State of North Carolina Office of Governor Bev Perdue
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By Linda Coleman

State Personnel Director

State employees give to their communities throughout the year.  

The NC Division of Aging and Adult Services’ (DAAS) mission to serve older and disabled adults guides not only the professional lives of the DAAS staff but it also plays a major role in their volunteer efforts.  For eight years, the division has maintained a weekly route with Wake County’s Meals-on-Wheels program, delivering meals to seniors in east Raleigh.  DAAS will continue to cover the route each Friday in 2012 – rain or shine.  On Veterans’ Day, volunteers from Correction Enterprises prepared a meal at the women’s and children’s shelter through the Salvation Army, serving 15 mothers and their children.

Others give regularly through community projects with the State Employees Association of NC. At this year’s SEANC convention alone, state employees contributed $8,000 and numerous baby shower items including: strollers, travel systems, pack-n-plays, diapers and clothing to benefit Operation Homefront of North Carolina.  And then there’s the State Employees Combined Campaign. For the 2011 Combined Campaign, state agency and university employees have contributed $4.1 million to charities across North Carolina that will benefit causes from homeless animals to Alzheimer’s disease.

During the holiday season, many state agencies conduct service projects. Employees in District 22 of the Division of Community Corrections co-sponsored a blood drive and served as bell-ringers for the Salvation Army. Correction Enterprises staff collected enough stocking fillers to fill 83 stockings for the Salvation Army of Wake County.

But at this time of year, our hearts go out, particularly, to fighting hunger.  The Office of State Personnel, the Division of Community Corrections, the Department of Environment and Natural Resources and other state agencies and universities are collecting food for food banks and food pantries across the state, delivering thousands of pounds of holiday provisions for their neighbors in need.

State employees are proud to serve their fellow citizens, their communities and their state.

To find a volunteer opportunity in your community, contact www.unitedwaync.org.

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Congratulations to the Appalachian State University students whose work on a solar house was voted the "People's Choice" in the U.S. Department of Energy's 2011 Solar Decathlon.

I visited the students' Solar Homestead house in July. ASU is one of 20 competitors in the decathlon in which collegiate teams design, build and operate solar-powered houses that are cost-effective, energy-efficient and attractive.

During my summer visit, I saw the energy and enthusiasm from the ASU students that resonated with voters in the "People's Choice" award.

"The team’s passion and enthusiasm were contagious," said Terri Jones, Solar Decathlon Communications Contest official. "The People’s Choice Award is a popular vote, and I believe the Solar Homestead house and team appealed to people on many levels."

The ASU students also won second place in the Communications Contest and third place in the Architecture Contest.

The project was funded through private donations.

Help me congratulate our ASU team. We are proud of them.

 

 

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You can help students from Appalachian State win for their work on a solar-powered house.

Students from Appalachian State are competing against 20 teams from around the world in the U.S. Department of Energy's Solar Decathlon.

The competition challenges collegiate teams to design, build and operate solar-powered houses that are cost-effective, energy-efficient and attractive. The team from ASU is in the running for the contest's "People's Choice" award and voting will continue until Sept. 28.

Gov. Perdue and First Gentleman Bob Eaves visited the school's project in Boone in July.

Funding for ASU’s entry in the Solar Decathlon has come entirely from private donations from corporate sponsors and individuals. 

 

 

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We ask a lot of our state employees.

It's been three years since they've had so much as a cost-of-living adjustment. In this recession, they continue to work under the constant threat of layoffs. They don't get a lot of respect for the hard work they do.

And that's why it's great when we have an opportunity to recognize the kind of dedication and selflessness that many of our employees exhibit every day. Last month, State Trooper Skye Stone was doing his job when he pulled behind a stranded motorist on U.S. 64 in Martin County. 

As The News & Observer's Bruce Siceloff tells it, Bob Inge, 54, and his mother were stuck waiting for a relative to come with a tow truck for Inge's disabled SUV and camper. While they waited for the next couple hours, Stone took care of them. Inge explained it to the newspaper:

"He went to a store, purchased water on his own, brought my mama a quart of water back, brought me a quart of water back, and said he would check on us," Inge said. "And he came back two or three more times. When the wrecker got there, he stopped traffic so they could get the vehicle off the road."

Stone would not accept reimbursement for the water. And he later told Siceloff that he didn't think what he had done was a big deal. 

"It happens a lot more than people realize," he told the newspaper. "We really do help people."

And by the way, for anyone who thinks Stone should have been more worried about speeders: He still managed to write nine tickets during his shift that day.

 

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By NCDOT Deputy Secretary of Internal and External Affairs Ted Vaden

In the past year, @NCDOT, the N.C. Department of Transportation’s main Twitter feed, has grown from about 800 followers to more than 4,000. NCDOT uses this free tool to connect directly with citizens to share real-time travel information, important safety messages and transportation news. Hitting this benchmark is exciting, because it shows people value the information we’re providing in 140 characters or less.

Gov. Perdue has made transparency and accountability a priority in her administration and social media tools offer taxpayers more ways to connect with their state government.

