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Wikipedia

Pam Hemminger

Pamela Somers Hemminger (born March 20, 1960)[1] is an American politician who served as the mayor of Chapel Hill, North Carolina, from 2015 to 2023. She owns a small real-estate company and previously served on the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools board of education and the Orange County Board of County Commissioners. She is a member of the Democratic Party.

Pam Hemminger
Hemminger in 2019
Mayor of Chapel Hill
In office
December 2, 2015 – December 18, 2023
Preceded byMark Kleinschmidt
Succeeded byJessica Anderson
Orange County Commissioner
In office
2008–2012
Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools
Board of Education
In office
2004–2008
Personal details
Born (1960-03-20) March 20, 1960 (age 63)
NationalityAmerican
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseBradley Hemminger
Children4
Alma materVanderbilt University (BA)
Occupation
  • Politician
  • business owner

In the town's 2015 mayoral race, Hemminger was endorsed by a new local political action committee and unseated Mark Kleinschmidt by a 9% margin.[2] She won reelection three times, in 2017, 2019, and 2021.

Education and personal life edit

Hemminger graduated from Vanderbilt University in 1982 with a bachelor's degree in economics and German.[3][4] Her husband, Bradley Mark Hemminger, is an associate professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC) School of Information and Library Science.[3][1][5] They met at Vanderbilt and have four children, all of whom attended Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools and three of whom graduated from UNC.[5][4] In 2004, Indy Week wrote: "You could call Pam Hemminger a power soccer mom", noting a decade of involvement with a local soccer league.[6]

Early political career (2004–2015) edit

In 2004, Hemminger unsuccessfully ran in the Democratic Party primary election for the Orange County Board of County Commissioners; after the election, in July, she said the campaign "was a really positive experience".[6][7] The defining issue of the campaign was the possibility of merging Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools and Orange County Schools; the group NoMerger.org, seeking to oust incumbent Moses Carey, endorsed Hemminger and Valerie Foushee; it did not endorse incumbent Margaret Brown, for perceived unwillingness to pick a side.[7] With 21% of the vote, Hemminger placed fourth of five candidates; the nominees were Foushee and Carey.[7]

Hemminger was a member, from 2004 to 2008, of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Board of Education,[8] on which she served as both vice chair and chair.[9] Elected along with Foushee in 2008,[10] Hemminger served as an Orange County Commissioner until 2012.[8] She also served in Chapel Hill's Greenways Commission, the town's Parks and Recreation Commission, and the Upper Neuse River Basin Authority, chairing the latter two.[4][6]

At the time of her first election as mayor, in 2015, Hemminger had lived in Chapel Hill for 29 years.[9][11] She was owner of Windaco Properties LLC, a real-estate management company.[9][11] In 2018, Lauren Talley of The Daily Tar Heel reported that Hemminger's company managed five properties: "She does the bookkeeping – mainly on evenings and weekends – while another employee maintains the properties."[12]

Mayor of Chapel Hill (2015–2023) edit

Elections edit

With 54% of the vote, Hemminger won the 2015 mayoral election in Chapel Hill against incumbent Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt (45%) and Southern Village resident Gary Kahn (0.9%).[13] Marked by debate over the future of development in the area,[14] this was the first election in five decades in which an incumbent mayor in Chapel Hill was defeated.[15] Hemminger raised $24,974 before the early voting period, while Kleinschmidt had raised $30,480.[16] In late September, a Public Policy Polling survey found Kleinschmidt leading by 12 percentage points,[17] but by early November, Hemminger led by 6 points.[14]

In 2015, only one council member (of the four up for reelection) was reelected.[8] The Chapel Hill Alliance for a Livable Town (CHALT) political action committee, which endorsed Hemminger, also supported two of the three new candidates who won election to the town council.[13] CHALT, established in 2015, advocated a "more deliberate pace of growth" along with affordable housing, environmental protection, and energy efficiency.[13] A former town council member said of the organization, "I think basically they advocate for slower or no growth ... They would argue that they're not against growth, they just want a different kind of growth."[18] Indy Week reporter Billy Ball wrote: "This campaign has been unusually venomous by Chapel Hill standards, with malicious attacks, Internet trolling and a bitter wave of anti-incumbent sentiment, all in a town that, historically, tends to agree with itself more than it doesn't."[19] During the campaign, as CHALT members criticized certain developments in town and certain people in government, Hemminger distanced herself from the group, saying, "I'm not for polarization."[19]

Hemminger confirmed her first reelection bid during her weekly appearance on WCHL's The Aaron Keck Show in May 2017, and then she made a formal announcement in June.[20] She was reelected to a second term on November 7, 2017, with 92.51% of the vote; former Chapel Hill-Carrboro NAACP leader Eugene Farrar challenged her in a write-in campaign.[21] Hemminger focused on diversifying the tax base to fund affordable housing, community space for teenagers, parks and recreation, and additional cultural activities.[22] As she later explained, "The longer view is changing and diversifying commercial space. We can't keep depending on residential property taxes and business property taxes to keep us going."[23] She was endorsed by Indy Week,[24] CHALT, Equality North Carolina, and the Sierra Club.[25] Four new council members were elected, all endorsed by CHALT.[26]

On July 8, 2019, Hemminger filed for reelection, seeking a third term as mayor.[27] Facing a single challenger, 34-year-old ACLU canvasser and yoga and math teacher Joshua Levenson,[28] she was again endorsed by CHALT, the Sierra Club,[29] Equality North Carolina,[30] and Indy Week,[31] as well as The Daily Tar Heel[32] and the local advocacy group NEXT.[33] She won the election with 89% of the vote.[34]

Hemminger was again re-elected with 61% of the vote in 2021[35] in a more hotly contested race against town council member Hongbin Gu and UNC law student Zachary Boyce. Hemminger was again endorsed by a number of organizations and media outlets, including Indy Week, the Sierra Club, NEXT Chapel Hill-Carrboro, Equality NC, The News & Observer, and The Daily Tar Heel; meanwhile local advocacy group CHALT endorsed Gu against the incumbent Hemminger, whom they had endorsed in prior election cycles.[36]

