A string of abrupt downtown Greensboro business closings has touched off an unusually public bout of anxiety and media coverage regarding the state of Greensboro’s center city – and it has also produced a predictable response from city leaders: a reassuring press release.
On Thursday night, February 6, the City of Greensboro sent out a press release announcing that the Greensboro Police Department had “increased downtown patrol presence” through its Center City Resource Team – the unit that’s assigned to downtown.
City leaders said the team consists of two patrol squads with 18 officers who rotate schedules for a near-constant presence in downtown Greensboro, and also that GPD added three more officers to the team recently to enhance visibility and maintain a consistent presence.
Two days earlier, business owners and residents used the public comment portion of a virtual Greensboro City Council meeting to complain that downtown has become much harder to navigate, as well as harder to enjoy.
Many people don’t want to go downtown because of things like the traffic patterns that are complicated enough without detours all over the place due to road construction and repair. Others don’t feel safe due to the number of homeless people. Others don’t like the fact that finding a good legal parking place on a busy day is like winning the lottery.
The complaints are loud enough that they are getting a good deal of play on local media.
In a report on the meeting, public radio station WFDD noted that speakers echoed all of these concerns about parking, safety, and homeless people. Downtown business owner Kim-Grimsley-Ritchy stated: “Marketing is not the problem, and it never has been,” she said. “People know where downtown is. They are choosing not to go because the experience no longer works for them. Marketing may bring people once; conditions determine whether they return.”
On Tuesday, Feb. 10, a group of downtown business owners and City Council members went on a walking tour of downtown and discussed ideas..
The highly public complaints come in the wake of high-profile business closures that have hit downtown hard – particularly since several of the businesses were long-running fixtures.
M’Coul’s Public House – a downtown staple for nearly a quarter of a century, closed in late January. Dame’s Chicken & Waffles announced the closure of its downtown Greensboro location, which happened January 26.
Liberty Oak, a 46-year-old restaurant that had long been part of downtown Greensboro’s core identity, also closed.
Liberty Oak’s shutdown came on the heels of other recent closures, and nearby business owners are more and more describing downtown as increasingly difficult for small businesses to operate.
Those closures were followed almost immediately by a public narrative that Greensboro’s downtown is slipping in desirability.
The complaints have clustered around a few recurring themes: fewer people downtown during the workweek, higher costs, winter storms that disrupted the end of January, and a big set of local irritants that make downtown feel like it was becoming more trouble than it should be.
Parking, like safety, keeps coming up; it’s often the first thing people complain about.
In a February 3 news report, ABC 45 described business owners complaining that new paid parking changes on city-owned surface lots near Elm Street have created confusion for customers and cut into foot traffic. That report noted that some nearby lots shifted from free public parking to paid parking during weekday business hours at the beginning of 2026, while weekend parking remains free.
The ABC 45 story also described a complaint that paid parking signs indicate enforcement until 6 p.m. – while some business advocates say ticketing often stops earlier, leaving paid spaces sitting empty during early evening hours.
That’s a prime time for dining and shopping.
Speakers to the Greensboro City Council grouped safety complaints together with parking and homelessness – not necessarily as separate issues, but as components of an overall downtown experience that some residents say has deteriorated in recent years.
Downtown Greensboro has had a well-reported homeless problem for years and recent parking deck closures and new construction projects have gobbled up parking spaces like Pac-Man eating rows of dots.
Downtown Greensboro Inc. President and CEO Zack Matheny, when interviewed by WXII News, said there’s no one single reason for recent business closures.
He said one factor could be food and alcohol costs.
Whether the underlying causes are part of a national economic trend, a local trend or some mix of both along with other problems, the combined effect is that downtown leaders want to see the problems addressed.
The city’s February 6 press release regarding police presence in downtown didn’t cite crime statistics, specific incidents or a new initiative beyond the addition of three officers to the Center City Resource Team. It only emphasized visibility, consistency, proactive patrol, and collaboration with community partners – and it stated that the move “further solidifies the City of Greensboro’s commitment to the downtown community.”
That message sent out by the city was meant to beef up confidence in going downtown but what needs addressing are the problems of customers who’ve decided it’s just easier to eat elsewhere, the older patrons who don’t want to risk a ticket because they can’t figure out the parking signs or they don’t have a smart phone with an app that can pay, and the multitude of concerns of business owners who are watching too many “closed” signs go up in too short a period.
