” Sayles said.
Louise Lee of Raleigh is founder of Save Our Summers-North Carolina, a parent group that collected signatures and ran radio ads in 2004 seeking the streamlined calendar. She said she’s not surprised by the continued efforts of groups to repeal the law.
Lawmakers should stick to the status quo because, Lee said, “what the legislators are not hearing is that parents want changes.”
CHARLOTTE, N.C., May 5, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — SQL Sentry, Inc., the developer of award-winning software for SQL Server, is pleased to announce the release of the Power BI content pack for SQL Sentry in June of this year. The SQL Sentry Cloud (cloud.sqlsentry.com) already provides web access to your SQL Sentry performance and event data from anywhere, and across any tablet or mobile device. The new Power BI content pack for SQL Sentry further extends these cloud capabilities to deliver analytics for key areas such as performance, downtime, disk utilization and operations.
“One of our original goals with cloud.sqlsentry.com was to build a service which is not only useful for database administrators, but also delivers useful, actionable information for ops teams and IT managers alike,” said Greg Gonzalez, President and CEO, SQL Sentry. “Our new Power BI content pack brings us one step closer to achieving this goal.”
The SQL Sentry Cloud team worked closely with Microsoft’s Power BI team to create this exciting new service. With it, a SQL Sentry user can easily synchronize on-prem data to the cloud, and gain instant access to the Power BI content pack for SQL Sentry. In addition to pre-built dashboards and reports, users can quickly build custom reports on top of the exposed data model, and utilize Power BI’s powerful natural language search for instant insights.
“Empowering more people to pull insights from data is a boost for any business,” said James Phillips, Corporate Vice President of Microsoft’s business intelligence product group. “With this collaboration, SQL Sentry customers will be able to connect and view their data from pre-built Power BI dashboards and reports that are updated continuously and automatically.”
“We have long envisioned customizable, shareable and easily consumable dashboards and reports on top of the performance and operational data collected by SQL Sentry,” said Rick Pittser, Product Manager, SQL Sentry. “Power BI makes this a reality in a simple to deploy, integrated fashion, delivering your SQL Sentry analytics alongside those from a variety of other sources such as Microsoft Dynamics CRM, Google Analytics and Marketo. How cool is that?”
For additional information, visit the SQL Sentry website at www.sqlsentry.com.
About SQL Sentry® SQL Sentry, Inc. delivers software products that optimize the performance of Microsoft SQL Server environments around the globe. SQL Sentry Performance Advisor® for SQL Server delivers an advanced performance dashboard with relevant Windows and SQL Server metrics in a single view, along with detailed insight of heavy SQL, blocking, deadlocks and disk bottlenecks. SQL Sentry Performance Advisor for Analysis Services provides unparalleled insight into Analysis Services performance, including bottlenecks related to memory, storage systems, aggregation usage, queries and processing. SQL Sentry Event Manager® is the ultimate scheduling, alerting and response system for managing SQL Server jobs, SharePoint jobs and other events that impact performance.
Contact Nick Harshbarger, SQL Sentry VP Sales and Marketing, (704) 895-6241, Email 8936 NorthPointe Executive Park Dr, Suite 200, Huntersville, NC 28078, www.sqlsentry.com
RALEIGH, N.C. — It’s been 11 years since North Carolina lawmakers told public schools when the school year could open and close.
But local school boards remain unwilling to dismiss their insistence that they and not the state should decide when classes are out for summer in their areas. A new politically diverse coalition of advocates and dozens of lawmakers agree with them.
State law tells nearly all traditional public schools they can’t start earlier than the Monday closest to Aug. 26 and end no later than the Friday closest to June 11.
“We believe in local control,” said Kathy Hartkopf with North Carolina FreedomWorks, a limited-government group that’s working with liberal organizations and established education associations in seeking relief. “We do not believe the calendar (law) represents any kind of local control.”
But the coalition’s creation and the introduction of more than 40 bills at the legislature this year seeking to either repeal the law, obtain individual exemptions for 75 districts or move back the school start date apparently won’t be enough for changes.
The law originally approved in 2004 after pressure from the tourism and real estate rental industries and parents seeking to preserve traditional summer breaks is working fine, according to Senate leader Phil Berger, R-Rockingham. Before the law, nearly all districts were opening classes by early August.
“We don’t want to revisit the issue of preserving the summers for the kids, for the parents so that people can take their vacations and our businesses that depend on summer tourism (to) have an opportunity to flourish,” Berger said.
As proof of that disinterest, a bill passed by the House before a parliamentary deadline last week — basically a placeholder from House Republicans designed to spur discussion with senators on school calendars — was quickly moved in the Senate to a committee where bills GOP leaders don’t like sit and die. Another nine Senate calendar bills already were in the Ways Means Committee.
