}DUKE PROPOSES A
TRANSFORMER SUBSTATION AT PATTON & CLINGMAN (Former Hunter Volvo). They
are also buying all adjoining property along Clingman to Hilliard
}Neighborhood input
is essential to inform Duke of our needs, values and aspirations. Open-air
substations like those on Desoto Street in West Asheville or Rankin behind
the US Cellular Center are not acceptable designs
}Select WECAN Board
members have joined a multi-functional development task force with
representatives from Duke, City of Asheville and adjoining neighborhoods
}Receive Task Force
updates by email if you request; email request to lahall78@gmail.com.
Detailed updates are also posted to this WECAN blog, http://wecannews.blogspot.com/
GENERAL
STATEMENT:
The city of Asheville is growing along with its power demand.
Demand and aging infrastructure requires additional power be made available.
Duke has looked at several sites on the west and south sides, but is most
interested in developing a new facility at Patton and Clingman. WECAN board
members are working with Duke and the city of Asheville to guide matters
within our limitation. Both Duke and the City understand the importance of
this site as a gateway to Asheville, WECAN and River Arts, but it will take
dedicated effort of the WECAN neighborhood to encourage the right type of
development should it go forward.
Please see
detailed information and history
on the WECAN blog.
|
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Friday, July 7, 2017
WECAN NEIGHBORHOOD SUBSTATION NEWS ALERT
Thursday, July 6, 2017
WECAN July 2017 Board Meeting Minutes • Draft
WECAN Board Meeting Minutes July 6, 2017
Board Members present: Byron Ballard, Jared Fischer, Lyn Hall, Rebecca
Lance, Rachel Larson, Luke Perry and Pattiy Torno.
Members not present: Danny Aull, Tom Gibson, Mike Kenton, JoAnn Skinner
and Suzanne Willis.
At Large Members not present: Rafael Rettig and Floree Lowery.
Also Present: Jessie Coleman, Joe Fioccola, David Heetderks, Payne
Kissinger, Hanni Muerdter, Caroline Mullis and APD Officer Justin Wilson.
INTROS: Rachel called the meeting to order at 6:30 pm.
MINUTES/ TREASURER”S REPORT: Lynn moved and Pattiy seconded a motion to
approve the draft WECAN minutes from June 1 as distributed. The motion
passed. Treasurer reported no activity.
APD/CRO Update: Justin reported burglaries at two houses under renovation
and two vehicles broken into and one stolen from in WECAN. Also city-wide
an increase in bicycle thefts with locks being cut.
Lyn reported problems with homeless campers on a vacant lot next door to
his home on Park Avenue. He acknowledged Asheville reputation for
tolerance making it a magnet for this activity around hidden or untended
places. It was suggested that the seven days notice should be reduced to 4
days to discourage abuse. Christiana Tugman can be reached at
CTugman@ashevillenc.gov. Justin can see the advantage for more officer
discretion in alleviating the problem. Hanni reported a similar problem at
the Clingman Lofts.
BLOCK JESSIES: July 4 party on Jefferson, Pat Crisp’s nephew passed away,
Steve and Britany have finally moved in, Yuri and Mara visited and stopped
their Air B&B, Snake and Sandra’s son just graduated from High School,
Clingman Lofts had a lot of turnover many owners are using it as a second
home, a hydrant exploded behind Jared’s house, the .63 acre Cotton Mill
building recently sold for $1,950,000.
338 HILLIARD AVENUE: Payne Kassinger is the developer of affordable
housing on the Parks and Recreation Maintenance site. They have built
1200 units in Asheville since 2009. Next week they walk through with the
city pre demo. He will bring a site plan to the next WECAN meeting. In two
months plans will be finished and then 120 days for city approval.
Construction should begin in April 2018 on the 64 units (34 affordable and
30 market rate). It will not be car-free and is to be called Clingman Park
Apartments.
DUKE SUBSTATION UPDATE: Rachel gave an overview of the history leading up
to Duke’s option on the Hunter Volvo site. A meeting on June 7 at Haywood
Street Congregation yielded a proposal from Duke to put an Air Cooled
Substation in the middle of the site and fencing all around it. That
option is unacceptable to the neighborhood. At a June 13 meeting with the
Mayor it was suggested that a smaller working group be formed to dig a
little deeper and explore some options for the site. On June 26 Duke
brought in consultants to explain the differences between Air insulated
and Gas insulated Substations. Since then a report from geo-technician
showing the water table on the site at 27 feet below grade—which affects
the initial site plan digging down 20 feet. The costs of site preparation
inflate the entire project cost and may make the more expensive GIS a less
costly alternative but nothing is decided yet—everything is still in play.
A smaller working group has been formed and will meet on July 7 and 10 and
then on August 8th to develop alternatives. A WECAN’s response and
strategy and potential positive outcomes and controlling the messaging
with the media were discussed.
