Retired state Senator and former Carrboro Mayor Ellie Kinnaird said she’d like to see a more business-friendly Carrboro – as well as a post office that recognizes its actual boundaries.
If you live in a neighborhood where cars zoom through way too fast, but you’re not thrilled with the idea of speed bumps and speed tables, then you can probably sympathize with the residents of Carrboro’s Fox Meadow subdivision.
If you live in Carrboro, and you’d like to keep your own chickens for non-commercial purposes, you can rest assured that the Board of Aldermen is considering ways to make that easier for you.
Carrboro residents and visitors can expect to see a major campaign in the near future to “Think Local First” when it comes to doing business in the town.
With more than 1,000 undocumented children crossing the southern border into the United States each week, locals are looking for a way to respond to what some are calling a “humanitarian crisis.”
A proposal to extend Carrboro’s 1998 ban on drive-throughs at downtown businesses to other areas of town brought several citizens out to Tuesday night’s Board of Aldermen meeting to address the issue.
The Carrboro Board of Aldermen has a busy agenda at its Town Hall meeting Tuesday – and one of items is a resolution to adopt the $21.3 million budget for fiscal year 2014-15.