Randee Haven-O'Donnell Carrboro Table Talk

Randee Haven-O'Donnell Carrboro Table Talk Randee Haven-ODonnell, Carrboro Table Talk Photography and design by takethehighstreet.com

Happy New Year, 2026.Folks have asked me to share my 20 years of Carrboro Town Council closing remarks from the December...
01/04/2026

Happy New Year, 2026.
Folks have asked me to share my 20 years of Carrboro Town Council closing remarks from the December 2, 2025 Town Council meeting.

Here is the text of my closing Council Membership remarks:
Closing Council Membership Remarks:
***********************************************************
December 2, 2025

With gratitude to the 7 women who run with wolves who recruited me:
Ellie Kinnaird, Shirley Marshall, Melva Okun, Diana McDuffee, Mary Wakefield, Frances Shetley, and Marti Mandell.

Carrboro Freight Train: The Little Engine that Could

As every Carrborrean knows, Elizabeth Cotten wrote “Freight Train” as a teenager in Carrboro over one hundred years ago, inspired by the sound of the trains passing by her home. Now, a century later, Carrboro is that freight train, raw with energy and carrying a heart full of goodness to deliver. And like the “The Little Engine that Could,” Carrboro is the “local” motivation, the beacon ignited and emboldened by Carrborreans, fueled by people-focused deeds and mighty voices.

Back in the day, in New York, two beacons awakened me with their light and vision: Shirley Chisholm and Bella Abzug. They inspired and shaped my expectations of women, work and social activism. Chisholm and Abzug, bold, thought-leading women resonated deeply with me. I have never forgotten the lessons of their leadership. Bella Abzug, “Battling Bella,” who aptly stated “A woman’s place in the House, the House of Representatives”; and Shirley Chisholm, “unbossed and unbought,” who said, “If they don't give you a seat at the table, bring a folding chair.”

Yes, and I say, set a new table.

Hence, it’s not what’s next, it’s what’s now: Table Talks, neighborly, neighborhood and community driven kitchen table conversations. Table Talks are a place to talk about our community. And yes, thank you, Frances Shetley, who inspired kitchen table talks 38 years ago.

I’ve been in the room and at the table to help guide our “little engine that could” hometown through expansion of her municipal boundary and the densification of her population. In my capacity as an elected Town official, I have engaged as a community organizer to build and fortify the community as we became the progressive stronghold we are today.
I am passionate about Carrboro and my Council work and remain dedicated to our collective effort to continuously build and strengthen community. I am humbled by the gift of having served with my community folks and treasure all of our work together for our beloved hometown.
As the torch is passed this evening, I welcome and offer the very best wishes for the new Council as representatives and to all the community voices eager to engage, collaborate and represent Carrboro through its governance.
We are living in an unprecedented and urgent moment in American and human history. Our democracy and the rule of law we have relied on and taken for granted is being dismantled from within the walls of all three branches of our federal government.
Town government is not designed for nor is it equipped to respond to the dismantling of the federal government and reshaping it into an imperial presidency. How and whether democracy prevails depends on we, the people.
This is the time to invest more deeply in community awareness, action and advocacy. In November 2024, I felt called to act in a different capacity, one that furthers education, seeks to motivate and mobilize our citizenry to be resilient and face the challenges ahead together.
So what’s next? Three areas I will continue to work on:
Human Rights, Women’s Reproductive Rights, Tenants’ Rights
Climate resiliency and environmental sustainability, preservation, protection, green living and infrastructure
Water quality, access, quantity and PFAS pollution
The personal is political. I am proud to be a Boomer, coming of age in the Woodstock Nation. Proud to have marched with Coretta Scott King to continue the good work of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. for civil rights and voting rights. I marched and advocated for LGBTQ+ and human rights and women’s reproductive rights and was present during anti-war and Stonewall protests.
In British Columbia, I was a farm worker, mentored by Manitoban Native North Americans, where I learned how to advocate for day laborers and organize a strike for higher wages. From that experience, decades later I visioned the El Centro Center for Employment and Leadership in Carrboro.
These experiences prepared me for the work I have undertaken here in Carrboro and across North Carolina. I have always addressed contemporary issues of my time and sought to engage all voices.
Thank you, Carrboro for entrusting me with the responsibility to make decisions with and for you as a five term, 20 year elected community representative of our town.

Thank you for teaching me how to be responsive to diverse needs and perspectives reflected throughout our community.

Thank you for the opportunity to learn the principles and apply the tools of participatory governance, what it is, looks and feels like and how it can express itself and build trust when practiced.

In the words of Carl Sagan, “We can judge our progress by the courage of our questions and the depth of our answers, our willingness to embrace what is true rather than what feels good.”

