Day Three: Pathways to Prosperity

This morning we were able to sleep in until 6:30 – thank goodness. We drove the short distance into Charlotte to meet with Pathways to Prosperity, a group project made up of UNC’s Center for Community Capital, the Charlotte Housing Authority, Third Fifth Bank, and others who work to help improve banking and financial literacy among the clients of the CHA.

Many people fall into a trap, using credit to pay credit, suffering massive health bills when uninsured, or failing to understand how to manage the money that they have. These people are often unable to organize their debts to pay them, or to get a bank account. North Carolina makes payday loans – usually viciously predatory – illegal, which helps, but many people with a low income are unable to use banking services. This group from UNC partnered with CHA and these others to teach the clients of CHA’s FSS (family Self Sufficiency) program to manage their funds and how to least painfully pay off their debts, while also offering a variety of banking services designed to support people with past unfortunate banking histories to relearn how to use a bank account or credit responsibly.

The CHA is also heavily involved in renovating and changing their subsidized housing projects to make them into much more attractive mixed income developments. This has brought up property values and sparked new growth and development near each project, but has also driven property values up massively. Nothing without cost.

This is incredibly valuable – how could anyone get out of debt if they didn’t have a way to manage it? Or have never learned how to think about money?

Day Two: Dinner with the Wolfpack

Dinner was to be at the Embassy Suites – a joint dinner with the Bus Tour of the new NC State University faculty, who began the bus tour idea and always go at the same time as Carolina.

Before the dinner, David (Public Health) and I wanted to take a walk – we’ve been sitting and standing and eating a lot, but not moving around much. We went across the very busy road (we’d been told that was a bad idea, but hey…) and headed up the gravel track toward – the giant Nascar track. We were hoping to go take a peek, but it was too far off. We walked up close enough to see it a long way off, and spoke to a couple of nice friendly people camping out in one of the many rvs. They told us that there were practice runs occurring at the track. It sounded like chemical release sirens, or air raid sirens in old movies – a loud whining drone rising and falling off in the distance. If I was camping out and heard that, I think I would have nightmares.

The dinner itself was very nice – with even nicer appetizers and drinks before – with a decent buffet and a further lecture on the new Nutrition Research Institute facilities. The best part was that it was with the new NC State faculty, who sat mingled in with us. I met a couple of very nice people from the Veterinary School and the Planning School. Their new Special Collections Librarian came over to visit afterwards when I was sitting talking about Michigan’s economy with the veterinarian (who was also named Susan). Susan the vet and Lisa the librarian invited me and Daniel to come visit them to have lunch and meet their new veterinary librarian, whose background is as a medical librarian. I really enjoyed talking to them and would be happy to meet up with them anyway, but it’s especially good because of the professional connection. That’s exactly what was hoped for with this joint dinner.

Day Two: Nutrition Research Institute

After lunch at the dam, we rode drowsily along to get to Kannapolis, where a new research campus modeled on the RTP is being built. Along the way, Jim Laloudis gave us a talk about the economic and desegregation history of the area, as he had done all throughout the tour. He flew out after dinner that night, which was a loss, but we gained Ferrell Guillory to also give us historical background for some of the rest of the tour.

Kannapolis was a company town for Pillowtex, a very large textile manufacturer that went out of business in 2003. The town began to sink fast, and is at 30% unemployment. David H. Murdock of Dole Foods had an affection for the town as he had once owned Pillowtex in a previous incarnation, so he bought it. He decided to work with the state universities to create a center for research like RTP, focusing on biotechnology, nutrition, and health research. He moved two of his factories to the state and took funding for the universities to use in this project instead of the usual incentive tax breaks for moving the factories – generous. The new UNC Nutrition Research Institute, part of the School of Public Health, will focus on nutrition and food and plant science. Carolina, Duke, NC State, UNC A&T, UNC Charlotte, and others will all have faculty and projects based there, working in many cases in the same labs, as well as assorted private companies focusing on biomedical endeavors.

We were each given a hard hat and a florescent vest to wear – the center is still under construction. I had looked up a few pictures, and there were some in our Tour Book – but nothing could prepare me to see this building. It looked like many other buildings I have seen – vaguely Georgian, with red brick and tall white columns – but is incredibly massive. It’s five stories, but it felt more like ten.

The entry way to the Core Lab – the only one safe enough to visit yet, even with hard hats – is a huge rotunda, going up all five stories. It reminded me very much of the Texas State Capital building, except that it was far more light and better lit, with yellow paint and white marble. The Capital building always reminded me of a cave, although that might be because I always entered it directly from sunlight while wearing sunglasses.