Calendar law opponents haven’t changed the crux of their other arguments since 2004. They also say the lack of flexibility harms student performance and makes it harder for students to take advanced classes at community colleges because high school first semesters don’t end until January.
“The clear message is one size doesn’t fit all,” said Rep. Tricia Cotham, D-Mecklenburg, a former high school assistant principal. “I think filing all those bills says this isn’t working.”
The flood of bills filed to help school districts likely was caused by a particularly bad winter this year that gave Piedmont districts extremely limited dates for makeup days, said Paige Sayles, a Franklin County school board member and president of the North Carolina School Boards Association.
Sen. Tom Apodaca, R-Henderson, the Rules Committee chairman, said tweaks to the calendar law over time have made it easier for school to comply.
Since 2013 districts can choose to have either 185 days or 1,025 hours of instruction. Both had been required previously. Districts can extend daily instructional time and either schedule fewer days, like Wilkes County schools have done, or increase the number of potential snow makeup days in reserve. The rules already didn’t apply to charter or year-round schools.
Changes also have been restrictive, too. Waivers are no longer allowed for individual schools that have specialized curricula, for example.
The coalition called LOCAL, or Let Our Calendar Authority Be Local, opposed the contents in the House bill that passed last week. The bill didn’t give any new tools to districts in adjusting their calendars. An amendment that would have repealed the calendar date requirement nearly passed — a reflection of stronger support in the House. The issue is still alive for this year.
“We’re hoping it’ll at least start the conversation with the Senate,” Sayles said.
Louise Lee of Raleigh is founder of Save Our Summers-North Carolina, a parent group that collected signatures and ran radio ads in 2004 seeking the streamlined calendar. She said she’s not surprised by the continued efforts of groups to repeal the law.
Lawmakers should stick to the status quo because, Lee said, “what the legislators are not hearing is that parents want changes.”
Chapel Hill, N.C. — Margo Metzger describes it as a movement – a Southern craft beer movement. Bill Manley calls it a Renaissance.
“Craft brewing right now all over the country, and to some extent, all over the world, is really going through a renaissance. It’s exploding everywhere,” said Manley, beer ambassador for Sierra Nevada Brewing Co., which recently opened a brewing facility – its second – in Mills River, N.C. “You really don’t have to go far to find a really excellent beer anywhere in the country now.”
Metzger, executive director of the N.C. Craft Brewers Guild, said North Carolina is at the forefront of the Southern response to a national trend in craft brewing.
“It’s starting to gain some recognition nationally as a great place for craft beer,” she said.
Between 2010 and 2014, the number of breweries in the state almost tripled, rising from 43 to 124, according to data from the North Carolina Alcoholic Beverage Control Commission.
The Brewers Association found that North Carolina craft beer sales had an economic impact of $791.1 million in 2012 – a figure that placed it at 14th in the country.
Metzger said the 2006 Pop the Cap campaign — which raised the state’s alcohol by volume cap from 6 percent to 15 percent – was pivotal for North Carolina’s burgeoning brewing scene because it made the effort of brewing worthwhile.
“It made all the difference, and if we can continue to be progressive like that, gosh, the sky’s the limit,” she said.
North Carolina has the eighth highest excise tax on beer in the United States – something Metzger describes as a burden on small brewers. The state also places a 25,000barrel limit on a brewery’s annual selfdistribution. By comparison, California and Colorado both allow unlimited selfdistribution, and New York sets the cap at 100,000 barrels.
“There are probably close to 20 states that either have unlimited selfdistribution or allow a greater amount than we do,” Metzger said. “And when you look at it in the South, we look pretty good, but I’m not satisfied with comparing us to the South. If we’re going to be what I believe we can be — which is a mecca for East coast beer — if we want to set our sights on that, then we’ve got to be more progressive.”
Drinking Local
When customers dine at the Fearrington House Restaurant in Pittsboro, N.C., they sample root vegetables grown on the property, eat wild beef sourced from local farms, and drink beer – a seasonal pecan coffee porter – that is brewed at Durham’s Fullsteam Brewery using coffee beans roasted at Fearrington Village and pecans grown on its own trees.
The experience is both fresh and hyper local, unlikely to be replicated exactly in any other restaurant. And that’s the idea.
Xavyer Burroughs, sommelier for the Fearrington wine team, sees it as a part of the farm to table movement in a restaurant culture that now includes beverages – like beer.
“It’s a cool snapshot into the ingredients, kind of what grows up here in North Carolina – in this small part of North Carolina,” he said.
The state’s unique landscape and agricultural resources are part of what has positioned North Carolina to be a force in the brewing industry.
“I think North Carolina’s been a pretty strong state in terms of craft beer acceptance, even I think a real shift toward the local food movement here that stems from having such rich agriculture here, and it’s changed people’s attitudes about caring about where their food
comes from,” Metzger said. “And I think that translates also into beverages.”