Tenure edit

Hemminger was sworn in as mayor of Chapel Hill on December 2, 2015.[37] She announced in July 2023 that she would not stand for a fourth reelection.[38] She endorsed town council member Jessica Anderson, who won the 2023 election.[39][40]

Development edit

In April 2017, the town council rezoned parts of Chapel Hill to attract business development; Hemminger said she wanted the change because "we're not able to react fast enough for some of these projects that we would most likely like to have".[41] In December 2017, the town council voted to allow "conditional zoning" so that the council, in Hemminger's words, would "have more latitude for turning [development projects] down just because [council members] don't like it, or for asking for more conditions".[42]

Saying she wanted the town to be a "regional foodie destination", Hemminger worked to bring new retailers to Chapel Hill, such as by approving construction of a Wegmans supermarket with $4 million in tax incentives.[43][44][45] The town council also gave $2 million in tax incentives to a Charlotte development company to make new office buildings; Hemminger said the incentives were an unfortunate necessity, explaining, "We haven't had any office buildings; nothing else we tried has worked. In order to move forward, this is what the developer said it would take to be able to get them out of the ground, because it is very risky and speculative when you're building office in our community."[46]

Hemminger supported the eventually scrapped Durham–Orange Light Rail Transit project, arguing that it would help with growth in town.[47] She has called one instance of clearcutting "heartbreaking" and said that she preferred selection cutting.[48][49] In 2017, the town bought a 36.2-acre (14.6 ha) property from the American Legion, which Hemminger said would eventually become a park, though the organization was leasing it from the town while the town paid off the $7.9-million property over three installments.[50][51]

In December 2022, the town council approved a "Complete Communities Framework" proposed by urban planner Jennifer Keesmaat.[52][53]

Energy edit

In a candidate questionnaire in 2015, Hemminger wrote: "I vow to continue Chapel Hill's strong track record of protecting our streams, encouraging energy-efficient building, and maintaining natural green spaces to balance the growing density of our built environment."[54] In June 2017, the town council passed a resolution recommitting Chapel Hill to its goals for climate change mitigation as part of the Paris Agreement.[55] Hemminger also signed a petition pledging to uphold the agreement after President Donald Trump announced the country's withdrawal from it.[56] In January 2018, she signed a petition against the repeal of the Clean Power Plan announced by Scott Pruitt, the EPA administrator at the time.[57] "To ignore climate change is ridiculous," she wrote. "To repeal things or go backwards makes no sense."[58]

Later in 2018, David Boraks reported for WFAE that despite the announced national withdrawal from the Paris Agreement, some state and local governments had made their own efforts on climate change mitigation. Chapel Hill was among those governments; Hemminger said that "there's a great possibility of being successful no matter what the federal government's dictating".[59] She said the town was reducing energy use, buying electric buses, building charging stations,[59] installing LED lights in public buildings,[60] and planting trees.[61] She also said Duke Energy could do more to save energy.[60]

The town council approved a Climate Action and Response Plan in April 2021.[62]

Housing edit

In April 2017, Hemminger said the town had hired more staff to look into affordable housing.[63] She said the town, in 2017, spent $6 million on affordable housing, and had set a goal of adding 400 units and renovating existing units in the coming four years.[64] She also said she didn't want "any more [UNC] student housing downtown".[64] In 2018, she said, "We really, really want to find ways to keep affordable housing in our communities and to create more affordable housing that doesn't come under constant pressure of this nature,"[65] referring in particular to a proposed redevelopment of a mobile home property, over which she said the town had no control.[65][66] Also that year, the town council approved a $10 million bond for affordable housing,[67] which voters approved.[68] The next year, the council updated the town's public housing plan, calling for several kinds of renovations in all 336 of the town's public units (at the time housing 2 percent of the town's population).[69] Hemminger also said "it's time to do something" regarding the construction of new public housing.[69]

The town's first Affordable Housing Strategy was approved in September 2023.[70][71]

Immigration edit

While Chapel Hill is not a sanctuary city, Hemminger argued in February 2017 that "we just have a community value that says, 'Yes, we're open for everyone'."[72] Later that year, Hemminger claimed that the General Assembly might try to legislate for "intent" instead of "policies" in order to force municipalities to comply with federal law enforcement, saying, "It's hard to talk about [welcoming refugees] and not have state lawmakers come at us."[73] In September, she spoke and signed a letter in support of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program.[74][75][76] In 2018, Chapel Hill started an initiative trying to get foreign-born residents more involved in local government.[77][78] In April 2019, along with Lydia Lavelle, the mayor of neighboring Carrboro, Hemminger signed a letter opposing a bill (eventually vetoed by Governor Roy Cooper)[79] that would have required county law enforcement to cooperate with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).[80]

Silent Sam edit

In August 2017, Hemminger wrote to Carol Folt, UNC chancellor at the time, to ask for the Silent Sam statue on campus to be put into storage because it presented a "clear and present danger" to students if something happened during a protest.[81][82] Shortly after the Charlottesville rally in August, she said the town was working with the university to protect students during protests.[83] The next year, she said, "The statue belongs somewhere it can be referenced, used as a teaching tool and thought of in the correct context."[84] On August 20, 2018, protesters toppled Silent Sam. Hemminger said town staff and police were working with the university to investigate the toppling, and added, "I encourage everyone to remember that our freedom of expression does not come at the expense of safety and public order."[85] She also said the statue "doesn't represent our town values" and was "a public safety nightmare, as far as we're concerned", arguing that some people stayed away from downtown businesses when protests were held.[86] She thanked police for their response to the toppling[87] and said she wished UNC had gotten the statue removed earlier.[88] The next year, as Folt stepped down, Hemminger said, "Our biggest concern has been that someone was going to get hurt."[89]

