Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout20356 Affordable Custom Public Notice Doc 20201014+ TUESDAY OCTOBER 13 2020 7BClassified/SportsCHARLOTTEOBSERVER.COM NOTICE TO CREDITORS MARY BRIDGES, having qualified as Execu-trix of the Estate of MARY T. NOLAND, late of 1300 MEADOWOOD LANE, CHARLOTTE,NC 28211 MECKLENBURG COUNTY,NORTH CAROLINA, through her under- signed Attorney, Maria Satterfield, doeshereby notify all persons, firms, and corpora- tions having claims against the estate ofsaid decedent to exhibit them to the under-signed at 4500 Cameron Valley Parkway, Suite 370, Charlotte, NC 28211, on or be-fore Thursday, December 31, 2020 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recov-ery. All persons, firms, and corporations in-debted to the said estate shall make immedi- ate payment to the undersigned. This the 29th day of September 2020 Maria Satterfield, Esq. Attorney for Mary Bridges, Executrix 4500 Cameron Valley Parkway Suite 370 Charlotte, NC 28211 (For Publication Dates: 29 September 2020,6 October 2020, 13 October 2020, 20 Octo-ber 2020) LP4766473 SUMMARY OF NOTICE OF INTENT TO REDEVELOP A BROWNFIELDS PROPERTY Site Name: Affordable Custom Iron Brownfields Project Number: 23056-19-060 Pursuant to NCGS § 130A-310.34, CC LoSo Station, LLC, as Prospective Developer, has filed with the North Carolina Department ofEnvironmental Quality (“DEQ”) a Notice of Intent to Redevelop a Brownfields Property (“Property”) in Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, NorthCarolina. The Brownfields Property, which is the former site of Affordable Custom Iron, consists of 3.872 acres and is located at 3804 South Boulevard. Environmental contamination exists on the Brownfields Property in soil and groundwater. CC LoSo Station, LLC has committed itself toredevelopment of the Brownfields Property for no uses other than high density residential, retail, office, recreational, parking, open space, and with prior written DEQ approval, other commercial uses on the Brownfields Property. The Notice of Intent to Redevelop a Brownfields Propertyincludes: (1) a proposed Brownfields Agreement between DEQ and CC LoSo Station, LLC, which in turn includes (a) a map showing the locationof the Property, (b) a description of the contaminants involved and their concentrations in the media of the Property, (c) the above-stated description of the intended future use of the Brownfields Property, and (d) proposed investigation and remediation; and (2) a proposed Notice ofBrownfields Property prepared in accordance with NCGS § 130A-310.35. The full Notice of Intent to Redevelop a Brownfields Property may be reviewed online at the DEQ public record database, Laserfiche, byentering the project number 23056-19-060 into the search bar at the following web address: https://edocs.deq.nc.gov/WasteManagement/Welcome.aspx?dbid=0&repo=WasteManagement Written public comments may be submitted to DEQ within 30 days after the latest of the following dates: the date this Notice is (1) published ina newspaper of general circulation serving the area in which the Brownfields Property is located, (2) conspicuously posted at the Brownfields Property, and (3) mailed or delivered to each owner of property contiguous to the Brownfields Property. Written requests for a public meetingmay be submitted to DEQ within 21 days after the period for written public comments begins. Those periods will start no sooner than October 13,2020, and will end on the later of: a) 30 and 21 days, respectively, after that; or b) 30 and 21 days, respectively, after completion of the latest of the three (3) above-referenced dates. All public comments and public meeting requests should be addressed as follows: Mr. Bruce Nicholson Brownfields Program Manager Division of Waste Management NC Department of Environmental Quality 1646 Mail Service Center Raleigh, North Carolina 27699-1646 LP4779151 NOTICE TO CREDITORS ESTATE OF RUTH KENDALL HUIET Havingqualified as Executrix of the Estate of Ruth Kendall Huiet, of Mecklenburg County,North Carolina, the undersigned doeshereby notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against theestate of said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 29th dayof December, 2020, or this notice will bepleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to the saidestate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 29th day ofSeptember, 2020. Layne Huiet P.O. Box51446 Durham NC 27717. LP4766882 NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CARTERET IN THE DISTRICT COURT NICOLLE JOHNSON v. BRADLEY JOHNSON File Number: 19 CVD 291 TO: Mr. Bradley Johnson; TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-entitledaction. The nature of the relief being sought is as follows: COMPLAINT