Showing posts in the “Durham” category

Gimme a ‘G’… Gimme an ‘O’…

Samiha Khanna · 18 Mar 2010, 1:32 PM · Comment


100318_google_031

Supporters of Durham's application for Google's high-speed Internet project spell out the company's name. Photo by Jeremy M. Lange

Supporters of Durham’s application for the national Google Fiber project gathered at the Durham Bulls Athletic Park this afternoon to spell out the company’s name on the baseball outfield.

A photographer in a plane was schedule to fly over the field around noon to take a photo of the assembly. According to Sam Poley of the Durham Convention & Visitors Bureau, more than 700 people turned out for the event. There weren’t quite enough people to spell “We want Google,” he said. Just the word “Google.” The “We want” part will be added as text, said Poley, who is part of a committee working on Durham’s bid for the Google Fiber project. He hopes to release a photo shortly.

Durham is among hundreds of towns and cities nationwide who are vying for Google’s attention and hoping to lure the company to install fiber-optic networks that would allow for Internet connections at extremely high speeds.

See the Indy’s recent cover story and Durham’s Web site for the project for more information.

Durham, Durham County, North Carolina, national, news , , , , , , ,

In Haiti, hospitals in disrepair

Lisa Sorg · 16 Mar 2010, 10:36 AM · Comment


haiti2This post is part of a week-long series from Engineering World Health, a nonprofit headquartered in Durham. A team of three biomedical engineers and technicians from EWH will be in Haiti from March 14 to 21 to assess and repair medical equipment at five clinics in the Port-au-Prince area. Our second post is written by Lora on Monday, March 15 after our first day in the hospital:

Perhaps the biggest misconception about our work here is that we are fixing everything that was damaged in the earthquake. Yes, we were brought here as part of the relief effort. But I hate to break your bubble: Most of this equipment was in very bad shape before the Richter scale read 7-plus.

Overall, we managed to fix seven pieces of equipment in a half day at one hospital. We recorded touching 15 pieces of equipment, some of which could easily be fixed with the correct parts—like a halogen bulb. The pieces that were fixed were addressed largely because of some knowledge beforehand that allowed us to bring the appropriate tools and replacement parts. Unfortunately, the hospital we visited today does not have a trained biomedical staff to do regular equipment maintenance. The designated technician wasn’t around quite enough for us to train him all that effectively. Fortunately, the nurses were well-versed in their equipment and very attentive to details. It’s exciting to see someone bring you something that is an easy fix, repair it and in the process, show them how to prevent or solve that problem in the future.

The trip home from our hospital seemed surreal. We had spent the night in the Dominican Republic the night before, so it was a rush from hotel to airport to hotel to first hospital this morning. When I finally got a chance to take in the scene on the way home, it was as if the news reels were running outside my window. Except they were life-size, complete with the smells and humidity, and the reporter’s narration was satisfyingly absent.

Our third team member, Jean Polycarpe, a biomedical technician in the U.S., grew up in southern Haiti. He has been instrumental on the trip in helping to repair anesthesia machines and other advanced medical equipment. We stopped on a rubble-filled street in front of a two-story house with collapsing balcony and crumbled foundation strewn about. This was his mother’s house, his home during high school and college. Now it was not even remotely liveable, all his belongings having been looted. As he mourned the loss of his personal library, we asked if he would tell his mother about the scene or show her the pictures we’d taken. “No, no… she doesn’t need to know this.”

For more info about EWH, please visit www.ewh.org or email info@ewh.org

Durham, news , , ,

Attorney Ken Lewis whomps competition in Durham For Obama vote

Sam Wardle · 16 Mar 2010, 9:46 AM · 1 Comment


After a forum for Democratic primary candidates for the U.S. Senate seat currently held by Republican Richard Burr, Durham For Obama activists voted overwhelmingly to support local attorney and political newbie Ken Lewis.

Lewis, not to be confused with the former CEO of Bank of America, pulled in nearly 58 percent of the 182 votes counted. N.C. Secretary of State Elaine Marshall came in a distant second with 32 percent. Former N.C. Sen. Cal Cunningham managed just 8 percent, and Lumberton attorney Marcus Williams, less than 2 percent.

Susan Harris and Wilma Ann Worthy received no votes. Neither candidate attended the event or returned questionnaires to Durham For Obama.