Suzanne Brown, spokeswoman for the N.C. Department of Commerce, thinks that’s a part of the draw for tourism — an industry that brought $20.1 billion to the state in 2013.
“So many of our breweries use local ingredients and reflect the landscape and the history and the agriculture of our state,” Brown said. “It’s a great part of our tourism product because it relates on so many different levels. It’s not just one beautiful thing, but it draws from a lot of
different facets.”
This spring, Sierra Nevada will enter the final phases of opening its Mills River facility, utilizing its 200-acre location in the mountains by adding hiking trails and biking paths that will contribute to the brewery’s reputation as a destinationstyle brewery.
“I think that you track a lot of this to the state’s natural assets,” Brown said. “All of this really does have to do with this land and what comes off it, whether it’s the beauty and the recreation or what’s grown.”
Sierra Nevada’s Mills River location was designed with tourism in mind, from recreation to brewery tours.
“In a lot of ways, I think to people, making beer is — it’s like magic, you know?” Manley said. “You take things that don’t seem to really make much sense together, and you put them together, and all of a sudden, you’ve got beer. And you know, who doesn’t like beer?”
A Southern Shift
Despite the newly popular craft brewing trend, Sierra Nevada – based in Chico, Calif. – has been brewing since the early 1980s.
Looking to expand, Manley said the company weighed the cost, difficulty and environmental impact of continuing to ship beer to the East Coast, where sales were picking up, and chose to find a second facility somewhere east of the Mississippi River.
The company looked for access to the outdoors, a good music scene, affordable housing, good schools and communities committed to renewable resources and alternative energy creation — components he described as the ethos of a brewery.
Though they hadn’t intended to move anywhere with a regional brewing operation, like Asheville, the Sierra Nevada owners found an ideal piece of land and the approval they wanted from the Asheville Brewers Alliance.
“It’s really cool to have this kind of community of likeminded people who are around all the time that you can kind of bounce ideas off of and get advice back and forth and really kind of share that collective love of beer,” Manley said. “As such, you can go into any bar or gas
station, frankly, in town and find great craft beer available from local breweries.”
The location has everything to do with it.
The ABC Commission counts a total of 125 brewing permits currently issued in the state – the largest number of which have been issued in Buncombe County, home to Asheville, a former Beer City USA whose reputation for beer precedes it.
“You really feel like it’s woven into the fabric of what it’s like to live in Asheville,” Manley said.
And the water in the area is ideal – it’s soft and it keeps a relatively constant temperature year-round.
“In other words, off the shelf, without doing any treatment, you can brew with it and make really good beer,” Manley said.
Metzger isn’t surprised by the interest in moving brewing operations to North Carolina.
“It makes sense, if they’re going to expand, to expand east. And when you look at North Carolina, it’s in a pretty sweet spot — about halfway between New York and Florida. The water’s good. It’s progressive at least in terms of the south, so it’s an attractive spot,” Metzger
said. “And it’s an awfully nice compliment to North Carolina to have these big craft brewers moving in, but I wouldn’t be surprised if we see a few more set up shop here, and we’re happy to have them.”
A New Culture
Nancy Williams, an Asheville resident of 38 years, doesn’t drink beer.
“I don’t like it all. I really tried to like it,” she said. “I just don’t like the taste.”
She said she was originally skeptical of the growing interest in bars and beer around her. It was her son, a craft beer enthusiast, who introduced her to a culture she now appreciates.
“It’s just very, very different from going to a darkened bar with one TV and a neon sign in the back that says some beer name,” she said. “It’s a hobbyist kind of thing — a lot of people get together and drink. And I think also the lines are blurring between bar and restaurant; a lot of breweries often have pretty decent food here.”
Williams describes Asheville as two cities in one: home to longtime residents as much as young transplants, beer enthusiasts and abstainers alike.
“I think it’s a turnoff to some of the people who are from here and have always lived here and, now, what our city’s known for is beer,” she said. “Just a lot of folks who live in western North Carolina feel like they don’t understand it, and some of them just think, ‘Gosh, isn’t there
something we can be known for other than beer?”
It has the tendency to overshadow other attractive things about the town, she said.
“Based on years ago, growing up in dry counties, I thought bars are kind of where people get together to drink,” Williams said. “But I think here, people get together to socialize, and the beer is kind of part of it.”
Williams recently attended a birthday party for a 1-year-old at Asheville’s Bywater Bar – a location she found to be surprisingly appropriate for the occasion. And she said she’s doing her part to bring friends to breweries to test out what she thinks is a positive atmosphere.
“You’d have to be under a rock to not notice the rise of craft beer in this state, and you’d be remiss if you didn’t recognize the positive impact that it has in so many ways on jobs, on tourism, on quality of life, on North Carolina’s image around this country,” Metzger said. “We’re part of North Carolina’s image, and it gives us some credibility. We’ve already got a great culinary scene here, and adding some of the best craft brewing in the country to that, it makes people want to come here.”
