|
What @sog_ced is reading on the web: December 2016By CED News and Social MediaPublished December 30, 2016The 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. Items of interest related to CED in North Carolina: Op-Ed explains how IMPLAN economic development impact analysis is misused. http://bit.ly/2gCPrnK Also see faculty bulletin: http://unc.live/2gVAwRB Durham, NC featured in CityLab article asking, can historic preservation stop gentrification before it starts? http://bit.ly/2ia9Uxm North Carolina programs receive federal economic development grants to help promote entrepreneurship: http://bit.ly/2gugv7t Charlotte Business Journal looks at the possible impact of U.S. trade policy on North Carolina exporters. http://bit.ly/2hfWAGV NC Railroad, NCDOT to contribute to rail infrastructure to support economic development at Mebane, NC industrial park. http://bit.ly/2i5kUff NC Commerce releases its 2017 development tier rankings – Guilford County more distressed, some eastern counties less: http://bit.ly/1eNfPjC Consultants’ economic development study of Dare County, NC released: tourism, infrastructure investments proposed, not incentives. http://bit.ly/2i3bcKz The North Carolina economic development nonprofit EDPNC changes by-laws so that the incoming North Carolina Governor cannot remove and replace previously appointed board members (9 of 17). http://bit.ly/2i0gXZD Other CED items: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to support the mortgage market for manufactured housing, affordable housing preservation, and rural housing: https://t.co/LErlYJHM1w Trulia looked at over 3,000 low income housing projects and found that values of properties nearby were NOT affected: http://nyti.ms/2h9DKjR Analysis of tax reform and the fate of affordable housing, historic preservation, and other tax credits under the new administration: http://bit.ly/2hqLZsj Fannie Mae recognizes the value of boarding vacant buildings with clear polycarbonate, not plywood: http://bit.ly/2hyQBge New ULI report examines the intersection of healthy food and real estate development: http://bit.ly/2hxQ8OE Last month’s edition of “What @sog_ced is reading….” http://ced.sog.unc.edu/what-sog_ced-is-reading-on-the-web-november-2016/ Compiled by Marcia Perritt |
Published December 30, 2016 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.
Items of interest related to CED in North Carolina:
Op-Ed explains how IMPLAN economic development impact analysis is misused. http://bit.ly/2gCPrnK Also see faculty bulletin: http://unc.live/2gVAwRB
Durham, NC featured in CityLab article asking, can historic preservation stop gentrification before it starts? http://bit.ly/2ia9Uxm
North Carolina programs receive federal economic development grants to help promote entrepreneurship: http://bit.ly/2gugv7t
Charlotte Business Journal looks at the possible impact of U.S. trade policy on North Carolina exporters. http://bit.ly/2hfWAGV
NC Railroad, NCDOT to contribute to rail infrastructure to support economic development at Mebane, NC industrial park. http://bit.ly/2i5kUff
NC Commerce releases its 2017 development tier rankings – Guilford County more distressed, some eastern counties less: http://bit.ly/1eNfPjC
Consultants’ economic development study of Dare County, NC released: tourism, infrastructure investments proposed, not incentives. http://bit.ly/2i3bcKz
The North Carolina economic development nonprofit EDPNC changes by-laws so that the incoming North Carolina Governor cannot remove and replace previously appointed board members (9 of 17). http://bit.ly/2i0gXZD
Other CED items:
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to support the mortgage market for manufactured housing, affordable housing preservation, and rural housing: https://t.co/LErlYJHM1w
Trulia looked at over 3,000 low income housing projects and found that values of properties nearby were NOT affected: http://nyti.ms/2h9DKjR
Analysis of tax reform and the fate of affordable housing, historic preservation, and other tax credits under the new administration: http://bit.ly/2hqLZsj
Fannie Mae recognizes the value of boarding vacant buildings with clear polycarbonate, not plywood: http://bit.ly/2hyQBge
New ULI report examines the intersection of healthy food and real estate development: http://bit.ly/2hxQ8OE
Last month’s edition of “What @sog_ced is reading….” http://ced.sog.unc.edu/what-sog_ced-is-reading-on-the-web-november-2016/
Compiled by Marcia Perritt
Author(s)
Tagged Under
This blog post is published and posted online by the School of Government to address issues of interest to government officials. This blog post is for educational and informational Copyright ©️ 2009 to present School of Government at the University of North Carolina. All rights reserved. use and may be used for those purposes without permission by providing acknowledgment of its source. Use of this blog post for commercial purposes is prohibited. To browse a complete catalog of School of Government publications, please visit the School’s website at www.sog.unc.edu or contact the Bookstore, School of Government, CB# 3330 Knapp-Sanders Building, UNC Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3330; e-mail sales@sog.unc.edu; telephone 919.966.4119; or fax 919.962.2707.