July 27, 2009

New Local Blogs

Nancy Proctor is a busy lady. Its not enough that she has started a weekly newsletter focusing on the activities and needs of the Outer Banks nonprofit community, she is also producing a fascinating blog that targets environmental news and issues with local relevance.
I found the CommonGood E-newsletter when a copy was forwarded to me by the leader of a local group that provides help for families with memory loss (dementia) issues. I immediately subscribed. The newsletter provides information about upcoming events, volunteer opportunities and area nonprofit programs. It offers a wealth of timely and accurate news for the Dare-Currituck area. The CommonGood site has recent newsletters archived and a link to subscribe.
Perhaps more interesting, though no more important, for frequent visitors to this space is Nancy's OBX Common Ground blog. The site focuses on environmental issues that effect our area particulalrly global warming the impact of sea level rise. Nancy provides links to good data and studies as well as current news articles. All material that can't be ignored when public policy about this issues is debated. Wind power, land conservation and green shopping on the OBX have been featured in recent posts. I hope you will stop by, take a look and welcome Nancy to the local blogosphere.
Ciao
PS : For my friends who follow these posts on FaceBook here are the links.
CommonGood site. http://commongoodnews.wordpress.com/
Common Ground blog: http://obxcommonground.wordpress.com/

July 24, 2009

Old Friends New Places (Shameless Plugs)


I used to spend a lot of time in a bar/restaurant called Lances. Just north of Danube St. it was a hangout for a Nags Head - Manteo posse of natives and locals. Run by Lance and MaryAnne Newman the place was one of the few in the area that probably saw more local business than tourist. As Lances wound down the building became the Sticky Wicket Pub (SWP). A group of New Englanders kept the old crowd happy and added new customers with a great menu and excellent service. SWP moved on and the building became a gift shop. The Lance's crew moved to the BACU grille at the Outer Banks Mall. A Cuban inspired menu and a lively bar scene made the place very successful until the owners sold it and move on.
With apologies to George Santyana. Luckily some folks learned from their history so we all get to repeat it. The managers of both The Sticky Wicket Pub and the Bacu Grille have resurfaced and are both serving great food and hospitality again.
The Sticky Wicket Crown now inhabit the Prime Only Restaurant on the big road in Nags Head, just north of the Ace Hardware store. Always a good place to eat the new crowd has broadened the menu, keeping the aged beef and outstanding seafood while expanding the menu with a meal options ranging in price from affordable to , well, embarrassing. We stop by on Saturday nights to hear The Wilder Brothers play upstairs in the lounge area but any night is a good night to try Prime Only.
Over on the beach road the Bacu Grille has been reincarnated as Bacu2Go primarily a take out service the site has some tables arrayed outside. The menu features breakfast, lunch and dinner favorites, including the signature Cuban Press sandwich. We picked up an order of lasagna and an order of stuffed shells. Both were excellent, with a salad and bread the total for 2 good dinners was under $20.
Here is hoping that both these new enterprises flourish and we all get to enjoy the great food and service that these folks have been known for.
Ciao

July 17, 2009

Municipal Filing Updated

I have learned that the DC Board of Elections posting was incorrect. Apparently David Sanders has withdrawn and former Mayor Hal Denny has file to oppose incumbent Mayor Don Smith in Southern Shores.
Ciao

Municipal Filing

Candidate filing for the Nov. Municipal Elections closed at noon today. Dare County Board of elections published a list quickly on their web site.
Nags Head has the most interesting races with Bob Oakes challenging incumbent Mayor Renee Cahoon and 4 filers for 2 seats on the Board of Commissioners, Joe Maione, Doug Remaley, Anna Sadler and Will Woodard. Remaley and Sadler are incumbents neither of the other 2 has run for office in town before. Bob Oakes is an incumbent Commissioner with two years remaining on his term. Should he lose he would remain on the board, should he win his vacant seat would be filled by the Board of Commissioners.
The big surprise here is the number of challengers for the Commissioner seats. 2 years ago there was no opposition for Oakes and Commissioner Wayne Gray when they ran for reelection.
The other interesting race is in Southern Shores where former Councilman and fellow blogger Dan Sanders is challenging Mayor Don Smith. Sanders and Smith were on opposite sides of the Southern Shores Volunteer Fire Dept. fight 2 years ago.
Kill Devil Hills and Kitty Hawk will keep their Mayors. Both Ray Sturza and long time elected official Clifton Perry will run unopposed. Like wise the current KH and KDH Commissioners running for reelection have no challengers. Bob Woodard and Paul Buske in KDH and Robert Reid and Gary Perry in KDH are assured reelection.
SS Commissioner Brian MacDonald is in the same boat as the only candidate for his seat on the Council.
In Duck, where every elected official is up for election every 2 years there are 6 candidates for 5 seats on the Board.
In Manteo Mayor Jamie Daniels and Commissioners Christine Etheridge, David Farrow and Richard Burke are all unopposed in their bids for reelection.