Anyway, Murdock is building for posterity – there is 2-inch thick carved white Italian marble all through the entry way, and will be through much of the first floor. There is a beautiful inlaid marble design on the rotunda floor. Each building is meant to have the absolute best lab equipment, some of which is being designed and built specifically for the new Campus. They are attempting to gain Leed Certification, at least silver, although they think they might be able to get gold for some buildings. That’s very impressive when you recall that they had to import that Italian marble, and that will certainly count against them when the distance traveled is counted.

Two things about the design struck most of us as really valuable, both related to transport – there is a large parking structure built (something to be appreciated by anyone who tries to park on our own campus, especially as a few people just got evicted from their usual parking grounds due to construction), and there will be bike and walking paths from several nearby residential areas. They will install showers and locker rooms in the lab buildings so that people can bike to work and then rinse off – very cool! I myself prefer to walk the distance to a bus stop far off from my house, but won’t on my way to work or when it’s hot because of the need to be clean for work.

The building that is being called the UNC building – its official name is something else, but nobody is calling it that at this point – will be focused on nutrition research and include NC State and other researchers as well. It will be open in about a month, which is only a month behind schedule. The project leader seemed distressed by that, but I thought that was impressive – that seems a small delay for such a big project, especially as so much of it seems to be original to this building. It will have 18 tenured faculty from Carolina, who are currently being recruited. These faculty will be tenure track but not teach, which will be new for Carolina. They will be supervising grad students and postdocs, however.

After visiting the site, we went to a bank in town to listen to Dr Steven Zeisel, the Institute Director, talk about the history of the project. We discovered (while searching for the restroom, which we do a lot of on the bus tour) that the old vault was still there, and the door was open. Very cool – the mechanisms of the vault lock were visible, and some people went into it. It had children’s book mural on the walls for some reason.

Interesting visit – this should be an exciting addition if everything goes well. I am curious how the businesses and rival schools will function together. Everyone is also anxious to see how this will affect the town – there are plans for a community college annex on the Research Campus to train interested residents to function at a variety of research and lab support jobs, and this will certainly bring new money into the community, but it will surely change many things. Hopefully, everybody will benefit as much as there is potential to do so.

Day Three: Wireless problems

Good morning!  Your regularly scheduled blog posts will not be available until very late today – the beautiful inn that we stayed at Wednesday night only has wireless in the lobby, and my little computer doesn’t like it.

This is being written on a borrowed Mac – thank you, Kristy!  Suffice to say we had a great time and there’s a lot to write about later on.

Day Two: Carbonton Dam

Carbonton Dam is a dam no more – a small hydroelectric dam built in the ’30’s, this dam was no longer useful – it generated only a tiny amount of power and very little profit. Its owner began to let it slide, letting it sit unused.

Restoration Systems saw this as an opportunity to bring back an ecosystem that had long been choked by the dam – dams cause disruption in aquatic animals’ life cycles, population, and movement, and usually make changes to the water and plant life nearby, in addition to drowning a portion of land nearby. This one was now only useful as a good place to fish for bass – which caused some conflict with the local populace, who did not want to lose their favorite fishing hole when the company first proposed taking out the dam. Restoration Systems and its partners, including UNC, did a lot of education and discussion before actually beginning the project to get local people on board as much as possible.

Restoration Systems is a company – almost entirely made up of UNC grads – that corrects or restores water systems and then sells credits for doing so to developers. Developers are required to do something to mitigate any damage they have caused to the environment with their developments by purchasing remediation credits. This often means wetlands restoration, but in this case this company decided that it wanted to focus on this small obsolescent dam, one of approximately 1000 in North Carolina.

They studied the situation, went through months to request the proper permits from the state, and began by notching holes in the dam, to allow some of the water to flow through. They continued expanding the notch over five months, to allow the waters to mix – they couldn’t let it through all at once not only because of the negative effects of a large rush of water suddenly hitting the land on the other side, but to maintain the oxygen and mineral balance on both sides.

It now has one tall building on one side, with a ladder roped off and a platform to one side. When you stand on it, you can see the inside of the former dam – it still has caked dried silt at the bottom of the large empty chambers. the other side of the river flows freely through, and is a definite success. The project managers told us that two populations of rare fish on each side have now mingled and increased to large degree.

The bass fishers actually have better fishing in their newly returned river, although they now must use canoes. The company also created a small public-use park to the side of the river nearest the road, replacing a mass of scrubby weeds – everybody won. Including us – we had an excellent barbeque picnic, sponsored by Restoration Technologies. I have never before liked baked beans, but these were excellent. They also had great brownies. This is turning into a food blog – I’m really not obsessed, they’re just feeding us very well!

