City Council
Merchant Wants out of Service District
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An attorney whose office is located in the Hillsborough Street Municipal Improvement District is seeking to have his property removed due to a lack of services provided.
Raleigh Public Record (https://theraleighcommons.org/raleighpublicrecord/topics/news/city-council/page/10/)
An attorney whose office is located in the Hillsborough Street Municipal Improvement District is seeking to have his property removed due to a lack of services provided.
Despite complaints from neighbors, both the Merrimon-Wynne House and the Person Street Bar were granted their requests for amplified outdoor sound last week.
At the City Council’s afternoon session Tuesday, Councilman Thomas Crowder announced that he was losing his battle with cancer and may not be able to finish out his current term, which runs through December.
Raleigh City Council members got the first real look Tuesday at the schematic design for the new Moore Square bus station.
Parking in downtown Raleigh might soon get a tech upgrade.
Raleigh City Councilors this week approved the final design for the Sandy Forks Road project, which will get started next year. Councilors also approved three additional road races and received a grant to plant trees in Chavis Park.
Raleigh City Councilors have approved placing a $91.8 million parks bond on the November ballot, but funding for a whitewater park still isn’t included.
Real estate sales were way up fur June; and the debate over a new Hillsborough Street development has finally been settled by City Council, potentially opening the door for more projects that exceed suggested restrictions.
Two homeowners associations blame developers for expensive problems in different developments. In one, residents say a developer left behind numerous problems with stormwater and they should not be responsible for repairs required by the city. In the other subdivision, a developer never finished the streets and homeowners will likely have to pay the city hundreds of thousands of dollars for repairs.
Councilors voted this week to approve four new sidewalks, but held off on deciding whether to allow a bail bonds business in south Raleigh to continue operating.