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Empire Hotel Debt Payment Drains DSI Coffers: Brian Miller’s “Project” a Fiasco

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RFP Staff

♦ Prior to becoming a City Councilman, Brian Miller, chaired the Empire Hotel Task Force. Brian Miller and the Empire Hotel Task Force provided the leadership resulting in the purchase of the Empire Hotel by Downtown Salisbury Incorporated (DSI) for more than $1 million. A group of banks loaned the money to DSI to purchase the property. The plan was to flip the property quickly to a developer so that DSI would not have to make the loan payments, which are nearly $100,000 per year.

This never happened. In fact, multiple developers have looked at the property and zero were willing to put their own capital at risk to make the property happen. The first issue, as previously reported by Rowan Free Press, is the property does not have a clean environmental report due to asbestos in the building that would cost almost $500,000 to abate, and the fact that the site includes a former dry cleaner. (we’re not even mentioning the lead dust and mold) The second issue is that hoteliers want to locate by the interstate. The third issue is that the cost to rehab the building is more expensive that constructing a new hotel. These are issues that Brian Miller and the Empire Hotel Task Force failed to flush out prior to dedicating $1,000,000 of public funds to the project.

As a result the property sits derelict and DSI continues making the loan payments.

Prior to the loan payments hitting, DSI had the annual funds needed to support a dedicated marketing staff member who did an outstanding job. Remember Betz McKeown? DSI also had the funds to market downtown events so that merchants would benefit from the increased traffic. These funds are now going to make the annual Empire debt payment.

Now the Rowan Tourism Authority is pulling their funding of downtown events too, and requiring DSI to go through a grants process to prove these events result in room nights for hoteliers. Downtown events don’t generate room nights. They aren’t put on for hoteliers. They are put on for downtown merchants.

What this means is that despite paying the highest combined property tax rate in Rowan County, downtown merchants aren’t getting the services from DSI needed to bring more customers to their doors. Largely because $100k a year in the merchants’ tax dollars go toward making the debt payment for Brian Miller’s failed project.

Brian Miller, as Chair of the Empire Hotel Task Force, should have conducted proper due diligence before committing future merchant tax dollars. Because he didn’t, downtown merchants are stuck with the tab for the Empire Hotel. Instead of merchant dollars going to put on events that feed merchants more customers, those dollars are going to make the Empire debt payment.

Most recently, Brian Miller, a former City Executive for Citizens South Bank and BB&T Bank, was moved out of commercial banking and into a sales role pushing retail BB&T products.

Read the letter and environmental report to Brian Miller that stated a dry cleaner was on the Empire site: https://app.box.com/s/33uqwen5i96xp37lgav4kev0m6ruyg6y

Read the letter to Brian Miller outlining up to $520,000 in cost to abate the Empire asbestos: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B2E5Ew6OLdElZGc0SFZ1V1VRb0E/edit

Despite having professional environmental information that the site was dirty and had up to $520,000 in asbestos abatement costs, Brian Miller still pushed for the purchase of the Empire Hotel.

Read the below email exchange from a Freedom of Information Act inquiry. It appears Brian Miller never told former City Manager Doug Paris or other City Council members that the Empire was dirty despite knowing about it since 2007:

From: William Kennedy

Sent: Tuesday, July 23, 2013 1:25 PM

To: Doug Paris

Subject: Re: Empire Phase II

This obviously could become a campaign issue that could harm the incumbents seeking re-election. By all means delay a decision on this.

Sent from my iPhone
William”Pete”Kennedy

From: Doug Paris

Sent: Tuesday, July 23, 2013 11:45 AM

To: Paul Woodson; paulwoodson3@gmail.com; Maggie Blackwell; William Kennedy; Brian Miller; Brian Miller; Karen Alexander; Karen Alexander

Cc: Myra Heard; Elaney Hasselmann; Janet Gapen; John Sofley

Subject: Empire Phase II

Good Afternoon,

I wanted to give you an update on this item.

After discovering during the Integro incentive discussion that the Empire property did not have a clean Phase I, I have been working with DSI President Mark Lewis on resolving this issue.

