Friday, August 2, 2013

Meeting on Central Library to Go AHEAD!

8/2/13


Saw an article in the HARD COPY of the Winston-Salem Joural concerning the NEW site for the 5th Street Public Library=both locations appear to be directed towards streets[spirits][mindsets] association with NUTS=Chest[NUT] or Wall[NUT]; nut is also associtated with [sex];

Goal of the NEW site for the Main Public Library is to set up white man system so that any body who goes into the library or comes out UNDERSTANDS that no matter what information they may obtain from the library; when it comes to dealing with them it is a LIE!!; not to mention that a place of information placed beside the county JAIL would be very intimidating to anyone who would/or may want to challenge those/in atuhority with any type of information; not to mention those who are present patrons who find it difficult to follow orders/be servants to white males, [ESPECIALLY] African American males; and ESPECIALLY any of them they may suffer from some type of LEARNING DISABLITY;


The tearing down and closing of the current 5th Street Library=would provide ample opportunity to insteal to those African American males who usually go to the public library that it is easy for their right/privilege to be taken away so they would have no where to go; and not to mention that the tearing down of the 5th street library [which would represent where guy who wears blue who wants to date me starting going so he could see]would be white males sending message-tear down the relationship with the female who he came to the library to see;=lot of money to put into one relationship=WHY?=MONEY=certain relationship generate certain wealth; Like the girl and guy marrying in the WHITE society; their marriage produces certain results, economically, socially; and in the case with the AFrican American male who wears blue=white males goal is to ensure that he does not access/marry AFrican American female who is not a prostitute working for white males=means they would not have control of the MONEY/society[African American neighborhood that white males have assigned to guy who wears blue clothes/duke fan];





[If you go The public meetings have been set from 1 to 2:30 p.m. Aug. 13 at the Forsyth County Government Center; from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Aug. 20 at Wake Forest Biotech Place; and from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Aug. 27 at the Central Library.]

CONFIRMATION=CODE WORDS AND NUMBERS; =13,2, 27, GOV., WAKE FOREST BIO;
13=13th Amendment-Amendment XIII-Section 1.
Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction. Section 2.Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation
[http://www.law.cornell.edu/constitution/amendmentxiii];
 
2=TWIN stolen;
27=BIRTHday of TWIN stolen
GOV=government [control];GOV.=Government [control];
WAKE FORREST -place where they gave me a "WARNING ticket" for looking up gov. information and they are a federal depository library [0444 and 0445;[http://catalog.gpo.gov/fdlpdir/FDLPdir.jsp?flag=searchp&st_12=NC];
BIO=chemical=WSTA[Winston-Salem Transit Authority] owned by chemical company/DOT;[have experienced chemicals on skin; fumes on city buses; wrote DOT=no response;

And the Winston-Salem Forsyth County Public Library Federal Depository Number is 0446;

Commissioners debate the role of public input on libraries

[http://www.journalnow.com/article_233ff428-fb19-11e2-a70f-001a4bcf6878.html];

Posted: Thursday, August 1, 2013 10:13 pm | Updated: 10:20 pm, Thu Aug 1, 2013.



After a lengthy presentation and debate, the Forsyth County commissioners directed county staff to move forward with three meetings in August during which community members will get to give input on potential locations for a new Central Library.The commissioners got a preview of a presentation about the seven potential sites during their briefing Thursday afternoon, but a lengthy debate ensued after Commissioner Gloria Whisenhunt questioned why more community meetings were needed when the county didn’t yet have a cost analysis.What do you think of the debate over the new library site?
Marco Andrade, a city-county planner, presented a broad overview of each site, including a brief site analysis, parking and zoning considerations and a list of pros and cons.
Commissioner Everette Witherspoon disagreed with Whisenhunt, saying, “We have to get the public input. It’s our job to make plans with the public, not to make plans for the public.”
He pointed out that voters had already approved $27 million in bonds for the central library.
“We know what the price is going to be, but it’s our job to always listen to the people and their concerns,” Witherspoon said.
Commissioner Dave Plyler was the chairman of the board when the library bonds were placed on the ballot. He said this is a golden opportunity to hear from members of the public about what they want.
“The concept we presented was, you tell us what you want and we’ll do everything we can to make the dream come true,” Plyler said.
Commissioner Bill Whiteheart said the county wanted to get the most it could for its money. He said a site was not the only element to take into consideration. The type of building needed in an environment of changing technology is key and could rule out some sites, he said. He encouraged planning department staff members to include other elements into their community presentation.
Witherspoon encouraged the board members to move forward and not delay the project.
Whisenhunt said, “I’m not delaying. I’m trying to skip a step. We’ve already had public input. … No matter what the input of the people will be, we’re not going to please all the people.”
The county held public meetings in 2011 and 2012, but Deputy County Manager Damon Sanders-Pratt said those just gave people a chance to weigh in on what they would like to see at the library, not on specific sites.
After further discussion, Richard Linville, the board’s chairman, said he appeared to have a consensus for county staff members to move forward with the meetings but asked them to make it clear that, though commissioners will consider public input, they will ultimately base their site decision on several factors.
Voters approved $40 million in bonds in 2010 to build or renovate libraries in downtown Winston-Salem, Kernersville and Clemmons. The county asked for proposals last year for a new central library site, and five were submitted. The county also has two sites of its own in consideration. County staff members are analyzing financial considerations with the sites and will bring that back to the commissioners in September or October along with a summary of community comments.
mevans@wsjournal.com



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