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What @sog_ced is reading on the web: August 2014By CED News and Social MediaPublished August 28, 2014The following are articles and reports on the web that the Community and Economic Development Program at the UNC School of Government shared through social media over the past month. Follow us on twitter or facebook to receive regular updates. North Carolina General Assembly updates: NC General Assembly bill with historic rehabilitation tax credit extension fails to pass: http://bit.ly/1kq0Fby Will North Carolina’s historic rehabilitation tax credits be resurrected when the NC General Assembly returns? http://bit.ly/1pbIOVF Items of interest related to CED in North Carolina: Golden Leaf’s new grant funds for economic development in certain North Carolina “prosperity zones”: http://bit.ly/1qAAqQ9 Developer says that new low-income housing units in Anson could not have been built in such rural area without state tax credit: http://bit.ly/1qAEIH1 Story shows impact of expiration of state’s historic tax credit on historic school project in Durham: http://bit.ly/YX9Vu0 Rural counties fret over change to North Carolina’s business recruitment efforts, new centralized approach with economic development nonprofit. http://bit.ly/VPiKE4 Workforce development plan in works at Central Carolina Community College to accompany Chatham-Randolph industrial megasite: http://bit.ly/1p4SBYW Report on impact of North Carolina eliminating state funding for community development organizations: http://ow.ly/zP3Nq UNC-Chapel Hill’s Building Integrated Communities initiative helps Sanford’s Latino community obtain better access to public safety, local government, education, and economic opportunities: http://bit.ly/1vdfKxQ Other CED items: U.S. Government Accountability Office report finds that New Markets Tax Credits need better controls and data in order to ensure their effectiveness: http://bit.ly/1pbIOVF U.S. Conference of Mayors report states that U.S. has regained jobs lost in the recession, but those jobs pay 23% less. http://bit.ly/1pvmIxl Last month’s edition of “What @sog_ced is reading….” http://ced.sog.unc.edu/?p=4966 Compiled by Marcia Perritt |
Published August 28, 2014 By CED News and Social Media
The following are articles and reports on the web that the Community and Economic Development Program at the UNC School of Government shared through social media over the past month. Follow us on twitter or facebook to receive regular updates.
North Carolina General Assembly updates:
NC General Assembly bill with historic rehabilitation tax credit extension fails to pass: http://bit.ly/1kq0Fby
Will North Carolina’s historic rehabilitation tax credits be resurrected when the NC General Assembly returns? http://bit.ly/1pbIOVF
Items of interest related to CED in North Carolina:
Golden Leaf’s new grant funds for economic development in certain North Carolina “prosperity zones”: http://bit.ly/1qAAqQ9
Developer says that new low-income housing units in Anson could not have been built in such rural area without state tax credit: http://bit.ly/1qAEIH1
Story shows impact of expiration of state’s historic tax credit on historic school project in Durham: http://bit.ly/YX9Vu0
Rural counties fret over change to North Carolina’s business recruitment efforts, new centralized approach with economic development nonprofit. http://bit.ly/VPiKE4
Workforce development plan in works at Central Carolina Community College to accompany Chatham-Randolph industrial megasite: http://bit.ly/1p4SBYW
Report on impact of North Carolina eliminating state funding for community development organizations: http://ow.ly/zP3Nq
UNC-Chapel Hill’s Building Integrated Communities initiative helps Sanford’s Latino community obtain better access to public safety, local government, education, and economic opportunities: http://bit.ly/1vdfKxQ
Other CED items:
U.S. Government Accountability Office report finds that New Markets Tax Credits need better controls and data in order to ensure their effectiveness: http://bit.ly/1pbIOVF
U.S. Conference of Mayors report states that U.S. has regained jobs lost in the recession, but those jobs pay 23% less. http://bit.ly/1pvmIxl
Last month’s edition of “What @sog_ced is reading….” http://ced.sog.unc.edu/?p=4966
Compiled by Marcia Perritt
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