WEEK OF NOV. 10, 2008
ORDER NOW — AUBURN CIVITAN CLUB OFFERS SMOKED TURKEYS & HAMS FOR THANKSGIVING
Smoked Turkey (12-14 lb) or Smoked Picnic Ham (8-10 lb) — $35 each
Ready for pick up, hot off the smoker, on Sunday, November 23, 2008 at 3:00 PM, at the Elks Club on Opelika Road. Make your check payable to: Auburn Civitan Club & mail to 1481 Morning Glory Circle, Auburn, AL 36832. Or phone your order to: Charles Eick (334)-821-5623.
CITY OF AUBURN / CONSTRUCTION PROJECT STATUS REPORTS (updated weekly)
PUBLIC WORKS: www.auburnalabama.org/pw/status.asp
WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT: www.auburnalabama.org/wrm/status.asp
THROUGH NOV. 20 — BEAT BAMA FOOD DRIVE KICK-OFF
The Beat Bama Food Drive will kick off on the Samford Hall lawn and run through Nov. 20. Drop-off locations for canned goods will be set up around campus and there is a Web site (http://www.beatbamafooddrive.com) in which money can be donated. The drive will benefit the East Alabama Food Bank. Please help Auburn University and the Student Government Association reach their goal of 250,000 pounds to feed the hungry of East Alabama and beat Bama. For more information, contact Ashley Nichols at agn0001@auburn.edu.
CITY OF AUBURN BOARD VACANCIES
• Two vacancies on the Parks & Recreation Advisory Board were announced at the October 21 City Council meeting and will be filled at the November 18 meeting.
• One vacancy on the Public Park & Recreation Board will be announced at the November 18 City Council meeting and will be filled at the December 16 meeting.
• Two vacancies on the Cemeteries Advisory Board will be announced at the November 18 City Council meeting and will be filled at the December 16 meeting.
• Two vacancies on the Board of Zoning Adjustment will be announced at the December 2 City Council meeting and will be filled at the January 6, 2009 meeting
Citizens interested in serving are encouraged to contact a City Council member or notify the City Manager’s Office at webocm@auburnalabama.org or call 501-7260.
Opinions sought in campus-wide parking and transportation survey
Do you have unmet transportation needs on or off campus? Faculty, staff and administrators are encouraged to participate in an online campus-wide parking and transportation survey. The survey will assess the transportation needs of employees and gather information on their current transportation habits. Data generated from the survey will
provide valuable information to the Office of Campus Planning, Office of Parking and Transit Services and the Traffic and Parking Committee. You may access the survey at this link (http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=ylHottx9U_2fo3rnEouZ7eaQ_3d_3d). E-mail rollifl@auburn.edu if you need more information.
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MONDAY, NOV. 10, 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM — POVERTY AWARENESS WEEK / PUBLIC FORUMS
Held in AU’s new Student center, room 2216. Free & open to the public.
The opening forum of Poverty Awareness Week, “Understanding Poverty in Alabama,” includes participants Cindy Reed, director of Auburn’s Truman Pierce Institute, Kristina Scott from the Alabama Poverty Project, Linda Tilly of Voices for Alabama’s Children and Shakita Jones and Melissa Oliver from Alabama Arise.
The closing forum, “Preparing Educators and Counselors,” (Thursday, Nov. 13, 11:00 a.m.-12:30 p.m., in 2216 Student Center) features Ivan Watts, associate professor and acting director of diversity, recruitment and retention for the
College of Education, will discuss poverty’s impact on children and adolescents. Shakita Jones of Alabama Arise will address education as a solution to poverty. Stephen Stetson of Alabama Arise will speak about “Dropouts and Alabama’s Workforce: Policies and the Rhetoric of Poverty.” Linda Tilly of Voices for Alabama’s Children will speak on
“Education and Poverty: Making the Connection.”