Other issues edit

Hemminger developed the Food for the Summer program, based on an election promise; since 2016 and through 2019, it has served meals to food-insecure children throughout the summer, five days a week.[90][91][92][93] Because "she helped create" Food for the Summer, Hemminger was recognized by WCHL as its weekly Hometown Hero on June 17, 2019.[94]

In March 2016, the town council passed a resolution condemning the Public Facilities Privacy & Security Act (widely known as HB2).[95] The next year, Hemminger said that the compromise bill partially repealing it "does not go far enough to address discrimination".[96]

In 2017, Hemminger created the Historic Civil Rights Commemorations Task Force, which researched and recommended ways to commemorate the town's involvement in the civil rights movement, in particular the history of Chapel Hill Nine. When the project finished, Hemminger said, "We finally get to tell our whole story, and that's just a wonderful gift this task force has put together for the entire community."[97]

Hemminger endorsed Hillary Clinton, the Democratic nominee, in the 2016 presidential election.[98] Hemminger has said she supports gun control measures such as stricter background checks and extended waiting periods.[99] At a rally against gun violence on UNC's campus in 2018, she said, "The mayors across the nation are with you."[100] Hemminger also supports limits on campaign donations in local municipal races; in her first mayoral election in Chapel Hill, the cap was $353 for individuals.[101]

In April 2016, Chapel Hill hosted a delegation from the Israeli Knesset. Some community members criticized the visit, and one council member walked out of a meeting with the Israelis. Hemminger defended the decision to host the group, saying, "While you may not agree with everything – or any or part – it's always a good learning experience, and it's also a better opportunity to have change come when you bring people to the table and have the discussion rather than shutting them out."[102][103] In June 2018, the town hosted officials of the Dutch embassy, who were visiting every "Orange County" in the United States; Hemminger said that in a meeting with the Dutch she discussed, among other things, "being a 'blue bubble in a red sea'."[104]

Electoral history edit

2004 Orange County Commissioner Democratic primary election results[7][105]
Candidate Votes %
Valerie Foushee 6,933 25.2
Moses Carey Jr. (incumbent) 6,664 24.5
Margaret W. Brown (incumbent) 6,310 23.3
Pam Hemminger 5,881 21.3
Jack Lamb 1,507 5.6
Total votes 100
2008 Orange County Commissioner general election results, District 1[10]
Candidate Votes %
Valerie Foushee (incumbent) 50,556 53.38
Pam Hemminger 44,155 46.62
Total votes 94,711 100
2015 Chapel Hill mayoral election results[106]
Candidate Votes %
Pam Hemminger 4,878 54.01
Mark Kleinschmidt (incumbent) 4,053 44.88
Gary Kahn 84 0.93
Write-in 16 0.18
Total votes 9,031 100
2017 Chapel Hill mayoral election results[21]
Candidate Votes %
Pam Hemminger (incumbent) 7,426 92.51
Write-in 601 7.49
Total votes 8,027 100
2019 Chapel Hill mayoral election results[34]
Candidate Votes %
Pam Hemminger (incumbent) 7,064 88.54
Joshua Levenson 832 10.43
Write-in 82 1.03
Total votes 7,978 100
2021 Chapel Hill mayoral election results[35]
Candidate Votes %
Pam Hemminger (incumbent) 6,256 61.16
Hongbin Gu 3,692 36.09
Zachary R. Boyce 255 2.49
Write-in 26 0.25
Total votes 10,229 100