WECAN is advocating for a positive outcome. WECAN doesn’t want to kick the
can to another neighborhood but if it must be here it must be done
differently.
RAD FORM BASED CODE: The Asheville Planning and Zoning Commission passed
it. The only opposition expressed was from EWANA who feared Craven Street
properties going commercial would yield a row of Air B&B’s.
RADTIP: The budget estimate came in as twice what was planned so the scope
of the project is now cut in half.. What is still in the project are full
from Hill Street to the old 12Bones, 2 roundabouts, the greenway on the
west bank of the river and a 16 foot wide greenway from the old 12Bones to
Amboy Road. What was cut were: Bacoate Greenway, Town Branch Greenway,
Livingston Street, bollarded bike lanes and the roadway south of the old
12Bones.
MSD: The pipes can’t handle the load and get backed up and a larger line
will go from the end of Park Avenue down the hill to Roberts Street
starting in August and some trees will be removed.
NEW BELGIUM: Pile driving for 65 poles on the north end of the site will
begin in July for water treatment.
SOCIAL: Rebecca proposed a feast when the corn is ready to harvest. Joe
noted the potatoes will be ready soon. A membership drive in conjunction
should also happen.
Meeting adjourned at 8:21 pm
ANNOUNCEMENT: Pattiy announced that the million dollar ‘Taj Matoilets’
bathrooms at 14 Riverside Drive will have a grand opening on July 21 from
3-6 pm.
Minutes submitted by Joe Fioccola, Secretary Emeritus
Important Upcoming Dates:
July 7, 9 Duke Working Group Meetings
July 9 Open City Hall Neighborhood Coordinator survey deadline.
July 10 Meet the Equity Manager Candidates at Civic Center 4:30-6:30
July 11 Development Customer Advisory Group at Public Works
9-10:30 am
July 21 NH leaders Roundtable 8:30 @ Riverlink
July 11, 18, 25 Community Garden Workday/meeting 6 pm
July 17 C.A.N. Meeting 7 p.m. Oakley Community Center
July 21 Bathroom Grand Opening 14 Riverside Drive from 3-6 pm.
July 25 City Council reviews RAD Form Based Code
August 1 Next WECAN Board Meeting Thursday 6:30 pm
Saturday, June 24, 2017
Downtown Duke Substation Proposed for Patton & Clingman Ave
Neighborhood Update: Re: Proposed Duke-Energy substation at Patton and
Clingman
Over the last four years Duke-Energy has tried to address Asheville’s
growing energy needs. With the extensive growth in the last few years,
especially in downtown, they have shown a need for a second substation to
supplement and back up the fifty plus year old one on Rankin Avenue. They have
since then acquired several properties including an option on a 3.5 acre site
at 252 Patton Avenue (last housing Hunter Volvo.) For various reasons most of
the other sites were not usable (Please see background detail below).
Legally Duke is authorized by the state to provide energy for businesses
and residents and has broad powers to achieve its mission. Legally residents
and the city have little or no power to oppose Duke in its mission. However, a
representative from Duke-Energy is working with a small group of stakeholders
(city staff, community representatives, engineers) to explore options for
mutual gain. Duke-Energy has invited the community to be part of this
conversation. To keep the conversation productive, they have made the
reasonable request to avoid involving the news media at this point.
The site under consideration is in the Central Business District and
therefore has very few zoning restrictions but it is uniquely--and rarely for
the CBD, adjacent to a residential zone. Some of the issues that have emerged
are: best use of property, cost, EMF(electro-magnetic field) health
effects, maintenance access, noise and visual impacts, pedestrian safety,
protection of immediate neighbors, reliability for the next 100 years,
redundancy (to back up Rankin Avenue,) several neighborhood plans addressing a
gateway for downtown, site security and traffic mitigation.
Initially, their first offering of a standard off-the-shelf substation
(like one at 168 Clayton Road) was proposed to solve some of the concerns but
did not effectively use the rest of the site and created more problems for the
neighborhood. The neighbors and the city staff prefer a smaller footprint
for the substation and activation of the rest of the property for residential
and commercial development.
The neighbors have acknowledged Duke’s need and are reluctant to kick the
can down the road for some other neighborhood to deal with. They see the
challenges and the opportunity for an innovative and creative solution that
also benefits the neighborhood and the city. WECAN (West End Clingman Avenue
Neighborhood) articulated principles that their community values: Equity and
Diversity, Planning and Effective Land Use, Energy and Environment, Safe Home
and Environment, Collaboration.
Importantly, Duke-Energy is listening and willing to work with the
community for a win-win-win. Meanwhile, the city is in the process of writing
an ordinance covering the buffering of utilities. The time frame is short.