–The debut of Poverty Awareness Week at Auburn University Nov. 10-13 will help equip graduates of the College of Education as teachers and counselors to assist children and families affected by poverty. The four-day program was designed by Jamie Carney, professor in AU’s Dept of Special Education, Rehabilitation, Counseling/School of Psychology, and students in the Auburn chapter of the international counseling honor society, Chi Sigma Iota. For more information, contact Carney at 844-2885 or carnejs@auburn.edu.
MONDAY, NOV. 10, noon– AUBURN PLANNING COMMISSION PACKET MEETING (AGENDA DISCUSSION)
Held in the conference room, Development Services Bldg, 171 N. Ross St. Open to all.
Agenda & full packet: www.auburnalabama.org/pc/agenda.asp
Agenda includes:
CITIZENS’ COMMUNICATION
OLD BUSINESS
CONSENT AGENDA
1. Donahue Land Annexation PL-2008-00738
Applicant: Donahue Land, LLC
General Location: Off of North Donahue Drive, east of Camden Ridge Subdivision and south of West Farmville Road
Zoning District: Outside of the City limits
Action Requested: Recommendation to City Council for annexation of approximately 33.63 acres
2. Donahue Land Farmville Annexation PL-2008-00739
Applicant: Donahue Land, LLCc
General Location: Off of North Donahue Drive, east of Camden Ridge Subdivision and south of West Farmville Road
Zoning District: Outside of the City limits
Action Requested: Recommendation to City Council for annexation of approximately 13.8 acres
NEW BUSINESS
3. The Cotswolds Rezoning PUBLIC HEARING PL-2008-00646
Applicant: JEDD Land Company, LLC
General Location: Off of Richland Road and adjacent to The Cotswolds, Phases 1A, 1B, and 1C
Zoning District: Rural (R)
Action Requested: Recommendation to City Council to rezone approximately 99.1 acres from Rural (R) to Comprehensive Development District (CDD)
4. The Cotswolds Rezoning PUBLIC HEARING PL-2008-00755
Applicant: JEDD Land Company, LLC
General Location: Off of Richland Road and adjacent to The Cotswolds, Phases 1A, 1B, and 1C
Zoning District: Rural (R)
Action Requested: Recommendation to City Council to rezone approximately 311.6 acres from Rural (R) to Development District Housing (DDH)
5. The Cotswolds Rezoning PUBLIC HEARING PL-2008-00647
Applicant: JEDD Land Company, LLC
General Location: Off of Richland Road and adjacent to The Cotswolds, Phases 1A, 1B, and 1C
Zoning District: Rural (R), pending Comprehensive Development District (CDD) (Case PL-2008-00646) and Development District Housing (DDH) (Case PL-2008-00755)
Action Requested: Recommendation to City Council to apply the Planned Development District (PDD) designation to approximately 410.7 acres
6. Lundy Chase PDD Amendment PUBLIC HEARING PL-2008-00756
Applicant: The Musselwhite Group, Inc.
General Location: South of Richland Road and north of Willow Creek Subdivision
Zoning District: Planned Development District (PDD) with Development District Housing (DDH) underlying
Action Requested: Recommendation to City Council to amend Ordinance 2496 that placed the Planned Development District (PDD) designation on 98.87 acres
7. Lundy Chase, Phase 1, 2nd Revision PL-2008-00763
Applicant: The Musselwhite Group, Inc.
General Location: South of Richland Road and north of Willow Creek Subdivision
Zoning District: Planned Development District (PDD) with Development District Housing (DDH) underlying
Action Requested: Amended final plat approval for a 24-lot performance residential subdivision
8. Camden Ridge 11th Addition, Phase 2B PUBLIC HEARING PL-2008-00761
Applicant: North Woods, Inc.
General Location: Parsons Circle, adjacent to Camden Ridge 10th Addition
Zoning District: Development District Housing (DDH)
Action Requested: Preliminary plat approval for a 5-lot conventional residential subdivision
9. Camden Ridge 11th Addition, Phase 2B PL-2008-00762
Applicant: North Woods, Inc.