Alan Griffith, our contract geologist who assisted us on getting the green light with DENR on both 300 Block projects, recommended that we proceed with a Phase II assessment.

This proposal was presented to the DSI Board this morning and was met with resistance from banker Bill Greene
and banker Paul Fisher.

The resistance was mainly centered on if the Phase II found anything, that it would require cleanup. DSI does not have the cash reserve to fund a cleanup and so the DSI board would then have to come to the city. There was concern about public support for this.

Obviously, if the city didn’t pick up the costs then the banks would be left with a mess – essentially a million dollar note on a building worth maybe half that with 500k worth of asbestos abatement and then a dry cleaning/petroleum cleanup on top of it all. The dynamic is the asset could rapidly deteriorate into a large liability.

The board decided to delay two months on the decision to proceed on the Phase II.

I do want to share Mr. Lewis has been great to work with on this item and I couldn’t ask for better collaboration.

This one is a tough issue, and one that will not go away without tackling it as a team with all partners on board.



SHOTZBURY Bang! Bang! Freeman Payton and Joshua Studevent Arrested for Allegedly Shooting at Preston Hillie in Salisbury, N.C.

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RFP Staff

♦ Our grossly underpaid and understaffed Salisbury Police Department were dispatched to Salisbury’s mean streets on Saturday when Preston Hillie, 28, called 911 to report someone was shooting at his car. Hillie had just motored by the 1500 block of West Innes near DJ’s Restaurant.  Soon Hillie, driving a Chevvy Impala, swung in behind a Honda beater and told 911 he was following the suspects.

Soon an SPD patrol car caught up with the Honda on the 700 block of North Lee and East Henderson Streets and the Honda squealed to a stop before its passenger lit out.  The officers sprinted after a Black male later identified as Freeman Franklin Payton III, 23, of the 300 block of Harrel Street.  Payton was seen with a pistol when he first got out of Honda, but when the police caught up with him he allegedly disposed of it during his flight.

A China Grove K-9 was brought to the scene to locate the missing handgun, but struck out.  An officer later found the pistol in a trash can by 118 East Lafayette Street.

The Police identified the Honda’s driver as Joshua O’Bryan Studevent, 22, of the 700 block of East Liberty.

Payton was charged with assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill (felony), discharging a firearm into an occupied vehicle (felony), and firearm possession by a felon prohibited (felony).

Under a secured $500,000 bond, Payton remains in the Rowan County Detention Center.

Studevent was charged aiding and abetting (felony) and possession of an open container of alcohol (misdemeanor).  Under a secured $20,000 bond, Studevent is in the Rowan County Detention Center.

Payton’s Previous Record:

http://webapps6.doc.state.nc.us/opi/viewoffender.do?method=view&offenderID=1193967&searchLastName=Payton&searchFirstName=freeman&listurl=pagelistoffendersearchresults&listpage=1

Studevent’s Previous Record:

http://webapps6.doc.state.nc.us/opi/viewoffender.do?method=view&offenderID=1238738&searchLastName=studevent&searchFirstName=joshua&listurl=pagelistoffendersearchresults&listpage=1

Freeman Franklin Payton III:

Joshua O’Bryan Studevent:

Preston Hillie, Jr.:


Daniel Lynn Jordan Busted in Downtown Salisbury for Allegedly Ripping Off His Granny for $3,195 and Selling Fake Heroin

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RFP Staff

♦ It’s getting rough in da Bury.  You can’t even score real “smack” without some joker trying to pimp you fake heroin in Downtown Shotzbury.  What’s this world coming too?

Daniel Lynn Jordan, 32, of Mt. Hope Church Road in Salisbury, N.C. was arrested Thursday in Downtown Salisbury by Sheriff’s Office investigators who were tipped off that Jordan was enjoying the sights on foot.  When the investigators caught up with Jordan, he allegedly admitted to helping himself to his granny’s money as well as selling fake heroin.