FOR ABSOLUTE DIVORCE You are required to make defense to such pleading no later than November 16, 2020 andupon your failure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for therelief sought. Kimberly L. Farias FARIAS LAW, PLLC 4050 Arendell Street, Suite G Morehead City, NC 28557 Tuesday October 6, 2020 Tuesday October 13, 2020 Tuesday October 20, 2020 LP4772105 PUBLIC HEARING The Town of Pineville will hold a Public Hearing for a request to update a conditionally approved site plan to allow outdoor storage. A Public Hearing has been scheduled forMonday, October 26th, 2020 at 6:30 p.m. at the Hut Meeting Facility located at 413 JohnstonDrive, Pineville, NC, 28134. Attendance at this meeting will be limited. Further information can be obtained at Pineville Town Hall, 200 Dover St., Pineville, or call Pineville Planning andZoning at 704-889-2202. LP4776389 PUBLIC NOTICE AT&T Mobility, LLC is proposing to construct a new telecommunications facility located at 8920Nations Ford Rd, Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina 28217. The new facility will consist of a 27-foot wood pole telecommunications facility topped with an antenna for an over-all height of 32 feet, 6 inches. Any interested party wishing to submit comments regarding thepotential effects the proposed facility may have on any historic property may do so by sending comments to: Project 6120008818 - MH EBI Consulting, 6876 Susquehanna Trail South, York,PA 17403, or via telephone at (785) 760-5938. LP4778849 NOTICE OF PUBLIC COMMENT AND PUBLIC HEARING ACTION: Notice of public comment period and public hearing. SUMMARY:INLIVIAN, formerly the Charlotte Housing Authority (CHA), invites resident clients,partners and community members to comment on the agency’s proposed 2021 Moving toWork (MTW) Annual Plan. The Proposed 2021 MTW Plan outlines INLIVIAN’s priorities and how the agency anticipates utilizing MTW flexibilities to serve clients, partners and the generalcommunity in 2021. PUBLIC COMMENT:INLIVIAN will receive comments regarding the proposed plan for 30days, beginning Friday October 16, 2020 until Wednesday November 18, 2020. Comments will be accepted via email at MTW@INLIVIAN.COM or through a Public Hearing scheduled forTuesday November 17. PUBLIC HEARING:The public hearing will be held virtually and via telephone on November17, 2020 at 5:30 p.m. To join the public hearing, or to sign-up to speak on this matter, please call 704-432-5557 or send an email to MTW@INLIVIAN.com. To view the proposed draft plan, visit the INLIVIAN web-site Moving to Work section atwww.inlivian.com/movingtowork/. REASONABLE ACCOMODATION REQUESTS:INLIVIAN is committed to providing equalaccess to this event for all participants and residents with disabilities. If you need a reasonable accommodation or sign language interpreter service, please contact our ADA/504/LanguageDepartment at 704-336-8413 to initiate a request. Please allow at least 3 business days for thenecessary arrangements to be made. If you need a foreign language translator, you should also contact our ADA/504/Language Department at 704-336-8413. For language translationrequests, please allow at least 5 business days for the necessary arrangements to be made. LP4779516 NOTICE TO CREDITORS The undersigned, having qualified as Ex- ecutor of the Estate Jerry Franklin Canipe,late of Gaston County, North Carolina, here-by notifies to all persons, firms and corpora- tions having claims against said Estate topresent them to the undersigned on or be- fore December 29, 2020, or this notice willbe pleaded in bar of their recovery. All per-sons, firms and corporations indebted to the said Estate will please make immediate pay-ment to the undersigned. This the 29th day of September, 2020. Jerrianne Pyles 1220 Silversmith Circle, Gastonia, NC 28056 Marie M. Anders, Atty. For Executrix 124 W. Catawba Ave. Mt. Holly, NC 28120 LP4766009 Legals Misc. Notice to Creditors Notice to Creditors Legals Misc. Legals and Public Notices Legals and Public Notices Legals and Public Notices Legals and Public Notices Notice to Creditors Legals and Public Notices CLASSIFIED POLICY: By placing an advertisement in The Charlotte Observer you agree that the advertisement as it appears will become the property of The Char- lotte Observer. You assign all owner-ship interest in the advertisement as it appears under the Copyright Act or otherwise to The Charlotte Observer. You can still place a similar advertisement, different in form from the advertisement as it appears in The Charlotte Observer, in any other media. For the best results, check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Call us as soon as possible should a change be needed. The Charlotte Observer cannot make allowances for errors after