General Location: Parsons Circle, adjacent to Camden Ridge 10th Addition
Zoning District: Development District Housing (DDH)
Action Requested: Final plat approval for a 5-lot conventional residential subdivision
10. Longleaf Crossing, Phase Five PUBLIC HEARING PL-2008-00771
Applicant: Tiger Crossing
General Location: West Longleaf Drive
Zoning District: Planned Development District (PDD) with Comprehensive Development District (CDD) underlying
Action Requested: Preliminary plat approval for a 5-lot conventional subdivision
11. Furniture Care, Inc. PUBLIC HEARING PL-2008-00764
Applicant: David Fowler
General Location: 1962 Mall Boulevard, Suite A
Zoning District: Comprehensive Development District (CDD)
Action Requested: Recommendation to City Council for conditional use approval for a commercial support use (furniture repair and refinishing)
OTHER BUSINESS. CHAIRMAN’S COMMUNICATION. STAFF COMMUNICATION. ADJOURNMENT.
MONDAY, NOV. 10, 4:00 PM – ARCHITECTURE LECTURE: INSTANT CITY DUBAI
Held in AU’s Dudley Hall, auditorium, room B-6.
AU’s College of Architecture, Design and Construction will host a lecture by Fatih Rifki titled “Instant City Dubai: Its People, Places and (urban) Processes”. Rifki is the dean of the American University of Sharjah. For more information, contact Justin Miller in the School of Architecture at 844-5171 or justin.miller@auburn.edu.
MONDAY, NOV. 10, 6:30 – 7:30 PM — COMMUNITY FORUM / TOO MANY CHILDREN LEFT BEHIND: HOW CAN WE CLOSE THE ACHIEVEMENT GAP?
Held at the Auburn First Baptist Church. Open to all.
Auburn University will host a public forum on what citizens in Auburn and Lee County can do to close the widening achievement gap between low-income and minority children and their peers in school. Help our community make decision that will affect our children’s future. Join in this community forum sponsored by Access and Community Initiatives, a unit of AU’s Office and Diversity and Multicultural Affairs. This forum is part of a statewide series of National Issues Forums designed to promote discussion and decision-making on issues related to public education. The forum in Auburn is sponsored by the Caroline Marshall Draughon Center for the Arts and Humanities in the College of Liberal Arts, Access and Community Initiatives in the Office of Diversity and Multicultural Affairs and the David Mathews Center for Civic Life. For more information, contact Mark Wilson at 844-4946 or Paulette Dilworth at 844-4184.
TUESDAY, NOV. 11, 8:30 am — FOREST ECOLOGY PRESERVE AUTUMN WALKS
Held at the Louise Kreher Forest Ecology Preserve (North College Street just past the Auburn fish ponds on the right). Meet at the Pavilion. Free & open to all; no reservations required. Cancelled if rain. https://fp.auburn.edu/preserve/
Autumn walks will be held every Tuesday and Thursday at the Louise Kreher Forest Ecology Preserve at 8:30 a.m. Walks are geared toward exercise and enjoying the preserve’s fall beauty. Walks will last approximately one hour. Info: Jennifer Lolley at 707-6512. The preserve is open seven days a week from 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
TUESDAY, NOV. 11, 10:00 AM — ANNUAL AUBURN VETERANS DAY CEREMONY
Held at at the Auburn Veterans Memorial Monument, located at the northeast corner of Ross Street and Glenn Avenue. Join the City of Auburn and the Auburn Veterans Committee for the Annual Veterans Day. The program includes music from the Auburn High School Choral Company and bagpiper Dan Drummond. Please join us as we pay tribute to our veterans. For more information, contact: City of Auburn Economic Development Department, Phone: 334-501-7270,
E-mail: webecondev@auburnalabama.org.
TUESDAY, NOV. 11, 10:15 – 11:45 AM — DR. WALLEY RETAN / CRISIS IN AMERICAN HEALTH CARE
Held at the Best Western, 1577 S. College Ave. The public is welcome to attend.
Dr. Wally Retan, M.D., from Birmingham, will be speaking on Crisis in American Health Care at an OLLI (lifelong learning) program. Visitors invited to attend this program.