If Rhino Times readers have ideas on how to help downtown, they should include them in the comments below.

A lot of the homeless people have serious mental health issues like schizophrenia and bipolar. They self medicate with drugs and alcohol. Most police officers have no training in identifying mental health issues or how to handle someone having a mental health crisis.
Just adding police officers with no training or understanding of the mentally ill is actually unfair to the police officers and a waste of resources that are already stretched to the breaking point. For clarity I have bipolar and substance abuse issues so I have some knowledge
Should the mental health buses that Commissioner Skip Austin wants should be used to pick up the homeless and mental health individuals be transported to Skips residence or spread out to the mayor and city council residences?
Council should demand the “Cure for Violence” money GIVEN to an organization with NO accountability be refunded to the citizens of Greensboro to provide more police, mental health trained individuals.
Greensboro has been a leader in NC working on a co-response model, specifically to handle those calls involving mental illness, substance use, and homelessness. It is referred to as the Behavioral health Response Team (BHRT)
As of early 2026, the city received State funding to expand BHRT hours (traditionally they were weekday / evenings) to move closer to 24/7 response. Other cities are already reaching out to Greensboro for help in deploying similar programs.
Professor Chris strikes again. Thank you professor for the tutorial
Does information offend you? Weird.
Yes, BHRT exists, but does it help? Not really. The same mentally ill homeless dudes are sleeping at the same bus stops that they always have. The same homeless mentally ill dudes are still sitting in front of Cheese Cakes by Alex and other businesses or wandering around Center City Park. Like many programs thought up by brain trusts who don’t actually go out into the real world, BHRT is good idea on paper, but the mental health system behind it, or lack thereof, makes it doomed to fail. Which is why if you eat outside downtown you have a decent chance of being yelled at by a homeless guy or at least have them sleeping next to you. Can’t even safely take your kids to the park down there. Good try though. Chris. At least the police won’t ever go out of business.
Don I’m not sure if you read the local newspaper but I recently read the article about what ails downtown and the solutions being offered. I’m sure you remember several years back the Police increased foot patrols and then a few years later they had bike patrols and now the new bright idea is 4 wheel drive side by sides. The city late last year purchased 2 at 44k a piece. That’s such an unbelievable price. 88k for 2 side by side vehicles. Just when I thought dumb couldn’t get dumber That article was in the News- Record this past week
EVERY police officer in Greensboro receives training on how to deal with subjects experiencing a mental health issue. Every one.
However, Greensboro has become a magnet for the homeless population. It gets large numbers of homeless people from other areas because they talk, and one of the things they talk about is how easy Greensboro is on the homeless population, allowing them to get away with so much, giving them so much, etc. It’s 100% true. So what happens is, a city of our size it gets a disproportionate number of homeless people and all the problems that come with them. This overtaxes the services set up to help them. So instead of a few homeless getting average assistance and care, we end up with a large homeless population getting well below average assistance and care, and many get none at all. The revolving door policy at the hospitals and social services and the jail cannot keep up with the increasing number of out of town homeless people, much less the local ones, so they are repeatedly forced back out on the streets and left to fend for themselves.
But don’t blame the police- in addition to EVERY officer receiving PLENTY of mental health training they are ALREADY spending a substantial portion of their time interacting with subjects experiencing mental health issues. And there’s also a specialized squad of sworn officers and civilians who are mental health professionals that’s available most of the time to respond to those types of calls. But they can’t do anything to fix the problem of having far too many people in need of their attention. We need to somehow get it known that the handouts and free rein in the City are over, and the City Council has to fix that.
The city should provide free parking on the streets downtown with two-hour time limits. The same could be created in the city parking lots, again with two-hour time limits. Also. impose strict penalties for soliciting alms in the downtown business district. Police officers should be given the green light to enforce these provisions with support from the city and the courts. of course, this is not a perfect fix, but it might be a start.
I would agree with banning panhandling. However, I believe there was a Supreme Court case that confirmed that panhandling is protected speech under the 1st Amend.
Ken you are correct. The city issues a permit to folks who want to solicit on the street. I should have made that clear; that officers should ensure that solicitors have the proper permit.