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • at Town of Chapel Hill

hemminger, pamela, somers, hemminger, born, march, 1960, american, politician, served, mayor, chapel, hill, north, carolina, from, 2015, 2023, owns, small, real, estate, company, previously, served, chapel, hill, carrboro, city, schools, board, education, oran. Pamela Somers Hemminger born March 20 1960 1 is an American politician who served as the mayor of Chapel Hill North Carolina from 2015 to 2023 She owns a small real estate company and previously served on the Chapel Hill Carrboro City Schools board of education and the Orange County Board of County Commissioners She is a member of the Democratic Party Pam HemmingerHemminger in 2019Mayor of Chapel HillIn office December 2 2015 December 18 2023Preceded byMark KleinschmidtSucceeded byJessica AndersonOrange County CommissionerIn office 2008 2012Chapel Hill Carrboro City SchoolsBoard of EducationIn office 2004 2008Personal detailsBorn 1960 03 20 March 20 1960 age 63 NationalityAmericanPolitical partyDemocraticSpouseBradley HemmingerChildren4Alma materVanderbilt University BA OccupationPoliticianbusiness ownerIn the town s 2015 mayoral race Hemminger was endorsed by a new local political action committee and unseated Mark Kleinschmidt by a 9 margin 2 She won reelection three times in 2017 2019 and 2021 Contents 1 Education and personal life 2 Early political career 2004 2015 3 Mayor of Chapel Hill 2015 2023 3 1 Elections 3 2 Tenure 3 2 1 Development 3 2 2 Energy 3 2 3 Housing 3 2 4 Immigration 3 2 5 Silent Sam 3 2 6 Other issues 4 Electoral history 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEducation and personal life editHemminger graduated from Vanderbilt University in 1982 with a bachelor s degree in economics and German 3 4 Her husband Bradley Mark Hemminger is an associate professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill UNC School of Information and Library Science 3 1 5 They met at Vanderbilt and have four children all of whom attended Chapel Hill Carrboro City Schools and three of whom graduated from UNC 5 4 In 2004 Indy Week wrote You could call Pam Hemminger a power soccer mom noting a decade of involvement with a local soccer league 6 Early political career 2004 2015 editIn 2004 Hemminger unsuccessfully ran in the Democratic Party primary election for the Orange County Board of County Commissioners after the election in July she said the campaign was a really positive experience 6 7 The defining issue of the campaign was the possibility of merging Chapel Hill Carrboro City Schools and Orange County Schools the group NoMerger org seeking to oust incumbent Moses Carey endorsed Hemminger and Valerie Foushee it did not endorse incumbent Margaret Brown for perceived unwillingness to pick a side 7 With 21 of the vote Hemminger placed fourth of five candidates the nominees were Foushee and Carey 7 Hemminger was a member from 2004 to 2008 of the Chapel Hill Carrboro Board of Education 8 on which she served as both vice chair and chair 9 Elected along with Foushee in 2008 10 Hemminger served as an Orange County Commissioner until 2012 8 She also served in Chapel Hill s Greenways Commission the town s Parks and Recreation Commission and the Upper Neuse River Basin Authority chairing the latter two 4 6 At the time of her first election as mayor in 2015 Hemminger had lived in Chapel Hill for 29 years 9 11 She was owner of Windaco Properties LLC a real estate management company 9 11 In 2018 Lauren Talley of The Daily Tar Heel reported that Hemminger s company managed five properties She does the bookkeeping mainly on evenings and weekends while another employee maintains the properties 12 Mayor of Chapel Hill 2015 2023 editElections edit With 54 of the vote Hemminger won the 2015 mayoral election in Chapel Hill against incumbent Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt 45 and Southern Village resident Gary Kahn 0 9 13 Marked by debate over the future of development in the area 14 this was the first election in five decades in which an incumbent mayor in Chapel Hill was defeated 15 Hemminger raised 24 974 before the early voting period while Kleinschmidt had raised 30 480 16 In late September a Public Policy Polling survey found Kleinschmidt leading by 12 percentage points 17 but by early November Hemminger led by 6 points 14 In 2015 only one council member of the four up for reelection was reelected 8 The Chapel Hill Alliance for a Livable Town CHALT political action committee which endorsed Hemminger also supported two of the three new candidates who won election to the town council 13 CHALT established in 2015 advocated a more deliberate pace of growth along with affordable housing environmental protection and energy efficiency 13 A former town council member said of the organization I think basically they advocate for slower or no growth They would argue that they re not against growth they just want a different kind of growth 18 Indy Week reporter Billy Ball wrote This campaign has been unusually venomous by Chapel Hill standards with malicious attacks Internet trolling and a bitter wave of anti incumbent sentiment all in a town that historically tends to agree with itself more than it doesn t 19 During the campaign as CHALT members criticized certain developments in town and certain people in government Hemminger distanced herself from the group saying I m not for polarization 19 Hemminger confirmed her first reelection bid during her weekly appearance on WCHL s The Aaron Keck Show in May 2017 and then she made a formal announcement in June 20 She was reelected to a second term on November 7 2017 with 92 51 of the vote former Chapel Hill Carrboro NAACP leader Eugene Farrar challenged her in a write in campaign 21 Hemminger focused on diversifying the tax base to fund affordable housing community space for teenagers parks and recreation and additional cultural activities 22 As she later explained The longer view is changing and diversifying commercial space We can t keep depending on residential property taxes and business property taxes to keep us going 23 She was endorsed by Indy Week 24 CHALT Equality North Carolina and the Sierra Club 25 Four new council members were elected all endorsed by CHALT 26 On July 8 2019 Hemminger filed for reelection seeking a third term as mayor 27 Facing a single challenger 34 year old ACLU canvasser and yoga and math teacher Joshua Levenson 28 she was again endorsed by CHALT the Sierra Club 29 Equality North Carolina 30 and Indy Week 31 as well as The Daily Tar Heel 32 and the local advocacy group NEXT 33 She won the election with 89 of the vote 34 Hemminger was again re elected with 61 of the vote in 2021 35 in a more hotly contested race against town council member Hongbin Gu and UNC law student Zachary Boyce Hemminger was again endorsed by a number of organizations and media outlets including Indy Week the Sierra Club NEXT Chapel Hill Carrboro Equality NC The News amp Observer and The Daily Tar Heel meanwhile local advocacy group CHALT endorsed Gu against the incumbent Hemminger whom they had endorsed in prior