The Growth Rate

Based on the March 2023 Monthly Development Report, WF Planning Updated April 12, 2023 There were no changes between the February and March reports. There were no additions and no deletions. The updated Wake Forest population as of July 2022 is 54,274. In 2021 the population was 50,244. How rezoning and development requests are now heard Planning Director Courtney Tanner gave this response to a query: All legislative cases (rezonings) have a public hearing at the Commissioner meeting and a public comment session at the Planning Board. A special use permit has a public hearing at the Commissioner meeting. Administrative (correct zoning and comply with the UDO) cases are approved at the staff level. What town board approval means now Senior Planner Patrick Reidy explained what the town board’s approval of new subdivisions means under the new state and town requirements. “They approved the conditional rezoning/master plan. Both projects will

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Padgett proposes one-cent tax increase

Tuesday evening, May 2, Wake Forest Town Manager Kip Padgett proposed a one-cent increase in next year’s tax rate, which would raise it from 49.5 cents to 50.5 cents. The increase, Padgett said, is to cover the costs of the 2022 bond referendum with a $75 million price tag. He and Chief Financial Officer Aileen Staples had warned those costs for roads, greenways, parks/recreation and a downtown parking facility might necessitate a property tax increase of between one and three cents, but they have been able to keep it at one cent. Street resurfacing and greenway projects are ready for construction. There is also a proposed increase in the solid waste monthly charge of $1 from $21 to $22. The tax base has grown by $209,888,345 in a year to $7,631,691,445, which includes property in both Wake and Franklin counties. He pegged the collection rate at 98.5 percent, but in

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Preserve this unique land, residents plead at Harris Road hearing

Everyone was pretty sure the Wake Forest Town Board would deny the Harris Road plan on Tuesday, May 3, because the town planning board had rejected it and the town planning department recommended against it, but Michael Birch, a lawyer representing the developer Church Street Co., dangled a new goodie, affordable housing, in front of the commissioners. After Birch sat down, the public hearing on Harris Road was open to the public, and almost to a man and woman they said the land should be left lightly touched because of its piedmont 50-foot bluff, its pristine and fish-filled stream and the rare plants found on the 46 acres. Deborah Perlini led off, talking about how the town needs more recreation areas because green spaces are vital to mental and physical health. “The town needs to act like trees are a priority.” Tim Shail followed with a brief video about the

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Big Bang Boom comes to Friday Night on White

Big Bang Boom will be the featured musical group at the second Six Sundays in Spring at E. Carroll Joyner Park’s amphitheater on May 7. The popular music series sponsored by the Town of Wake Forest and ARTS Wake Forest will be in the park on consecutive Sundays rain or shine from April 30 through June 4 and from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Featuring free, live musical entertainment, Six Sundays in Spring offers residents the opportunity to enjoy a variety of local and region al performers in a beautiful outdoor setting. The other acts scheduled to perform this year include Miss Mini and the Sandman Band on May 14, Conjunto Breve on May 21, The Magnificents on May 28, and Sensory Expressions on June 4. A variety of food and dessert trucks will be on site for each Six Sundays in Spring concert. Concert goers are also invited to bring

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Just a little history: The Powell House

Dempsey Powell was an early resident of Wake County whose house once stood where the Meridian apartments are under construction. The house, part of it built in the mid-1700s, burned in 2006. It overlooked a large tract of land that was divided between his sons, Jesse and Caswell, after his death ca. 1793. Jesse Powell inherited 318 acres from his father and accumulated much more before he died in 1842. When he decided to build a house on the then-main Raleigh to Oxford Road, the present owner says it was a long-range and meticulous plan because the heart pine used had been seasoned (cut and allowed to dry thoroughly before it was used), all the windows are of the same exact size, the floors have not warped in two centuries, and the rooms with their fireplaces remain intact. It is a large Federal-style house with an unusual floor plan with

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Letter: New skate park planned for wrong space