I know where they can find $700 million to help problems all over the city, including downtown. People will go where the want to go, they decide, not the government. Other than going-to-court, or visiting City Hall, I feel no need to go downtown. Socialist & liberal policies are the problem.
Cool. Way to upsell downtown as a way to avoid conservative MAGA types. Love it!
I agree. I noticed that our once wonderful city has deteriorated under the leadership that keeps getting re-elected year after year. Policies implemented by the mayor and city council have turned Greensboro into a little Chicago, and it will continue to erode the quality of life that I used to enjoy. I could not take it any longer, so upon retirement, I moved away.
I am now in a community that while not perfect, is Republican leaning and a much more desirable place to live.
Sadly, with all of the new business moving to Greensboro, people will continue to migrate to the area, so the powers that be do not care about quality of life. It’s all about the money.
Please choose wisely at the next election.
Not with this electorate.
Younger people have been flooded with leftist dogma from every public angle, starting with government schools.
Not using it, not keeping it. You snooze, you looze.
The further away from the nerve center of leftist democrats and their cronies we can get, the happier we are!
If you can, get outta town!
Agree
high end high density housing in the downtown puts dining, shopping & services within easy walk/bike distance – promote it. feed the homeless far away from it. centralize & subsidize ride sharing eliminating usually empty, energy sucking buses holding up traffic flow & creating door to door transport
Greensboro need to build another parking deck. Increase more events downtown to entice folks (young and old) to come. Build another homeless shelter or increase the tiny home project to other areas and stay permanently open. It wouldn’t be bad to build another high rise to compete with other mid sized cities. See Greenville S.C.
The restaurants need to publicize their products due to most don’t know they exist and also lower prices. I know prices are going up for them, but if it’s affordable for the people, it will bring more folks and more profit. Police are not equipped to deal with the mentally ill, so have trained social workers to accompany them. Again, if more housing were available, they will leave the downtown.
The 3 P’s
Parking
Police
Places to Go (for all ages)
That is what makes a successful downtown strategy.
Too many homeless people that liter, use the restroom beside buildings, tent encampments, syringes laying out in the open, is why people aren’t going to these businesses and are closing. Why are Skip’s non-profits not out there rounding these folks up to get them mental health help, job training, drug rehab and off the streets. I guess the mayor and city council and Guilford County Commissioners would rather lose the money from taxes as these businesses close than deal with the problem. Look at California, the homeless / drug addicts are running off the good taxpaying working folks. Come on Greensboro what will it take?
If Property Taxes continue to rise, there will be few businesses left to provide any services to downtown. We’re headed into the “dark days” of downtown that we saw in the 90s.
As a small business owner and downtown property owner — with McCouls located in my family’s building, built by my husband while my sister-in-law owned it — and as a friend of the IRC who is actively involved with the unhoused community, I want to share the email I sent last night to City Council and City Management following yesterday’s downtown walk. I also copied more than 40 downtown businesses and building owners who are collaborating on these issues.
During the walk, we were told that we need to focus on parking. If that is truly the priority, then we need to address it in a way that directly supports the businesses that keep downtown alive.
The McGee/Elm and Green/Elm lots need to return to three-hour parking, with clear and consistent signage throughout each lot. In addition, the city-designated monthly paid spaces in these lots need to be eliminated immediately. These changes are not arbitrary — they reflect what surrounding businesses are consistently saying they need in order to survive and thrive.
Downtown businesses depend on accessible, customer-friendly parking. The City must prioritize supporting the businesses that are investing here, employing people here, and paying taxes here. If there is a budget deficit, the solution cannot continue to come at the expense of the very businesses that drive economic activity downtown. The City should explore alternative revenue strategies rather than placing additional strain on local businesses.
We all want a thriving, safe, and economically strong downtown. Aligning parking policy with the needs of the business community is a practical and immediate step in that direction.
Here’s my email:
Good Evening City Council Members and City Management,
Thank you to April Parker for championing the Downtown Business Walk and for her efforts to connect downtown businesses, property owners, and employees with City Council and City Management. It is a positive first step toward collaboration. I would also like to thank Tanya McCaskill-Dickens of Savor the Moment Dessert Bar for generously providing a welcoming space and refreshments for our group.
One of the most valuable outcomes of these Downtown Business Collaborations has been the conversations themselves and the increased awareness of the unique businesses and people that make downtown Greensboro special.
