Allen Buansi to seek re-election to N.C House of Representatives
N.C Rep. Allen Buansi (D-Orange) announced in a press release on Wednesday that he will run for re-election in N.C House District 56.
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N.C Rep. Allen Buansi (D-Orange) announced in a press release on Wednesday that he will run for re-election in N.C House District 56.
Since the implementation of Senate Bill 20, Dr. Robin Wallace has to travel to Virginia to provide abortion care for patients who are more than 12 weeks pregnant.
Rani Dasi, Barbara Fedders, Meredith Ballew and Vickie Feaster Fornville were elected to the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Board of Education.
In episode 2 of Before You Vote, Ethan Horton, Lucy Marques and Walker Livingston from the City & State desk continue to break down what you need to know before voting in the 2023 local elections. This week, the main dividing lines in the Chapel Hill mayoral race, the most contentious race of the cycle, and more CHCCS School Board candidates.
Editor's note: This story is part of a series on Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Board of Education candidates. The Daily Tar Heel is not endorsing any CHCCS school board candidates.
Welcome to a new season of Before You Vote, The Daily Tar Heel's election podcast. This season, we will be breaking down what you need to know about voting before the 2023 local elections. In this episode, Ethan Horton, Lucy Marques and Walker Livingston from the City & State desk go over some of the school board candidates, Barbara Foushee's campaign for Carrboro Mayor and campaign finance.
According to a flyer and emails obtained by The Daily Tar Heel, the Friends of Bolin Creek — a 501(c)(3) nonprofit registered in Carrboro — held a candidate event advertised as a "meet and greet" at Umstead Park in Chapel Hill on Sept. 24.
About one in five homeowners and more than half of renters in Chapel Hill are cost-burdened – meaning they spend more than 30 percent of their income on rent, mortgage or other housing-related needs – according to Chapel Hill Affordable Housing's most recent quarterly report.
Holding on to candles and each other, hundreds of students gathered outside the Student Union Tuesday night to honor the memory of UNC associate professor Zijie Yan and speak about their experiences on campus during Monday's shooting.
N.C. Rep. Renée Price's (D-Orange, Caswell) reaction to the Aug. 28 shooting on UNC’s campus was one of horror and numbness.
This November's municipal elections will have four seats on the Chapel Hill Town Council, along with the Chapel Hill mayoral seat, up for grabs.
In 2005, EmPOWERment, Inc., a local affordable housing nonprofit, owned 12 rental units. Now the organization owns 65 rental units — and has become one of the largest nonprofit landlords in Orange County.
The Chapel Hill Public Library’s Neurodiversity and Nature initiative is providing neurodivergent youth and adults with sensory learning activities this summer.
The N.C. General Assembly passed House Bill 574 — called the Fairness in Women’s Sports Act — on June 22. The bill would ban transgender women from participating in school athletics at middle school, high school and collegiate levels.
Planned Parenthood South Atlantic and a North Carolina health care provider filed a federal lawsuit on June 16 addressing parts of Senate Bill 20 — a law that bans abortion in the state after 12 weeks of pregnancy.
Republican members of the N.C. General Assembly are currently working on a compromise budget proposal for the 2023-24 fiscal year — but it may not be completed until early July. The new fiscal year begins on July 1.
As the year comes to an end, parents and community members from Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools reflected on the origins and effects of the academic achievement gap in the school system.
The Carrboro Housing and Community Services Department presented its 2021-22 fiscal year activities report at the Carrboro Town Council Meeting on Tuesday.
The National Assessment for Educational Progress results for 2022 show that the average reading and mathematics scores for fourth- and eighth-grade students in North Carolina have declined since 2019.
In the run-up to the midterm elections, candidates have been campaigning across North Carolina.