CANCELLED – NO MEETING IN NOVEMBER TUESDAY, NOV. 11, 11:30 am – AUBURN GREENSPACE ADVISORY BOARD
TUESDAY, NOV. 11, 12:30 pm — (RET.) COL. JEANNE PICARIELLO, MEMBER U.S. OLYMPIC COMMITTEE / WOMEN IN SPORTS: FAIRNESS, FITNESS, AND FINANCES
Held in AU’s Thach Hall, room 202. Free & open to the public.
Picariello, chair of the Multi-Sport Organizations Council of the U.S. Olympics Committee, serves on the board of the Alabama Fair Housing Council in Montgomery and is a candidate for a Ph.D. in public administration at AU. Sponsored by the AU’s Women’s Studies Program. Info: Ruth Crocker crockrc@auburn.edu or Laura Obert lco0001@auburn.edu.
TUESDAY, NOV. 11, 1:00 PM — BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES IN URBAN ECOSYSTEMS
Held in AU’s School of Forestry & Wildlife Sciences Bldg, room 3315. Open to all.
Richard Pouyat of the U.S. Forest Service will present a seminar, “Biogeochemical Cycles in Urban Ecosystems: Baltimore and New York as Case Studies,”. Pouyat is an internationally reknown researcher who studies urban woodland ecology, urban biogeochemistry and integration of ecological and social sciences. He has worked extensively with the Urban Ecology Long Term Ecological Research Site in Baltimore. This event is sponsored by the Auburn University Center for Forest Sustainability. More info: Graeme Lockaby at lockabg@auburn.edu or at 844-1054.
POSTPONED TO NEXT TUESDAY, NOV. 18 TUESDAY, NOV. 11, 7:00 – 8:00 PM — ENVIRONMENTAL FILM: THE PRICE OF RENEWAL
Held at the Auburn Unitarian Universalist Fellowship (AUUF) Hall, 450 E. Thach Ave. Free & open to all.
What are the challenges of bringing the “neighbor” back into the “hood”? How can an urban village be built from an ethnically, culturally, and economically diverse background? This movie documents the issue of community development and civic engagement of the once crime-ridden, deteriorating neighborhood of City Heights of San Diego, CA. This district, earmarked for a freeway and abandoned by its citizens, was transformed and revitalized into a lively area by people working together and helping each other. The movie is a part of the series “California and the American Dream” by Paul Espinosa, Lyn Goldfarb, and Jed Riffe. (In September, another film of this series, “Ripe for Change,” was shown
at AU’s Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art.) More info on the film at www.californiadreamseries.org.
TIME CHANGE — TUESDAY, NOV. 11, 7:00 – 8:30 pm 6:30 – 8:00 pm  — ALLIANCE FOR PEACE & JUSTICE (APF) www.peaceeagle.org
Held at the Busch Center, behind the Auburn Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 450 E. Thatch Ave. Open to all.
Note: This meeting was rescheduled from Nov. 4.
TUESDAY, NOV 11, 7:30 PM — JCSM: Film / The Meaning of Tea
Held at the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Arts. Free & open to the public.
“The Meaning of Tea” is an engaging and whimsical documentary film that explores the romance and complexities surrounding tea, a universally beloved and widely consumed beverage. Following the screening of his film, director and producer Scott Chamberlin-Hoyt will engage the audience in a discussion about the film and its meanings. Presented by the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art as part of the Southern Arts Federation’s Southern Circuit Tour of Independent Filmmakers.
CHANGED TO WEDNESDAY, NOV. 12, MONDAY, NOV. 10 – LEE COUNTY COMMISSION
4:00 pm – work session / 6:00 pm – regular session
Held in the commission chambers, historic courthouse building, 215 S. Ninth St, Opelika. Open to all.
Agenda to be posted at www.leeco.us.