And so y’all work hard, work deep, keep chugging along like a Freight Train.
Carrboro is our home and worth it.

Greetings from Woodstock!The Simple and the ComplexSome decisions are simple and complex at the same time.Community folk...
07/18/2025

Greetings from Woodstock!

The Simple and the Complex

Some decisions are simple and complex at the same time.

Community folks who are desperate not to lose my voice on the Carrboro Town Council have asked why I am not seeking reelection.

My answer is both simple and complex. Simply, I’ve been elected to serve five continuous times on the Carrboro Board of Alderman and the renamed Town Council. I’ve been in the room and at the table to guide our “little engine that could” hometown through expansion of her municipal boundary and the densification of her population. In my capacity as an elected Town official, I have engaged as a community organizer to build and fortify the community as we became the progressive stronghold we are today.

I am passionate about Carrboro and my Council work and continue to feel so. I am humbled by the gift of having served with my community folks and treasure all of our work together for our beloved hometown.

At this time, I encourage new voices to step up, collaborate and represent our beloved hometown community through its governance.

The more complex response is that at this unprecedented and urgent moment in American and human history, I am at a crossroads. Our democracy and the rule of law we have relied on and taken for granted is being dismantled from within the walls of all three branches of our federal government.

Town government is not designed for nor is it equipped to respond to the dismantling of the federal government and reshaping it into an imperial presidency. How and whether democracy prevails depends on us, the people.

It is time to invest more deeply in community awareness, action and advocacy. I feel called to act in a different capacity, one that furthers education, seeks to motivate and mobilize our citizenry to be resilient and face the challenges ahead together.

There are three areas I have been working on that demand more time and an expanded work effort than a Council seat allows:

• Human Rights, Women’s Reproductive Rights, Tenants’ Rights
• Climate, local stormwater mitigation and resilience, environmental preservation, protection, conservation
• Water quality and quantity and PFAS pollution

The personal is political. I am proud to be a Boomer, to have marched with Coretta Scott King to continue the good work of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. for civil rights and voting rights. I marched and advocated for LGBTQ+ and human rights and women’s reproductive rights and was present during anti-war and Stonewall protests.

I came of age in the Woodstock Nation. I worked to organize the first Earth Day events in 1970 and have been an environmental and science educator ever since. I am a certified diversity and multicultural education trainer and have served on the NCDEQ Environmental Justice and Equity Advisory Board.

In British Columbia, I was a farm worker, mentored by Manitoban Native North Americans, there I learned how to advocate for day laborers and organize a strike for higher wages. From that experience, I visioned the El Centro Center for Employment and Leadership in Carrboro.

All of these experiences prepared me for the work I have undertaken here in Carrboro and North Carolina. I have always addressed contemporary issues of my time and sought to engage all voices.

Now is the time for me to repurpose that early activism with the leadership skills I have developed on the Town Council. Therefore, with the urgency of this kind of community work in mind, I am not seeking reelection.
Onward,
Randee

Carrboro Neighbors! Join us tomorrow, Saturday, March 22nd, for a World Water Day Celebration at at MLK Park from 1-4 p....
03/21/2025

Carrboro Neighbors! Join us tomorrow, Saturday, March 22nd, for a World Water Day Celebration at at MLK Park from 1-4 p.m. sponsored by the Raging Grannies and the women of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.
https://www.un.org/en/observances/water-day
https://www.wilpf.org/
Town of Carrboro, NC

Our very own Fairoaks Composting Project will have a table to share with community about our composting work. Thank you, neighbors: Carrie Donley Cindy Shea Clara Zelasky Delia Johnson Barrick Della Chambless Greg Randolph Jane Danielewicz Kira McGovern Anthony Gagnon for volunteering to attend and share our work at this event!

NOTE: Saturday Night is also EARTH HOUR from 8:30-9:30 p.m. The Town of Carrboro has celebrated EARTH HOUR since its beginnings in 2007. Earth Hour is known globally for the “lights off” moment, with individuals switching off their lights to show symbolic support for the planet and to raise awareness of the climate and environmental issues affecting it. Here in Carrboro, set a timer to turn off your electric lights and appreciate the starshine from a dark sky. https://www.earthhour.org/about/the-biggest-hour-for-earth

VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! Our rights and Democracy is on the ballot. Thank you if you have v...
11/03/2024

VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOTE!
Our rights and Democracy is on the ballot.
Thank you if you have voted early!
Women's Health and Reproductive Freedom are on the ballot!
Women's Health and Reproductive Rights:
In July, Graig Meyer reached out to our Orange County municipalities to engage with Ipas( Partners for Reproductive Justice- Bethany VanKampen Saravia ) as part of a coalition of municipalities drafting local resolutions in support of Georgia Representative Nikema Williams
resolution to Congress.
Representative Nikima Williams resolution affirms reproductive freedom is a human right.
The resolution is In complete accordance with the United Nations Committee on Human Rights to the International Covenant on Civil Political Rights (ICCPR). As with all of the parties to the covenant, the United States, is obliged to protect reproductive freedom.
Co-leading the resolution were Congresswoman Alma Adams for Congress (NC-12), Rep. Troy A Carter (LA-02), Congressman Greg Casar(TX-35), Congresswoman Jennifer McCllelan (VA-04) and Congressman Rep. Jamie Raskin (MD-08), NC local advocate signatories include: Congresswoman Valerie Foushee Congresswoman Deborah Ross
September, 12th, the Town of Carrboro, NC Council unanimously approved our municipal resolution adopting Women's Reproductive Rights Are Human Rights. https://www.townofcarrboro.org/CivicAlerts.aspx?AID=2824 #:~:text=The%20Reproductive%20Rights%20are%20Human,States%20and%20in%20North%20Carolina

I am proud to have represented our Town and Council as municipal advocate and to stand with Karen Stegman at the presser with Nikema Williams representing Town of Chapel Hill and their municipal support.
Women's Reproductive Rights are Human Rights.
Here is the statement I made at the IPAS reception.
Carrboro Women’s Rights
I am deeply humbled to have been asked by NC Senator Graig Meyer and to have crafted our Carrboro resolution in close collaboration with our partner of many years IPAS. The United Nations Human Rights Committee called on local governments to take action and address the public health crisis that we currently face in a post-Dobbs United States – they called on local governments to act because it is OUR duty, not just that of the federal government, to uphold human rights. I proudly represent our Carrboro Mayor Barbara Foushee, our Town Council and the people of Carrboro.
Carrboro may be a small municipality by numbers, we are mighty in our stand on women’s reproductive rights, abortion, and fertility choice and access.
The people of Carrboro recognize that reproductive rights are human rights. We recognize that Women’s Rights are Human Rights. The Carrboro Resolution accentuates and undergirds women’s rights to self-determination, reproductive health, justice and the sovereignty human beings must have over their own bodies, reproductive choices, gender and sexuality rights. The Carrboro Resolution in collaboration with municipalities throughout the nation, advocates policies that protect a basic human right to bodily autonomy.
The resolution is a clarion call to advocate for Our Bodies, Ourselves for all time. The freedom to choose to birth, to start or grow a family must always belong to the pregnant person, not the government.
Amber Nicole Thurman and Candi Miller, say their names. Say their names with me.
These young women should still be with us today and it is a tragedy that they are not. Amber traveled to North Carolina, to my state, for care. She was like the hundreds of women who do so each and every week. Our clinics are inundated, our abortion funds cannot nearly meet the demand. We are not going anywhere, and we will continue to stand with our arms open to everyone who needs care in our state. We will not stop fighting because abortion is health care and healthcare is a human right.
In Amber’s and Candi’s name’s may we energize support for reproductive freedom for everyone in solidarity with IPAS, El Pueblo, Pro-Choice NC and municipalities throughout our nation. Pregnant people’s reproductive health, justice and abortion rights are basic human rights. Reproductive rights are human rights.

Kamala Harris Yes, we can and will. Join the Harris campaign. Kamala Harris for President!❤️ Thank you Joann Keller for ...
07/29/2024

Kamala Harris Yes, we can and will.
Join the Harris campaign.
Kamala Harris for President!

❤️ Thank you Joann Keller for posting this wonderfully inspiring image of Kamala.

Thank you,  ,  ,  , for hosting a grand gathering in support of Allen Buansi NC House and special guest, Eric Holder for...
07/14/2024

Thank you, , , , for hosting a grand gathering in support of Allen Buansi NC House and special guest, Eric Holder for your wisdom and encouragement. Esse Quam Videri. Stand together, stand up, stand strong for democracy.
"Democracy is not a state. It is an act." Rep. John Lewis

Happy Father’s Day! To all the children who love and cherish your dads and have their unconditional love, tell them, ado...
06/16/2024

Happy Father’s Day! To all the children who love and cherish your dads and have their unconditional love, tell them, adore them, share time with them while they are here with you, as you will immeasurably miss them when they are gone.

Thank you, Aran O'Donnell, for this beautiful post! Grateful for you. You are life’s greatest gift to me.
05/04/2024

Thank you, Aran O'Donnell, for this beautiful post! Grateful for you. You are life’s greatest gift to me.

Sinewy, gracefulWhat is it about an elm?Gentle, green drapingHappy Earth Day 2024!
04/22/2024

Sinewy, graceful
What is it about an elm?
Gentle, green draping

Happy Earth Day 2024!

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