I will write up our third stop and our very pleasant evening dinner with the NC State folks on their own bus tour tomorrow.

Day Two: Seymour Johnson Air Force Base

After breakfast in New Bern, we drove to Seymour Johnson Air Force Base. A young man hopped on the bus after we arrived – after some joking about using Tim’s Marine ID to get on the base – and gave us a very quick hello and intro to the base. It was too quick and very military – nobody understood him, at least in the back of the bus where I was sitting. So, we hopped off and followed him into the unknown.

We entered a large airplane hanger. The first thing I thought was, where are the pigeons? – I used to work in an airport that had a major problem with them in the hangars – and the next thing I thought was, “Whoa!” There were two F-15 E planes and an assortment of bombs and missiles around the hangar, as well as several officers waiting for us. The officers broke us up into groups and showed us around, giving explanations about the armament and planes, as well as answering our questions about Seymour Johnson’s Iraq and Afghan deployments. Seymour Johnson just got 600 people and 14 planes back from deployment as part of the Surge. Our guide told us that he finds the current use of multiple staggered 4 – 6 month deployments preferable to the 9-month deployment in Desert Storm, where the entire base picked up and left, thereby devastating the local economies around the bases and leaving families apart for much longer periods.

Our guide, Lt.(?) Wreblewski, was very considerate and willing to answer many questions – he is a very nice man who is planning to go from one difficult career to another dangerous career – teaching middle school. We also climbed up to look into the planes’ cockpits and met a pilot, Lt. Flippin, who also answered questions. There was a lingering odor of fuel in the air, but it was spotlessly clean.

I was also pleased to hear that the Air Force still hosts Scout Troops – they were always so nice to us when I was in one. When I went through my adolescent military phase (very short for me for many reasons, but I still contemplated it), the Air Force was my first thought, largely because I had had such positive experiences with it. Anyway, I had thought that they might not because they’re on a war footing – but where else are they going to find new recruits, I suppose?

Day One: Tryon Palace & Dinner

After arriving in New Bern, we checked into the hotel and walked down the street through the historic (and tourist shop-filled) downtown to Tryon Palace.

Tryon Palace is a reproduction of the first official central seat of the Colonial government of North Carolina, built in the late 1760’s right before the Revolutionary War. After the English Colonial Governor was evicted, it served as the state capital building until the end of the 18th century, when the capital was moved to Raleigh. It was rented out to various groups, but the main building burned to the ground very soon after the government moved out, only to then be covered by various roads and buildings.

In the 1940’s, a philanthropist with an interest in history convinced the state to collect all of the original piece of land, unearth the old foundations, and restore the Palace, most of it funded by a trust that she had provided. Having the Palace under the road was actually lucky – it saved the foundation’s bricks from reuse by builders and let the restorers figure out exactly where to place the reproduction. There were also extensive records of the Palace available, although they had to be collected from all over the world – literally; some of the most useful had found their way to Venezuela.

The Palace tour is provided by people dressed in period costume and goes through the entire house and grounds – we went through the first floor only due to time. One of the most interesting things was a collection of rare books – they’ve been collecting all of the books that the first governor was known to have in his library (there is an inventory available because he lost most of them in a fire and submitted a request for reimbursement later in his career) in contemporaneous editions. There are over 800 titles. The dining room with the reproduction period food also was very interesting to everyone – the food was beautiful. I thought it was made from Fimo, but apparently it was molded from plaster and painted. It looked very real.  I also liked seeing the servants’ quarters in the basement – my favorite part of historic homes or buildings is always seeing where people actually did the work of running the household.

After the tour – I’d like to go back and take a longer one sometime – we moved to a building across the street to have dinner. It was regional cooking – fittingly – and excellent. I tried shrimp and grits for the first time – I don’t normally like either of those things, but this was one of the best things I’ve eaten in a long time. Everyone near me at dinner (everyone who eats seafood, anyway) liked it the best. The dessert was also good – I would have called it pecan tassies, but it had another name which now escapes me. I’ll have to find out.

After dinner we went to yet another building to listen to Bland Simpson perform. He’s the head of Creative Writing at Carolina, but he is also a musician and has been performing for these tours for a long time. He read a funny story about a hapless kayaker who met the best and most helpful people in North Carolina after a series of misadventures, and then sang several songs. He has a wonderfully clear speaking voice – as soon as you heard him speak, you knew he was going to have a great singing voice, too. That was a great way to end the first evening, especially as he is part of Carolina, too.

This picture did not come out well – the room was a little too bright for my flash to work, and a little too dark not to need it.  Apologies to Dr. Simpson.