Ciao

July 13, 2009

Turnpike changes explained.

Turnpike Authority changes explained by the Exile on Jones St. I found the wrong bill in my post but the language is the same. The reasoning here is fewer boards less expense. Not so sure about that given the state of the DOT Board in recent years. Time will tell.

http://www.exileonjonesstreet.com/2009/07/13/questioning-turpike-authority/trackback/

Turnpike Authority under DOT

Saw a tweet that led a this blog post calling for people to call their NC Legislators about a threat to the Mid County Bridge. No source for the post and no bill number etc. There is also no anaysis how moving the Turnpike Authority under DOT would affect anything.

I did a little digging and found this language in the budget bill passed by the NC House. I suspect this is what the writer is referring to:


House Bill 916
...
PART XXI. NORTH CAROLINA TURNPIKE AUTHORITY
13
14 NORTH CAROLINA TURNPIKE AUTHORITY
15 SECTION 21.1. G.S. 136-89.182 reads as rewritten:
16 "(b) Administrative Placement. – The Authority shall be located within the Department
17 of Transportation for administrative purposes but shall exercise all of its powers independently
18 of the Department of Transportation except as otherwise specified in this Article.
and shall be
19 subject to and under the direct supervision of the Secretary of Transportation. This shall be
20 treated as a Type I transfer under G.S. 143A-6.

21 …
22 (d) Board of Transportation Members. –No more than two members Members of the
23 North Carolina Board of Transportation may serve as members of the Authority Board.

Not sure how this change would effect any of the Authority's projects. I guess it would mean more oversight but its hard to see how it would affect the projects since financing for the authority is done by selling bonds to be repayed by the tolls levied on the user of the roads and bridges the Authority operates.
Anyway just another strange element of the state government process.
Ciao

N&O on Jennettes Pier funding


Photo from NC Aquarium

The News and Observer came to the defense of the Jennettes Pier project in an article that explained the sources of money [link revised in 10/2010 original article not available] for the new facility. There has been increasing buzz statewide about state government spending $25 million dollars on a fishing pier at a time when expenditures in every state department are being trimmed drastically.
Liberal and conservative critics are pounding the new pier, trying to transform the project into North Carolina's "bridge to nowhere," the Alaska construction project that the state's Republican governor, Sarah Palin, boasted of trying to block as wasteful government pork.
Critics have deployed a television ad [here] and mass e-mails bashing the pier, saying it is a luxury the state can't afford when it is handing out pink slips to teachers and shutting down pieces of the state's health care services.
The article continues to explain that none of the money used to pay for the pier was available to meet next years budget. All the funds came from sources already committed to specific funding targets ranging from building aquariums to water access to stormwater protection. No money was taken from the soon to be adopted state budget. That budget will trim state spending in response to a severe drop in tax revenues due to the nations economic collapse.
There is no doubt the new pier goes well beyond the concept of the old wooden fishing pier. It will be 1,000 ft. long and made of concrete rather than wood, the better to withstand coastal storms. The pier house will feature a meeting room that will host education an community meetings. It will seat 200 for dinner and hold at least 500 standing. It is this facility that has caused the most controversy. It will be available for rent for weddings and other events. While this may seem a bit off it is exactly the same arrangement currently used by all the Aquariums to raise additional operating funds. What the critical video calls a "ballroom" is in fact a place where school kids can learn about the protecting the coastal environment and reducing pollution through alternative energy sources. I am not sure what the "clubhouse" crack refers to but it could be a the public beach access facility with showers and toilets for beach visitors. The new pier will be a major attraction for visitors and locals alike. It will rival or may even surpass its sibling on Roanoke Island.
Did I mention the pier will host a series of alternative energy projects including 3 windmills, extensive use of solar panels and possibly a small hydrogen fuel cell. Some or all of the cost of these element will come from private sources. The pier will also have advance wastewater and storm water plants. All these elements will be integrated into education programs that will be offered at the pier. These educational programs will very popular before the pier was damaged in Hurricane Isabel, damage that led to the construction of the new pier.
BTW You can follow construction of the pier on the NC Aquarium's website with regular construction updates.
The N&O spoke with Sen. Marc Basnight about the project. I will let his vision of the pier close this piece:
Basnight said the investment in the pier has to be viewed through a long-term lens. He said it will draw children and adults alike to features such as a 200-seat meeting room for school field trips, ocean conservation exhibits, and its plumbing, a system that cleans bathroom waste water and uses it to hose down the deck.
"This can be an opportunity to learn and educate the masses as to what our future could and should be, how to treat storm water, renewable energy," Basnight said. "We can dispel some of the myths at a place that will outdraw any museum ... any state historic park."
I couldn't say it better myself.
Ciao
Disclaimer - I was recently chosen to Chair the Jennettes Pier Advisory Committee, a group that represents the agencies that funded the initial purchase of the pier property including the NC Aqarium Society, the NC Aquariums, the Clean Water Management Trust Fund, the Town of Nags Head, Dare County. The effort to buy the pier was started by a resolution sent from the Town to Sen. Basnight during my tenure as Mayor. I drafted and offered the resolution. I have been a member of the Advisory Committee since its inception and I have advocated for the pier since before its purchase. I think it is a great idea, will be a great asset to the area and the state. Don't say I didn't tell you.