Jordan was arrested and charged with 13 counts of obtaining property under false pretenses (felony), identity theft (felony), and possession with intent to sell and deliver a counterfeit controlled substance (felony).  Jordan also outstanding warrants for habitual felon (felony) and possession of drug paraphernalia (misdemeanor).  Under a secured $38,000 bond, Jordan is currently in the Rowan County Detention Center.

According to law enforcement sources Jordan was living off and on at his grandmother’s home over the past several months when Jordan allegedly made withdrawals from grandma’s F&M banking account without her knowledge.  An alert F&M bank employee noted an unusually high volume of withdrawals (13) within 7 days totaling over $3,195 dollars and contacted a family member who immediately suspected Jordan. (He allegedly helped himself to grandma’s Christmas Card money at one time)

Jordan allegedly transferred money from grandmother’s account to his Google Wallet Account.  The money could then be accessed from specific ATMs or from a Google Wallet account debit card transaction.

Daniel Lynn Jordan’s Previous Record:

http://webapps6.doc.state.nc.us/opi/viewoffender.do?method=view&offenderID=0759781&searchLastName=Jordan&searchFirstName=Daniel&searchMiddleName=l&listurl=pagelistoffendersearchresults&listpage=1


Letter-to-the-Editor: Endorsing Craig Pierce and Mike Caskey for County Commissioner–Salisbury City Council Protect Your Citizens

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Rabbi Will McCubbins, China Grove

♦ I have no hesitation in endorsing Craig Pierce and Mike Caskey two proven commodities up for re-election for their seats on the Rowan County Commission.  These men are two rarities in elected life who are unafraid to speak the truth and do what’s right for all of Rowan County Citizens. Truly Craig and Mike can put an R after their names and mean it.  I am proud to say I know both of these gentleman and they are forward thinkers and are truly concerned about the county.

Our county is being dragged down by the rogue government in Salisbury’s City Hall. This is the same government that “misrepresented” their failed fiber optic network, illegally terminated officer Kenny “Serpico” Lane, had a Chief of Police pie-eyed on synthetic heroin for 10 years, that keeps pushing the decrepit flophouse Empire Hotel unopened since 1963, and hid the fact they field an badly understaffed police force and are not offering them competitive wages and benefits.  Now they are claiming our police are going to get a raise.  Let’s see if it really happens and if those raises are competitive.

How many times does City Hall promise things and never get around to doing them?  Talk is cheap in Salisbury.  Mr. Skinny Wheels worked his butt off to get bike lanes and traffic calming on East Innes.  But the city reneged.  There’s no sign of bike lanes anywhere on East Innes.  Typical of the city’s broken promises.

My heart goes out to all those people living in Fulton Heights, the Historic District, the West End, and the teaming trailer parks on Airport Road getting their homes and cars broken into with regularity.

If you really want to protect yourself avoid going into Salisbury after nightfall and get a concealed carry permit if you need to go there to conduct business.  You don’t want to be another miscellaneous body found in a city that doctors their crime stats.

Pierce and Caskey all the way in 2016!

 

 


VOTE: Everything You Need to Know about the Rowan County, N.C. Primary Elections Beginning Thursday March 3rd

Corey Damont Bolt Arrested Tuesday for Allegedly Stealing a Gas-Powered Jackhammer from Perfect Party Rentals in Salisbury, N.C.

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RFP Staff

♦ Corey Damont Bolt, 40, of the 1100 block of Richard Street in Salisbury, was arrested Tuesday for allegedly stealing a gas-powered jackhammer from Perfect Party Rentals and Sales at 1819 South Main Street in Salisbury.  His former employers reported the gas-powered jackhammer used for hammering in tent stakes stolen last July.

Recently the stolen jackhammer turned up at E-Z Pawn on South Main where it was alleged Bolt employed an associate to pawn the item.

Tuesday night Bolt was arrested on the 1100 block of Richard Street.  He was charged with larceny by servants and other employees (felony). Under a secured $7,500 bond, he remains in the Rowan County Detention Center.

It is highly suggested that employers in Salisbury do criminal background checks. Individuals with who just got out of prison and have lengthy felony records are not a good bet as second chancers.