election cycles 36 Tenure edit Hemminger was sworn in as mayor of Chapel Hill on December 2 2015 37 She announced in July 2023 that she would not stand for a fourth reelection 38 She endorsed town council member Jessica Anderson who won the 2023 election 39 40 Development edit In April 2017 the town council rezoned parts of Chapel Hill to attract business development Hemminger said she wanted the change because we re not able to react fast enough for some of these projects that we would most likely like to have 41 In December 2017 the town council voted to allow conditional zoning so that the council in Hemminger s words would have more latitude for turning development projects down just because council members don t like it or for asking for more conditions 42 Saying she wanted the town to be a regional foodie destination Hemminger worked to bring new retailers to Chapel Hill such as by approving construction of a Wegmans supermarket with 4 million in tax incentives 43 44 45 The town council also gave 2 million in tax incentives to a Charlotte development company to make new office buildings Hemminger said the incentives were an unfortunate necessity explaining We haven t had any office buildings nothing else we tried has worked In order to move forward this is what the developer said it would take to be able to get them out of the ground because it is very risky and speculative when you re building office in our community 46 Hemminger supported the eventually scrapped Durham Orange Light Rail Transit project arguing that it would help with growth in town 47 She has called one instance of clearcutting heartbreaking and said that she preferred selection cutting 48 49 In 2017 the town bought a 36 2 acre 14 6 ha property from the American Legion which Hemminger said would eventually become a park though the organization was leasing it from the town while the town paid off the 7 9 million property over three installments 50 51 In December 2022 the town council approved a Complete Communities Framework proposed by urban planner Jennifer Keesmaat 52 53 Energy edit In a candidate questionnaire in 2015 Hemminger wrote I vow to continue Chapel Hill s strong track record of protecting our streams encouraging energy efficient building and maintaining natural green spaces to balance the growing density of our built environment 54 In June 2017 the town council passed a resolution recommitting Chapel Hill to its goals for climate change mitigation as part of the Paris Agreement 55 Hemminger also signed a petition pledging to uphold the agreement after President Donald Trump announced the country s withdrawal from it 56 In January 2018 she signed a petition against the repeal of the Clean Power Plan announced by Scott Pruitt the EPA administrator at the time 57 To ignore climate change is ridiculous she wrote To repeal things or go backwards makes no sense 58 Later in 2018 David Boraks reported for WFAE that despite the announced national withdrawal from the Paris Agreement some state and local governments had made their own efforts on climate change mitigation Chapel Hill was among those governments Hemminger said that there s a great possibility of being successful no matter what the federal government s dictating 59 She said the town was reducing energy use buying electric buses building charging stations 59 installing LED lights in public buildings 60 and planting trees 61 She also said Duke Energy could do more to save energy 60 The town council approved a Climate Action and Response Plan in April 2021 62 Housing edit In April 2017 Hemminger said the town had hired more staff to look into affordable housing 63 She said the town in 2017 spent 6 million on affordable housing and had set a goal of adding 400 units and renovating existing units in the coming four years 64 She also said she didn t want any more UNC student housing downtown 64 In 2018 she said We really really want to find ways to keep affordable housing in our communities and to create more affordable housing that doesn t come under constant pressure of this nature 65 referring in particular to a proposed redevelopment of a mobile home property over which she said the town had no control 65 66 Also that year the town council approved a 10 million bond for affordable housing 67 which voters approved 68 The next year the council updated the town s public housing plan calling for several kinds of renovations in all 336 of the town s public units at the time housing 2 percent of the town s population 69 Hemminger also said it s time to do something regarding the construction of new public housing 69 The town s first Affordable Housing Strategy was approved in September 2023 70 71 Immigration edit While Chapel Hill is not a sanctuary city Hemminger argued in February 2017 that we just have a community value that says Yes we re open for everyone 72 Later that year Hemminger claimed that the General Assembly might try to legislate for intent instead of policies in order to force municipalities to comply with federal law enforcement saying It s hard to talk about welcoming refugees and not have state lawmakers come at us 73 In September she spoke and signed a letter in support of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals DACA program 74 75 76 In 2018 Chapel Hill started an initiative trying to get foreign born residents more involved in local government 77 78 In April 2019 along with Lydia Lavelle the mayor of neighboring Carrboro Hemminger signed a letter opposing a bill eventually vetoed by Governor Roy Cooper 79 that would have required county law enforcement to cooperate with U S Immigration and Customs Enforcement ICE 80 Silent Sam edit In August 2017 Hemminger wrote to Carol Folt UNC chancellor at the time to ask for the Silent Sam statue on campus to be put into storage because it presented a clear and present danger to students if something happened during a protest 81 82 Shortly after the Charlottesville rally in August she said the town was working with the university to protect students during protests 83 The next year she said The statue belongs somewhere it can be referenced used as a teaching tool and thought of in the correct context 84 On August 20 2018 protesters toppled Silent Sam Hemminger said town staff and police were working with the university to investigate the toppling and added I encourage everyone to remember that our freedom of expression does not come at the expense of safety and public order 85 She also said the statue doesn t represent our town values and was a public safety nightmare as far as we re concerned arguing that some people stayed away from downtown businesses when protests were held 86 She thanked police for their response to the toppling 87 and said she wished UNC had gotten the statue removed earlier 88 The next year as Folt stepped down Hemminger said Our biggest concern has been that someone was going to get hurt 89 Other issues edit Hemminger developed the Food for the Summer program based on an election promise since 2016 and through 2019 it has served meals to food insecure children throughout the summer five