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WFAE
Construction is seen in Charlotte s South End area. The Community Benefits Coalition wants to use contracts between developers and neighborhoods to ensure that new development in Charlotte benefits existing residents.
A coalition of neighborhood and community groups is urging Charlotte leaders to strengthen a provision in the city s draft 2040 Comprehensive Plan aimed at ensuring that existing residents benefit from future development.
Community benefits agreements are private contracts between developers and neighborhood groups that spell out how projects will benefit existing residents. The Community Benefits Coalition says agreements like these are needed to protect residents from displacement and gentrification by giving them leverage. For example, residents could agree to support a project in exchange for something the neighborhood wants, like affordable housing, a park, or extra measures to ease traffic.
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WFAE
Charlotte’s city manager has sent a memo to the mayor and City Council proposing changes to the city’s 2040 Comprehensive Plan. The memo outlines changes that affect proposed impact fees and zoning for multi-family housing.
City Manager Marcus Jones offered the changes in a memo to the mayor and City Council on Thursday. The full memo is below.
One proposed change targets one of the more controversial parts of the plan allowing multi-family development in areas zoned for single-family only. The revision broadens wording by saying duplexes and triplexes can be built in all “place types” but not on “all lots.”
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Controversy still dogs Charlotte arts funding plan, as private companies pledge $7M Catherine Muccigrosso, The Charlotte Observer
May 3 The controversial Charlotte city arts funding plan has received an initial boost of over $7 million in pledges for matching funds from private companies, even as a group of local artists continue to demand that city leaders include them in the process.
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Breaking from decades of past practice, Charlotte no longer plans to channel its arts funding through the Arts & Science Council, although Mecklenburg County still intends to work through the ASC. The city move has generated concern from some arts organizations that they do not have a voice in the major funding change.
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