Corey Damont Bolt’s Previous Criminal Record:

http://webapps6.doc.state.nc.us/opi/viewoffender.do?method=view&offenderID=0036701&searchLastName=bolt&searchFirstName=corey&searchMiddleName=d&listurl=pagelistoffendersearchresults&listpage=1


Veteran Scam Alert: Be Aware of IRS Scams! It’s That Time of Year

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Rodney Cress, Veteran Advocate

♦ FRAUD/TELEPHONE SCAM ALERT

Background Information:

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has received numerous reports of threatening telephone calls from individuals claiming to be from the IRS. Fraudsters pose as the IRS to trick victims out of their money or personal information. Fraudsters use scare tactics (arrest, deportation, and/or revoking their license) to demand that the victim pay a bogus tax bill and subsequently con the victim into sending cash, usually through a prepaid debit card or wire transfer. The fraudsters may also leave “urgent” callback requests through phone “robo-calls,” or via phishing email.

The fraudster states they are with the Audit Commission Department with the IRS Audit Headquarters in Chicago and they are calling to inform them that the IRS is filing a lawsuit. The fraudster will provide the individual with a previous address and indicate that the initial notification was mailed to that address.

What the veteran/beneficiary should do if they receive these calls:

•Contact the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA) to report the call. Use their “IRS Impersonation Scam Reporting” web page. You can also call 1-800-366-4484.
•Report it to the Federal Trade Commission. Use the “FTC Complaint Assistant” on FTC.gov. Please add “IRS Telephone Scam” in the notes.
•Record the employee’s name, badge number, call back number and caller ID if available.
•Call 1-800-366-4484 to determine if the caller is an IRS employee with a legitimate need to contact you.
•Stay alert to scams that use the IRS as a lure. Tax scams can happen any time of year, not just at tax time. For more information, visit “Tax Scams and Consumer Alerts” on IRS.gov.


Slim Voter Turnout at Rowan County Polls This A.M. “Jailhouse” Jonny Barber, Ex-County Commissioner, First in Line in Salisbury, N.C.

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RFP Staff

♦ The Polls opened at 8 a.m. at the Rowan Public Library in Salisbury and the first in line was “Jailhouse” Jonny Barber, an ex-county commissioner, self-confessed alcoholic and convicted thief, who stole a bottle of cheap wine from a Rushco convenience store and who allegedly helped himself to a large volume of copies on the county government dime for his non-profit Mobile Farm Fresh. The one-man human misdemeanor crime wave and former cover boy for “Slammer” is managing to keep out of trouble.

“Fess Up Jonny They Might go Easier on You” Marina Bare, Artist:

Fess up Jonny they might go easier on you

At around 10 a.m. Commissioner Craig Pierce walked into the polling place and learned he was only 44th in line.

A light turnout reported so far at the China Grove and Rockwell polling spots.

No polling irregularities reported so far, however some ugly attack literature being handed out by a church group attacking Jonny Love, a commission candidate, for allegedly kicking a Lutheran Church group off the Fair Grounds several years back.

VOTE: Everything You Need to Know about the Rowan County, N.C. Primary Elections beginning Thursday March 3rd:

VOTE: Everything You Need to Know about the Rowan County, N.C. Primary Elections Beginning Thursday March 3rd



Elderly Woman Knocked Down During Mugging in the Lowe’s Parking Lot this Evening in Salisbury, N.C.

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RFP Staff

♦ At slightly after 6 p.m. this evening an elderly woman was knocked to the asphalt in Lowe’s parking lot during a mugging at 207 Faith Road.  One of the muggers, described as a Black teenager, tore the woman’s purse out of her grasp and took off running with a bystander in pursuit.  A few hundred yards away the bystander hammered the purse snatcher to the ground and pinned him there while an onlooker called 911.

A Salisbury Police car pulled up a short time later. Officers handcuffed the mugger and his lookout accomplice who unwisely stayed in the area.

The woman, stunned by the assault, suffered a minor lump on her head and returned to her car in handicapped parking.