I understand that April was unaware of the level of media participation during today’s walk. However, the media presence felt disproportionate and may have limited open and candid dialogue. For future walks, a more personal, less media-focused approach could encourage more meaningful engagement, as people tend to speak more freely off camera.
During today’s walk—at least within our group—the discussion focused primarily on parking conditions, rather than safety or unhoused concerns. I am attaching some of the handouts I shared with several City Council members for your reference and consideration as part of the decision-making process.
Key Parking Concerns Raised
Affordable, understandable, or free parking options
Free or reasonably priced parking for small business employees (We appreciate hearing that a service employee parking program is in development)
Changing city parking signage limited to 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m., Monday–Friday, as City parking attendants leave at 5:00 p.m.
Reduced barriers for short-term parking
Improved organization and consistency across city-owned parking lots, including clearer labeling and identification of private versus public lots
Safe replacement of parking lost due to demolished decks
Non-app payment options for elderly and non-tech users, along with operable meters
Accessibility-conscious parking for handycapped
The McGee/Elm and Green/Elm parking lots had over 20 different signs during the first week of January when the City implemented paid parking on January 2, 2026. Please see the attached photos for reference.
Less than two years ago, the City removed approximately 50 three-hour public parking spaces from the Green/Elm Street and McGee/Elm Street lots (18 in the McGee lot and more than 30 in the Green Street lot). This decision significantly impacted surrounding businesses, including McCouls. These spaces are now being used by nearby property owners, local businesses—primarily Global Connect—and City employees at discounted rates. City employees have since been redirected to parking garages.
Regarding 324 South Elm Street, the property was developed in 2009 by Jim and/or Seth Marshall with Lindbrook Development Corp. At that time, the City provided approximately $100,000 in incentives and agreed to supply them with 11 parking spaces for 40 years, per the lease agreement. After several failed restaurants, Global Connect leased the 324 South Elm Street property in 2016. I have attached a couple news paper articles from 2009.
Currently, Global Connect employees occupy approximately 33 parking spaces in the Green/Elm parking lot. Of these:
11 spaces are tied to the original 40-year agreement
2 spaces are occupied by dumpsters
20 spaces are paid monthly to the City
Several of these assigned spaces belong to employees who work remotely and are not consistently used. This exceeds the number of spaces contractually assigned or actively utilized and, most importantly, removes valuable parking that could serve downtown customers. All of the city paid spot in these lots should go towards public parking, and city attorney should review the lease agreement.
Lastly, I am aware that City Management has stated that they do not support restoring three-hour public parking at the McGee/Elm and Green/Elm lots. I respectfully but strongly disagree with this position. The majority of the surrounding businesses that rely on these public parking options feel the same. At times, it feels as though this decision has already been made, I hope I’m wrong.
With four recent restaurant closures and many more businesses struggling, the City must stand behind its small businesses and take meaningful action. Economic conditions have affected everyone, and people are spending less. Making it harder to park downtown only compounds these challenges and further harms our local businesses. From my experience, anyone I know who ventures downtown is often more concerned with safety than parking, yet these two issues are closely intertwined. Convenient parking is especially important when people don’t feel safe in their environment. Someone that lives and works downtown noted that they don’t feel unsafe downtown but added efforts need to be made to ensure that all visitors to downtown feel that way.
Today was about communication with decision-makers. I hope these concerns are given thoughtful consideration moving forward.
Thank you for your time and attention and I look forward to seeing results.
Pretty much stopped going downtown some years ago when my spouse expressed feeling unsafe due to panhandlers and scruffy street people.
Democrat policies are driving away customers.
I don’t want to get into a gunfight or thrown in jail to buy a burger.
Blaming customers never works. This is the Golden Rule. He who has the gold gets to make the rules.
In this case, the citizens have the gold and are voting with their feet.
Democrats never get it.
The downtowns that are still successful in the US, all have downtown convention centers and many hotels,
we for some reason, lack that. I traveled the whole US for many years doing trade shows, and saw it time and time again
Well, Koury beat the city to the punch. Developed a motel/convention center at Four Seasons, conveniently by I-40 and a quick ride from the airport, with plentiful parking. The coliseum is nearby. And later added Grandover. Downtown is tough enough to navigate as it is. Building a convention center, at this point, makes no sense. City leaders can’t seem to make downtown work well as it is. Imagine squeezing in a convention center? Too late for that now.