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 12, 4:00 pm – AUBURN HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMISSION
Held in the Development Services Bldg, 171 N. Ross St. Open to all. www.auburnalabama.org/hpc/agenda.asp
THURSDAY, NOV 13 , 8:30 am — FOREST ECOLOGY PRESERVE AUTUMN WALKS
Held at the Louise Kreher Forest Ecology Preserve (North College Street just past the Auburn fish ponds on the right). Meet at the Pavilion. Free & open to all; no reservations required. Cancelled if rain. https://fp.auburn.edu/preserve/
Autumn walks will be held every Tuesday and Thursday at the Louise Kreher Forest Ecology Preserve at 8:30 a.m. Walks are geared toward exercise and enjoying the preserve’s fall beauty. Walks will last approximately one hour. Info: Jennifer Lolley at 707-6512. The preserve is open seven days a week from 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
THURSDAY, NOV. 13 — CITY OF AUBURN / Portion of East Longleaf Drive to Close November 13
THURSDAY, NOV. 13, 11:00 AM – 12:30 PM — POVERTY AWARENESS WEEK / PUBLIC FORUMS
Held in AU’s new Student center, room 2216. Free & open to the public.
The closing forum of Poverty Awareness week, “Preparing Educators and Counselors,” features Ivan Watts, associate professor and acting director of diversity, recruitment and retention for the College of Education, will discuss poverty’s impact on children and adolescents. Shakita Jones of Alabama Arise will address education as a solution to poverty. Stephen Stetson of Alabama Arise will speak about “Dropouts and Alabama’s Workforce: Policies and the Rhetoric of Poverty.” Linda Tilly of Voices for Alabama’s Children will speak on “Education and Poverty: Making the Connection.”
The debut of Poverty Awareness Week at Auburn University Nov. 10-13 will help equip graduates of the College of Education as teachers and counselors to assist children and families affected by poverty. The four-day program was designed by Jamie Carney, professor in the Department of Special Education, Rehabilitation, Counseling/School
Psychology, and students in the Auburn chapter of the international counseling honor society, Chi Sigma Iota. For more information, contact Carney at 844-2885 or carnejs@auburn.edu.
THURSDAY, NOV. 13, noon – LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS OF EAST ALABAMA / Brown bag lunch meeting
Held at Bruno’s community room. Open to all.
THURSDAY, NOV. 13, noon – ART MUSEUM / A LITTLE LIGHT MUSIC
Held at AU’s Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Arts. Free & open to all. Enjoy lunch in the museum café on Thursdays while the lovely sounds of local musicians echo through the museum. Sponsored by the Auburn Chamber Museum Society.
THURSDAY, NOV. 13, 1:00 – 4:00 PM — SAUGAHATCHEE CREEK / STREAM & FLOODPLAIN RESTORATION VEGETATION SEMINAR
Held at the Saugahatchee Stream and Floodplain Restoration Project, the most recent SWaMP-funded project. [SWaMP = Saugahatchee Watershed Management Project www.swamp.auburn.edu ]
Free, but registration required. To register and receive tour details, contact Eve Brantley at brantef@auburn.edu .
Join this overview of floodplain and stream vegetation for restoration sites at the Saugahatchee Stream and Floodplain Restoration Project. An afternoon tour will discuss plant selection, plant installation, monitoring, and a project description. Additionally, a variety of plant types (container, live stakes, bare root, transplants) will be on-site and there will be an opportunity for hands-on participation. Tentative Agenda
1-2 pm Introduction to Stream Restoration and the Saugahatchee Restoration Project
2-4 am Field site visit
- Vegetation Selection & Flooding Zones
- Vegetation Options (container, bare root, live stake, transplant)
- Vegetation Monitoring
For an online tour of the Saugahatchee Stream and Floodplain Restoration Project, go to: http://www.aces.edu/dept/fisheries/aww/swamp/swamp-blog/?p=99
THURSDAY, FEB. 14, 4:30 pm – OPELIKA HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMISSION
Held in the Planning Chambers, Opelika Public Works Bldg, 700 Fox Trail, Opelika. Open to all.
THURSDAY, NOV. 13, 5:00 pm – AUBURN PLANNING COMMISSION
Held in the council chambers, 141 N. Ross St. Open to all.