the first day of publication. In the event of an error, a reimburse-ment will be given for the amount of space in which the error occurred. The Charlotte Observer shall be un-der no liability for its failure for any cause to insert an advertisement. Ad Begins Deadline to Call Sunday-Monday ......4PM Friday Tuesday-Friday ...2PM prior day CLASSIFIED DEADLINES: How to Place An Ad: Phone: 704-358-5555 Toll Free- 800-532-5348 Online: charlotteobserver.com/ classifieds Online deadlines are 3 hours prior to phone deadlines Subscribe800.532.5350 LAKE BUENA VISTA, FLA. The ultimate anguish. The ultimate joy. This season, for LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers, had it all. And it ended in the only fashion that they deemed would be acceptable, with them back atop the basketball world. For the first time since Kobe Bryant’s fifth and final title a decade ago, the Lakers are NBA cham- pions. James had 28 points, 14 rebounds and 10 assists, and the Lakers beat the Miami Heat 106- 93 on Sunday night to win the NBA Finals in six games. “Our organization wants their respect. Laker Nation wants their respect,” James said. “And I want my damn respect, too.” Anthony Davis had 19 points and 15 rebounds for the Lakers, who dealt with the enormous anguish that followed the death of the iconic Bryant in January and all the challenges that came with leaving home for three months to play at Walt Disney World in a bubble designed to keep inhabitants safe from the coronavirus. It would be, James pre- dicted, the toughest title to ever win. “We have a Ph.D in adversity, I'll tell you that much,” Lakers coach Frank Vogel said. “We’ve been through a lot.” They made the clincher look easy. James won his fourth title, doing it with a third different franchise – and against the Heat fran- chise that showed him how to become a cham- pion. Bam Adebayo had 25 points and 10 rebounds for Miami, which got 12 points from Jimmy Butler – the player who, in his first Heat season, got the team back to title conten- tion. Rajon Rondo scored 19 points for the Lakers, who put together the elite talents of James and Davis with this moment in mind. And Davis, as white and gold confetti coated the floor around him, spent his first moments as an NBA champion thinking of Bryant. “All we wanted to do was do it for him,” Davis said. “And we didn’t let him down. … I know he’s looking down on us, proud of us.” With that, the league’s bubble chapter, put to- gether after a 4 1/2-month suspension of play that started March 11 because of the coronavirus pan- demic and came with a promise that it would raise awareness to the problems of racial injustice and police brutality, is over. So, too, is a season that saw the league and China get into political sparring, the death on Jan. 1 of commissioner emeritus David Stern – the man who did so much to make the league what it is – and then the shock on Jan. 26 that came with the news that Bryant, his daughter Gianna and seven other died in a helicopter crash. The Lakers said they were playing the rest of the season in his memory. They delivered what Bryant did five times for L.A. – a ring, and the clincher was emphatic. “You have written your own inspiring chapter in the great Laker history,” Lakers owner Jeanie Buss said. “And to Laker Na- tion, we have been through a heartbreaking tragedy with the loss of our beloved Kobe Bryant. Let this trophy serve as a reminder of when we come together, believe in each other, incredible things can happen.” Game 6 was over by halftime, the Lakers tak- ing a 64-36 lead into the break. The Heat never led and couldn’t shoot from anywhere: 35% from 2- point range in the half, 33% from 3-point range and even an uncharacter- istic 42% from the line, not like any of it really mattered. The Lakers were getting everything they wanted and then some, outscoring Miami 36-16 in the second quar- ter and doing all that with James making just one shot in the period. Rondo, now a two-time champion and the first to win NBA rings as a player in the cities of Boston and Los Angeles – the fran- chises now tied with 17 titles apiece – was 6 for 6 in the half, the first time he’d done that since No- vember 2007. The Lakers’ lead was 46-32 with 5:00 left in the half, and they outscored Miami 18-4 from there until intermis- sion. Ball game. The 28-point halftime lead was the second-biggest in NBA Finals history, topped only by the Celtics leading the Lakers 79-49 on May 27, 1985. “We didn’t get the final result that we wanted,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “But even what I mentioned to the guys, these are going to be life- time memories that we have together. This locker room … we’re going to remember this year, this season, this experience and that