Construction needs to begin before the end of the year. The conversation
continues with a smaller working group to explore alternate ideas for use of
the space. The group from WECAN includes: Jessie Coleman, Joe Fioccola, Lynn
Hall, Rachel Larson, Luke W Perry and Pattiy Torno.
For more information, questions and concerns contact:
wecannews@gmail.com.
Additional Background Detail:
Since August of 2014, Duke has purchased 3 sites for this purpose and has
1 under contract. Currently Duke owns the former Matthews Ford site at 319
Biltmore Ave, around 17 acres in Montford surrounding the Isaac Dickson
Elementary School on Hill St, and 226 Hilliard Avenue across from the Hot Spot.
Duke Energy is under contract to purchase another site at 252 Patton Avenue,
the former Hunter Volvo site. This includes the approximately 3.5 combined
acres owned by the Meeker family. Duke’s due diligence period ends at the end
of July, but they would like to make a decision by mid June.
At each previous site there was pushback from the city of Asheville,
affordable housing developers, social justice advocates, neighborhood groups
and parent-teacher organizations who rallied against placement in their
backyard, thus pushing Duke to continue their search for an appropriate
location.
Substation Details:
According to Jason Walls, a spokesperson for Duke, the substation
technology proposed is similar to a substation at 168 Clayton Rd.
This type of substation is conventional outdoor air insulated substation.
There are multiple other types of substations, including indoor and gas
insulated, but Duke does not prefer this type. This substation would likely be
both a transmission and distribution substation, meaning it would continue to
transmit power to north Asheville and step down the voltage to the type of
power that the downtown systems can use.
Due to the slope of the Patton Avenue site, initial assessments would
suggest that for Duke to have a level site, they would have to dig down 10-15
feet on the North end of the property. The initial layouts presented at an
April 5th meeting covered about 300 x 215 sq feet. If the tallest
part of the substation were placed in that dug out area, the two 50-60 feet
high power poles would then be 40-50 feet above Patton Ave. The two
transformers behind these would be 10-20 feet high.
Current technology allows for substations to be buried underground, like
under a parking deck or building, or placed within a standalone single story
building. The footprint for a GIS substation can be a fifth of the size
of a conventional air insulated substation. Gas Insulated Switchgear (GIS)
has been around for several decades and is commonly used in urban environments.
However, the only example of this in Duke’s territory is in Chapel Hill, NC.
Gas Insulated technology was used to replace an air-insulated substation in
2008, and was housed inside a building. The address for this substation appears
to be 170 Old Mason Farm Rd, Chapel Hill, across from the Ronald MacDonald
House.
August 2014
Duke purchased the old Matthews Ford site (~5.5 acres) at 319 Biltmore
Avenue just north of Mission Hospital and adjacent to Lee Walker Heights for
$5.3M. The proximity to a Housing Authority development again had the community
up in arms. In addition, the City of Asheville would like to use some of this
land to enlarge the mixed use/ mixed income redevelopment currently being
planned for Lee Walker Heights public housing.
December 2014
Duke purchased ~ parcels totaling 16.93 acres in Montford, along Hill St
for ~$5.4M and surrounding Isaac Dickson Elementary School. There was
enough community push back from parents at Isaac Dickson Elementary that this
location is strongly opposed by the Mayor. Another media clip found here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ufz1HEP_W8E
December 2014
Duke purchased the old Hayes & Lunsford property (1.79 acres) for
~$3M on the corner of Hilliard & Asheland at 226 Hilliard Ave. In
meetings stretching over 2 years with the South French Broad neighborhood, it
was determined that a traditional substation could not fit on this parcel with
sufficient buffers to the residential sections that surround it.
January 2017
Duke holds meeting at Fire Department Training Room. Focus on meeting was
to not discuss specific sites but to step back and share common ideas for what
folks wanted and didn’t want from a substation. Jason provided sticky notes and
we were asked to each write down several ideas and put them on the wall. He
cites the following as takeaway guiding principles:
- Plan a long-term solution (50-100
years) to avoid having to build again.
- Ensure safety for neighbors,
community and employees.
- Reduce noise impacts.
- Mitigate visual impacts.
(i.e., increased buffering, fewest poles, etc.)
- Consider the best-use for a
specific property and consider best use for specific properties (i.e., traffic,
impacts on established neighborhoods, etc.).
- Ensure reliable electricity, with
appropriate redundancy.
- Lowest cost reasonable.
February 2017
Duke secures an option to purchase the recently vacated Hunter Volvo car
dealership on the corner of Clingman & Patton (~ 3.47 acres). There
are three houses that Duke might like to also purchase on Knoxville
Place. So far these neighbors do not want to sell their houses, but also
do not want to live with a substation as a neighbor.
