Inter-Neighborhood Council
Making Better Neighborhoods
Http://www.rtpnet.org/durhminc
Minutes of Meeting of
REPRESENTATIVES PRESENT
|
Donna
Monroe |
|
*
Frank Duke |
|
|
Pat Carstensen |
Cross County |
Richard Mullinax |
Old |
|
Cheryl
Sweeney |
|
Paul
Cornsweet |
Morehead
Hills |
|
Cathy Abernathy |
|
Randy Pickle |
|
|
Risa
Foster |
Trinity
Heights NA |
Dale
Stouch |
Placid
Valley |
|
David
Harris |
Old
Farm |
Fred
L. Mowry |
West
Glenn |
|
Bill
Scott |
|
Bill
Anderson |
|
|
* Lorisa Seibel |
|
Lynwood D. Best |
City of |
|
R.
Gaye Weaver |
Old
|
Lt.
Ron Evans |
Durham
Police Department |
|
Bobbe Deason |
Morehead Hills |
Helena Cragg |
Old |
|
*
Barbara T. Belvin |
NCFHC |
Renate
Wend |
|
|
Deb
Cristie |
Colony
Hill |
Vicki
Schneider |
Woodlake
HOA |
|
Melvin
Whitley |
Y.
E. Smith |
Alice
Bumgarner |
|
|
Carmetta Green |
Housing Department |
Erick
Larson |
TLNA |
* Speaker
Administration and Announcements
President Cheryl Sweeney opened
the meeting, and members introduced themselves.
Rental Property Panel – Delegates brought up a number of additional issues,
including
§
Some
people are making money on depreciation while houses deteriorate
§
Selling
houses among friends and relatives to derail orders to clean up property
§
Inability of Stormwater to do more
than send letter when yard waste is obstructing drainage.
§
On
the other hand, there was a story about community pressure working for a house
where Community Development got it cleaned up and put lien on house to pay for
it.
Lorisa Siebel described some of the
things the Durham Affordable Housing Coalition (www.dahc.org)
is doing, including a vacant housing survey that found 800 houses that are just
not being maintained. Code enforcement
should be a last resort. If there were enough staff in housing inspections, a housing certification
program would be a good way to prevent problems (but getting enough staff is
needed first).
Frank Duke talked about what
citizens should do when they think there is a zoning violation in their
area. The steps are:
§
Call Planning Department.
Note that a lot of things are not zoning violations (toys in front yard
or gravel in front yard that is approved for parking). Call them anyhow if in doubt and they will
give direction on what CAN be done.
§
A
zoning inspector will come out to see if there is evidence that will stand up
in court. This may take a couple days since
they need to cover the whole county.
§
If
the inspector doesn’t see anything and you still believe there is a violation,
take pictures. Note that if you want the
matter pursued, you have to be willing to testify about it in court. (Actually taking people to court is rare, by
the time you get done with the rounds of opportunities to correct problem,
etc.). Take the pictures to the Planning
Department and they will make a call on whether there is a violation.
§
If
there is a violation, a notice will go to the landlord and/or tenant. About 2/3 will immediately correct the
problem, often that day.
§
If
the problem is not corrected, Planning issues a citation (where penalties are
$300 / day, unless the problem involves vegetation, with is more complex). If the problem is corrected, the penalty can
be waived, but if the problem starts up again, charges go back to the original
citation.
§
Complaints
can be anonymous, but then there will be no follow-up.
Some typical non-violations are:
§
Abandoned
cars (they are housing or police problem, depending on where they are, except
if they are visibly inoperable, in which case, the junk yard zoning rules apply.
§
Too
many residents in a house (unless you can prove the residents aren’t
related). Housing code may be a viable
tool if there really isn’t enough space.
§
Operating
a business when they have a home occupation permit
§
Storage
shed on residential property (unless it doesn’t have required set-back).
§
In
single family zoning, you can now park in the front yard, but current version
of revised code (to be passed this year) fixes this.
Barbara Belvin
talked about Section 8 housing. Their guidelines
include zero tolerance for drugs, requirements on housing quality, prohibitions
on being convicted of crime, and fair housing rules. Enforcing the law is about how people live,
not limits on where they can live. A lot
of deserving people really benefit from the program.
Other Items
§
Billboard
Bill is back. The words just are on billboards now,
but it is hard to see how general amortization could survive if the bill is
passed. INC re-iterated its opposition to
this bill and will send letters to City Council, Board of County Commissioners,
and Legislative Delegation.
§
Neighborhood
Conference – It will be in
§
Newsletters
– Please bring copies to share and to use at things like an INC booth.
§
New
issues – We will take time to discuss strategies to improve etiquette on dog doodoo, Central Campus on Duke as detriment to Ninth
Street, and raising dues or other fund-raising.
§
Speed
hump resolution – We will get resolution to council this week.
Adjournment – The meeting adjourned with a reminder to look at the
events listed at the bottom of the agenda.