One thing they might consider is the tax and fees they impose that burden all the taxpayers who choose not to live or work downtown. The more they must pay for “other people’s problems” reduces not just the amount they have to spend, but likely the inclination to spend it downtown. What attracts generous customers is nice and welcoming businesses that offer something special, not policemen or security guards or ID checks. Make downtown fun, and it will pay for itself. Tax everyone else for its safety and few will be happy to pay.
About these businesses closing down. Please correct me if I am wrong, I don’t ever remember seeing or any commercials on local radio or TV. It seems that DGI should have known that these businesses were in trouble and helped with advertising incentives. Also did these Owners think that in today’s market they did not have to advertise?
Also it seems that our city leaders let our parking garages degrade on purpose simply because they thought they could increase revenue through a land lease agreement if that is what they did.
My Wife and I will not come downtown. Your so called “young professionals ” seem to be a lot of drunkards and there seems to be too much violence and uncourteous behavior. We were at an art show an opened the door to leave. We were almost run buy an electric scooter.
It seems people that own their own business try to keep their property up. While our city leaders and school administrators let the property they responsible for fall into disrepair the come crying to the taxpayers to bail them out to the tune of a billion dollar bond. This is on top of the 3/4 bonds they can use without taxpayers approval. On top that our property taxes will somewhere around 50% this year. Don’t ever think about sales tax increase.
We have people moving from other parts of the country and bringing their sorry good for politics with them. You have ruined from where you came. Go back and don’t ruin Greensboro and Guilford County.
Sincerely
Wilson Chandler
Get a pro team here…MLS Soccer….Women’s Soccer….Rugby… whatever. This area can support a Major League Team…use the old News and Record site and build a stadium. They will come.
or a casino . . . i will avoid
My longtime experience in Greensboro is that Greensboro is bush league. If the team makes the playoffs, then they get support. Otherwise, empty seats.
The Greensboro Generals would pack them in for the playoffs, especially Charlotte. I don’t see how they survived for many years.
Great article Scott! I know you have covered this topic numerous times in the past. It seems the same issues continue to fall on deaf ears and I expect the trend will continue. I don’t think the feel good programs the city likes to dream up will work on all the issues mentioned in your article. Downtown has become an armpit and the perception that things are better is just not true. Downtown is not a destination people want to visit.
It’s not just downtown Greensboro. Many things about this city have changed, and not for the better. Sign of the times, I guess.
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Scott is right – PARKING, PARKING, PARKING ! “..it’s often the first thing people complain about”.
YA THINK…???
If I was an evil genius who wanted to bankrupt downtown businesses, I would make parking as impossible and frustrating as possible. Which is exactly what the City has done.
I don’t own a smart phone because I don’t want a phone that’s the size of a paperback. And costs $1000. And doesn’t receive any signal in rural Caswell or Randolph county, where I make sales (which need to be confirmed in real time by my office). I own an ancient Nokia flip phone that works in these situations, and is so small that I have to feel my pocket to see if I’m carrying it.
But the City of Greensboro has decreed that I must have a “Smart Phone” – or I’m S.O.L. – if I want to enjoy the restaurants, bars, entertainment, and ambience of our great Downtown – while claiming that they’re making parking easier.
You know what’s easy? Dropping a quarter in a meter. Until you re-instate that, or enable universal free parking, I’m not coming back.
Hey – it was you you made it impossible.
Greensboro City Council should take note of WHOM is not coming downtown. That will reveal a lot. Southern cities are no longer an attraction to White families. That ended in the 1960s, and we all know why. Fixing a problem always begins with admitting the truth. Southern cities were made up of families that did not party at night or dine out often. But one thing they did do during the day was work in cities. That made for vibrant city sidewalks. And many of the workers were blue collar. I would suggest enticing businesses to move into downtown Greensboro. The workers may return to the suburbs at night but there would be commerce going on during the day. Liveliness during the day may beget liveliness during the evening hours.
No problems my money won’t be used to address.