We use Twitter to let citizens know about opportunities to get involved in transportation planning,  explain when construction projects may affect traffic, and offer ways to make travel by bike, plane, bus, ferry, or train more efficient and fun. We also used Twitter to connect with citizens after the destructive tornadoes ravaged parts of North Carolina this spring. With Twitter, we quickly passed on critical information on road conditions and closures.  We were, in effect, the public’s eyes on the interstates.  Twitter gave our citizens a simple way to “know before you go.” The strong increase in the number of people following us is due, in part, to the critical role Twitter played in those kinds of emergency response efforts. 

But, Twitter is more than just a way to send information. It is a conduit for conversation between the department and the public. It’s an easy way for citizens to ask questions and get answers. For instance, we’ve been able to better explain why we handle snow and ice the way we do as a direct result of those conversations. Our Twitter dialogue has led to improvements on our DMV website, and it even helped keep a group of pigs loose on I-540 in Durham from causing big traffic problems!

Connecting with NCDOT on Twitter is easy. Visit www.ncdot.gov/travel/twitter/ and click on the link for one of the department’s 21 different accounts, which include specific interstate routes, regional areas and the ferry division. You can also follow Gov. Perdue on Twitter. 


 

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By Betsy Kane, Senior Planner, Community Planning Division of the NC Department of Commerce

North Carolina’s downtowns are among the favorite places that Tarheels and visitors cherish in our state. A healthy, vibrant downtown promotes economic development as well as a community identity. Active downtowns create a more enjoyable place to live and do business.  

To help downtowns thrive, the Community Planning Division in the N.C. Department of Commerce is developing a new toolkit for “Downtown Zoning Repair.” The diagnostic tool will help Main Street communities align their zoning regulations to better support their economic goals for downtown.  

Sometimes zoning regulations can be at cross-purposes with downtown goals. In my work, I kept running into situations where a town had zoning regulations on the books that were more suited to a suburban setting. 

For example, some regulations prohibited the creation of housing in the upper floors of downtown commercial buildings. There’s a lot of demand for downtown lofts and apartments, even in smaller communities.  

I saw similar problems in multiple communities. So I began to think it would be helpful to catalog all the ways that zoning should be helping, not hindering, downtown goals, and refer to that list when we provide technical assistance to our communities.

Working with staff members in the Urban Development Division (North Carolina Main Street and Small Town Main Street programs) and other planners in the Community Planning Division, we created a diagnostic checklist that can be used to make sure towns are doing all they can to remove unnecessary regulatory barriers to downtown revitalization. 

In coming months, I’ll be working with Burnsville in the mountains, Waxhaw in the southern piedmont, and Goldsboro in the coastal plain as pilot communities. Their participation will help me refine and develop the advice we give to other towns that may use this toolkit in the future.

Downtown revitalization is a job-creator.  Downtown businesses are often family-owned, and they have strong local connections. When you create jobs in downtowns, they are ‘sticky’– they can’t be lured away, because they are so strongly linked to place. The money spent in downtown enterprises also re-circulates in the community at a higher rate, and this high multiplier effect tends to make the whole community more prosperous.

One of the features of ‘Zoning Repair’ for downtown is that it costs almost nothing, yet the upside can be huge.  In these budget times, we are always looking for ideas that have a good cost-benefit ratio.

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Gov. Bev Perdue continues to fight for education despite the devastating cuts included in the Republican-backed budget.

“We must have a highly trained workforce for our state to be globally competitive, and that education begins in preschool classrooms and continues all the way through our community colleges and universities,” Gov. Perdue said. “They may have cut our pre-k programs and turned our education system backwards. But tomorrow, the citizens of North Carolina and I will resume the fight for what we believe in -- that education must be the one priority we never turn our backs on.”

When she vetoed the budget bill, Gov. Perdue said the budget would force local school systems to lay off educators. Since the General Assembly’s override of the budget veto, news headlines have confirmed this fear.

“To think that those cuts will not negatively impact our students, that’s not true,” Gaston County Schools Superintendent Reeves McGlohon told the Gaston Gazette. “The cuts will hurt. There will be individuals in our school system who have jobs this year that will not have jobs next year.”

Other systems have begun delivering pink slips.

Cumberland County: 179 teacher assistant jobs, 130 teachers, nine assistant principals

New Hanover County: 191 jobs

Harnett County: 88 jobs (mostly teacher assistants)

Union County: 100 jobs

Robeson County: 235 jobs

Statewide: Eliminating funding for Governor's school shuts out 600 students

Winston-Salem/Forsyth County: Considering a plan to eliminate 221 jobs, including 118 teaching positions

Wake County: Teacher Assistants pay is slashed

Columbus County: Layoffs have started

Johnston County: 123 positions, including 73 teacher assistants

Beaufort County: 110 jobs lost

Lee County: 50 teacher jobs, dozens of teacher assistants

Charlotte Mecklenburg Schools County: 460 jobs lost

Statewide: Gap between rich and poor schools growing

The General Assembly's budget is the "riskiest gamble ever perpetrated on the citizens of North Carolina," said Montgomery County Schools Superintendent Dr. Dale Ellis. "What's getting ready to happen should be a crime."