days a week 90 91 92 93 Because she helped create Food for the Summer Hemminger was recognized by WCHL as its weekly Hometown Hero on June 17 2019 94 In March 2016 the town council passed a resolution condemning the Public Facilities Privacy amp Security Act widely known as HB2 95 The next year Hemminger said that the compromise bill partially repealing it does not go far enough to address discrimination 96 In 2017 Hemminger created the Historic Civil Rights Commemorations Task Force which researched and recommended ways to commemorate the town s involvement in the civil rights movement in particular the history of Chapel Hill Nine When the project finished Hemminger said We finally get to tell our whole story and that s just a wonderful gift this task force has put together for the entire community 97 Hemminger endorsed Hillary Clinton the Democratic nominee in the 2016 presidential election 98 Hemminger has said she supports gun control measures such as stricter background checks and extended waiting periods 99 At a rally against gun violence on UNC s campus in 2018 she said The mayors across the nation are with you 100 Hemminger also supports limits on campaign donations in local municipal races in her first mayoral election in Chapel Hill the cap was 353 for individuals 101 In April 2016 Chapel Hill hosted a delegation from the Israeli Knesset Some community members criticized the visit and one council member walked out of a meeting with the Israelis Hemminger defended the decision to host the group saying While you may not agree with everything or any or part it s always a good learning experience and it s also a better opportunity to have change come when you bring people to the table and have the discussion rather than shutting them out 102 103 In June 2018 the town hosted officials of the Dutch embassy who were visiting every Orange County in the United States Hemminger said that in a meeting with the Dutch she discussed among other things being a blue bubble in a red sea 104 Electoral history edit2004 Orange County Commissioner Democratic primary election results 7 105 Candidate Votes Valerie Foushee 6 933 25 2Moses Carey Jr incumbent 6 664 24 5Margaret W Brown incumbent 6 310 23 3Pam Hemminger 5 881 21 3Jack Lamb 1 507 5 6Total votes 1002008 Orange County Commissioner general election results District 1 10 Candidate Votes Valerie Foushee incumbent 50 556 53 38Pam Hemminger 44 155 46 62Total votes 94 711 1002015 Chapel Hill mayoral election results 106 Candidate Votes Pam Hemminger 4 878 54 01Mark Kleinschmidt incumbent 4 053 44 88Gary Kahn 84 0 93Write in 16 0 18Total votes 9 031 1002017 Chapel Hill mayoral election results 21 Candidate Votes Pam Hemminger incumbent 7 426 92 51Write in 601 7 49Total votes 8 027 1002019 Chapel Hill mayoral election results 34 Candidate Votes Pam Hemminger incumbent 7 064 88 54Joshua Levenson 832 10 43Write in 82 1 03Total votes 7 978 1002021 Chapel Hill mayoral election results 35 Candidate Votes Pam Hemminger incumbent 6 256 61 16Hongbin Gu 3 692 36 09Zachary R Boyce 255 2 49Write in 26 0 25Total votes 10 229 100See also edit nbsp United States portalList of mayors of Chapel Hill North Carolina List of commissioners of Orange County North CarolinaReferences edit a b Pam Hemminger Candidate for Orange Board of County Commissioners Indy Week April 18 2012 Archived from the original on December 23 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 Grubb Tammy November 3 2015 Chapel Hill s mayor elect I m not planning a U turn The News amp Observer Archived from the original on February 11 2018 Retrieved February 10 2018 a b The College Cabinet 2007 2008 PDF Arts and Science Vanderbilt University College of Arts and Science Fall 2008 Retrieved October 18 2019 a b c Mayor Pam Hemminger Town of Chapel Hill Archived from the original on July 9 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 a b Gramer Montana July 7 2017 Q amp A with Chapel Hill mayor Pam Hemminger The Daily Tar Heel Archived from the original on July 11 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 a b c Orange and Chatham County races Indy Week July 14 2004 Retrieved October 23 2019 a b c d Winn Patrick July 21 2004 Foushee Carey win primary The News amp Observer Archived from the original on August 8 2004 Retrieved October 23 2019 a b c DeVito Joey November 3 2015 Pam Hemminger Elected New Mayor Of Chapel Hill WCHL Archived from the original on October 21 2016 Retrieved December 22 2017 a b c Grubb Tammy July 6 2015 Former Orange County Commissioner Hemminger launches bid to unseat Chapel Hill mayor The News amp Observer Archived from the original on August 22 2015 Retrieved December 22 2017 a b 2008 General Election Orange County Board of Election November 25 2008 Archived from the original on November 13 2017 Retrieved February 10 2018 a b Benjamin Reed September 23 2015 Pam Hemminger Chapel Hill Mayor Indy Week Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Retrieved December 22 2017 Talley Lauren April 3 2018 Being mayor town council member is only half the job The Daily Tar Heel Archived from the original on October 18 2019 Retrieved October 18 2019 a b c Grubb Tammy November 2 2017 Chapel Hill Challengers sweep mayor 2 councilmen from office The News amp Observer Archived from the original on March 10 2016 Retrieved December 22 2017 a b Grubb Tammy November 1 2015 Chapel Hill mayor s race pits competing visions for town growth The News amp Observer Retrieved October 23 2019 Foulkes John December 2 2015 Year in Review Pam Hemminger narrowly wins mayorship looks to change town s development strategy The Daily Tar Heel Archived from the original on October 2 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 Grubb Tammy March 21 2016 Late report shows developers backed Kleinschmidt in Chapel Hill mayor s race The News amp Observer Archived from the original on July 14 2016 Retrieved December 22 2017 Ball Billy September 24 2015 Early polling shows Mark Kleinschmidt with a sizable lead in Chapel Hill mayoral race Indy Week Retrieved October 23 2019 Haney Henry April 4 2019 Who is CHALT and what do they do in Chapel Hill The Daily Tar Heel Archived from the original on April 9 2019 Retrieved April 13 2019 a b Ball Billy October 14 2015 With the rise of CHALT Chapel Hill s never seen an election quite like this Indy Week Retrieved October 23 2019 Hodge Blake May 26 2017 Chapel Hill Mayor Pam Hemminger Running for Re Election WCHL Archived from the original on October 9 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 a b Grubb Tammy November 7 2017 Pam Hemminger outpaces write in challenger Eugene Farrar in Chapel Hill mayor s race The Herald Sun Archived from the original on November 8 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 Grubb Tammy October 19 2017 Mayoral candidates Hemminger Farrar lay out competing visions for Chapel Hill future The Herald Sun Archived from the original on October 20 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 Grubb Tammy June 13 2018 Chapel Hill Town Council trims tax increase What you ll pay now The Herald Sun Archived from the