March 8, 2017
Duke notifies (by email) members of the neighborhoods, city and chamber
officials about the option to purchase on the Hunter Volvo Site. He reiterates
that this decision was made from listening to feedback at the January meeting,
following the guiding principles stated above.
April 5, 2017
Duke and the City of Asheville call a meeting @ City Hall. Jason informs
us of the likelihood of this site being the final option, and 3 site layouts
were included. He indicates that they have a 3rd party appraisal
study showing there is no impact to nearby property values. The appraisal
report was requested to be shared with neighbors. It has not yet been shared. A
meeting was suggested to be had in May, as the deadline for the option to
purchase was approaching in July.
June 7, 2017
WECAN Association host a meeting with Duke at the Haywood Street
Congregation (297 Patton Ave) and invite additional surrounding neighbors,
additional stakeholders from the River Arts District and Downtown associations,
and representatives from Chamber of Commerce, City of Asheville, Isaac Dickson
PTO, and Montford and South French Broad who have participated in the process
over the last 2 years. A revised layout is presented showing a single
A-Frame construction, normally 50 feet high, placed 20 feet below Patton Ave,
as the site needs to be evenly graded for all of the components. Decibel
estimate explanations are shared as well. Nearest residence is approximately
100 feet from nearest components, which would experience around 50 decibels,
similar to a "calm conversation".
June 26th, 2017
Duke spokesperson Jason Walls requests additional meetings as the option
to purchase deadline approaches. It is held at the Aston Park Tennis
Court meeting room at 5pm to 6:30pm. Duke invites individuals from an Oklahoma
based company to discuss Gas Insulated Substation Technology, which could
substantially reduce the footprint of the site and enable other buildings to be
situated on the street front. Cathy Ball speaks on the changing nature of
Patton Avenue under the current NC DOT Plans for realigning I-26 off of the
Captain Jeff Bowen Bridge.
Thursday, June 1, 2017
WECAN June 2107 Board Meeting Minutes • Draft
WECAN Board Meeting Minutes
June 1, 2017
Board Members present: Byron Ballard, Rachel Larson, and Pattiy
Torno. Members not
present: Danny Aull, Jared Fischer, Tom
Gibson, Lyn Hall, Mike Kenton, Rebecca Lance, Luke Perry, JoAnn
Skinner and Suzanne Willis. At
Large Members not present: Rafael Rettig and Floree Lowery.
Also
Present: Jessie Coleman, Joe Fioccola, Caroline Mullis and APD Officer Justin
Wilson,.
INTROS: Byron called the meeting to
order at 6:37 pm.
MINUTES/ TREASURER”S
REPORT: Byron
moved and Pattiy seconded a motion to approve the draft WECAN minutes from May
4 as distributed. The motion passed.
APD/CRO Update: Justin reported that
there was not a lot of activity in May. An unlocked vehicle was broken into on
Birddog Lane. A bullet hole was found in a house on Park Avenue North,
increasing graffiti and homeless camps cleared from the Boy Scout’s Hill. He
explained his frustration with the process in place for homeless campers along
the interstates. There are other places in the neighborhood that are not along
the interstate, such as two of the west corners of the Clingman and Hilliard
intersection. Pattiy encouraged the city to post their newly acquired
properties in the RAD. The neighbors assured Officer Wilson they will support
any of his attempts to solve the problem.
NATIONAL NIGHT OUT: The annual event
sponsored by Target will be on Tuesday August1. Justin reported that the fee
will be waived if you register through the Neighborhood Coordinator. In the
past there was competition for attention between individual neighborhood
anti-crime efforts and collective gatherings such as at City County Plaza,
Carrier Park or the Buncombe County Soccer Complex. Again this year the city is
encouraging individual efforts rather than big centralized outings. Pattiy
expressed confusion about what it is for and why.
BACOATE BRANCH GREENWAY
NAMING:
Pattiy noted that the naming of Bacoate Branch, and Forest and Greenway was now
officially approved by City Council..
RAD FORM BASED CODE: The Asheville Planning and
Zoning Commission will hold a public hearing to review the proposed River Arts
Form-Based Code for the greater River Arts District on Wednesday June 7 at 5
p.m. Requested changes have been made to building heights and there doesn’t
seem to be a lot that needs neighborhood support. Pattiy noted that commercial
interests on the commission do oppose it but they are outnumbered.
RADTIP: City Council will vote on
funding at their June 13 meeting.
SOCIAL: SPRING FLING: At 2 pm on Sunday May 28
of Memorial Day weekend was the a cook out and pot luck at Owens Bell Park to
celebrate Jessie Coleman’s 79th Birthday. The weather was very
pleasant, about 30 people showed up and feasted on chicken, hot dogs, sausages,
salad from the community garden, potato salad banana pudding and cake. There
was discussion of how to better communicate the next one.
