►
From YouTube: Neighborhood Advisory Committee – April 24, 2023
Description
Regular meeting of the City of Asheville Neighborhood Advisory Committee.
Access the agenda and other meeting materials at the City of Asheville website: https://www.ashevillenc.gov/department/city-clerk/boards-and-commissions/neighborhood-advisory-committee/
Participate before and during the meeting on our public engagement hub: https://publicinput.com/P6833
B
A
A
A
H
H
H
H
To
additional
law
enforcement
presence
downtown
there's
also
going
to
be
the
kickoff
of
our
community
responder
program.
There
are
a
number
of
things
that
are
happening
and
would
just
encourage
the
committee
to
look
at
the
project
page
for
this
and
encourage
your
neighborhood
contacts
contacts
to
do
the
name
sign
up
or
subscribe
to
that
project
page.
So.
H
Are
added
to
that
page
will
be
able
to
proactively
send
communication
to
the
folks
that
are
subscribed,
which
I
think
can
be
very
helpful,
because
this
thing
it
will
continue
to
evolve
and
there's
that
really
important
aspect
of
being
able
to
track
what
we're
doing
so.
A
survey
that
was
done
by
the
asheville
downtown
association
going
to
be
used
as
the
pre-survey.
They
sent
that
out
too
their
neck
through
their
network.
So
we've
got
an
idea
of
what
things
what
the
sentiment
was
before
this
initiative
kicked
off.
H
H
H
H
Migrate
or
the
strong
partnerships
that
we
have
in
this
initiative,
it
is,
it
is
not
something
that
city
government
can
do
alone,
and
so
those
partnerships,
whether
their
neighbors
businesses
other
agencies.
It's
really
going
to
take
all
of
us
working
together
to
get
to
the
root
at
some
of
the
causes
of
the
buttocks
and
crime.
E
Actually
gave
a
link
to
the
like
plan
document
that
the
sheriff
put
together
that
very
explicitly
describes.
What's
going
to
happen,
how
many
officers
are
involved,
what
they're
going
to
be
doing
its
kind
of
draft?
I
did
see
a
few
like
errors
in
there,
but
it
pretty
well
explains
the
specifics
of
what's
going
to
go
on.
Thank
you.
If
I.
E
E
E
And
you
can
see
how
it
was
currently
written
on
the
left
column
and
then
the
proposed
text
on
the
right
and-
and
so
the
change
here,
is
just
to
eliminate
a
few
words
and
to
add
a
comma,
to
revise
the
claws
to
be
more
action-oriented
and
to
use
an
oxford
comma
to
clarify
list
items
and
something
in
particular
about
about
this
sentence
right
here.
That.
E
E
E
C
C
E
And
the
reason
for
this
is
that
we
haven't
held
our
annual
meeting
at
the
the
with
the
schedule
that
we
have
in
the
last
few
years
due
to
covid.
And
so
this
additional
clause,
just
kind
of
very
very
clearly
indicates
that,
even
if
the
annual
meetings
are
not
occurring
on
their
regular
schedule,
that
the
officer
term
limit
is
that.
E
E
Comment
to
okay:
there
were
some
comments
on
this
because
I
did
did
add
some
comments,
as
in
there
seemed
appropriate
in
my
view,
but
I
want
to
make
sure
I
was
interpreting
that
correctly
and
it
wasn't
like
business
affairs
as
one
phrase
and
actually
means
business
affairs
and
policies.
So
let
me
see
what
my
notes
said.
J
A
Are
reasonable
and
proper
for
the
conduct
of
the
business,
business
and
policies,
so
do
you
want
to
leave
the
in
their
of.
C
Nose
just
period
after
after
policies.
E
E
E
E
E
C
E
E
D
C
A
A
A
D
C
A
C
C
A
H
A
A
C
H
D
A
Is
a
draft
and
posterior
knowing
that
they're
going
to
be
posted
within
a
reasonable
time?