The muggers’ names were not yet released.  Their charges are unknown at this time.

**This article will be updated as soon additional information is available.**


N.C. Department of Public Instructions Report on Crimes Occurring in All Its School Districts and Schools Including RSSS

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RFP Staff/N.C. Department of Public Instruction

♦ The latest report from the N.C. Department of Public Instruction on crimes occurring in all its school districts and individual schools, including the Rowan-Salisbury School System, was released March 3rd on DPI’s website. The full reports will be posted below.  In a nutshell the report shows schools within the Rowan-Salisbury School System suffering a rise in violent crime including 16 assaults reported in the 2014-2015 (the latest). 10 of those assaults were on school personnel. These assaults represent a rise over the previous year 2013-2014. Noted in the 2014-2015 report was a single sexual assault and 4 assaults with weapons took place.

Are school reports on actual assaults and crimes accurate? School systems, like some police chiefs, often try to “look good” and may underreport their statistics. Very often the Rowan-Salisbury Schools will not report lockdowns and fights on school property that parents, neighbors, and teachers report. So reader be cautious in accepting these reports as fact. Consider that assaults take place all over the Salisbury and other hardnose Rowan municipalities on any given day. Would it not follow that assaults and fights take place in Salisbury High School and North Rowan High School? They do.

Another interesting statistic in 2014-2015 was that Rowan-Salisbury School students were handed 3,552 short-term suspensions a rise from 2013-2014’s 3,107 short-term suspensions.

The N.C. Department of Public Instructions 16 Reportable Offenses:

http://www.dpi.state.nc.us/research/discipline/offenses/

Consolidated DISCIPLINE Reports: 2014-2015 Reports for all Rowan-Salisbury School System Schools (go to Crime and Violence Table C-6 2014-15 pdf, 799kb and do a word search on Salisbury):

http://www.dpi.state.nc.us/research/discipline/reports/#consolidated

Reportable Public School Crimes/Consequences Increase 2014-15–Long Term Suspensions Decrease Slightly:

http://www.dpi.state.nc.us/newsroom/news/2015-16/20160303-01


NewspaperMap.Com: the Largest Collection of the World’s Online Newspapers Anywhere. In Every Language and in Every City

THE SHOTZBURY EXPRESS

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Ka-pow Bah-Zing 24-7

THE SHOTZBURY EXPRESS


2 Gun Battles Break Out in Salisbury, N.C.’s West End Early This A.M. One Man Dies After Being Shot at J.C. Price American Legion Post

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RFP Staff

UPDATED: At around 2:15 a.m. a fist fight broke out in a party inside the Joseph Charles “J.C.” Price American Legion Post at 1433 Old Wilkesboro Road in Salisbury’s West End.  The two participants, both described as Black males and were separated by security and asked to leave.  According to persons at the scene, the fight escalated outside in the rear of the Legion Post into a pitched gun battle.  When the firing subsided, two men were reported down in the lot behind the legion hall. The ground, where the two gunshot victims lay, was blood soaked.

The two men, shot behind J.C. Price, were later identified this morning as Antoine Terrell “Sky” McGee, 29, and his brother Devon Daniel McGee, 24, both of Salisbury. Antoine McGee remains in critical condition, but his brother Devon died. Both men were transported earlier by helicopter to Wake Forest Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem.

The Late Devon Daniel McGee:

Antoine Terrell McGee:

Right after the shooting occurred Salisbury Police vehicles began filling up the area and emergency vehicles were shortly on the scene.  About an hour later another gun battle between two cars broke out near the Brenner Crossing Apartments on Brenner Avenue across from the cemetery. Multiple gunshots were reported.

One of the vehicles involved in the gun battle stopped and the driver got out and fled the area.  K-9s were brought to the scene.

It is not confirmed at this time if the shooting at J.C. Price was related to the gun battle on Brenner Avenue.

“J.C.” Price American Legion Hall was the site of the tragic crossfire homicide of 13-year old Treasure Feamster in 2007 when she stepped between rival gangs.