BLOCK JESSIES: Pat Crisp is back in the
hospital. De De posted on Next Door that her neighbor’s wall had
collapsed. Pattiy recommended
organizing helpers from the neighborhood to put in our neighborhood support
toolbox. Perhaps helpers could assist debris removal and Luke and Joe can start
by help Jessie dealing with a leak or runoff.
COMMUNITY GARDEN: Joe reported that
strawberries are running, corn is rising, tomatoes are planted and the wood
fenced half has been weeded. He has only seen one town snake and a birds nest
in the vertical ‘diaper’ garden. Pattiy has seen frogs. Lynn had asked for a
submersible pump Joe explained that it was to drain their wading pool up to the
community garden barrels instead of using buckets. Pattiy also noted that Roots
has food grade barrels for the asking.
DUKE SUBSTATION: Pattiy and Rachel met with
Laura and Steven at the Haywood Street Congregation to arrange the next meeting
with Duke. Steven will welcome attendees and make a pitch for development that
supports their need for additional parking. At this point WECAN does not
support a traditional substation at that location. Pattiy will propose a
win-win-win solution with mixed use, GIS in a building or under a parking deck.
She will try to control the conversation to listen to what Duke is proposing
and what options they have to offer and keeping our neighborhood response in
our back pocket. Before the meeting she has offered to meet with business
owners who have not been at prior meetings to bring them up to speed. There is
a concern that it may be too late to use the media. Joe noted that Duke has a lot of pushback on their gas fired
generators and don’t need another black eye and this may be an opportunity for
Duke to do the right thing—even though they don’t legally have to.
KUDZU HILL: No work day was set for
June. It is too late to spray the kudzu and the ineffectiveness of spraying was
discussed.
OTHER ISSUES: Moving the Bacoate Branch
stream culvert at the stone works, Zoning issue at Roberts Street and Trade
Street. Caroline reported that her house won a Griffin Award from the
Preservation Society and she would be renting it for about a year. Dogs running loose jumped on JoAnne with
her grandson and dog on Short Hilliard until she was rescued by a passing
motorist. Jessie reported that dogs continue to defecate on the sidewalk on
Hilliard. Dog owners need to pick up the poop.
ADOPT A HIGHWAY: Rachel will bring the
contract renewal around later this month. Our current contract expires on July
1.
Meeting adjourned at 8:02
pm
Minutes submitted by Joe
Fioccola, Secretary Emeritus
Important Upcoming Dates:
June 7
Duke Substation meet up2:30 Haywood Street
June 6,13,20,27 Community
Garden Workday/meeting 6 pm
June 7,14,21,28 RAD Market at
All Souls Pizza
June 11 Father’s
Day
June 12
C.A.N. Meeting 7 p.m. Oakley Community Center
June 16 NH
leaders Roundtable 8:30 @ Riverlink
June 28 Comp
Plan Draft Public Meeting TBA
July 6 Next WECAN Board Meeting Thursday 6:30 pm
Thursday, May 4, 2017
WECAN May 2017 Board Meeting Minutes • Draft
WECAN Board Meeting Minutes May 4, 2017
Board Members present: Danny Aull, Byron Ballard, Len Hall, Rebecca Lance,
Rachel Larson, Luke Perry, and Pattiy Torno. Members not present: Jared
Fischer, Tom Gibson, Mike Kenton, JoAnn Skinner and Suzanne Willis. At
Large Members not present: Rafael Rettig and Floree Lowery.
Also Present: Matthew Bacoate, Jessie Coleman, Joe Fioccola, Helen Hyatt,
David Siripoonsup, Margot Wallston and Mike Wasmer.
INTROS: Rachel called the meeting to order at 7:37 pm (following a
subcommittee meeting about a future Dike Substation) with a round of
introductions.
MINUTES/ TREASURER”S REPORT: Pattiy moved and Jessie seconded a motion to
approve the draft WECAN minutes from April 6 as distributed. Treasurer
Rebecca reported no activity but there may be a proposal next meeting to
spend some money on water catchment for the community garden.
APD/CRO Update: Email report from Justin Wilson:
-----A resident on Park Ave N has complained of parking violations on the
street. He is claiming that people visiting the RAD are illegally parking
on the street. ----Residents at Clingman Lofts (125 Clingman Ave) have
reported an on-going issue with a homeless woman trespassing on the
property. I've worked with the residents and property management to try to
solve this----There have been complaints of homeless camping on the DOT
property between the Boy Scouts of America and Club St. I've run some
people off of this property, but it doesn't seem to take long for a new
crew to arrive. I spoke to the DOT about the lot-today. They said they've
recently cleaned it, and filled a 5 gallon bucket with used syringes. The
DOT said that they have been clearing wooded lots in other areas of I-240
and have been very successful at making the lots more visible and
therefore-preventing homeless camps long term. In my opinion, this would
be the best solution for this lot. The DOT employee I spoke with said that
their crews are short staffed for the task at hand, and are currently
focusing on DOT properties near Fairview Rd..-I don't know a timeframe of
when this could happen. Thoughts? Ideas? Suggestions?---A vehicle breaking
and entering was reported on Jefferson Dr on 4/16. The report indicated
that the car door was left unlocked. There is no suspect information.