I
mean
if
we
want
to
do
that
with
that,
specifying
it
time
as
a
week
only
because
haven't
gone
to
covid
and
all
of
this
it
was
just
a
meaningless
lucky.
We
got
anything
done.
That's
a
good
change
yeah!
I
would.
I
would
say
that
and
no
time.
H
H
A
C
A
H
C
F
F
The
why
am
I
/
cumbe
cumbe
and
we
ended
up
meeting
another
person,
andrea
who
owns
nor
collective
and
she's
also
on
the
bay
steering
committee.
I
think
they
call
themselves
as
well
as
the.
Why
am
I
bored,
I
believe,
and
so
she
felt
comfortable
talking
with
us,
because
we
were
really
not
there
to
say
anything
definitive
but
really
just
to
offer
an
idea
and
see
what
they
thought
of
it.
F
Moving
back
down
to
the
block
this
year
be
comfortable
with
the
festival
of
neighborhoods
square,
and
would
there
be
room
for
collaboration
and
cross-pollination,
and
all
that-
and
you
know
she
you
know
not
be
out
of
respect
to
the
rest
of
the
goomba
organizers-
was
not
going
to
give
us
an
answer.
You
know
yes
or
no,
so
her
plan
was
to
take
that
proposal
to
that
steering
committee.
F
H
H
Freely-
and
I
got
the
impression
if
there
are
questions
that
they'll
bring
those
back
and
and
we
can
certainly
if
they
come
to
us
first,
they
may
come
to
you
all
first.
If
then,
we
can
certainly
share
them,
but
I
think
that
it
probably
makes
the
most
sense
to
just
give
them
space
to
to
play
around
idea
and
really
have
the
same
converse
tile.
If
it's
a
good.
A
A
And
so
that
we
haven't,
so
then
we're
not
not.
I
really
like
the
fact
it's
downtown
and
I
think
most
of
us
are
neck
like
the
fact
that
it's
turned
down
because
it's
accessible
and
if
we
wait
too
long
that
we
may
not
have
that,
never
a
hunting
around
for
another
venue
so
to
speak
that
maybe
in
an
area
that's
not
as
accessible
for
our
neighborhoods
and
that
we
should
just
probably
change
the
date
and
instead
of
trying
to
negotiate
another
festival
festival.
A
That
is
the
store
time
and
frankly,
in
my
opinion,
if
I
was
on
that
festival,
I
would
not
necessarily
want
another
group
coming
in
whether
I
like
the
group
or
not
didn't
matter,
it's
just
somebody
different
coming
in
and
and
and
I'm
pretty,
as
everybody
knows,
a
pretty
straight.
I
wanted
this
way
and
this
is
the
way
it's
been
and
that's
the
way
I
wanted,
and
I
don't
know
whether
they
feel
that
way
or
not.
But
I
would.
A
A
A
E
E
It's
very
important
so
that
it's
to
the
culture
of
people
there
and
recognizing
the
history
around
the
block
and
everything
everything
and
wouldn't
like
I
said
I
wouldn't
blame
them
if
they,
if
they
didn't
want
to
share
that
we
can
with
us.
I
also
have
in
the
notes
from
last
meeting
that
it
also
coincides
with
the
5k.
That's
going
on
that
weekend
just
seems
like.
F
A
And
on
the
field-
and
I
like
pack
square
it's
easier
if
we
could
get
the
volunteer
organization,
that's
going
to
set
up
the
bouncy
house-
and
I
forget
the
gentleman's
name,
wendy
wendy,
that
is
going
to
bring
all
the
kids
sniff.
It's
so
much
easier
to
set
up
a
perfect
square
square
and
we
could,
if
it
ended
up
being
a
smaller
venue
of
food.
A
A
A
The
day
that
coincides,
I
forget,
with
what
is
that
september,
2nd
september,
2nd
from
green
bay
and
relieve
them
from
having
to
have
that
discussion,
and
we
decide
to
have
our
neighborhood
festival
on
september
16,
the
perfect
square,
and
we
reserve
that
that
and
then
I'll.
Second.
Second,
any
discussion.
