Up & Coming Weekly

July 04, 2017

Up and Coming Weekly is a weekly publication in Fayetteville, NC and Fort Bragg, NC area offering local news, views, arts, entertainment and community event and business information.

Issue link: http://www.epageflip.net/i/844872

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 4 of 36

4 UCW JULY 5-11, 2017 WWW.UPANDCOMINGWEEKLY.COM PUBLISHER'S PEN STAFF PUBLISHER Bill Bowman Bill@upandcomingweekly.com ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER/EDITOR Stephanie Crider editor@upandcomingweekly.com ASSISTANT EDITOR Leslie Pyo leslie@upandcomingweekly.com SENIOR REPORTER Jeff Thompson news@upandcomingweekly.com SENIOR SPORTS EDITOR Earl Vaughan Jr. GRAPHIC DESIGNER Elizabeth Long art@upandcomingweekly.com CONTRIBUTING WRITERS D.G. Martin, Pitt Dickey, Margaret Dickson, John Hood, Erinn Crider, Jim Jones, Shanessa Fenner, Paul Hall SALES ADMINISTRATOR/ DISTRIBUTION MANAGER Laurel Handforth laurel@upandcomingweekly.com ACCOUNTING Paulette Naylor accounting@upandcomingweekly.com MARKETING/SALES Linda McAlister Brown linda@upandcomingweekly.com ––––––––––– Up & Coming Weekly www.upandcomingweekly.com 208 Rowan Street P.O. Box 53461 Fayetteville, NC 28305 PHONE: (910) 484-6200 FAX: (910) 484-9218 Up & Coming Weekly is a "Quality of Life" publication with local features, news and infor- mation on what's happening in and around the Fayetteville/Cumberland County community. Up & Coming Weekly is published weekly on Wednesdays. Up & Coming Weekly welcomes manuscripts, photographs and artwork for publi- cation consideration, but assumes no responsibil- ity for them. We cannot accept responsibility for the return of unsolicited manuscripts or material. Opinions expressed by contributors do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher. The publisher reserves the right to edit or reject copy submitted for publication. Up & Coming Weekly is free of charge and distributed at indoor and outdoor locations throughout Fayetteville, Fort Bragg, Pope Air Force Base, Hope Mills and Spring Lake. Readers are limited to one copy per person. ©2007 by F&B Publications, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction or use of editorial or advertisements without permission is strictly prohibited. Cover art designed with various elements from: vecteezy.com and freepik.com. Well, Kirk deViere's YouTube announce- ment last week that he intends to give up his District 2 City Council seat and enter the race for mayor makes it look like Fayetteville residents are going to experi- ence a spirited municipal race and elec- tion this fall. Two-term incumbent Mayor, Nat Rob- ertson, has much going for him, including years of experience, a grassroots kinship with the Fayetteville community and a long list of municipal accomplishments with an even longer list of Republican friends, donors and supporters. On the other hand, Florida-born outsider deViere was introduced to Fayetteville via his 10-year Army tenure and affiliations through Fort Bragg. He consequently and consciously adopted Fayetteville as his "hometown." Here, he built his reputation, his businesses and his home. With his marriage to one of Fayetteville's local and most prominent favorite daughters, Jenny Beaver, he is now in the process of raising a Fayetteville family. With these two worthy contenders hav- ing much in common, it practically assures an exciting and competitive race. Matter of fact, they have so much in common it makes you wonder why they are vying for the same position and not combining their experience, intellect and passion into building a leadership coalition that would expedite Fayetteville's growth and prosperity for all citizens. It has been said that Fayetteville is a tale of two cities — the "haves" and the "have-nots." Well, I'm not sure I buy that. Fayetteville is one city, and it should be governed as one city. Rob- ertson and deViere are both good men. A close look at these two candidates reflects many positive similarities. Both candidates love the Fayetteville community and are committed to making it a better place to live, work and raise a family. Both are honest, intelligent and reason- able with a lot of common sense. Both are free-thinking and can articulate and communicate their ideas succinctly. Both understand the importance of long-term planning and leadership. Both have positive visions for the Fayetteville community. Both have demonstrated an extreme work ethic. Both have extensive "hands-on" busi- ness experience. Both are entrepreneurial and have owned businesses. Both are familiar with the pressures of making an employee payroll. Both are logical and creative thinkers. Both are family-oriented: Robertson has two successful grown children raised in Fayetteville and deViere has chosen to raise his children in Fayetteville. Both their wives are local women of sub- stance who have successful professional careers. Both women are involved and ac- tive in the community and extremely dedi- cated to and supportive of their husbands. Both want to see Fayetteville grow and prosper both economically and socially. And, both contenders know the agony of defeat, having each lost a previous mayoral campaign. So, on the surface, we have two sub- stantially qualified candidates who undoubtedly and passionately have the City of Fayetteville's best interest at heart. Personal leadership style and philosophy may end up being the only real conten- tions between the two. Let's hope so. We do not need the overwhelming vitriol that was present when Robertson ran against and defeated real estate agent Val Apple- white in 2013. Many people felt that was fueled because Applewhite's priorities were misaligned and that she was running for all the wrong reasons. No one can predict what will take place in the coming weeks. Will it be a dignified and respectable mayoral race between two dignified and respectable city servants? No one knows, but, I sincerely hope so. No doubt both candidates want to be leaders and accountable to the people. I'm hoping for an aggressive but positive and respectable campaign — one where the winner becomes mayor and the loser re- mains an involved supporter and advocate of the Fayetteville community. No doubt e Fayetteville Observer and the local radio talk shows will try to keep the election conflicted. ey think it sells more papers and gains listeners. I doubt it. e fact is, our local daily newspaper doesn't have many reporters left in the newsroom, if any, who have a qualified local historical and political perspective of Fayetteville, let alone of the candidates. And, with its local editorial page editor liv- ing two counties away in Chatham County, you can be sure his opinions and insights will be shallow and antagonistic. e local radio talk shows will tend to follow their same "unfair and unbalanced" format. My best advice to the candidates and the community is to resist, resist, re- sist. is means Fayetteville residents must do their due diligence by vetting each candidate. Talk openly with and candidly to these two highly-qualified mayoral can- didates. en vote your conscience. Don't depend on the media. Our community is on the verge of great- ness. Fayetteville residents want it, and we deserve it. I close this editorial with excellent advice to all the 2017 candidates intending to affect Fayetteville's future and quality of life. To paraphrase Gen. George Pat- ton, lead, follow, or get the hell out of the way. Anything else and you are impeding progress. I thank both Mayor Robertson and City Councilman Kirk deViere for their service to our community. And, I thank you for reading Up & Coming Weekly. The Race Is On! by BILL BOWMAN BILL BOWMAN, Publisher, UP & COMING WEEKLY. COMMENTS? BILL@upandcomingweekly.com. (910) 484-6200 District 2 City Councilman Kirk deViere Incumbent Mayor Nat Robertson

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Up & Coming Weekly - July 04, 2017