City of Asheville to hold meeting on Haywood Road Parking needs

Press release from the city of Asheville:

City to hold meeting on Haywood Road Parking needs

What: Meeting about the Haywood Road Parking Study.
When: 6:30 p.m. Oct. 22.
Where: Hall Fletcher Elementary School, 60 Ridgelawn Road.
The City of Asheville Transportation Department has been conducting a study of parking needs related to the Haywood Road corridor. A consultant has completed an assessment of available parking and met with business and property owners along the Haywood Corridor to understand their needs.
The next step is to get a better understanding from residents of the parking needs and concerns adjacent to Haywood Road. The study consultant’s team has been conducting additional parking counts on several residential streets identified during the initial counts and through reports of complaints made to APD and other City departments.
The purpose of this meeting is to share the results of the study with residents and gather input on your experience of parking on and near Haywood Road. Please join us for this important meeting!
For more information, contact Transportation Director Ken Putnam at 828-259-5405 or kputnam@ashevillenc.gov.

Find a copy of this press release on Asheville City Source, http://coablog.ashevillenc.gov/2015/10/city-to-hold-west-asheville-meeting-on-haywood-road-parking-needs.

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About Jeff Fobes
As a long-time proponent of media for social change, my early activities included coordinating the creation of a small community FM radio station to serve a poor section of St. Louis, Mo. In the 1980s I served as the editor of the "futurist" newsletter of the U.S. Association for the Club of Rome, a professional/academic group with a global focus and a mandate to act locally. During that time, I was impressed by a journalism experiment in Mississippi, in which a newspaper reporter spent a year in a small town covering how global activities impacted local events (e.g., literacy programs in Asia drove up the price of pulpwood; soybean demand in China impacted local soybean prices). Taking a cue from the Mississippi journalism experiment, I offered to help the local Green Party in western North Carolina start its own newspaper, which published under the name Green Line. Eventually the local party turned Green Line over to me, giving Asheville-area readers an independent, locally focused news source that was driven by global concerns. Over the years the monthly grew, until it morphed into the weekly Mountain Xpress in 1994. I've been its publisher since the beginning. Mountain Xpress' mission is to promote grassroots democracy (of any political persuasion) by serving the area's most active, thoughtful readers. Consider Xpress as an experiment to see if such a media operation can promote a healthy, democratic and wise community. In addition to print, today's rapidly evolving Web technosphere offers a grand opportunity to see how an interactive global information network impacts a local community when the network includes a locally focused media outlet whose aim is promote thoughtful citizen activism. Follow me @fobes

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