D
I
think
it's
important
to
have
some
sort
of
communication
with
the
goon
bay
steering
committee
do
and
sort
of
its
same
say
something
to
the
effect
of
when
we
discuss
it
at
our
meeting.
We
realized
historical
significance
of
something
that
does
not
like
like
a
piece
out
we're
about.
You
know
that
we
we
actually
communicate
and
reasoning
behind
that
respectful.
I.
A
F
A
K
You
want
to
make
this
quick,
but
I
also
want
to
make
it
interactive
anytime.
We
go
give
these
presentations
and
it's
a
one-way.
You
listen
to
me
and
then
I
sit
down
so
but
that's
not
that's
not
this.
The
whole
point
of
this
is
we
are
in
the
faith
and
our
planning
process
of
engaging
the
community
and
we
are
doing
it.
We
have
multiple
strategies
and
we're
going
to
talk
about
that.
K
K
Pretty
much
my
whole
month,
the
rest
of
this
month
and
all
of
next
month,
our
I'm
making
some
first
glance
has
lettings
talking
to
some
folks
about
in
our
community
in
all
different
arenas
about
what
we're
doing
is
a
city.
As
you
know,
neighborhood
resilience
is
one
of
the
counsel
goal
and
we
in
support
of
that
council
goal,
is
redoing
our
emergency
operations
plan
and
our
continuity
of
operations
plan.
K
K
One
at
home
that
you
will
be
hearing
from
me
or
someone
from
our
shop.
We
are
in
the
process
of
updating
these
plans,
but
in
order
to
have
accurate
premium
plans
that
we
can
operationalize,
it's
super
important
that
we
have
community's
input
to
inform
these
plans,
training
and
exercise
so
that
we
are
able
to
respond
faster
and
meet
the
community
where
they
are
no
matter
where
they
are
are,
and
so
this
is.
These
are
two:
when
we
talk
about
preparedness
and
resilience,
these
are
cornerstones
for
us
in
our
operation.
K
You
know
the
personal
participation,
the
community
dialogue,
we're
going
to
look
at
what
the
feedback
that
get
not
only
from
this
from
presentations
that
we're
going
to
give
and
that
that
feedback
is
going
to
inform
our
training
in
our
continuing
education
as
well
as
the
plans
themselves.
We
have
lots
of
data
sets
that
were
able
to
have
access
to.
We
leverage
all
of
our
partnerships
within
the
city,
with
our
horizontal
stakeholders
within
the
departments
and
our
met
some
of
our
vertical
stakeholders
to
the
state
and
county
to
get
these
data
sets.
K
K
K
I
kind
of
gave
a
little
peek
behind
the
curtain
is
the
heavy
lift
that
this
is
for
the
entire
city?
It's
not
just
the
fire
department.
This
is.
These
are
both
citywide
plan.
So
what
we
have
is
the
live
survey,
a
dedicated
web
space,
we're
here
tonight
in
front
of
you
to
discuss
but
and
the
other
opportunities
that
we've
already
have,
where
we're
thinking
and
where
we're
going
is
using
using
sustainability
relationships
using
equity
inclusion.
K
K
Kind
of
across
the
spectrum-
and
we
get
these
from
lots
of
different
data
sets,
but
it's
also
very
important
again
to
we
want
to
make
sure
that
we
are
addressing
and
responsive
to
what
keeps
you
up
at
night.
What
how
that
works,
and
all
of
these
things
are,
you
know,
they're
very
unfortunate
when
they
happen,
but
we
must
show
must
go
on
right.
We
have
to.
K
K
What
do
you
want?
What
do
you?
What
do
you
want?
How
do
you?
How
do
you
want
to
interact
with
this
information
and
what
kind
of
events
would
you
want
to
attend?
Lots
of
good
ideas
have
been
floated
around
lots
of
interaction
at
the
fire
department.
We're
really
good
about
it.
It
we're
in
the
schools,
schools,
positions
dedicated
to
being
the
school's
educating
our
community
members
and
their
children
on
fire
prevention,
but
this
we're
talking
more
of
an
all-hazards
approach
here.