Thank you, and please contact me with any feedback. Officer Justin Wilson
Community Resource Officer Asheville Police Department Cell: 828-450-3719
Rachel reported a second occurrence of a break in and stolen tools from a
building being renovated on Clingman at Clingman Place. Lynn noted
graffiti keep appearing. Pattiy observed that when it is gone fast the
vandals move on. Also 10 people live under the bridge near Riverside
Studios. Joe complained that people walk their dogs and do not pick up the
poop in front of his house.
ADOPT A HIGHWAY: Joe reported that the time has come again to renew the
contract with NCDOT. This will set the stage for a twentieth year
observance sticker. Signing the application will happen at the June WECAN
Meeting.
BLOCK JESSIES: Community garden and Clingman Edible Triangle are blooming.
Zack’s mom passed away. Luke discovered solar lights at his driveway and
steps. Rachel reported new residents at Girdwood and Green Streets.
RAD FORM BASED CODE: Rachel noted the building height requirement has been
changed next to residential areas. Now it will go through the process P&Z,
AARC, RRDC and City Council by June.
BACOATE BRANCH GREENWAY NAMING: Rachel reported the status on the Creek
naming which will lead into the forest and greenway renaming is set to go
before the African American Heritage Commission on Thursday May 11 at 5:30
pm at the Dr Wesley Grant Sr. Center.
RADTIP: City Council will vote on funding at the June meeting for the
suite of projects. Work should begin in July and Pattiy will bring a
schedule of construction and road closings to the July meeting.
MSD SEWER LINE: Rachel reported that in 3-4 months MSD will enlarge the
sewer line from the end of Park Avenue North down the hill towards the
traffic circle and a swath of trees will be removed..
CLINGMAN STREETSCAPE MAINTENANCE: Rachel reported interest at the RADBA
meeting to maintain the vegetation from Grey Eagle to the traffic circle
with volunteers. Pattiy explained that the city and NCDOT paid for putting
in the plantings but never any effort to maintain them. She also explained
that RADBA has been paying to maintain them and this year approved funding
to maintain them for three months (April, May and June) hoping that the
city will do their part for the following three months. Margot cautioned
about some poison hemlock plants in the area but they may be the less
dangerous water hemlock.
KUDZU HILL: A work day was set for Sunday May 7 at 9 am to clear weeds
starting near the traffic circle. Rachel will call Eric at Green Works for
the mobile tool shed and Pattiy volunteered Clifford the big red truck.
SOCIAL: SPRING FLING: At 2 pm on Sunday May 28 of Memorial Day weekend
will be a cook out and pot luck at Owens Bell Park to celebrate Jessie
Coleman’s Birthday. Bring pot luck. Grills will be fired up for hot dogs
and Joe will bring paper products.
NATIONAL NIGHT OUT: Ashley reported the graphics have come out for NNO on
August 1st.
Meeting adjourned at 8:18 pm
Minutes submitted by Joe Fioccola, Secretary Emeritus
Important Upcoming Dates:
May 6 Soul Shakedown 6-9pm Boathouse
May 7 Kudzu Hill workday—9 am
May 11 African American HeritaGE Commission at Grant Center 5:30 pm
May TBA Duke Substation meet up
May TBA Comp Plan Draft Public Meeting
May 9,16,23,30 Community Garden Workday/meeting 6 pm
May 10,17,24,31 RAD Market at All Souls Pizza
May 14 Mother’s Day
May 19 Bike to work day
May 19 NH leaders Roundtable 8:30 @ Riverlink
May 20-21 RAD Studio Stroll
May 28 Jessie Coleman Birthday Pot Luck
May 29 Memorial Day
May 30 RADBA 4-6 pm FLS Conference room
Jun 1 Next WECAN Board Meeting Thursday 6:30 pm
Tuesday, April 4, 2017
WECAN April 2017 Board Meeting Minutes • Draft
WECAN Board Meeting Minutes
April 4, 2017
Board Members present: Len Hall, Rachel Larson, Luke Perry, and
Pattiy Torno
Members not present: Danny Aull, Byron Ballard, Jared Fischer, Rebecca Lance, Tom Gibson,
Mike Kenton, JoAnn Skinner and
Suzanne Willis.
At Large Members not
present: Rafael Rettig and Floree Lowery.
Also
Present: Matthew Bacoate, Jessie Coleman and Joe Fioccola.
INTROS: Rachel called the meeting to order at 6:31 pm with a round of
introductions..