July 3, 2009

So long Sarah

Not quite sure what to make of Sarah Palin's rambling resignation. Certainly it was instictive and not a pro - planned job. If you want some good quick analysis check out Politico
My take -Quitters never win. Winners never quit. If she wanted to run in 2012 she would have been better served to complete her turn. A bad political move - poorly executed.
Ciao

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July 2, 2009

Nags Head July 4th Fireworks

Nags Head July 4th Fireworks originally uploaded by BOBXNC




It's that time again. Here is a list of the time and place of fireworks demonstrations around the area:
July 4th Fireworks Summary:
1) Corolla = Currituck Heritage Park at dusk
2) Kill Devil Hills = Avalon Pier (Mile Post 6) at dusk
3) Nags Head = Nags Head Fishing Pier (Mile Post 11.5) at 9:25 pm
4) Roanoke Island = Festival Park at 9:20 pm
5) Avon = Avon Fishing Pier at 9:15 pm
6) Hatteras Village = Ramp 55 at 8:30 pm.
7) Ocracoke Village = Dusk

Perhaps more interesting is how quiet Nags Head has been this summer. In years past illegal fireworks were set off every night, often late into the night. The rental industry and local governments have been working to discourage the practice and have apparently been effective.

I am sure that on Sat. night there will be plenty of unauthorized displays on the beach, but this has become the exception rather than the rule.

Nice piece on the Ocracoke Island Blog explaining the genesis and the importance of the fireworks ban on that precious island. Nags Head's new fireworks rules are posted on the town web site. They mirror earlier bans by Dare County and Duck.
Have a great 4th and please be safe.
Ciao

July 1, 2009

Burying the Lead

THE COROLLA WILD HORSE FUND REQUESTS THAT YOU DO NOT PATRONIZE ANY OF THE ACTIVITIES OFFERED BY BARRIER ISLAND ECO TOURS.


Photo by Steve V.



There I put the message where it should be, unlike the Corolla Wild Horse fund (CWHF) who left this message til the very end of a striking piece about a new threat to the ponies that roam the Currituck beach strand.
On June 27th, there were three domestic horses being ridden north on the 4X4 beach with two other horses being “ponyed.” (led by riders on horseback). I observed at least one rider drinking. A sanctuary patrol officer stopped to ask them to not continue and explained that even if vaccinated, their domestic horses can carry diseases to the wild horses for which they have no immunity. She also warned them that the wild stallions would see them as a threat and may charge them. They did not care. In fact, they were defiant. I also stopped them but they had no interest in hearing what I had to say and told me that they were “delivering” the horses to the owner of Barrier Island “Eco” Tours ...As they were riding up the beach, a stallion appeared on top of the dunes. He did what comes naturally to him. He charged the intruders to his territory in an attempt to drive them off and protect his harem. One of the horses reared, throwing its adult male rider to the ground. Sheriff’s deputies had to chase the wild stallion back several times. Unfazed, the riders continued, stopping occasionally to talk to curious beachgoers and on one occasion, allowing a bikini clad woman to step from the bed of her truck into the saddle and go for a pony ride of sorts. All the while, the female rider that was giving the “pony ride” had a bottle of alcohol in her hand.
The article goes on to describe the problems associated with the introduction of "domestic" horses into the area occupied by the wild horse herd. It is sad but not unpredictable that someone would find another way to threaten this relic of our storied past. Development in the Corolla area finally drove the horses out of that habitat, one they had occupied for centuries, and into confinement in an undeveloped sanctuary on the northern Currituck banks. Interactions between humans and the ponies simply couldn't be worked out. The horses were hit (and often killed) by speeding cars, they feasted on newly watered and fertilized landscape plants and occasionally bit a tourist that was offering a goody or trying the pet the still wild though apparently tame animals.
The courts can prosecute people who violate the rules set up to protect the horses but we can help too. First send $20 to the CWHF,(see note below) more if you can, then make sure your tell your friends, coworkers and random contacts not to support the companies that do this kind of thing - Boycott them. Maybe they will get the message.

You had to read all the way through the CWHF post to get to the boycott message, now I have done the same thing. Don't you bury the lead put it at the top of your message list then explain why later.
Ciao
Note: The memberships are charged through there online store. They add a shipping charge to the membership. Probably a glitch in the software, I didn't see anyway to avoid it. a $15 membership - the lowest level - will actually cost you $20. You could just buy a teeshirt or hat for about the same money if you want something tangible.