So
what
does
that
all-hazards
approach,
approach
to
education
and
and
prevention
mitigation
recovery?
K
K
How
do
we
get
back
to
a
new
normal
and
how
do
we?
How
do
we
have
that
spring
back
to
whatever
that
new
one
will
might
be,
and
the
kind
of
the
france
and
in
between
is
building
that
resilience?
If
we
focus
on
that
personal
preparedness
at
the
neighborhood
level,
we
have
successful
we're
when
we
keep
things
small
and
we
keep
things
local.
K
K
But
we
want
to
make
sure
that
not
only
were
we
organizing
their
response,
but
we're
also
making
sure
that
the
rest
of
the
city
and
the
rest
of
the
service
and
the
rest
of
the
things
that
that
we
provide.
How
do
we
prioritize
and
make
sure
those
things
we
don't
drop
any
balls
or
that
we
were
able
to
continue
no
matter
what's
happening
outside
so
those
that's
kind
of
the
project
project
overview
and
that's
what
the
survey
is
going
to
inform
these
two
plans.
K
What
are
those
things
that
concern
you?
The
most
again,
we
have
a
pretty
comprehensive
list
of
things
that
can
happen
and
we're
using
all
types
of
datasets,
but
I
think
it's
super
important
that
we
have
this
dialogue
and
we
talk
through
that.
So
I've
kind
of
open
it
up
to
the
group
group
number
one
for
any
is
that
we
have,
but
specifically
a
relay
earn
and
your
neighborhoods.
C
C
C
A
A
A
K
You
know
if
it's
this,
it's
this
particular
format.
If
it's
another
format,
you
know
what
does
that
look
move
forward
and
that's?
This
is
just
the
first
pass
pass
because
really
getting
on
track.
We're
taking
a
lot
of
those
lessons
we
learned
during
covid
and
and
not
just
letting
those
go
by
we're
capturing
that
progress
that
we
made.
We
made
a
lot
of
progress
and
we
had
to
pivot
very
quickly.
We
were
able
to
make
a
lot
of
progress
and
make
sure
that
that
was
not
done
in
vain.
So.
D
D
I've
been
actual
amount,
we
tears
years
and
I
would
say
almost
everything
that
I
can
think
of
that
has
affected
me
or
my
friends
or
my
neighbors
has
been
water-related.
You
know
when
it
floods
or
when
it
roads
or
when
roads
are
blocked.
Then
there's
there's
also
water,
pipe
things
that
thing
I
guess
just
a
few
months
ago
where
there
was
some
water
people
didn't
have
access
to
water
and
they
were
people
handing
out
water,
and
I
don't
know
if
that
was
you
all.
D
K
It
was
a
team
effort
for
sure
we
all
were
involved
moved
in
that,
but
I
think
you're
right
and
that's
what
we
want
to
we're
going
after
this
data
set
right
now
we're
going
after
not
what
you
know
again:
there's
national
trends
national
best
practice,
but
the
data
that
we
want
to
use
to
inform
our
plans
and
inform
our
training
and
exercises
the
data.
That's
local
to
us,
and
so
I
envision
the
next
time
that
I
stopped
by
and
kind
of
give
you
an
update
because
we're
looking
to
complete
this
first
round
or
in
august.
K
What
was
the
after-action
of
that?
What
did
we
learn
and
what
would
in
what
were
the
innovations
that
were
created
from
the
from
the
dialogue
and
the
communication
within
our
communities?
So
so
did
you
have
something?
I
saw
you
you
and
again
which
points
to
this
you
said
earlier:
how
does
your
community
come
together
during
emergencies?
K
The
weather
is
we're
very
slow
in
the
mountains,
maybe
not
acceptable
as
the
as
the
coast,
but
it's
a
different
kind
of
susceptibility
right.
So
we
have
to
have
that
that
all-hazards
approach
is
going
to
be
critical
to
this
and
that
all-hazards
approach
is
going
to
be
critical
to
how
we
come
together
as
a
as
a
community
and
talk
about
that
just
to
kind
of
finish
up
I'll.
