Town officials do not yet know how the Chapel Hill 2020 comprehensive plan will be funded — but they also aren’t worried about it.
The final draft of the plan will be released before the Chapel Hill Town Council meeting May 21, and the plan will be voted on at its June 25 meeting.
Mary Jane Nirdlinger said though they do not yet know how the community would pay for developments outlined in the plan, the process has been more designed to gather community input, not to determine funding.
“It’s like a wish list, not everyone will get what they want,” she said.
Nirdlinger said the town will use priority-based budgeting for the plan, which will fund projects based on what town officials and residents consider to be most important.
Council member Lee Storrow said the next steps in the plan will come after it is finalized.
Storrow said the town did not want to fund the plan by raising property taxes.
But some of the goals are to increase the economic tax base and to increase tax and general revenue for the town, he said.
Nirdlinger said she thinks concerns residents have about Chapel Hill 2020 deal mainly with how residents would be involved in implementing the plan.