MINUTES/ TREASURER”S
REPORT: The
draft WECAN minutes from March 2 were approved as distributed. No reported treasury
activity.
APD/CRO Update: Email report from
Justin Wilson:
03/09, 1 Roberts St- Graffiti was sprayed on the property of
White Duck Taco.
03/10, 64 Clingman Ave- A bicycle was
stolen from a bike rack. The bicycle was chained, which was apparently cut.
There is no suspect information.
03/11, 83 Clingman Ave- This residence was
broken into sometime between 3/10 and 3/12. I believe this house may be under
renovations and was unoccupied. The suspect pried the door open and stolen
tools.
03/27, 5:00PM, 56 Roberts St- A
vehicle breaking and entering was reported. The victim left her car unlocked
and a small amount of money was stolen. The suspect was not located. Some of
the folks from the neighborhood shared this information with me in an email. Other items of interest that are
not necessarily in WECAN;
--There is still a rise in car thefts in
the city. 95% have been cases where the owner left a spare set of keys in the
car and left the door unlocked. The majority of the stolen cars are recovered
within a day or two. This is not any sort of organized crime, more so petty
thieves checking door handles and getting lucky by finding keys.
--In the past week, there have been a
couple reports of "shots fired" in Hillcrest Apartments. No one has
been struck by gunfire. APD has increased patrols here and is working to
identify the suspects.
--Shrubs and plants are being stolen out
of the ground from residences and neighborhoods in North Asheville. This is
normally occurring the same week the shrubs are planted. I haven't
heard of this occurring elsewhere in the city, but keep an eye out for
suspicious late night "landscaping".
Officer Justin Wilson Community Resource Officer Asheville Police
Department Cell: 828-450-3719
Lynn
also noted campers/drinkers across from Park Avenue, in the back shed at Hunter
Volvo and Joe noted debris left behind the crabapple trees at the NW corner of Hilliard
and Clingman.
DUKE SUBSTATION LOCATION UNDER
CONTRACT- Rachel,
Luke, Jessie and Joe attended a meeting with representatives from Duke, SFB,
IDES and the City about a potential location under contract at the site of
Hunter Volvo 225 Patton Ave. Rachel gave a brief history of the effort, the
first attempts to locate a substation at Isaac Dickson or the old Hayes and
Lunsford site at Hilliard and Asheland Ave met resistance from IDES parents and
SFB neighbors. A meeting was held in June of 2016 to set a new path. A second
meeting was called in January 2017 to articulate principles, concerns and
issues with the Asheland site. A third was called in April 2017 to identify a
new site that became available. The new site under consideration still has
similar problems such as proximity to residences, affect of property values,
noise, and community push back. There are also some advantages such as
eliminating the need for power lines across Hilliard (since the Volvo site is
next to the transmission lines already), and the site is flexible so the
standard substation design has plenty of room to fit in different potential arrangements.
There are also unique considerations such as the location at the gateway to
downtown, potential development to the west when I-26 creating a boulevard
Patton Avenue, and a possible storm water catchment park. The meeting was a
start of an open dialog or conversation about the guiding principles to see if
the site works. They were asked for some illustrative elevations to give an
idea of scale, relationship to the residences, setbacks and sidewalks and storm
water ideas. Nothing is final yet but the property is under contract and after
due diligence on potential problems with the site they proposed a site visit in
early May. They are working with the group to mitigate community concerns, are
open to discussion of the use of the Asheland site and will be relocating poles
off the sidewalk on Hill Street. Rachel proposed meeting with the SFB neighbors
who have already done research on options of what could be done as a substation
also that we need to push for the smallest footprint possible. Matthew asked
about some transmission lines on Haywood Street behind the Rescue Mission. Jessie
may be interested in selling but doesn’t want to move from the neighborhood. Pattiy
observed that the city has offered relocation money in the past. Joe already
shared with Jessie his concerns that since the start in 1994 of the WECAN Plan
the reasons included Future residential development pressures as a result of
riverfront revitalization and Commercial development pressures along Clingman
Avenue. When the WECAN organization was formed on 1997 one important goal was
to stop commercial encroachment on the residential areas. Also our Citizens
Master Plan from 2001 called for infill placement of two story buildings in the
block of Clingman north of Hilliard with residential above. Now it looks like
that will never happen and the proximity of the substation makes puts pressure
on the residences on Knoxville Place. So, it makes some sense to relocate the
residences on Knoxville Place but on the other hand, if the residents of
Knoxville Place want to stay WECAN should keep pressure on Duke for them to
remain. (Not that Duke is proposing that at all. They say they want to be good
neighbors.) The decision should be up to Jessie and her neighbors. With these
conflicting principles it’s not an easy decision either way. It is very complicated.