Agenda & full packet: www.auburnalabama.org/pc/agenda.asp (See details above, Monday, noon, Nov 10, PC packet meeting)
THURSDAY, NOV 13, 7:00 PM – SCIENCE CAFÉ AT THE GNU’S ROOM www.thegnusroom.com
Held at The Gnu’s Room, 414 S. Gay St, Auburn. Ph: 334-821-5550. Free & open to all.
Featured Guest TBA
FRIDAY, NOV. 14, 9:00 AM – 2:00 PM — FREE ONE-DAY ELECTRONICS RECYCLING & SHREDDING EVENT
Held at the Auburn Chamber of Commerce parking lot, located at 714 East Glenn Avenue. Rain or shine.
The City of Auburn’s Environmental Services Department-Recycling Division and the Auburn Chamber of Commerce will co-host a free one day electronic recycling and secure document shredding. Don’t miss this opportunity to properly dispose of outdated, unwanted, or broken electronic items and securely destroy important documents. All Auburn citizens, businesses, and non-profit organizations are encouraged to participate.
–The City of Auburn offers electronics recycling year-round. Televisions 19″ & larger may be left at curbside for recycling. Computer-related equipment and televisions smaller than 19″ are accepted by appointment only at the Environmental Services Department main building, located at 365-A North Donahue Drive.
For more information, please contact André Richardson in the City of Auburn Environmental Services Department at 501-3084 or the Auburn Chamber of Commerce at 887-7011.
FRIDAY, NOV. 14, 6:00 PM — BURN THE BULLDOGS PEP RALLY
Held at Toomer’s Corner, downtown Auburn. Free & open to all.
Auburn’s SGA is hosting a pep rally in Toomer’s Corner to get the students and fans pumped up about the Auburn vs. Georgia game. Info: Hannah Zito; E-mail: hez0001@auburn.edu.
SATURDAY, NOV. 15, 11:30 AM — AU HOME FOOTBALL GAME v. UNIV. OF GEORGIA
SATURDAY, NOV. 15, 8:00 pm – SUN BELT READING SERIES
Held at the Gnu’s Room, 414 S. Gay Street. www.thegnusroom.com Ph: 334-821-5550. Free & open to all.
This Sun Belt Reading Series will feature writers Kirk Curnutt, Ron Riekki, Carrie Spell, and Shanti Weiland.
Kirk Curnutt, author of Breathing Out the Ghost – Best Fiction in the Indiana Center for the Book’s Best Books of 2008 Awards, is professor and chair at Troy University’s Montgomery Campus. He was also tapped as the nonfiction gold medalist in this year’s William Faulkner – William Wisdom Creative Writing Contest, sponsored by the Pirate’s Alley Faulkner Society. His next novel, Dixie Noir, will be published in November 2009.
Ronald Riekki is the author of the novel U.P., published by Ghost Road Press and nominated for the Sewanee Writers’ Series by National Book Award winner, John Casey. U.P. is scheduled for release this month. Riekki has a Masters in Fine Arts in Theater Arts from Brandeis University, an M. F. A. in Creative Writing from the University of Virginia, and a Ph. D. in Literature & Creative Writing from Western Michigan University.
Carrie Spell received her Ph. D. in Creative Writing from the University of Southern Mississippi’s Center for Writers. Her fiction has been included in more than 20 journals and magazines including McSweeney’s, Black Warrior Review, Georgetown Review, Beloit Fiction Journal, Phantasmagoria, and Nightsun. Her work has received a Henfield Prize, has been nominated twice for a Pushcart Prize, and is forthcoming in the anthology, Online Writing: the Best of the First Ten Years.
Shanti Weiland, author of the chapbook, Daughter En Route and winner of the Joan Johnson award in poetry, currently teaches at the University of Alabama. She received her Ph. D. in English at the University of Southern Mississippi. Her essays and poetry are featured in numerous literary journals and reviews in addition to the anthology, Great American Poetry Show.
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Thanks for your interest and support.
Email: placeforum@gmail.com
Web: http://placeforum.org/blog/
Nov. 10, 2008