|
What @sog_ced is reading online: June 2021By CED News and Social MediaPublished June 30, 2021The 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: NY Times report on adaptive reuse of historic mills in NC, including Rocky Mount, High Point and Winston-Salem. https://nyti.ms/3dugjSo City of Durham follows Asheville’s lead and commits to public infrastructure investments in historically Black neighborhoods as a form of reparations. https://bit.ly/3qBOZH6 “Revitalizing NC Towns” story features the work of UNC DFI on public-private partnerships to reuse the historic Broughton Hospital campus in Morganton. https://unc.live/3hoSkoz Other CED items: Community colleges engaging affordable housing activities to address housing insecurity among their students https://bit.ly/3whvvJf Lack of funds for security deposits can lock renters into their current housing. Article explores for-profit and nonprofit approaches to this issue and pros and cons of each. https://bit.ly/3duXpe3 DFI Online Dare County asks UNC DFI to focus on two sites for affordable housing development; tax credit financing mechanisms explained. https://bit.ly/3dvd2lz ncIMPACT co-authors offer Initiative Bulletin: Community Development Organizations’ Capacity to Respond to COVID-19: A Theoretical Approach to the Strategic Use of Social Capital https://bit.ly/3x7QOOB Last month’s edition of “What @sog_ced is reading….” May 2021 Compiled by Sara Cockerham |
Published June 30, 2021 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:
NY Times report on adaptive reuse of historic mills in NC, including Rocky Mount, High Point and Winston-Salem. https://nyti.ms/3dugjSo
City of Durham follows Asheville’s lead and commits to public infrastructure investments in historically Black neighborhoods as a form of reparations. https://bit.ly/3qBOZH6
“Revitalizing NC Towns” story features the work of UNC DFI on public-private partnerships to reuse the historic Broughton Hospital campus in Morganton. https://unc.live/3hoSkoz
Other CED items:
Community colleges engaging affordable housing activities to address housing insecurity among their students https://bit.ly/3whvvJf
Lack of funds for security deposits can lock renters into their current housing. Article explores for-profit and nonprofit approaches to this issue and pros and cons of each. https://bit.ly/3duXpe3
DFI Online
Dare County asks UNC DFI to focus on two sites for affordable housing development; tax credit financing mechanisms explained. https://bit.ly/3dvd2lz
ncIMPACT co-authors offer Initiative Bulletin: Community Development Organizations’ Capacity to Respond to COVID-19: A Theoretical Approach to the Strategic Use of Social Capital https://bit.ly/3x7QOOB
Last month’s edition of “What @sog_ced is reading….” May 2021
Compiled by Sara Cockerham
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.