 

 

"5 Reasonable People": A Superintendent’s Response to the State Budget Crisis from Lindsay Whitley on Vimeo.


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Gov. Bev Perdue vetoed the legislature's budget proposal after concluding the bill would set North Carolina backwards and cause generational damage to the state's workforce and education system.

Here is Gov. Perdue's veto message.

 

Delivered Sunday, June 12, 2011, from the Capitol Building, Raleigh

For generations, we North Carolina have distinguished ourselves from other southern states as a place of opportunity, and a place that understands the value of investing in our people. 

Education has been our hallmark – the one area that set us apart from our neighbors and propelled our economic success. 

From the high chair to the rocking chair, every North Carolinian has been given the opportunity for a quality education -- from early childhood, K-12, community colleges and through our colleges and universities. This is the commitment we have made to our people because, quite simply, it’s what we believe in. 

We have lived our values – until now.

Now, for the first time, we have a legislature that is turning its back on our schools, our children, our longstanding investments in education and our future economic prospects. 

Under this budget:

We will overlook many of our most at-risk pre-school children by slashing Smart Start and More at Four, leaving these kids behind before they’ve even started Kindergarten;

Classrooms will be underfunded in K-12, forcing local school districts to lay off thousands of teachers and teaching assistants who will then be added to the unemployment rolls; and

In our community colleges and universities, programs will be shut down, tuition may be raised, career training and college degrees will be further out of reach, there will be fewer class offerings and students will take longer to graduate.  

This budget will result in generational damage. It tears at the very fibers that make North Carolina strong – not only our schools, but also our communities, our environment, our public safety system and our ability to care for those who need us most. 

Our most vulnerable and sick will see medical and mental health services cut or eliminated;

Families will have fewer resources as they care for their elderly, their disabled or their mentally ill;

The natural environmental treasures that we cherish and that draw so many visitors to North Carolina will be at risk of permanent damage or destruction;

Historical sites that attract tourists and stimulate economic activity by commemorating our rich cultural heritage will be closed;

Our ability to prepare for and recover from disasters such as tornados and hurricanes may  be hampered; and

These cuts would be devastating when we have a more than active hurricane season predicted.

Fewer law enforcement officers will patrol our streets and supervise convicted felons, while victims will be forced to wait longer for justice. 

 



In the days since the General Assembly’s budget reached my desk, I’ve traveled the state listening to parents and grandparents, teachers and superintendents, business people, community leaders and law enforcement officials. I saw worry in their eyes; 

I heard frustration in their voices. These are people who, like me, are proud to call North Carolina home because of what we believe in as a people; because of our legacy of smart choices and planning for the future.  They spoke to me not as Democrats or Republicans, Tea Partiers or Independents. They came to me as North Carolinians, and they asked me to stand up for what is right for our children and grandchildren, for what moves North Carolina forward, not backward. 

They know that much of damage that this budget seeks to do is simply unnecessary.  By extending less than a penny of the sales tax, North Carolina can avoid severe cuts to our schools and other crucial programs.  

These cuts were made by the legislature in this budget by choice.  They chose to risk our children’s futures -- for less than a penny.

For weeks I have cautioned legislative leaders of the damage this budget will cause. Yes, these difficult economic times demand that we tighten our belt, make cuts and face up to hard choices. 

The budget I submitted to the General Assembly in February did just that -- but it also invested in our future.  We cannot move North Carolina forward without both balance and reason. This budget provides neither. 

As I’ve reviewed the General Assembly’s plan for how North Carolina should run the next two years, I’ve found is ideologically driven budget that rips at our classrooms and campuses, our environment and quality of life, our services for the needy and ill, and the safety of our streets and communities. What message does that send to the people and businesses who are considering a move to North Carolina? The state’s budget is more than just a roadmap for how state agencies operate. It is a reflection of the state’s values, of what we believe in.

I will not put my name on a plan that so blatantly ignores the values of North Carolina’s people. I cannot support a budget that sends the message that North Carolina is moving backwards, when we have always been a state that led the nation.

The General Assembly may be satisfied with a state in reverse, but I am not. Therefore, I veto this bill.

 

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Gov. Bev Perdue sent a letter to House Speaker Thom Tillis and Senate leader Phil Berger outlining objections to legislative budget proposals.

She called on the chambers to work toward a compromise that protects the state's legacy of investing in education. 

Read the letter below.

 

Tillis-Berger-5-27-11-Budget.pdf (1.67 mb)

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Members of Gov. Perdue's cabinet have been travelling the state as part of the 'Education Works' tour, which notes the direct link between education and economic prosperity for North Carolina. 

Here are some highlights:

Administration Secretary Moses Carey has visited students in Sanford and Halifax County. In Durham, he told students that proposed mass layoffs of educators would "turn back the clock" in North Carolina.

Correction Secretary Al Keller and Crime Control and Public Safety Secretary Reuben Young stressed the importance of education to students in Richmond County.

Cultural Resources Secretary Linda Carlisle visited students in Guilford County.

 

 

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