Since no candidate snagged an outright 70 percent of the vote, Durham For Obama will withhold its endorsement. But the results—though unscientific to the extreme—hint at who has the most pull with the state’s progressive, activist Democrats.

Continue reading »

Durham, Durham County ,

Pedestrian bridge to be hoisted Wed. over Durham Freeway

Samiha Khanna · 15 Mar 2010, 12:09 PM · Comment


ped_bridge_dayAfter a year of delays because of funding shortfalls, the new pedestrian bridge that’s been sitting on the side of N.C. 147 near the Alston Avenue exit will finally be hoisted into place beginning Wednesday night, according to a news release this morning from the City of Durham. If the weather is bad, the erection of the bridge could be postponed. This photo shows what it will look like once in place.

The $2.2 million bridge will connect neighborhoods around Alston Avenue that have long been separated by the Durham Freeway, and help current and future residents reach public transportation hubs, including a station for the Triangle Transit Authority. The original bridge, which was deteriorating and had limited visibility, was closed in 1995.

Traffic on the Durham Freeway will be re-routed to Briggs and Alston avenues from 11 p.m. Wednesday to 5:30 a.m. Thursday, the release said.

For more information on the project, visit the City of Durham Web site >>

Durham, economy, news

Triangle’s Google infatuation continues to grow

Samiha Khanna · 15 Mar 2010, 10:49 AM · Comment


In a follow-up to our cover March 10 cover story, “Gaga for Google’s fiber,” we’d like to update metrics of the involvement of the Triangle’s top three participants.

Durham’s still ahead in Facebook presence, with 2,180 fans on its “Bring Google Fiber to Durham N.C.,” page, while 935 people have signed up for “Bring Google Fiber to Raleigh!”. The western part of the Triangle is not far behind: the Facebook group “Bring Google Fiber to Chapel Hill & Carrboro N.C.” boasts 906 members.

The towns of Chapel Hill and Carrboro, and UNC-Chapel Hill, will hold a public forum at 7 p.m. today at Chapel Hill Town Hall, 405 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., to receive public comment regarding community interest in the fiber optic trial and how residents would use an ultra-high speed Internet network.

On Thursday, Durhamites hope to make a splash by corralling thousands of locals into the Durham Bulls Athletic Park at 11 a.m. Thursday to spell out “We want Google” on the field, to pose for an aerial photograph. More here >>

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Durham’s Engineering World Health in Haiti to help hospitals

Lisa Sorg · 14 Mar 2010, 11:34 AM · Comment


Haiti photoThis post is part of a week-long series from Engineering World Health, a nonprofit headquartered in Durham. A team of three biomedical engineers and technicians from EWH will be in Haiti from March 14 to 21 to assess and repair medical equipment at five clinics in the Port-au-Prince area. These posts will be written by two of the EWH team members, Lora Perry and Justin Cooper, and will include daily news, photos, and insights from Haiti regarding the state of health care two months after the earthquake. For a brief overview of this project, please see our release on the EWH website. The Indy staff is our neighbor at our downtown Durham office, and I would be remiss if I did not thank them for graciously sharing both this space for us to blog. Thanks for following our story this week!
-Justin

Our first post is written by Lora on Saturday, March 13 in preparation for the trip: Continue reading »

Durham, news , , , , ,

Mother Earth to Durham: Pick up your trash

Lisa Sorg · 9 Mar 2010, 3:23 PM · Comment


plasticbottle1Ahh, the first signs of spring as the snow melts away: Daffodils, crocuses—and trash.
According to a recent survey, Durham has fewer “extremely littered” streets than it used to, but more of its streets are “littered.”
The annual survey, known as the Litter Index (28kb, pdf) [litter-index-2009-graph] is sponsored by Keep Durham Beautiful.
Last month, volunteers surveyed select streets within a one-mile radius of City Hall and gauged the amount and type of trash on them.
The percentage of littered streets rose from roughly 7 percent last year to 20 percent this year. And the percentage of streets that had no litter dipped from 39 percent last year to just one-quarter in 2010.
Dorothea Pierce, executive director of Keep Durham Beautiful, said there could be several reasons for the increase in littered streets, including this year’s wet and windy winter weather.
“Bad weather that moves things around,” Pierce said. “Flooding and wind: Wind is a horrendous litter mover.”
The good news: There were virtually no “extremely littered” streets—the amount of litter that would require a truck to haul it away.