original on June 16 2018 Retrieved July 19 2018 The INDY Endorses Pam Hemminger for Chapel Hill Mayor Indy Week October 18 2017 Archived from the original on October 21 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 Talley Lauren October 12 2017 CHALT endorses Town Council candidates The Daily Tar Heel Archived from the original on November 14 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 Grubb Tammy November 8 2017 Newcomers were big election night winners in Orange County s town school board races The Herald Sun Archived from the original on May 27 2018 Retrieved June 14 2018 Keck Aaron July 9 2019 Crowded 2019 Races Emerging For Chapel Hill Carrboro WCHL Archived from the original on July 11 2019 Retrieved July 11 2019 Candidate Questionnaire Joshua James Levenson Chapel Hill Mayor Indy Week October 16 2019 Retrieved October 23 2019 McConnell Brighton September 25 2019 Endorsements Coming in for Local Election Candidates WCHL Archived from the original on September 26 2019 Retrieved September 26 2019 Millen Lainey November 1 2019 State national orgs lay out election endorsements Q Notes Retrieved November 7 2019 McConnell Brighton October 16 2019 INDY Week Releases Endorsements for Local Elections WCHL Archived from the original on October 17 2019 Retrieved September 17 2019 Editorial The Editorial Board s endorsement for Chapel Hill Mayor The Daily Tar Heel October 30 2019 Retrieved October 31 2019 McConnell Brighton October 8 2019 Endorsements Continue as Local Elections Approach in Chapel Hill Carrboro WCHL Archived from the original on October 8 2019 Retrieved September 17 2019 a b Moyer Dakota November 5 2019 2019 Orange County Election Results WCHL Retrieved November 5 2019 a b Town of Chapel Hill Mayor North Carolina State Board of Elections Retrieved December 22 2022 Kehres Elle November 2 2021 Pam Hemminger Wins Re Election as Chapel Hill Mayor Retrieved December 22 2022 DeVito Joey December 2 2015 New Chapel Hill Mayor and Town Council Sworn In WCHL Archived from the original on December 13 2015 Retrieved December 22 2017 McConnell Brighton July 19 2023 Chapel Hill Mayor Pam Hemminger Not Seeking Re Election Tenure Will End This Fall Chapelboro com Retrieved October 15 2023 Duneja Annika October 23 2023 Q amp A Chapel Hill Mayor Pam Hemminger reflects on election endorsements possible outcomes The Daily Tar Heel Retrieved October 24 2023 McConnell Brighton September 28 2023 Jess Anderson Announces Endorsements from Former Congressman Chapel Hill Mayors Chapelboro com Retrieved October 24 2023 Grubb Tammy April 6 2017 Chapel Hill creates new zoning district for industry research The Herald Sun Archived from the original on November 12 2017 Retrieved June 14 2018 Ocampo Daniela December 5 2017 Chapel Hill Expands Conditional Zoning Working to Rewrite Land Use Policy WCHL Archived from the original on December 8 2017 Retrieved June 14 2018 Hudnall David October 13 2016 Chapel Hill Is Probably Getting a Wegmans Becoming a Foodie Place Indy Week Archived from the original on February 10 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 Chapel Hill approves location for Wegmans supermarket October 26 2017 Archived from the original on December 23 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 Keck Aaron October 17 2016 Chapel Hill Says Yes To Wegmans WCHL Archived from the original on July 8 2019 Retrieved July 8 2019 Grubb Tammy June 13 2019 Chapel Hill backs 2 2M tax incentive to bring office buildings jobs to Glen Lennox The News amp Observer Archived from the original on June 14 2019 Retrieved June 20 2019 Eanes Zachary February 7 2018 Wake County does the Durham Orange Light Rail plan a big favor The Herald Sun Archived from the original on October 19 2019 Retrieved October 19 2019 Hodge Blake June 8 2018 15 Acres Set for Clear Cutting in Chapel Hill WCHL Archived from the original on July 9 2018 Retrieved July 12 2018 Goad Matt June 22 2018 Mayors neighbors gather to try to save Chapel Hill Carrboro woods from clear cutting The News amp Observer Archived from the original on June 25 2018 Retrieved July 12 2018 Rosenbloom Bruce July 6 2017 Task Force Releases Report on American Legion Property in Chapel Hill WCHL Archived from the original on October 18 2019 Retrieved October 18 2019 Wolf Marin March 22 2018 Town council unanimously votes for sale of 4 3 million in bonds for American Legion property The Daily Tar Heel Archived from the original on October 18 2019 Retrieved October 18 2019 McConnell Brighton December 14 2022 Chapel Hill Council Adopts Complete Communities Strategy Selects Long Term Pilot Project Chapelboro com Retrieved October 24 2023 McConnell Brighton October 24 2023 How is Chapel Hill s Complete Communities Being Implemented One New Housing Development is an Example Chapelboro com Retrieved October 24 2023 Benjamin Reed September 23 2019 Pam Hemminger Indy Week Retrieved October 23 2019 Grubb Tammy June 7 2017 Orange Co commissioners join local resistance to climate change The News amp Observer Archived from the original on August 9 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 Schlanger Zoe June 5 2017 All of the US cities counties states university presidents companies and investors defying Trump s stance on Paris Quartz Archived from the original on September 8 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 U S mayors oppose EPA s proposed repeal of the Clean Power Plan Wisconsin Gazette February 22 2018 Archived from the original on February 23 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 McKinney Rachel January 24 2018 Mayor Hemminger signs petition to uphold Obama era environmental policies The Daily Tar Heel Archived from the original on February 11 2018 Retrieved February 10 2018 a b Boraks David November 14 2018 U S Won t Back Paris Climate Agreement So Local Officials Act On Their Own WFAE Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved December 10 2018 a b Bermas Dawes Sam February 15 2019 Chapel Hill Saves With Energy Efficiency but Officials Say More is Needed WCHL Archived from the original on February 16 2019 Retrieved February 22 2019 McConnell Brighton April 29 2019 Chapel Hill Council Members Want Climate Plan Sooner WCHL Archived from the original on April 29 2019 Retrieved May 2 2019 McConnell Brighton October 11 2022 Chapel Hill Using New Sustainability Position to Implement Climate Plan Chapelboro com Retrieved October 24 2023 Cheek Sarah April 6 2017 Competition for housing helps drive Chapel Hill rent up to highest in state The Daily Tar Heel Archived from the original on June 27 2018 Retrieved June 28 2018 a b Wilhelm Sophia March 27 2018 Think you pay too much to live in Chapel Hill UNC is responding to high rent prices The Daily Tar Heel Archived from the original on June 26 2018 Retrieved June 28 2018 a b Ocampo Daniela January 29 2018 Emotional Pleas at Chapel Hill Meeting Over Possible Redevelopment of Mobile Home Park WCHL Retrieved June 28 2018 Fahey Kelly February 7 2018 Chapel Hill Looking to Solve Mobile Home Displacement WCHL Archived from the original on June 14 2018 Retrieved June 28 2018 