Upcoming Raleigh Events
CITY COUNCIL MEETINGS
Mayor’s Committee for Persons With Disabilities Meeting
Mayor’s Committee for Persons With Disabilities Meeting
Safe, Vibrant and Healthy Community Meeting
Safe, Vibrant and Healthy Community Meeting
City Council Evening Session with Public Comment
City Council Evening Session with Public Comment
Mayor’s Committee for Persons With Disabilities Meeting
Mayor’s Committee for Persons With Disabilities Meeting
Safe, Vibrant and Healthy Community Meeting
Safe, Vibrant and Healthy Community Meeting
City Council Evening Session with Public Comment
City Council Evening Session with Public Comment
Mayor’s Committee for Persons With Disabilities Meeting
Mayor’s Committee for Persons With Disabilities Meeting
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
Neighborhood Rezoning Meeting: 3027 Rock Quarry Road
Neighborhood Rezoning Meeting: 3027 Rock Quarry Road
Hybrid Midtown Citizens Advisory Council Meeting
Hybrid Midtown Citizens Advisory Council Meeting
Development Stakeholders Quarterly Meeting
Development Stakeholders Quarterly Meeting
DDNA (District D Neighborhood Alliance)
DDNA (District D Neighborhood Alliance)
Neighborhood Rezoning Meeting: 8125 Leesville Rd
Neighborhood Rezoning Meeting: 8125 Leesville Rd
Neighborhood Rezoning Meeting: 3027 Rock Quarry Road
Neighborhood Rezoning Meeting: 3027 Rock Quarry Road
Fair Housing Conference: Fair Housing is Still Law
Fair Housing Conference: Fair Housing is Still Law
Neighborhood Rezoning Meeting: 3027 Rock Quarry Road
Neighborhood Rezoning Meeting: 3027 Rock Quarry Road
Hybrid Midtown Citizens Advisory Council Meeting
Hybrid Midtown Citizens Advisory Council Meeting
Development Stakeholders Quarterly Meeting
Development Stakeholders Quarterly Meeting
DDNA (District D Neighborhood Alliance)
DDNA (District D Neighborhood Alliance)
Neighborhood Rezoning Meeting: 8125 Leesville Rd
Neighborhood Rezoning Meeting: 8125 Leesville Rd
Neighborhood Rezoning Meeting: 3027 Rock Quarry Road
Neighborhood Rezoning Meeting: 3027 Rock Quarry Road
Fair Housing Conference: Fair Housing is Still Law
Fair Housing Conference: Fair Housing is Still Law
Read up on our latest news…
FEBRUARY 17 & 18, 2025 CITY COUNCIL MEETINGS
Highlights from 2/17 budget work session and 2/18 work session on stormwater and 2/18 afternoon session
Guidelines for Deciding Rezoning Cases
Livable Raleigh calls on City Council to reform their approach to rezoning applications. Raleigh’s Comprehensive Plan, if followed, offers a clear path to sustainable, equitable growth.
Democracy is more than voting
Local government is generally more democratic than other levels of government and that is largely due to public comment which provides the chance for residents to publicly share thoughts and ideas, and conversely to listen to the thoughts and ideas of other ordinary residents.
It’s our Birthday! We’re Five Years Old
Livable Raleigh published our first blog five years ago on February 17, 2020. Just like any other five-year-old, we can’t wait to grow even bigger. So, we’re combining a “FUND-RAISER” with a “FRIEND-RAISER” as our birthday celebration. If you rely on the kind of information you are only able to find through Livable Raleigh, we need your help to grow. Tell all your friends just what a valuable source of information we are.
INDY Best of 2025 – Wake County – Nominations are OPEN
The nominations for INDY’s Best of 2025 Wake County are open until February 28. You only have a few days to get your choices in. We hope you will consider nominating us again this year as “Best Local Activist Group” in Wake County
Democracy depends on the voices of citizens
I stand before you today because democracy depends on the voices of its citizens, and public comment is one of the most direct ways we, the people, can engage with our local government. The proposal to limit public comment time is not just about minutes on a clock—it’s about the fundamental principle of representation.
King Charles neighborhood in Southeast Raleigh is dinged by City Council
King Charles NCOD stands as an example of responsible urban planning, balancing growth with livability. Destroying it in favor of unchecked development will result in irreversible damage to its character, community, and environment. The city must seek smarter solutions that protect Raleigh’s legacy while ensuring sustainable growth.
February 11 City Council Meetings
Highlights from February 11 Work Session on Bus Rapid Transit as well as Public Comment session
New Community Engagement Support at One-Year Anniversary
A year ago on February 6, 2024 City Council approved a motions to restore City support and official recognition of Raleigh’s Citizen Advisory Councils (CACs). The vote to approve the motion was unanimous.
February 4, 2025 City Council Meetings
Highlights from the February 4 City Council Meeting.
Wildfire! Could it happen here?
The recent devastation of Los Angeles and the periodic destruction of property elsewhere in California and the western states begs the question — could it happen in Raleigh?
Speak Out Regarding Public Comments
Public Comments at City Council meetings are the one unique opportunity to address the full city council and have your concerns heard by the other residents in attendance and those watching the livestream in real time or the video at a later more convenient time. Council wants to cut them back by 2/3. Tell them NO!
Council Planning Retreat – January 24 & 25, 2025
Highlights from Council’s Planning Retreat
Raleigh’s budget is a blueprint for our lives
Our city’s budget is far more than just a financial ledger—it’s a blueprint for our lives and futures. It shapes the services we depend on every day, from police and fire protection that ensure our safety, to public transportation that keeps us connected, and parks and green spaces that enrich our quality of life.
Mayor Cowell: “It’s going to take focus, attention and every tool in the toolbox.”
Day two of Council’s annual retreat kicks off on January 25th with a discussion of affordable housing. It will be interesting to see if Mayor Cowell can convince her fellow Councilors to move beyond the kinds of fuzzy math that has concealed the real size and causes of Raleigh’s affordable housing crisis. Effective solutions will be fact-based, data driven and will reform current growth rules that promote the loss of five thousand affordable units each year.
Be strong, be resolute, preserve Raleigh’s cultural resources
Raleigh finds itself on lists of superlatives, and one factor that places us there consistently is our collective effort to maintain the character of our fair city through preservation of our historic landscapes, land use patterns, architecture and rich cultural heritage.
JANUARY 21, 2025 CITY COUNCIL MEETINGS
Highlights from January 21, 2025 Council Work Session and Afternoon Session
Make sure they fund the things that matter
Attending the city’s budget listening sessions was more informative than just how the budget is created. It showed people have a lot to say. They have a lot they care about. Of these things, the 3 that kept coming up were Affordable Housing, Transportation, and Public Safety.
January 14, 2025 City Council Meetings
Council discussed the strategic plan during the afternoon work session and heard public comments in the evening.
The Attack on Single-Family Zoning
I have experience valuing homes that are next to duplexes, fourplexes and apartment buildings; I see what’s happening in these neighborhoods. Once zoning is changed from single-family to multi-family, developers move in and start competing against families for older homes. Unfortunately, the builder always wins because they have more money and are willing to pay cash. Homes, perfect for a starter family or in need of being rehabbed will be purchased by a developer who will tear the house down to make way for a new multi-unit building on a small 5,000-square-foot site. (It’s called the highest and best use of the land). The moment construction starts, the value of a nice condition single-family home next door goes down; the appraisal term is called external obsolescence. Welcome to capitalism in America.