Archive for category Elections

Thank you Southern Village Community

I spent Thursday and Saturday walking the neighborhoods of Southern Village meeting folks, distributing literature and discussing some of their concerns, including their local environment, neighborhood safety and integrity, fiscal responsibility and shifting some of the tax burden off their shoulders – many of the common themes I’ve emphasized in my campaign for Council.

Getting a sense of how a campaign is going from the inside, especially towards the end, can be a bit tricky, thank you folks for the kind words of encouragement and support.

Both days were beautiful (though a bit warm given all the hills I climbed) though the energy and excitement that accompanied Halloween was especially nice.

As I was wrapping up this evening, I bumped into Chapel Hill-Carrboro School Board candidate Shell Brownstein at her home as she was decorating for Halloween. She met me with a cold bottle of water, quite welcomed as her’s was the 5th to the last home I was visiting of the 200+ I visited on this warm day.

We had a nice conversation about the election, our experiences organizing and going on the campaign trail.

I appreciate her and her neighbor’s hospitality. Thank you Southern Village.

WCHL1360 Meet The Candidate

I was the final candidate interview aired on WCHL 1360’s Meet the Candidate series. Amazingly, reporter Ben Gellman managed to compress and edit a wide ranging 20+ minute conversation down to this piece.

WCHL really stepped up their game this year in covering the election and even managed to wedge in a fair amount of material on the Council race, a pleasant contrast to some other venues that focused almost exclusively on the Chapel Hill mayoral zaniness.

2009 Hank Anderson-Bill Thorpe Breakfast Club Endorsement

Thank you Anderson-Thorpe Breakfast Club for supporting my campaign and recognizing my efforts to address the concerns of ALL of our community.

Chapel Hill faces some tough choices in the next four years.

Do we forge ahead with an agenda that puts our community front-and-center in the decision making process or continue to defer to those with political pull? Do we find the resources to redress a debt long owed our neighbors on Rogers Road? Do we follow through on our written commitments to the Pine Knolls/Northside neighborhoods? Do we live within our means, work to retain folks of modest means that have long contributed to our community’s well-being? Do we work to increase economic and social diversity within our Town?

The last eight years I’ve worked hard to bring forth the best ideas from our diverse community. I’m confident that our citizens have the talent and the drive to help Council move forward on these critical issues. Without leadership and persistence, though, we will continue to fail to meet the needs of our greater community. I look forward to meeting that challenge.

More on the Anderson-Thorpe Breakfast Club:

The Anderson-Thorpe Breakfast Club was founded by Hank Anderson, the first Black Recreation Department Director in the South in the 1970’s to help analyze and remedy the issues faced by African-Americans in the Chapel Hill-Carrboro communities. After Hank’s death, Bill Thorpe, who served on the Chapel Hill Town Council for 11 years until his death in 2008, led the Club. The Breakfast Club spearheaded the efforts to name Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd, and to improve the pay and working conditions of African-American and Latino employees at the University, hospital, schools and municipalities. The Breakfast Club’s political agenda is a progressive and inclusive agenda that supports the State NAACP’s 14-Point Agenda, with particular emphasis on justice for young people in our schools, fairness in employment and housing, and dismantling institutionalized racism.

Sign of The Times

Most of the signs are deployed throughout our Town. I keep a record of locations, make sure that my signs are visible while trying to maintain our Town’s beauty. Penny Rich noted that there’s 17 distinct signs in front of Seawell School. With so many kinds of signs and some candidates spreading their name far and wide, the Town is beginning to get a little messy. As usual, I’m doing my best to not only maintain my signs but other candidates also.

If you see one of my signs down or think it’s in an inappropriate location or just want a few for your own yard, please contact me at campaign AT willraymond.org.

Like my sign? Ellie, my wife, and I designed it (my sole contribution was the leaf idea, she picked a leaf from our yard, scanned it and did the layout).

Thanks Ellie!

Will’s Calendar Updated

I believe I finally have all the dates laid out. Please take a look here.

Let me know if I missed one here.

Thank you, Will

2009 NRG Chapel Hill Candidate Forum

Thanks to Madeline Jefferson, Bob Henshaw, Julie McClintock, Janet Smith, Alan Snavely, Mickey Jo Sorrel and the rest of the membership of Neighborhoods For Responsible Growth (NRG) for both sponsoring the recent candidate forum and making the following video available to the wider community.

Also thanks to my neighbor (and former Chapel Hill Mayor) Jonathon Howes for moderating the event.


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2009 Sierra Club Chapel Hill Candidate Forum

Thanks to Loren Hintz. Matt Scheer, Jason Baker (2005 candidate for Town Council), May Becker, Judith Ferster and the rest of the membership of the Orange-Chatham Sierra Club for both sponsoring the recent candidate forum and making the following video available to the wider community.