If someone has information about these two incidents please contact the Salisbury Police Department at 704-638-5333 or call Salisbury-Rowan Crime Stoppers at 1-866-639-5245.

**This article will be updated as more information arrives**

J.C. Price American Legion Post in Salisbury, N.C,:


Letter-to-the-Editor: Concerns about City of Salisbury, N.C. Trash Pickup. There’s a Dead Possum in the Road and an Old TV on the Curb

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Terry Crook, Salisbury, N.C.

♦ Please see the pictures below. First day I saw the dead possum in the road was Tuesday morning March 1st and beside it is a TV that has been on curbside for at least six months and has not been addressed. On Thursday, I made this picture before trash container was emptied. On Friday morning, today, I noticed trash was emptied but possum and TV were still there. I feel this is a safety concern for traffic and the neighborhood in general. There needs to be an open door policy for City employees driving to or from work or while on the job to report any type of safety concern in the City of Salisbury. Maybe this would help clean up our city.

RFP Staff: Terry, while trash pickup in Salisbury is abysmal, be glad there is not a “miscellaneous body found” peacefully rotting in front of your house.  They seem to be popping up around town with some frequency.

Tuesday Morning March 1st–Dead Possum, TV (been there 6 months), and Trash Yet to be Removed:

Thursday Trash Container Emptied, but Possum and TV Remain:

Friday the Dead Possum and TV Still Remains:


An Interview with Rowan County Commissioner Craig Pierce Running for Re-Election

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Steve Mensing, Editor with Rowan County Commissioner Craig Pierce

♦ The primaries are taking place and our Rowan County citizens are already coming out to vote. There appears to be quite a lot of popular support for incumbent county commissioners Craig Pierce and Mike Caskey who have served admirably in office. The Rowan Free Press supports both of these men. This morning we’re going to interview Commissioner Craig Pierce who acquired quite a productive resume during his first two terms in office.

Steve Mensing: Craig, always glad to talk with you and find out what’s going on in Rowan County.  Today the focus is on you.  What are your motivations for returning to the Rowan County Commission for a third term?

Craig Pierce: Thank you Steve for this opportunity.  I worked hard these past years moving Rowan County into a solid path of change and economic prosperity.  I implemented many positive programs and dealt with a lot of stagnant issues that other commissions ignored. I still have some plans I want to implement, such as a county water and sewer system for the I-85 corridor and the Southern end of Rowan County. I want to be in office to make sure these programs are a success.

Steve Mensing: Indeed you have implemented and engineered many tangible improvements in Rowan County.  Implementing county water and sewer for the I-85 corridor and the Southern End of the county would be a real win for future economic development.  Switching horses here, what are Rowan County Challenges?

Craig Pierce: Our school system is failing our children. The answer is not more money, rather a better use of funds they already have would be in order. Our classroom teachers are doing the best they can with the direction the administration has forced them to go. A change at the top is in order for our system to change and become effective for our children.

We need to address our building needs for our County offices and tackle the needs for the Sherriff’s Office. We purchased the West End Plaza to address those needs and the upfit of that space needs to be accelerated. We currently are placing the Veterans Service Offices and the long overdue Board of Elections in the places originally planned at West End. The Department of Social Services and the Health Departments should be relocated as soon as possible, freeing up space in the current location for the Sheriff and Probation.

Steve Mensing: You’ve had some major accomplishments during your two terms in office.  Would you care to shine some light on those?

Craig Pierce: It’s hard to talk about just one item. There’s been a rebirth at animal control. We got rid of the gas chamber, changed our policy on spay and neuter, and made it better for the animals that come into the shelter.  Fortunately we were able to work with a benefactor to build an addition on the shelter that was over 1.1 million dollar donation.

In regards to the Rowan County airport, huge advances were made since we built our first jet capable hangar. We are in the final stages of getting our runway extension and having it resurfaced and grooved to make it safer.

For good or bad, the central office is finally done and off the radar for all those people who insisted that it be built. Let’s hope it was worth it to all the citizens and not just the few in Downtown.