In 2013, i sent an email to former Mayor Vaughn explaining why the city’s one hour parking limit near Natty Greene’s was unreasonable since lunches often last longer than 60 minutes. This was in response to a ticket I received earlier in the day. At the time, I was working on downtown revitalization with a nearby municipality. My purpose was to offer a suggestion to make Downtown Greensboro more welcoming to potential consumers. The Mayor passed the email along to former city manager Jim Westmoreland. This man didn’t take kindly to my email, sent a complaint email to my boss, and copied all of the City Council of the city where I was employed. Instead of accepting constructive criticism, Westmoreland chose to try to intimidate me. This told me all I needed to know about Greensboro city management and leadership. They couldn’t care less about downtown or its potential visitors. I avoid downtown at all costs because I learned my lesson years ago.
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What a petty, spiteful thing to do.
You’re right Mike, parking is the problem.
Where to begin. This is why many of us predicted moving the entertainment from the Coliseum Auditorium to the Tanger Center was a mistake. Parking. Except for the option of a gravel lot 2 blocks away, there are the parking decks. How many citizens really want to walk back to their cars in a deck at 10-11pm, whereas the coliseum parking lot was huge, well-lit, and fenced in. Then there is the general lack of other entertainment downtown. In the 60s and 70s, there were 3 other movie theaters aside from the Carolina, and Triad Stage used to offer live plays. All that is gone. In our parents` day, there was an opera house. Also, consider what has become of the festivals downtown. We used to have City/Stage and Fun Fourth. The first was discontinued, and the latter is a shadow of what it once was. What business/restaurant would want to remain open when the city government and leaders think so little of their downtown that the entertainment of its citizens as well as their safety takes a backseat to pay raises for the mayor and city council and incentives for businesses which likely will leave when the incentives run out. Greensboro can do a lot better, but until her citizens figure out that the liberal government which has been in place these last 10 years works only for the government it will remain as it is.
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And why is there nothing but deafening silence from the President of DGI – Downtown Greensboro Inc?
He should be going to bat for downtown businesses and fighting to make parking more available, affordable, and abundant.
Why has Little Bryan gone AWOL? [ He likes to go by Zack ]
As sent to the Mayor and City Council
This morning, I read an article in the Rino Times, “Ailing Downtown Greensboro” of which I personally experienced yesterday.
I was downtown yesterday and almost got hit with a homeless man’s spit who was camped out at 304 Elm St, that was after I passed another homeless man who was camped out at 308 Elm St.
This behavior could have been predicted since our last City Council, mainly the last Mayor welcomed the homeless to Greensboro. They were coming here by way of a One Way Bus ticket. They heard on the street, “Go to Greensboro, NC”. Similar to what happened in Asheville’s downtown.
To help the homeless is an admirable task, however to do so to the extent Greensboro did can or is leading to an uncomfortable Downtown for All of our Citizens. Greensboro residents and Visitors are scared to go Downtown. This is sad. On one hand Greensboro is booming with loads of new jobs, a Civil Rights Museum and a Lovely Performing Arts center both in Downtown, and on the other hand loads of homeless coming to Greensboro. All of which has to be managed and controlled.
When 5 restaurants in one area close around the same time, there is a Big problem. Liberty Oak was the first with guts enough to open a restaurant in a Dead Down town decades ago. A place where No One was going to because they were scared. This is definitely not something we want to repeat.
The homeless need help. Each State and each City should be responsible to help their “Local” homeless. Not promote and invite them from all over the country. This was a Huge mistake promoted by our last Mayor.
Unfortunately our New Mayor and City Council are now left with that burden. This is a Big Problem that must be addressed quickly.
The Tax payers and citizens of Guilford County must focus on this problem and not allow it to get bigger. Guilford County got an extra $92,000,000 in property tax revenue in 2022, and another estimated $150,000,000 coming in 2026.
That is almost a Quarter of a Billion extra, Every Year, from now on. Lets tap these funds to fix this so the number of contributing Tax paying citizens want to live here and go Downtown without being scared.
My wife and I used to enjoy it when entertainers that we liked would come to the Carolina Theater. We’d usually arrive downtown an hour and a half prior to the event and go to one of the restaurants for a meal before. Most of the time we could only find a parking spot on some lesser used side street several blocks from the Carolina.
The music event usually would end in the 10PM range. Then there was a walk in the dark down the lesser used streets to get to our car. Since you cannot exercise your 2nd Amendment Right if you are going into the venue that meant that we were at the mercy of anyone who might be standing in an alley, doorway or behind a dumpster any place along our route. The last two times we did this I started getting very concerned of our vulnerability.
