Choose your location
indyweeknc
With the Closure of Pompieri Pizza, Durham Will Lose Bastion of the Neapolitan Style and Downtown History
A downtown Durham restaurant known for serving delicate wood-fired pizzas with kitchen shears tucked under the crust will close permanently next month due to an imminent and exorbitant rent increase. In a Monday release, Pompieri Pizza owner Seth Gross wrote that the restaurant’s landlord is primed to double the rent...
Historic St. Paul A.M.E. Church to Build Affordable Housing in Traditionally Black Rogers-Eubanks Neighborhood
Since the Civil War era, St. Paul African Methodist Episcopal Church has stood proudly at the junction between Chapel Hill and Carrboro. The church has watched the towns around it grow and change. It saw the post-Reconstruction solidification of the white supremacist state, the Great Migration, and the Jim Crow era. In the past decade, it saw the saga of gentrification play out in the Greenbridge condos, the foreclosed modern towers of straight lines and glass panes just across the street.
DEQ Will Intervene to Help Clean Up Lead in Durham City Parks
This story originally published online at NC Newsline. The NC Department of Environmental Quality will help clean up lead-contaminated areas in five Durham parks, city officials announced this week. The parks—Walltown, Lyon, East End, East Durham and Northgate—have qualified for the state’s Pre-Regulatory Landfill Program, which was established to remediate...
Eat Well, a Durham Program Fighting Food Insecurity, Receives $10 Million Investment
A Durham program that offers vouchers for fruit and vegetables announced Monday that it was allocated $10 million in North Carolina’s 2023 state budget, marking the largest investment ever made into a “produce prescription” initiative in the country. Eat Well will use the infusion of funds to...
In Durham, Million-Dollar Home Sales Are No Longer Outliers
This story originally published online at the 9th Street Journal. Not so long ago, a million-dollar home sale in Durham was rarer than a blizzard in the Bull City. No more. In 2010, just one single-family home in all of Durham County sold for more than $1 million. In 2022, 61 homes sold for seven figures.
They Were Go-To Dealers for College Students. Now They’re Headed to Prison.
This story originally published online at The Assembly. The weekend of March 4, 2023, was a big one in the Triangle. Big for thousands of students and alums because longtime basketball rivals Duke University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill were facing off. Big for crowded restaurants and bars that had the Saturday night game in UNC’s Dean Dome on their wide-screen TVs.
Durham Rolls Out New Electric Buses
This story originally published online at the 9th Street Journal. Noisy, gas-powered buses have some new competition on the Bull City streets. Durham is expanding its electric bus fleet this Thanksgiving, keeping the city on track to reach its goal of an all-electric bus system by 2035. Five new electric...
At East Durham Market, Ketchup, Cabbage, and a Community Mission
This story originally published online at the 9th Street Journal. On first glance, the East Durham Market seems like a run-of-the-mill corner store. Tucked into a large, red brick building, the market’s exterior is quaint and unassuming. Inside, metal shelves are stocked with essentials ranging from ketchup and pancake mix to peanut butter. Refrigerators lining the side wall hold wicker baskets of peppers, cabbage and squash. Some shelves remain empty, and business—for the time being—is slow.
Op-Ed: Why I Support Durham’s Zoning Reforms
In 2019 and 2020, while working as a high school teacher, I built an ADU in my backyard. An ADU is an accessory dwelling unit—a backyard small home. Some neighbors who were being displaced moved in, and that ADU has been a home to housing insecure folks for three years now.
Triangle Cities and Towns Score High in LGBTQ Equality, Despite State Laws
This story originally published online at NC Newsline. Despite a legislative session that featured several broad assaults on LGBTQ people, their visibility and their allies, most North Carolina cities and towns scored high for LGBTQ equality measures in a new study from The Human Rights Campaign. The national LGBTQ advocacy...
DEQ, Cultural and Natural Resources at Odds Over Settlement Agreement with Wake Stone
This story originally published online at NC Newsline. The NC Department of Environmental Quality and Wake Stone have reached a settlement agreement regarding the controversial expansion of the Triangle Quarry next to Umstead State Park, but the agency still must pay $500,000 in attorneys’ fees. The case stems from...
Allegation that Durham Charter School Student Used Racial Slur, Flashed Gun on FaceTime, Raises Concerns
This story originally published online at NC Newsline. This story contains racist language that might upset some readers. A white seventh-grade boy who attends Discovery Charter School in Durham allegedly called a Black classmate a “monkey” and another racial slur, and then flashed a rifle to several students during a FaceTime chat, Arssante Malone, the father of the Black student, told NC Newsline.
indyweeknc
5K+
Posts
10M+
Views
News, culture & commentary for Raleigh, Cary, Durham & Chapel Hill
Welcome to NewsBreak, an open platform where diverse perspectives converge. Most of our content comes from established publications and journalists, as well as from our extensive network of tens of thousands of creators who contribute to our platform. We empower individuals to share insightful viewpoints through short posts and comments. It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency: our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. We strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation. Join us in shaping the news narrative together.