Updated March 14, 12:37 pm:

Pierce added this information in an e-mail to the Indy:

The Litter Index covers all of Durham, all of the City and all of the County – we obviously don’t survey each road but there is a representative sampling from all over and every type of street: industrial, commercial, residential, agricultural, and a circle that includes an area that is centered on the city hall.  These roads where chosen at random within those five parameters and we survey the same streets over a minimum of a three year span, so we have continuity.  The Litter Index results portray for us a representative sampling of the overall litter picture.  This same process is done by over 500 Keep America Beautiful affiliates from all around the country.

Durham, environment, news ,

Tuesday in Durham: Politics in the era of unlimited corporate spending

Bob Geary · 8 Mar 2010, 10:26 AM · 1 Comment


Isn’t it amazing that the the U.S. Supreme Court decision equating free speech with corporate money, the one that allows corporations to spend unlimited sums on candidates and causes they like  (or, more often, dislike), came in a case known as “Citizens United v. Federal Elections Commission.”

That’s “Citizens” as in “Corporations Hiding Behind a Made-Up Name that Makes Us Look Like We’re Just Folks.”

The ramifications of this, and what we in North Carolina should do about it, will be discussed at a forum, “The Future of Campaign Financing in North Carolina,” on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Beyu Caffe in Durham.

From the Facebook listing:

Panelists:
Damon Circosta, Executive Director of N.C. Center for Voter Education.
Chase Foster, Director of NC Voters for Clean Elections
Representative Henry M. Michaux, Jr., North Carolina House of Representatives – District 31

Moderated by: Laura Leslie, WUNC’s Capitol Bureau Chief

Beyu Caffé is located at 335 W. Main St., Durham, NC 27701

In the January 21st 5-4 ruling of United v. FEC, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned restrictions against corporate spending in American elections. Corporations are no longer viewed separately from individuals and are not limited to spending through Political Action Committees. They can now directly support or not support their choice of candidates.

So what does this mean for North Carolina, cities and counties in the Triangle, and you? Will we see corporations spending more on candidates or is public financing of campaigns in our future?

Durham, North Carolina, politics

Google Fiber boosters to spell out wishes at DBAP on March 18

Samiha Khanna · 5 Mar 2010, 1:52 PM · 1 Comment


picture-2Folks, this is even bigger than the “We Want Oprah!” sign that used to occupy the windows of a converted motel on Corcoran Street downtown.

Durham wants Google. Specifically, Durham residents, businesses, elected leaders and creatives are hoping to lure Google Fiber, an project that Google is embarking on to bring broadband fiber and high-speed Internet access to one or more lucky cities in the U.S. Google has opened the application process to the entire country, and like many cities across the country have demonstrated in recent days, Durham wants in.

To demonstrate Durham’s engagement, a committee has organized an effort to spell the words “We want Google” on the field of the Durham Bulls Athletic Park on Thursday, March 18, said Sam Poley, a spokesman on Durham’s application for Google Fiber. An aerial photographer will take photos of the display that day and submit them to Google when the application is due, March 26. Continue reading »

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Revisit sign ordinance? Let’s not go there, committee tells Medlin

Samiha Khanna · 3 Mar 2010, 4:43 PM · 1 Comment


After a meeting of city and county elected officials, it doesn’t appear that the City Council or County Commissioners will be reconsidering the Durham’s 26-page ordinance on signage any time soon. When asked by Durham’s planning department whether it’s time to revisit the ordinance, Durham leaders vehemently answered, “No.”

“I personally am not in favor of opening the sign ordinance,” said City Councilwoman Diane Catotti, at Wednesday’s meeting of Durham’s Joint City-County Planning Committee, for which she is chairwoman. “I think it’s a lot cleaner in terms of litigation to support the sign ordinance in place. I do fear litigation. It’s a lengthy and costly process and I don’t think I have to remind any of you that the city has significant litigation still pending. I’ll just say ‘lacrosse.’”

Catotti commented that sign litigation is a prominent form of action taken against governments, and that Durham itself went through a nearly 10-year battle over a signage lawsuit from the 1980s and 1990s that cost the city nearly $1.5 million. Continue reading »

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