The North Carolina coast is a vacation destination for many in our area and over the next century it could go through a major transformation. Sea levels have climbed about 2.5 inches over the past 30 years across the southern end of the state and this number could be on the rise.
It’s hard to imagine the actual sea level rising, but Spencer Rogers, a Coastal Construction and Erosion Specialist for North Carolina Sea Grant, says that’s exactly what it’s been doing.
“Sea level has been rising all of our lifetimes and will continue to rise, said Rogers. “It’s not easy to accurately predict what will happen in 30 or 90 years.”
Rogers says the changes in climate and warmer oceans play a big role.
“The climate impacts are new and different, we haven’t been really paying attention to that or didn’t know as much about it over the past 20 years. In that respect, we’ve learned a lot more about climate in the long run,” Rogers said.
Todd Miller is with the North Carolina Coastal Federation and says the rate at which the sea is rising is worrisome.
“It’s a big concern, sea levels have been rising, and they’re rising faster and faster all the time,” Miller said. “The prediction is over the next 30 years we could be looking at a six to eight inch rise in water.”
Wrightsville Beach started their beach nourishment project in 1965, and because of it, you’re not going to notice sea level rise when your toes are in the sand; you’re going to notice it in flood prone areas further inland.
“This type of sea level rise, isn’t just the increase like in a bathtub, it invades our ground water, invades into our farm fields, we have agricultural ditches that are flowing backwards now,” Miller explained.
There’s over 12,000 miles of shoreline along our coast, when you count rivers and sounds too.
The impact of the rising sea level will vary greatly from the north end of the coast to the south with the Duck Inlet having the highest expected sea level rise by 2045.
“The face of North Carolina, the coast of North Carolina, is going to look very different in the next century,” Miller said.
Rogers says we can get ahead of this problem now.
“Building a house a couple feet higher than what is required is one way we can adapt to sea level rise,”Rogers said.
Philip Prete is a senior environmental planner for the city of Wilmington and says this is not a problem just for the coast but, its effects can be felt here in central North Carolina too.
“The coastal economy is big for the state of North Carolina. It’s a tourism economy, there’s a recreational economy, a fisheries economy and I think it’s important the whole state shares the coast. It’s beneficial to the entire state, so it is important what’s going on, on the coast,” Prete said.
Although researchers predict the sea to rise by six to eight inches over the next 30 years, they still call this rise “subtle.”
If you’d like to read more about this issue facing our state, the North Carolina Department of Environmental and Natural Resources has updated their sea-level rise study and it’s currently open for public review on its website.
OAK RIDGE — For this city’s 10th mayor since it was incorporated, his top goal is “the successful development of Main Street Oak Ridge,” the name of the proposed $80 million revamp of the old Oak Ridge Mall property.
Mayor Warren Gooch, who described himself as akin to the “chairman of the board of directors for the city,” gave his overview of city priorities during Tuesday’s “Lunch with the League” program of the Oak Ridge League of Women Voters.
Gooch called the current mall property “a black hole in the center of our city that we have been trying to fill for the last 20 years.”
He predicted the plan by Charlotte, N.C., developer Crosland Southeast for the property will be “the catalyst for a dynamic and revitalized downtown,” saying it will “enhance the image of our city for years to come.”
Gooch said groundbreaking and demolition of the old mall’s common areas is “on schedule to begin by June 30. Let’s all keep our fingers crossed.”
Other upbeat developments, he said, include the decision by CVMR Corp. to locate its world headquarters in Oak Ridge, which he said will bring some 600 jobs and a $300 million investment. He predicted that CVMR-USA will be an “anchor in our reindustrialization efforts; a magnet for other companies seeking to relocate in close proximity to CVMR.”
Gooch called the creation of the Manhattan Project National Park and Oak Ridge’s part in that new park “a potential gold mine for heritage tourism.” That new park, signed into law last December, designates historically significant landmarks in Oak Ridge, Hanford, Wa., and Los Alamos, N.M., as parts of the park, created to recognize the project to build the world’s first atomic bomb.
Passage of the enabling legislation “has added urgency to our efforts to have the park headquarters located in Oak Ridge,” he said, adding that competition for that designation is “intense.”
City challenges, he told league members, including the completion of the review of turnover, morale and policies of the Oak Ridge Police Department “as soon as it is reasonably possible to do so.”
Adopting a new property tax rate will also be a challenge, he said, especially since the latest Anderson County reappraisal showed a decline in property values and the Roane County reappraisal process isn’t finished.
Gooch said a survey of 259 residents showed that the lack of affordable housing and the need to lure young families to Oak Ridge, along with development of Main Street Oak Ridge, as residents’ top priorities.