Letter: Plan for skate park in the wrong place To the editor: The town of Wake Forest has plans to build a skate and pump (bike) park and 80-seat amphitheater at the intersection of Brooks Street and East Holding Avenue to the tune of $4.4M. This parcel sits east of the Northern Wake Senior Center and the Brookdale Retirement/Nursing/Memory Care home, and across the street from the public library. I am a member of the Neuse River Hawks, a chapter of the NC Wildlife Federation, and we’re hoping to convince the town that this location for a park of this type is inappropriate. Not only will the parcel’s trees be clear-cut (one of the last remaining stands of trees in downtown Wake Forest), the parcel serves as a habitat for many creatures, including a deer herd along with a multitude of birds and other critters. One of our biggest concerns

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Free monthly Family Movie Nights begin on May 27

The Wake Forest Parks, Recreation & Cultural Resources Department will host a free, monthly outdoor movie series from May through August at E. Carroll Joyner Park, 701 Harris Road. The first in the series of Family Movie Nights at Joyner Park will feature the film “Lady and the Tramp” on Saturday, May 27, at 8:30 p.m. Family Movie Nights will feature a variety of family-friendly film favorites and genres, including comedies, dramas, and thrillers, all projected on a 26-foot inflatable movie screen in the park’s amphitheater. Future film screenings are scheduled on the following Saturdays: June 17 (Encanto), July 22 (Zootopia), and August 5 (Spider Man: No Way Home). Showtime for each event is 8:30 p.m. Anyone planning to attend is urged to arrive early as viewing space may be limited. Family Movie Nights are free and open to the public. Each will also include a movie-related pre-show activity for

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Juneteenth will be a two-day celebration this year

The 2023 Juneteenth in Wake Forest will be a two-day event featuring the Alston-Massenburg Center, 416 North Taylor Street, on Friday, June 16, and the DuBois Center, 518 North Franklin Street, on Saturday, June 17. Friday’s event will run from 4 to 6:30 p.m. and will feature giveaways, Jay’s Italian Ice, and more fun before the crowd walks to the soon-to-open Wake Forest Food Hall at 303 East Roosevelt Avenue to purchase dinner from the various food trucks there. On Saturday the activities run from late morning to late evening. It all begins at 11:45 a.m. when participants will assemble for a recreation of the historic Freedom Walk. Then from noon until 3:30 p.m. there will be a festival with booths, fun and food. From 4 to 8 p.m. the scene shifts to the Wake Forest Renaissance Centre for the Arts at 508 South Brooks Street where Eugene Brown, a

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Registration continues for family-friendly 5K/3K walk/run

The Recreation Advisory Board will host a family-friendly 5K/3K walk/run as part of National Trails Day on Saturday, June 3, at E. Carroll Joyner Park, 701 Harris Road. Check-in on the day of the event starts at 7 a.m., and the races begin at 8 a.m. Online registration is available at http://bit.ly/WFNationalTrailsDay. The National Trails Day 5K/3K is a timed walk/run for children and adults. A loop of the paved trails throughout Joyner Park will comprise the 3.1-mile course for the 5K and 1.8-mile course for the 3K. Strollers are welcome but will be placed at the back of the pack to allow runners a clear start. The entry fee for the 5K is $30 through May 14; $35 from May 15-June 1; and $40 the day before and day of the race. The entry fee for the 3K is $25 through May 14; $30 May 15-June 1; and $35

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Parks & Rec hosting two fishing tournaments in May

Parks & Rec hosting two fishing tournaments From May 15 to May 28, the Parks, Recreation & Cultural Resources (PRCR) Department will host a Bass Fishing Tournament for ages 13 and older and a Youth Fishing Tournament for ages 12 and under (non-competitive). Over this two-week period, local anglers can visit any public fishery in Wake or Franklin County to try and catch the biggest fish. Participants in the Youth Fishing Tournament may catch any species of fish, while anglers in the Bass Fishing Tournament will be limited to bass only. Online registration for both tournaments is available through Thursday, April 27, at https://wakeforestnc.recdesk.com/Community/Home (search “fishing”). The cost to participate is $10 for the bass tournament and $5 for the youth tourney. Participants in the bass tourney will receive a fishing scale to be used in the competition, while contestants in the youth tournament will receive an “Early Fisherman” packet.

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