locker room brotherhood for the rest of our lives.” True to form, the Heat – a No. 5 seed in the Eastern Conference that finished with a losing record last season, a team that em- braced the challenge of the bubble like none other – didn’t stop playing, not even when the deficit got to 36 in the third quarter. “We’re trending in the right direction,” Butler said. “We’re going to learn from this. We’re going to get better. We’re going to come back.” A 23-8 run by Miami got the Heat to 90-69 with 8:37 left. But the outcome was never in doubt, and before long confetti was blasted into the air as the Lakers’ celebration for- mally and officially began. “Laker Nation,” Vogel, now a first-time champion who saw his title hopes as Indiana’s coach thwarted three times by James and the Heat, bellowed during the trophy ceremony. “We did it.” NBA FINALS Lakers run past Heat for 17th NBA championship BY TIM REYNOLDS Associated Press MARK J. TERRILL AP LeBron James (23) celebrates with his teammates after the Los Angeles Lakers defeated the Miami Heat 106-93 in Game 6 of the NBA Finals on Sunday in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. It began 11 days short of a year ago, when it was Opening Night, and the reconfigured Lakers lost to the reconfigured Clippers. Remember the assump- tions that took hold. The Lakers were a cou- ple of jigsaw pieces short. They had a new, fluid coaching staff, with Jason Kidd looming as a Plan B if Frank Vogel’s first months were shaky. They had two supreme players, but Le- Bron James was entering his 17th season and Antho- ny Davis’ connective tissue had failed him before. Kyle Kuzma would be chal- lenged to shelve his of- fense and figure out a new game. The rest were refugees, faces in the crowd. The Lakers had the second most cohesive club in town with the second-best de- fense and the second-best bench. That was the pre- vailing wisdom. “This roster was put together overnight,” Vogel said. “But I’ve always believed in LeBron James. To see him every day is remarkable. If you think you know, you don’t know.” Had anyone told you that the Lakers would win this NBA championship in a spruced-up high school gym in the scrubby terrain of central Florida, five weeks into an NFL season, in front of pixels disguised as people, and would do so without losing consecutive games in a four-series playoff run … well, there’s no star big enough upon to wish that. It happened Sunday night when the Lakers respected the Miami Heat enough to play their best game in their last game, a mocking 106-93 victory in which they once led by 36. It ended the NBA Finals in six games, on Columbus Day Eve. “You were a defensive monster,” Vogel told the Lakers, as they passed around Lawrence F. O’Brien’s trophy. “A lot of people didn’t think we could do it,” Alex Caruso said. “They didn’t think we had good enough role players, and that Le- Bron might be too old. People thought there were better teams in the West. We had to fight through the L.A. noise.” The Lakers did it under lockdown, albeit a com- fortable one. You can’t say this was the best of their 17 championship teams, but it overcame the most. They did it through the general worldwide dispirit of 2020. There’s no use rehashing it except to say that, on Jan. 26, we all just knew that the year would be known for the loss of Kobe Bryant. No one on earth would have savored this Game 6 like Bryant, who was unconditional, especially when it came to surrenders. Miami suffered the af- tereffects of Erik Spoel- stra’s decision to use only seven players in Game 5. They were shanking layups from the beginning. The Lakers’ venom came out when they saw Miami’s fatigue. They outscored Miami 14-0 in the paint in the first half, outscored Miami 14-0 on fast breaks, and held the Heat to 34.2 percent shooting. Miami’s offense was reduced to contortion. It was an awkward 22 for 42 in the paint. The Lakers eliminated all the comfort- able catch-and-shoots, too. In the end, the Heat play- ers looked like they were playing against Dad. Vogel set up the blowout with a move that can only come from a coach who is trusted. He started Caruso and benched center Dwight Howard. That allowed the Lakers to chase the shooters outside, to better handle pick-and- rolls, and to let Davis spread his wings at the rim. It quickened up every- one. And it meant the Lakers wouldn’t have to endure Howard’s tempo- busting early fouls. “We were getting stops without fouling,” Vogel said, “and other teams have no chance when you’re getting out like that on the break.” Near the end of the second quarter, Davis missed his first free throw in the Finals, out of 28. But Caruso, playing at the only speed he knows, bolted for the offensive rebound. Eventually, Rajon Rondo inbounded from