Day One: Institute of Marine Sciences

After a nice but overlong lunch at the Starlite Cafe in Greenville (which had very good but tremendously large hamburgers), we went on down to Morehead City on the coast.

I was very excited about this one – I love boats, and I love the ocean, and I haven’t been near the Atlantic in eight or nine years. It was much colder and windier than I had expected, and we were all a little worried – we were supposed to go in two research boats out to Shackleford Banks, a barrier island. I kind of like rough water, but I didn’t think many of us would. Sure enough, it was too rough to go beyond the harbor – we could see the white caps across the breakwater even though we were a long way off.

They decided to instead take us on a boat tour of the harbor, which I thought was very nice of them considering they didn’t have enough time to do the originally scheduled lecture (we took too long at lunch, I believe). There were two boats – the smaller UNC boat and the bigger Duke boat. I got on the UNC boat, naturally. According to one of the grad students based there, it had formerly been a drug smuggling boat that was then taken away and sold to the University. Very cool if true – we have a pirate boat. :) Also very cool is that UNC, Duke, and NC State all have marine installations there and the faculty members based there made a point of telling us that all three work together and get along very well – with slight tension during basketball season – despite all rivalries.

It was great – it was cloudy and windy, but beautiful. I sat up on the bow of the boat with Kirill (Digital Archives) and Jason (Public Health), and we saw a lot of other boats, many old houses and houses made to look old, a long stretch of marsh on one side, and a rusty old canning factory. A sobering reminder that this area had once had a strong industrial side – it’s primarily dependent on tourism now. Some people saw dolphins – I did not, but I did see a very, very big gray pelican, and an Ibis. I thought it was an egret, but someone said it was an Ibis. No shots of the birds, but I did get a nice one of the sky.

Boat

We got back to the dock, and had to hop to to get to the hotel in New Bern. New Bern is pronounced Newbern, btw – I had no idea.

I will write up our evening and post it tomorrow – I’m tired!

Day 1: Breaking Free

Okay, please forgive any incoherencies – I am very tired after a long day.  :)   A long interesting day.  This is the official website for the Tar Heel Bus Tour – it provides an itinerary: http://www.unc.edu/bustour/

Our first stop on the bus tour, after waking up and meeting VERY EARLY Monday morning, was in Rocky Mount at Dudley’s Beauty Salon.  We were there to meet the women of Breaking Free, a community based breast cancer screening program.  These women were incredibly impressive – the beauty shop owner and a friend who also owned a beauty shop were moved to work against breast cancer by a friend and employee who was a survivor.

African American women have a much worse rate of survival than white women – breast cancer is likely to be found much farther along and to be more aggressive.  The fact that Edgecombe County especially has a very high rate of poverty and that many women are likely to be uninsured does not help – Edgecombe itself is the county with the 16th highest rate of breast cancer in the United States.  That’s hardly a distinction that any county could want.

The women of Breaking Free had a captive audience – their beauty shop clients, who would be sitting listenting to them talk and would return on a regular basis.  They promoted breast self-exams and mammograms.  In time, they applied for and received a grant from the Susan G. Komen Foundation to create a program to train lay educators to go out into the community as well as work with the hairdressing clients.  These women saw a major health disparity and worked to overcome it, using a medium that made sense – what could be more perfect than hair salons for something like this?  Many women in their target audience might not go to the doctor for lack of insurance, fear, lack of awareness, or other reasons, but almost everyone gets their hair cut.

After the first year, they applied for and received funding from ECHO, a UNC program targeting health disparities, which is how it came to be part of the Bus Tour.  It was a great way to start off the trip – the project was very inspiring, with two survivors helped by the program and now working with it speaking to us as well as the director, a beauty shop owner, and several other people.  Each of the speakers was well chosen – both very effective speakers, and funny as well, which was great so early in the morning for waking us up.

One of the Bus Tour particpants is a surgical oncologist whose practice is largely made up of breast cancer patients – he brought special pink ribbon patches that are designed using half African American colors.  That was really nice – I think that the women he gave them to were really touched.

Then we were on to the next stop after a group picture – I do not have any pictures myself from this stop, though I may add some later if I can acquire them.

Tar Heel Bus Tour

The previous entries on this blog were all to do with a CE course that I was doing from the MLA about Web 2.0.  Now for the really fun part – the Tar Heel Bus Tour!

I will begin blogging about that tomorrow, as I am now finished packing and must go to bed – I have to be there at 6:30 AM, which means I have to get up in less than 6 hours.  Rocky Mount, Greenville, Morehead City, and New Bern.  I am especially excited about Morehead City – we’re visiting the Institute of Marine Sciences – but all of it looks extremely interesting.

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