We are currently addressing the pay study for our employees. This will end the discussion of whether our employees are being fairly compensated and hopefully improve morale and retention.

Steve Mensing: What economic improvements have you witnessed and help actualize while in office?

Craig Pierce: The sale of the property located in the old Summit Corporate Park was a shot in the arm to not only our property tax base, but also our sales tax revenues. That move required changing the zoning to allow retail instead of commercial development on that property. (Shoppes at the Summit) The sale of the property also added to our fund balance. The sale of the property across from the fair grounds to James River Equipment was also a very good move for the County. Gildan Industries locating in Rowan meant 132 million dollar investment and the hiring of 400 people from the local labor force. That was accomplished by a local incentive agreement and the fact they could get water and sewer.

I think the future is very bright for Rowan County especially for the County’s southern end with new interchange at Beatties Ford Road and the widening of I-85 in that area.

I would like to say that I work hard for my citizens and take this commitment very seriously. I have enjoyed working for our citizens and hope they will put me back in office to serve them for another four years.

Steve Mensing: I appreciate you responding to our interview.

Craig Pierce: I appreciate the invite and the fact you always print what I actually said.



Salisbury City Councilman Kenny Hardin Comments on his Interview with the Post

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Kenny Hardin, Salisbury City Councilman

♦ Ms. Cook, thank you for the article, but I want to offer a few additional points. I didn’t go into the interview seeking sympathy or approval from anyone. I was forthcoming and unapologetic about my thoughts, words and feelings during the interview on how racism is so prevalent here and how divided this City is. But missing were many of the strong views, examples and quotes I shared about its prevalence. Absent was how people of color feel they are not woven into the fabric of this City nor do their thoughts and opinions matter. This is evident by a quote that was shared with me recently by a city leader, “People are happy and things are good here, but some people only want to dredge up and focus on the negative.” No, there are people in this City suffering and not everyone is happy and skipping down the streets.

As I stated during our conversation last week, I care little about how I’m perceived or whether I’m accepted by anyone. I will not expend any amount of time or energy trying to make White people really know who I am and/or feel comfortable with me. I will not try to appeal to or wait for anyone’s moral compass to align to give me a sense of respect and inclusiveness. This was what I meant in the example I shared with you of why I don’t sing the song, We Shall Overcome. I believe in the fierce urgency of now.

I’m not naïve to think these issues just came up since I’ve been on Council or during a honeymoon period. They are deeply rooted in this City and have been going on for a long time, but as I said; there is a level of cowardice by our leaders to address them.

My weariness comes from the examples I shared of the racist, hateful comments and disrespectful actions I’ve endured over the last 30 years in my professional life, personal life, during the campaign and since I’ve been on the Council. My weariness comes from being expected to suffer in silence, move on and being told to stop focusing on the negative. My weariness comes from having been taken to breakfast and lunch so many times over the last four months and being told I was nothing like the angry and radical person they thought I was. My weariness comes from my Colleagues on the Council as well as some in the White Community who have said they don’t know how to deal with me. Stop trying to control and deal with me and just work with me.

My weariness comes from the ridiculous allegations I’ve heard from Whites who said I was trying to bring violence to the Country Club, blow up the City as a terrorist, trying to bring Sharia Law here, being told I was responsible for the gun violence and wanting to take all the money from the Country Club and give it to the poor. My weariness comes from the disrespect I spoke of that I and many other Blacks feel in this City and even at times from my Colleagues on the Council.

I’m weary of allowing people who really care nothing about the Black community and have nothing but a financial interest coming in and controlling the economics and politics while erasing the history and heritage. I’m weary of the Culture Hustlers who care nothing about finding solutions, but instead only want to raise their profile, increase church membership, get invited to the Trolley Barn or receive a MLK King award. I’m weary of the worn out playbook move that the City uses of going to the same safe bought and paid for Black people to cosign nonsense they want to push on the Black Community. As I shared with you, I see no difference between a Black or White snake.

