Three incumbents win council seats
Chapel Hill voters returned three incumbent town council members in Tuesday’s election but also brought in one fresh — and younger — face.
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Chapel Hill voters returned three incumbent town council members in Tuesday’s election but also brought in one fresh — and younger — face.
The Chapel Hill Town Council will welcome at least one new member to its ranks after all the votes are tallied — but with four seats up for grabs in a competitive race, council membership could see a major shake-up.
As Tuesday’s municipal elections creep closer, campaign finance reports filed Monday show the Chapel Hill Town Council race is more costly — and more competitive — than two years ago.
A quarter of the 44 churches, fire stations, schools and other community buildings in Orange County are slated to morph into election precincts Nov. 8, but voters will only see one item on the ballot — the quarter-cent sales tax.
Chapel Hill and Carrboro residents who missed Friday’s voter registration deadline need not worry. Beginning Thursday, voters will have another chance to register to vote in Orange County — and can cast their ballots while they’re at it.
First-time candidate for the Carrboro Board of Aldermen Michelle Johnson emerged this week as the leading fundraiser among a field of mostly incumbents.
The North Carolina chapter of the Sierra Club announced endorsements Wednesday for Chapel Hill and Carrboro’s municipal elections.
CORRECTION: The original version of this story stated that town council candidate Lee Storrow is using the publicly funded election program. He is not. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the error.
Ricardo Palao is tired of talking about 300 East Main St.
When junior Kaylon Kirk couldn’t find her backpack in her room, she thought she may have left it in her car.
Chapel Hill has served as a model for publicly funded election programs for the past two years — but that could soon be coming to an end.
UNC Health Care broke ground on its first satellite hospital Wednesday, a move intended to alleviate patient overcrowding at the main campus.
With a Republican-controlled N.C. General Assembly looking to lower the deficit, Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools officials will brace for future cuts as they review a proposed budget tonight.
As students swarmed into Greenlaw Hall on Wednesday for afternoon classes, four trickled in to a town-sponsored discussion on affordable housing.
A plan that could shorten the time it takes to get to Durham will be presented to Chapel Hill residents today by Triangle Transit.
Drivers might not have to search under floor mats to feed the meter after the town installs new parking pay stations.
Franklin Street shoppers will see one more empty storefront today, adding to a growing number of vacancies throughout the downtown area.