Ocampo Daniela March 23 2018 Town Council Approves 10M Affordable Housing Bond But Not 15M WCHL Archived from the original on June 14 2018 Retrieved June 28 2018 Hodge Blake November 6 2018 Chapel Hill Approves 10 Million Affordable Housing Bond WCHL Archived from the original on October 18 2019 Retrieved October 18 2019 a b McConnell Brighton April 21 2019 Chapel Hill s Public Housing Plan Improve Existing Units WCHL Archived from the original on April 22 2019 Retrieved April 27 2019 Onal Defne September 27 2023 Chapel Hill adopts first comprehensive affordable housing plan aims to build 900 homes The Daily Tar Heel Retrieved October 24 2023 Pellegrini de Paur Chase September 21 2023 As Chapel Hill Leaders Consider Long Term Plan for Housing Affordability They Also Fight to Preserve Existing Stock Indy Week Retrieved October 24 2023 Beckett Stephen February 1 2017 Mayors Chapel Hill Carrboro Not Affected by Executive Order on Sanctuary Cities WCHL Archived from the original on February 1 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 Camp Jon March 28 2017 Triangle leaders afraid to speak out on sanctuary cities WTVD Archived from the original on July 17 2018 Retrieved July 12 2018 Grubb Tammy Baumgartner Vaughan Dawn September 1 2017 Political Chatter Mayors press to keep dream alive for young immigrants The Herald Sun Archived from the original on September 2 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 Hodge Blake August 29 2017 Chapel Hill Mayor Participating in DACA Day of Action WCHL Archived from the original on September 23 2017 Retrieved July 12 2018 Hodge Blake August 15 2017 Chapel Hill Carrboro Mayors Sign Letter to President Trump Supporting DACA WCHL Archived from the original on August 16 2017 Retrieved July 12 2018 Vizcaino Maria Elena January 18 2018 Town of Chapel Hill and UNC aim to bring the gap for immigrant and refugee residents The Daily Tar Heel Archived from the original on June 27 2018 Retrieved July 12 2018 Ocampo Daniela February 20 2018 Chapel Hill Engaging Foreign Refugee and Latinx Residents Through Local Government WCHL Retrieved July 12 2018 Gov Cooper vetoes bill requiring sheriffs to cooperate with ICE WBTV August 20 2019 Archived from the original on October 18 2019 Retrieved October 18 2019 Bermas Dawes Sam April 3 2019 Bill in NC House Would Force Counties to Cooperate with ICE WCHL Archived from the original on April 3 2019 Retrieved April 4 2019 Stancill Jane August 18 2017 Chapel Hill mayor wants Silent Sam removed from UNC campus The News amp Observer Archived from the original on November 1 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 Grubb Tammy February 8 2018 A safe place for Silent Sam Orange County lawmakers hope the General Assembly agrees The Herald Sun Archived from the original on February 9 2018 Retrieved February 10 2018 Johnson Joe August 16 2017 Mayor Charlottesville riot puts Chapel Hill on notice as students return The Herald Sun Archived from the original on October 18 2019 Retrieved July 18 2018 Edwards Carlyann February 11 2018 Local legislators collaborate with community leaders to relocate Silent Sam The Daily Tar Heel Archived from the original on July 21 2018 Retrieved July 18 2018 Chapin Josh August 22 2018 Silent Sam is gone but conversation continues at UNC Chapel Hill WTVD Archived from the original on August 22 2018 Retrieved August 23 2018 Hodge Blake September 5 2018 Chapel Hill Business Faith Leaders Do Not Reinstall Silent Sam WCHL Archived from the original on September 5 2018 Retrieved September 9 2018 Bowen Janine September 13 2018 Eight arrested at latest Silent Sam protest on UNC campus WRAL Archived from the original on September 9 2018 Retrieved September 13 2018 Bennett Abbie Schultz Mark August 30 2018 UNC board member Silent Sam takedown was planned by radicals and police did nothing The News amp Observer Archived from the original on August 31 2018 Retrieved September 9 2018 Hodge Blake January 18 2019 Chapel Hill Mayor Sad to See UNC Chancellor Leaving WCHL Archived from the original on January 18 2019 Retrieved January 29 2019 Grubb Tammy May 10 2016 Chapel Hill Carrboro preparing summer lunches for students The News amp Observer Archived from the original on July 27 2016 Retrieved December 22 2017 Rosenbloom Bruce June 6 2017 Summer Meal Program Feeds K 12 Students in Chapel Hill and Carrboro WCHL Archived from the original on July 20 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 Fahey Kelly October 2 2018 Food for the Summer Sees Growth in 2018 WCHL Archived from the original on October 2 2018 Retrieved October 8 2018 Fahey Kelly June 16 2019 Food for the Summer Bringing Food Fun to Chapel Hill Carrboro WCHL Archived from the original on June 16 2019 Retrieved June 20 2019 Hometown Hero Chapel Hill Mayor Pam Hemminger WCHL June 17 2019 Archived from the original on June 17 2019 Retrieved June 20 2019 Blanford Andrea Chapel Hill resolution urges repeal of House Bill 2 WTVD Archived from the original on May 30 2016 Retrieved December 22 2017 Grubb Tammy March 30 2017 Chapel Hill mayor responds to state compromise on HB2 repeal The News amp Observer Archived from the original on June 3 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 McConnell Brighton June 20 2018 Historical Civil Rights Task Force Presents Findings to Chapel Hill Town Council WCHL Archived from the original on June 20 2018 Retrieved June 28 2018 Group of NC mayors endorse Clinton for president WLOS July 21 2016 Archived from the original on July 22 2016 Retrieved December 22 2017 Fahey Kelly February 22 2018 Local Elected Officials Advocating for Sensible Gun Laws WCHL Archived from the original on June 14 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 Fahey Kelly UNC Student Organizations Hold Rally Against Gun Violence WCHL Archived from the original on June 14 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 Talley Lauren September 20 2017 Campaigning at a cost in Chapel Hill Carrboro The Daily Tar Heel Archived from the original on November 21 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 Grubb Tammy Ritchie Natalie April 12 2016 Israeli delegates spark passionate response on visit to Chapel Hill The News amp Observer Archived from the original on July 8 2019 Retrieved January 17 2019 Chapel Hill Leadership Criticized for Hosting Israeli Delegation WCHL April 11 2016 Archived from the original on July 8 2019 Retrieved July 8 2019 Fahey Kelly June 22 2018 Chapel Hill Receives Visit from Netherlands Embassy WCHL Archived from the original on July 8 2019 Retrieved July 8 2019 Orange County North Carolina July 20 2004 Primary Election Orange County Board of Election July 27 2004 Archived from the original on August 13 2004 Retrieved October 23 2019 2015 Election Results WCHL November 3 2015 Archived from the original on May 5 2017 Retrieved December 22 2017 External links editMayor Pam Hemminger at Town of Chapel Hill Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pam Hemminger amp oldid 1190630489, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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