Before I work to build a rainbow, I want to get one color right first. I’m committed to working on the problems plaguing the Black Community like murders, gun violence, teen pregnancy, and drugs. I could not imagine the pain my grandfather had to endure just to be viewed as a man and to feed his family. I don’t have that level of tolerance.
Again Elizabeth, thank you.


Rowan County Commission Meets Monday March 7th at 3 P.M. at the County Administration Building in Salisbury, N.C.

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RFP Staff

♦ Rowan County Commission Meets Monday March 7th at 3 P.M. at the County Administration Building at 130 West Innes Street in Salisbury, N.C.

ROWAN COUNTY COMMISSION AGENDA

Call to Order
Invocation
• Provided By: Chaplain Michael Taylor
Pledge of Allegiance
Consider Additions to the Agenda
Consider Deletions From the Agenda
Consider Approval of the Agenda
Board members are asked to voluntarily inform the Board if any matter on the agenda might present a conflict of interest or might require the member to be excused from voting.
• Consider Approval of the Minutes: February 15, 2016
1 Consider Approval of Consent Agenda
A. Proclamation Recognizing Severe Weather Awareness Week
B. Set Public Hearing for Z 02-16 for March 21, 2016
C. Redesign of Rockwell EMS Building
D. Set Public Hearing for March 21, 2016 for 2016-17 HOME Action Plan
E. Convey Property to Shield A Badge With Prayer Ministry
F. Set Public Hearing for Z 01-16 for March 21, 2016
G. Set Public Hearing for Z 03-16 for March 21, 2016
H. Authorize Road Closings For 5K Run For Millbridge Elementary School PTA
I. Lazy 5 Ranch Veterinary Services Amended Spay/Neuter Contract
J. Landfill Gas Collection and Control Project Design
K. Set Quasi-judicial Hearing for Z 04-16 and CUP 02-16 on March 21, 2016
L. Vehicles and Equipment Financing Proposals
M. Architect Services for Monument Design on I-85
N. Work Authorization for North and South Apron
2 Public Comment Period
3 Public Hearing for STA 01-16
4 Presentation of Pay Study By Springsted
5 Consider United Way Request Regarding Assistance for Freightliner Layoffs
6 Budget Amendments
7 Consider Approval of Board Appointments
8 Closed Session
• Attorney Client Discussion regarding Property Tax Commission Appeal
9 Adjournment
Citizens with disabilities requiring special needs to access the services or public meeting of Rowan County Government should contact the County Manager’s Office three days prior to the meeting by calling (704) 216-8180

Additional Information:

http://agenda.rowancountync.gov/DisplayAgendaPDF.ashx?MeetingID=179


Burger King’s Demolition on Jake Alexander is Not Only a Loss for Budget Burger Fans, but a Major Hit to Salisbury’s Shrinking Tax Base

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RFP Staff

♦ The Burger King inferno decimated one of the city’s leading restaurants as far as Salisbury’s tax base goes.  B.K. also represents a major loss to the city’s mushrooming 27.2% poor who found Burger King burgs and coffee affordable and a major source of protein in the city’s rapidly spreading food desert.  Don’t knock the King.

Salisbury, most noted for its poverty, violent crime and gang life, booming hard drug culture, and substandard D and F schools, needs every tax dollar it can snatch.  The city can ill-afford the loss of a major fast food restaurant like the Burger King on Jake Alexander Blvd. and its hit to Salisbury’s shrinking tax base.  Realize that one Burger King represents more to the city’s tax base than 10 of those surviving bric-a-brac and junktique shops on vacancy strewn Main Street.  Burger King was a real contributor.

Hopefully Burger King doesn’t throw in the towel on Salisbury and leave like “5 Guys” and so many other businesses do.

 

 


Video: Rowan County Commissioners Meeting at 3 P.M. March 7th. The Pay Study

Video: City Councilman Kenny Hardin Queries Downtown Salisbury Inc.’s Paula Bohland and Greg Shields about Main Street

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RFP Staff

Video: City Councilman Kenny Hardin Queries Downtown Salisbury Inc.’s Paula Bohland and Greg Shields about Main Street.  Hardin Provides his Observations after a Downtown Walk:


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