RAD FORM BASED CODE: Pattiy explained the change
from a ‘use-based’ code to a ‘form-based ‘code and the first was created for
Haywood Road from Patton Avenue in West Asheville to the Riverlink Bridge.
Rachel reported that there was a problem with proposed building heights on the
West side of Roberts Street. Originally the limit was up to 5 stories which
would block view from Park Square. Now it has been amended to 4 stories or 55
ft on the west side except in the neighborhood transition zone which directly
abuts residential properties or right of ways can now only be 3 stories or 45
ft. Now it goes on through the process P&Z, AARC, RRDC and City Council by
June.
BACOATE BRANCH GREENWAY
RE-NAMING:
Pattiy was the first to offer the name of Bacoate Branch to rename Clingman
Forest Greenway. Bacoate Branch is on the consent agenda for City Council and
has not received any negative responses. WECAN Forest was suggested but the
greenway commission prefers to name greenways after geographic features such as
mountain, river, creek, etc. and have no problem re-naming the Clingman Forest
Greenway to the Bacoate Branch Greenway. Matthew was asked to be at the ribbon
cutting when it is completed (2018?) He humbly said Wow! He had no idea, and
never thought but learned in his life when good working minds get together,
they make things happen. You all have done a mammoth job to make it happen for
a little guy like me—because very seldom unless pushed he never talks about
what he’s done and wonders how he did do many of the things he made happen!
He’ll remain quiet and accept the honor and make you all look good. Thank you
all, he said. Pattiy said we are
thanking him for his 40 years of service to the community. She offered to video
tape his memories of the neighborhood history with JoAnne some Sunday afternoon
in the near future. He also offered to get copies of a SBA film and an ABC news
story from the 70’s featuring his business. He will get it to Rachel
‘fasterly.’
NH LEADERS ROUNDTABLE: Not a lot of activity but
the RADTIP contract for the suite of projects should officially be
awarded in June. Work will begin in August from the Railroad trestle working
south with lane closures expected for the following year.
ADOPT A HIGHWAY: Joe set a date for the
quarterly litter pick up for Tuesday April 11 at 10 AM.
KUDZU HILL: A work day was set for Sunday
April 23 from 10-2 to clear the next section.
CLINGMAN TRIANGLE: Pattiy has fertilized and
says the edibles are looking good.
SOCIAL: SPRING FLING: May 28 Memorial Day Sunday
afternoon will be a cook out and pot luck on Birddog Lane to celebrate Jessie
Coleman’s Birthday.
COMP PLAN ISSUES:
Joe read his feedback on 11 outstanding issues with the City’s Comprehensive
Plan. He is the liaison from the Neighborhood Advisory Committee to the Comp
plan Advisory Committee. (A copy of hid feedback is attached) There was some discussion about short
term rentals pros and cons.
NATIONAL CRIME VICTIMS
RIGHTS WEEK
is April 2-8. Byron offered to mark an observance on Face Book: Remembering
crime victims Alex King and Tatiana Diz.
WECAN HISTORY: Joe read items
from a WECAN Timeline from twenty years ago:
January 1996 WECAN
2010 Plan Adopted by City Council,
February 1997 Walking Tour of WECAN
and planning meeting to begin implementation of the plan
April 1997: 30 residents
and volunteers participate in neighborhood cleanup.
May 1997
Residents successfully rezone Pioneer Welding Supply Company
from Industrial to
Residential.
June 1997 Residents vote to form an
incorporated nonprofit neighborhood association Planning committee
formed.
Meeting adjourned at
8:27 pm
Minutes submitted by
Joe Fioccola,
Secretary Emeritus
Important Upcoming
Dates:
April 2-8 National
Crime Victims Rights Week
April 11 Community
Garden Workday/meeting 6 pm
Adopt-A-Highway
10 am
April 13 Stand
Against Racism 6:30-8 Eagle Street
April 11-17 Wood
Chipping @ Queen Carson et al
April 16 Easter
April 18 Community
Garden Workday/meeting 6 pm
April 21 NH
leaders Roundtable 8:30 @ Riverlink
FBR
Greenway Tour/ Ribbon Cutting 3:30-4:40
April 22 Earth
Day
April 23 City
of Asheville Earth day Celebration at Dr Wesley Grant Center 1-5 pm
Learn
how to compost! Take a walk on the future greenway! Enjoy tasty treats!
Plant a tree! Discuss the draft historic markers! Fun
for the whole family!
April 23 Kudzu
Hill workday—Next section 9-12
April 25 Community
Garden Workday/meeting 6 pm
RADBA meeting FLS Conference Room 4-6 pm
May 4 Next
WECAN Board Meeting Thursday 6:30 pm
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Asheville City Council will consider a proposal by the Asheville Housing Authority on Tuesday, December 14, 2010 concerning the W.C. Reid Ce...