We no longer frequent down town at all because of the very iffy parking, lack of police presents any where around when events in the parking decks and the streets. Nor will we ever go to the Carolina again.
I seem to note with all the comments here, that no one is talking about the DGI tax that I am reading on other outlets is providing businesses no benefit. Add that to the low level of parking, the fact that the IRC is 3 blocks from Elm St., and has no ability to house the homeless all day long, there are going to be issues. Until the city choses to actively resolve the known problems, nothing will change. Politically, we’re becoming more like Chicago and San Francisco in the spending and taxing to no benefit to anyone but government. Voters must decide to override 5 colleges worth of liberal infused students combined with a left leaning population to change things. I’m a lifer here, but if not for my age, I would relocate to get away from the direction we are headed. I see little good in the future of this town unless people wake up.
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Yeah, the poor small business owners downtown have to pay a surcharge on their Property Taxes to fund DGI.
And what – exactly – is DGI doing for them?
You’d think DGI would be involved here, trying to support the businesses. But it’s silence, deafening silence from that organization and the CEO
What a useless organization.
.
I retired from law enforcement. More cops doesn’t solve anything. You need fewer than you have now with a city and culture of happy and healthy citizens who behave themselves. We have all allowed the system to become what it is by electing losers & letting them run rampant for decades. Until you throw the bums out, sweep out all the corners and clear all the cobwebs, it will be difficult to replace enough of them to even begin to make any meaningful difference in our lifetime. This country needs a fresh start with very little government. Government is needed, but should only serve to be a basic framework to fund core infrastructure. I get ruffled everytime somwone mentions freedom. What you have now is certainly not freedom. Yes, we enjoy many things that others do not, but that comes at a price. Many have spilled blood for what few freedoms we enjoy. Many of our elected leaders have sold out to the rich & powerful, while others have tried to sell us all to mortgage the “historically underserved” or whatever the “social justice” rhetoric of the day is. The stark reality is we allowed this to happen & it is our responsibility to clean it up. That wont be done by adding police or feeding the homeless, it will take real work, a change in mindset & expectations from the masses, and for a very long time before even a glimpse of positive change is observed. Why is it that anytime something doesn’t go well, we feel the need to regulate it further? To be truly free, you need a fair tax system where everyone pays. Not based on income, but based on what you purchase or consume. The rate is the same for everyone. It may seem odd to some to believe that paying a 24% tax on your big screen TV or smartphone is fair, but when you dont pay an income tax and only pay for what you buy, everyone benefits. Democrats and Republicans are not the answer. On core issues that truly affect what we need in government, these two bodies have become one & the same. They mask themselves in their differences of social idealogy to continually divide and attempt to sway the opinions of us peons, while making a mockery of what our founding fathers established & at our expense. Thats my independent conservative libertarian leaning rant for the day… God bless you all.
Es verdad. From one Libertarian to another.
The downtown area does not have anything to draw interest from those of us that live outside walking distance away. As mentioned parking, homelessness and crazy streets. One idea is to create an actual desirable area, perhaps closing Elm St and making it a pedestrian only area, allowing more street activities and dining areas. Think Little Italy in NY. Perhaps even add shuttle services with off duty city buses to outlying central parking areas to allow outside residents to park away and get service into during weekend activities. With nothing but a few restaurants to draw, I’ve got no incentive to come given the hassles. Simple cost\benefit of my time and enjoyment.
Yes that takes planning, not something that is particularly a strength with the city.
It is true we have numerous issues in this city. Our governing body will never get it, because none of them understand how it started or how it became so terrible. The main thing is to keep the main thing, the main thing. What do we always hear at election time, it’s the economy, stupid. We live inside the city limits, we have a moderate home, and the house I purchased when we moved to Greensboro, was not in city limits. My present taxes on our home amount to more money than my total annual payments were on the original home. Just about the same square footage in both cases. I am retired and do not have any earnings beyond social security, we’ve lived here in this home for 32 years. The city needs to realize continuing to raise property taxes causes folks to sell their dwelling because they can’t pay the taxes. There must be a special place in hell for those who cause such. When you live in a home that you struggled to pay for, paid the mortgage and now find you can’t keep it. Fortunately, we are not in that position, but many are. Liberals ruin EVERYTHING they touch.