under the bucket, and Davis scored and got fouled. “Sometimes you can’t explain why a relationship is so organic,” James said of Davis. “We challenge ourselves, every single day.” That wasn’t just a 3- point possession. It was a rubbed nose into the mud. The Lakers led 54-34 and were thus immune from the Heat’s endless heart. As it turned out, only a triple-double from Jimmy Butler could beat them. Here’s another time trick: The Lakers were supposed to miss the de- fense and the shooting of Avery Bradley, who opted out. And who knows? May- be they did. The only missing piece this time is the customary Lakers parade, the one that happened 10 times be- tween 1980 and 2010. No floats and no speech- es, but if you want a moun- tain of confetti, just shred all those assumptions. There’s enough paper for 2021. COMMENTARY Forget the asterisks in a Lakers title run that had its own punctuation BY MARK WHICKER Daily News, Los Angeles **EXTERNAL EMAIL; use caution with links and attachments** Hi. Your package was delivered Tue, 10/13/2020 at 1:21pm. Delivered to 600 E FOURTH, CHARLOTTE, NC 28202 Received by C.MCCLURE OBTAIN PROOF OF DELIVERY Personal Message PSShip eMail Notification TRACKING NUMBER 397735985682 FROM McGuireWoods LLP 201 North Tryon St Suite 3000 Charlotte, NC, US, 28202 Page 1 of 3 10/13/2020 TO City of Charlotte Marcus Jones 600 E 4TH ST CHARLOTTE, NC, US, 28202 REFERENCE 2076898-0015 SHIPPER REFERENCE 2076898-0015 SHIP DATE Mon 10/12/2020 06:39 PM DELIVERED TO Mailroom PACKAGING TYPE FedEx Envelope ORIGIN Charlotte, NC, US, 28202 DESTINATION CHARLOTTE, NC, US, 28202 NUMBER OF PIECES 1 TOTAL SHIPMENT WEIGHT 0.50 LB SERVICE TYPE FedEx Priority Overnight Download the FedEx® Mobile app Get the flexibility you need to create shipments and request to customize your deliveries through the app. LEARN MORE This tracking update has been requested by: Page 2 of 3 10/13/2020 FOLLOW FEDEX   Please do not respond to this message. This email was sent from an unattended mailbox. This report was generated at approximately 12:24 PM CDT 10/13/2020. All weights are estimated. To track the latest status of your shipment, click on the tracking number above. Standard transit is the date and time the package is scheduled to be delivered by, based on the selected service, destination and ship date. Limitations and exceptions may apply. Please see the FedEx Service Guide for terms and conditions of service, including the FedEx Money-Back Guarantee, or contact your FedEx Customer Support representative. © 2020 Federal Express Corporation. The content of this message is protected by copyright and trademark laws under U.S. and international law. Review our privacy policy. All rights reserved. Thank you for your business. Company name:McGuireWoods LLP Name:Samuel O. Lumpkin Email:slumpkin@mcguirewoods.com Page 3 of 3 10/13/2020 **EXTERNAL EMAIL; use caution with links and attachments** Hi. Your package was delivered Tue, 10/13/2020 at 1:21pm. Delivered to 600 E FOURTH, CHARLOTTE, NC 28202 Received by C.MCCLURE OBTAIN PROOF OF DELIVERY Personal Message PSShip eMail Notification TRACKING NUMBER 397735255794 FROM McGuireWoods LLP 201 North Tryon St Suite 3000 Charlotte, NC, US, 28202 Page 1 of 3 10/13/2020 TO County of Mecklenburg Dena R. Diorio 600 E 4TH ST CHARLOTTE, NC, US, 28202 REFERENCE 2076898-0015 SHIPPER REFERENCE 2076898-0015 SHIP DATE Mon 10/12/2020 06:39 PM DELIVERED TO Mailroom PACKAGING TYPE FedEx Envelope ORIGIN Charlotte, NC, US, 28202 DESTINATION CHARLOTTE, NC, US, 28202 NUMBER OF PIECES 1 TOTAL SHIPMENT WEIGHT 0.50 LB SERVICE TYPE FedEx Priority Overnight Download the FedEx® Mobile app Get the flexibility you need to create shipments and request to customize your deliveries through the app. LEARN MORE This tracking update has been requested by: Page 2 of 3 10/13/2020 FOLLOW FEDEX   Please do not respond to this message. This email was sent from an unattended mailbox. This report was generated at approximately 12:24 PM CDT 10/13/2020. All weights are estimated. To track the latest status of your shipment, click on the tracking number above. Standard transit is the date and time the package is scheduled to be delivered by, based on the selected service, destination and ship date. Limitations and exceptions may apply. Please see the FedEx Service Guide for terms and conditions of service, including the FedEx Money-Back Guarantee, or contact your FedEx Customer Support representative. © 2020 Federal Express Corporation. The content of this message is protected by copyright and trademark laws under U.S. and international law. Review our privacy policy. All rights reserved. Thank you for your business. Company name:McGuireWoods LLP Name:Samuel O. Lumpkin Email:slumpkin@mcguirewoods.com Page 3 of 3 10/13/2020