Also thanks to my fellow colleague on the Sustainability Task Force Matthew Scheer for moderating the event abd James Carnahan for keeping time.


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Citizen Will

I know it can be difficult to measure a candidates fortitude and perseverance during a short campaign cycle.

Everyone promises to do their homework. Everyone says they are tough enough to take on the thorniest of issues. Everyone claims they will leave political expediency behind.

There are two quotations that capture the sense of what I believe and what will guide me as a Council member.

The first from Martin Luther King, Jr. appears on the top of my web site Citizen Will (4 years of posts on community issues):

On some positions, Cowardice asks the question, “Is it safe?” Expediency asks the question, “Is it politic?” And Vanity comes along and asks the question, “Is it popular?” But Conscience asks the question “Is it right?” And there comes a time when one must take a position that is neither safe, nor politic, nor popular, but he must do it because Conscience tells him it is right.

MLK,Jr. to SCLC Leadership Class

and this cautionary one from Abraham Lincoln:

Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man’s character, give him power.

The reason I’m running is to better serve our community. Over eight years, I have brought a thoughtful,practical and proactive approach to serving our community’s needs. Having a seat at the table will help me meet those needs more effectively.

If you want a better sense of my activism, take a look at over 4 years of posts on community issues Citizen Will.

And as I work collaboratively on behalf of our community I will keep these two quotations in mind – to serve with humility and to do what I believe is right irrespective of the political consequences.

Please Contribute to Our Campaign

As much as I’d like to run the lowest cost competitive campaign, this year we need a few more dollars to get the message out.

Please consider contributing not more than $100 to our campaign to bring Will’s pragmatic, practical and fiscally prudent leadership to our Town Council.

Further information here.

Will Raymond for Chapel Hill Town Council 2009

A big thank you to all the folks who contacted and encouraged me to run.

Below is my formal announcement, more posts to follow:

Will Raymond Announces Run for Chapel Hill Town Council 2009

Chapel Hill, NC – July 17th, 2009

I am taking the next step in my eight year continuum of public service to Chapel Hill by announcing my candidacy for Town Council.

After listening to hundreds of my fellow citizens during the Sustainability Task Force’s nine recent public forums, it is clear that Chapel Hill’s residents want to move forward on a different path for the next decade.

Moving Chapel Hill forward will require common sense leadership that is innovative, experienced, tested and prepared to follow our citizens’ mandate to change course.

Successfully working with a variety of community organizations, advisory boards, the Town Council and Orange County Board of Commissioners in the past, I have taken on some of the thorniest, toughest and, occasionally, most controversial issues facing our community.

Listening to the community, gathering the best advice, with conviction and thoughtful fortitude, I have been unwavering in my support of reasonable growth policies, fiscal prudence, environmental protection and transparent government operations.

As my understanding of these challenges deepened, so has my sense of responsibility for making sure our community thrives when meeting them.

The next four years finds Chapel Hill at a crossroads. Addressing these four issues will be vital to our community’s sustainability:

  • Beneficial Growth – I joined the Town’s Sustainability Task force to help build community consensus on measurably healthy growth.

    I know we must adopt balanced development policies that enrich all of our community. These policies must maintain our residents’ quality of life without sacrificing those bedrock principles that have made Chapel Hill shine. As existing projects like Greenbridge and East54 change the complexion of our community, and new projects like Carolina North and University Square come to fruition, we must better honor those values which have made Chapel Hill a sought after community.

  • Fiscal Responsibility – I know we must strengthen our Town’s fiscal foundations so that we can meet not only the unique demands of the current economic downturn but prudently manage existing obligations. We need to implement a broad range of pragmatic policies, many previously suggested by our talented citizenry, to tighten our Town’s belt – to live within our residents’ means – while also seizing new opportunities to expand our pool of jobs and commercial tax base.
  • Environmental and Neighborhood Protection – As a longtime resident, I know many citizens see enhancing and protecting Chapel Hill’s neighborhoods as inextricably linked to nurturing and defending our environment. Our Town’s growth goals, though, must be consistent with our environmental policy, with expected trade-offs clearly understood by our community.
  • Public Participation – I know now is the time to build upon our improved relationship with the University and expand upon the commitment to make public participation central to managing the expansion of UNC onto Carolina North. Carolina North can be a stunning success if the burdens and benefits created are mutually understood and shared. Firming existing relationships, operating in good faith, we can make sure that financial, transit, environmental and social costs are not thrust upon residents’ overtaxed shoulders.

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