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Tuesday, 07 February 2012
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The State of Our Community: How has Asheville — its intercommunity relationships, job opportunities, acceptance of diversity, etc. — changed over the past 25 years or so? Photo by Cathryn Shaffer

As happens all too often at the end of a year, a multitude of issues continue to bedevil us into the new one.

We have become dangerously complacent about this norm over the years of our republic. I have been to the US House and Senate four times in my life and have never seen more than a handful of our public servants “serving;” that tells me we need to keep a closer watch on those to whom we entrust our nation’s, state’s, county’s and city’s business. There are plenty of issues we could discuss, but for the sake of brevity I have selected the following as most pressing:


Homelessness
A visit to Pritchard Park, the Asheville exits off I-40, 26, 240, and the streets of Asheville will tell you that the homeless problem is here to stay as long as we turn a blind eye to the need and not merely the nuisance. On any given night, local shelters are full to capacity, and on cold nights most have fifteen or twenty additional mats on the floor.
What about the people in cardboard boxes, under bridges, on back porches of the churches? One would think that a town that advertises itself as open and welcoming, diverse and caring could do more to back up its claims. We believe it can and should. Good Will, ABCCM, The Vet’s Place and other similar services are doing everything they can with the resources they have, but sadly, the bridges, cardboard boxes and other alternatives are still there. Section 8 has a five-year waiting list and even housing for the elderly is backed up while people suffer, lose hope, or die in the cold.
Affordable Housing
How much longer will Asheville be held hostage by developers whose vision seems limited to building fifty or a hundred McMansions surrounded by a wall with a locked gate? Many are sold to people with the money to scrape some trees off the mountains and plop down until the summer sun in Miami cools down enough for them to return to the other house. Meanwhile, area residents can’t see the stars on a clear night because the light from the ridge tops help to make it impossible. I wonder how many can remember when it was possible to watch a sunset behind the Blue Ridge Mountains without the glare of houselights at a thousand feet up?
The influx of wealthy buyers has inflated all home prices. Sky-high property values mean that people who bought a modest house twenty or thirty years ago pay much higher taxes even at lower rates, on overblown valuations for affordable homes bought long ago. By the simple allocation of brick, mortar, wood and roofing of a certain quality in one area and not in another, we are seeing the creation of vastly different social stratifications in Asheville. What used to be “middle class” is quickly becoming “lower class,” and the gap is getting worse. Does “upscale” now mean looking down on the majority of us and saying, “I’ve got mine, so you get yours.” Is that really what Asheville is all about?
Education and Jobs
To be fair, there has been much discussion and some strides made in the area of education and training available to the citizens of Asheville and Buncombe County in the past few years. Test scores have improved, racial gaps have been narrowed, and such schools as A.C. Reynolds and Claxton have received recognition for excellence. Still, there is much to be done about drop-out rates and modernizing curriculums while sticking to strong core basics of reading, writing, math, science, the arts, and social studies. Teachers work hard, and if done right, teaching is hard work. Having spent thirty years as a teacher working with the so called “at risk” youth, I can attest to that fact. But nothing short of a national initiative can revive our once vaunted educational system.
Why not start it right here in Asheville? Mom and Dad: Put down the cell phone, crack pipe, joint, or bottle of whatever, turn off the TV, stop thinking about yourself, and “parent” your kids. Tell them that education is their future, that there is right and wrong, that pleasure can be found between the covers of a book! Tell them. Show them by example. Teach them.
As far as a future is concerned, it ought to include an occupation built on that education, or at least the opportunity. Someone once told me in a humorous but serious vein that if you were making twenty-one dollars an hour in Asheville, it was because you were working three jobs. I hope not. But what are the options for work? If you are a medical person, the opportunities abound. If you are high enough in the hospitality industry, you too can have a good income. These are great assets, but the world has changed for many of us. The mills are closing, moving to Mexico or China, or Singapore. Technology is the key today.
There are efforts underway to make Asheville a nexus of technology, the arts, and commerce. The Hub project has garnered support from the city and county as well as private resources, and there are many professionals in high tech fields — videographers, computer software designers, multimedia artists — supporting themselves through their work.
There are also a few businesses like the late Robert Moog’s operation and the Sonopress CD pressing plant in Weaverville. Elected officials are working with business leaders and entrepreneurs to make Asheville a climate research center, and numerous entrepreneurs have developed small high-tech businesses that provide them with self-employment. But much more needs to be done to create more well-paying jobs to Asheville and surrounding communities, such as manufacturing the high-tech products that are designed here. Spruce Pine, North Carolina provides some 80 to 90 percent of silica for the production of computer chips worldwide. Any ideas?
Crime/Gangs
A year or so ago an officer sitting in my house told me the Asheville police had no credible evidence that there was gang activity in this town. But at-risk youth will tell you differently. Gang violence is neither uncommon nor out of public view. It comes in various colors and languages: black, white, speaking street slang, Hispanic, Russian, you name it. How’s that for diversity? Not even home security systems, walled communities, and locked gates offer complete protection.
Still, crime statistics don’t always bear out the truth, and rumors — the word on the street — have to be treated with caution. Here are some questions that are being raised in the public mind: Are crime statistics from Deaverview, Pisgah View, Hillcrest, South Asheville, North Asheville, and other of Asheville’s neighborhoods not always reported? Is it possible you could be beaten or shot because you were or were not wearing your red or blue “flag” on the wrong side of town? Have you heard about citizens feeling so unsafe on the track, or basketball or tennis courts, and that some recreation facilities, paid for with tax dollars, are effectively unavailable to them? Drugs, prostitution, violent crime, gambling? It’s all here and easy to find. Just ask Bobby Medford.
What Else Needs Addressing
There is much to be done, and many issues to be addressed, to make Asheville a truly desirable and diverse place to live and work in reasonable peace and safety. Families, churches, governments, businesses, all need to be part of the solution or we will continue to be part of the problem.
How about improved public transportation, passenger rail, better use of one of our potentially great assets, the airport? Will we spend more money to “study” what to do with the Civic Center? Can the city put its financial house in order by judicious fiscal policies and not simply increase the tax base by annexing up swaths of Buncombe County? The city of Hendersonville took up a public collection and sent their World War II vets to Washington to see their own war memorial. What a great way to show civic pride on behalf of a community’s citizens!
Asheville has been called an All-American City more than once, and it appears on countless “best 10” lists. Wouldn’t it be great if Asheville could simply be America’s most livable city — not just for the super-rich, or retirees, or art lovers, or jetsetters, but for ALL its residents? It’s up to us to make it so.
We all have to do better, and that includes the understaffed Urban News. It’s not time to toss up our hands and surrender, because there is plenty we can do. Register to vote — and vote. Help your neighbor. Raise your kids. Pray. Think. Act. Take the time to attend a city council or commissioner’s meeting and speak your mind — even if your voice shakes.
– Bill Moore, Asheville, NC
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