Posts Tagged 'Town Hall'

Town buys Avery Street property to use in North Garner plan

In a special session held Monday, the Town of Garner approved acquisition of nearly an acre of land in North Garner from Habitat of Humanity of Wake County. The Town plans to buy and hold the parcel to use in implementing the North Garner Plan.

The Town already owns other property nearby.  Other assets include Garner Historic Auditorium, Avery Street Gym, and the Avery Street classroom annex.  The new parcel is adjacent to the Avery Street facilities.

“The Town of Garner is working cooperatively with Habitat for Humanity of Wake County to identify some other parcels of land that will be used to construct as many as three future homes in the Garner area,” said Town Manager Hardin Watkins in a statement released early Monday evening.

The town will pay $75,850 for the .823-acre property at the corner of Avery Street and North Garner Road.  The parcel is presently undeveloped.

 

N.C. governor considers 10 percent budget cut

Garner Town Council members are hardly alone in facing the prospect of budget cuts. North Carolina Gov. Beverly Perdue is scheduled to release more details this week on the casualties of cutting up to $2 billion from the state’s $21 billion budget.

The link below leads to outside content:

http://www.newsobserver.com/politics/story/1444850.html

Despite weather ‘hiccups’ town expects new nature park to open this fall

Construction on the jewel of Garner’s parks system is a month behind schedule, according to the town.

Despite a wet winter, the design and development team for White Deer Park says the project should rebound and open on time this fall.

“December just killed us,” said Fran Robertson of George Raper & Sons, the general contractor for the project. Robertson said rain and snow during the past few months have slowed and occasionally stopped construction altogether.  

The most recent snowfall also prevented AT&T from removing a couple of pedestals beside Aversboro Road that will allow the corridor to be widened. The town has yet to reschedule the work.

Designers expect to make up the missed time over the next few months.

“We will keep it rolling,” said Jeff Claus, an associate with OBS, the park’s landscape architect.

On Wednesday, few signs of slowed progress were visible during a Town Council tour of the site with members of the development team. Concrete trucks, excavators and grading dozers traversed much of the 96-acre nature park.

The project broke ground in September. At $4.2 million, the space is the largest capital undertaking in town history.

Located directly across from Lake Benson Park, it will include 2.5 miles of paved walking trails, five picnic shelters, two playgrounds, wildflower meadows and an arboretum. Patrons will be able to follow a greenway that runs through the park and connects to Timber Drive.

The park will also house a “green” nature center for which the town is attempting to attain U.S. Green Building Council Silver L.E.E.D. certification. The building, which will house classrooms and a nature exhibit, is expected to be a model in sustainability, water conservation and low-impact development.

“Much of what we’re trying to do here is educate citizens with things they can take back to their homes and offices,” said Ed Johnson, the project manager for the town.

Town preparing for $625,000 shortfall on $25.7 million budget

Garner is anticipating a revenue shortfall of approximately $625,000 for the 2008-2009 fiscal year, according to recent estimates released by the town.

Most of the gap is attributed to reduced sales tax revenue through the first five months of the fiscal year. About $100,000 of that total stems from expected declines in construction and development activity.

The estimate represents 2.4 percent of this year’s 25.7 annual operating budget.

To prepare, the town is scaling back on expenditures both large - $1.7 million toward expansion of police space - and small – moving the annual retreat to Holly Springs from Wrightsville Beach. Town Manager Watkins says Garner has about $2 million in cash available to offset a revenue gap.

“Right now, I feel good about our situation,” Watkins said Tuesday. “As we go forward, that could change.”

Like others at Town Hall, he is waiting to see whether the state will pull state collected local revenues from municipalities to contend with their own shortfall. Those funds represent nearly 30 percent of the town’s budget.

In 2001, the governor pulled some funds from local entities. Several Council members who were on the Board at the time have cited the incident as justification for spending cautiously during recent months.



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