What?
If
are
there
any.
K
If
you
have,
if
your
communities
are,
your
neighborhoods
are
getting
together
and
they're
going
to
have
any
kind
of
meetings,
I
would
love
to
come.
Love
to
talk,
sit
around,
have
a
conversation
and
talk
about
some
preparedness
to
see
how
we
can
get
this
conversation
started
and
again.
This
is
you
know.
K
K
K
G
To
different,
you
know,
department
all
together
only
only
because
you
know,
especially
during
the
water
outage.
I
didn't
have
water
for
10
days.
So
so,
and
somebody
like
me
who
I
feel
like
you
know
compared
to
some
of
the
other,
I
think
residents
in
ash
was
pretty
well
informed
and
I
kind
of
looked
at
the
regular
places
and
there
wasn't
really
anything
cohesive
communications
wise.
So.
K
But
I
think
that
the
process
and
how
we
organize
and
how
we
respond,
there's
a
humongous
communication
piece
and
making
sure
that
that
piece
is
when
we
organize
and
we're
dealing
with
all
of
the
various
incidents
and
all
the
various
issues
it
can.
It
can
be
complex,
very,
very
quickly
and
being
able
to
have
that.
I
guess
the
consistency.
K
K
Think
if
we
start
there,
then
I
think
that
the
information
and
then
the
exchange
of
information
between
we
use
all
of
our
partners.
The
community
of
public
engagement,
is
a
huge
partner
of
of
we
have
public
information
officer,
sir
within
the
fire
department,
as
well
as
the
police
department.
But
I
think
that
team
and
really
channeling
that
team
and
letting
they
have
a
huge
role
in
this
and
we've
had
some
very,
very
interactive
discussions
with
our
community
public
engagement
about
what
that
looks
like
and
the
organization
behind
this.
K
E
And
I
a
lot
of
times
we
focus
on
the
neighborhoods
that
are
officially
like,
registered
and
recognized
by
the
city
and
typically
those
neighborhoods
are
very
active.
They
have
active
facebook
pages
or
whatever,
and
they
seem
to
communicate
pretty
well
between
themselves.
They
have
kind
of
like
a
point
of
contact
and
I
feel
like
those
the
more
difficult
group
to
reach
are
those
people
who
don't
live
in
living
a
registered
neighborhood.
E
K
I've
been
it
says
some
of
those
neighborhoods
and
some
of
those
don't
really
recognize,
and
that's
kind
of
one
of
those
points
that
we're
talking
about
is
how
do
we
catch
those
folks
that
are
in
the
middle
and
and
how
do
we
leverage
those
relationships
that
we
have?
Not
only
that
may
be
in
someone
else.
Has
another
department
or
another
stakeholder
has.
How
do
we
leverage
that
to
connect
them
and
building
that
connections
and
connecting
that.
D
Meetings
since
our
next
meeting
and
it's
this
wednesday,
however,
there
was
a
an
event
last
week
that
a
lot
of
members
of
multimodal
transportation
commission
came
to
around
the
bike
lanes
that
they're
proposing
and
a
lot
of
public
input.
That
was
given
last
wednesday
opportunities
for
that
with
the
bike
lanes
on
college
and
patent
and
what
those
could
look
like,
and
it
was
a
really
cool
process.
D
The
bike
lane
is
covered
in
green
as
you
approach
an
intersection
and
even
in
front
of
the
cars
where
the
cars
have
to
wait
back.
That's
some
of
the
things
that
are
being
proposed
and
moving
some
of
the
logistics
about
where
they
are
one
way,
having
the
bike
lanes
of
laying
in
her
church
and
navigate
traffic.
But
it
was
a
really
neat
event
was
held
at
the
collider.
That's
wednesday
and
lots
of
city
people
were
on
hand
to
answer
questions.
I'm
sure
that
will
be
a
major
major
point
of
conversation
at
our
meeting.