FAYETTEVILLE City leaders and community advocates will work together over the next three months to come up with a plan to preserve structures and land significant to Black history after a City Council vote Tuesday.
FAYETTEVILLE City leaders and community advocates will work together over the next three months to come up with a plan to preserve structures and land significant to Black history after a City Council vote Tuesday.
The question of preserving historically Black neighborhoods in Fayetteville or more accurately, spending taxpayer dollars to do it is scheduled to come before the City Council Tuesday. The legality of what s proposed is a big question, too.
Early last week, the news side of this operation delivered a three-part series exploring the building crisis a crisis that is building, so to speak when it comes to housing in Northwest Arkansas and the shrinking capacity for many residents to even hope to afford home ownership.