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After 15 Years Spent Patiently Evolving, Chatham County Line Lets Loose on ‘Hiyo’
IV, Chatham County Line’s frankly titled fourth album, and Hiyo, the trio’s soon-to-be-released 10th album, were recorded about a decade and a half apart in the same place, Asheville’s Echo Mountain. The studio, a converted Methodist sanctuary, has become a recording destination for adventurous acts of a...
How to File a Complaint With the NC Utilities Commission Over Duke Energy Blackout in East Durham
This story originally published online at NC Newsline. Duke Energy customers can file a formal complaint with the state Utilities Commission over the recent blackout in east Durham, but will have to pursue monetary damages in court, according to North Carolina law. Nearly 12,000 customers lost power for 35 hours...
Bus Driver Shortages and Power Failures Add Up to a Tumultuous Few Days for Durham Public Schools
This story originally published online at the 9th Street Journal. On Thursday afternoon at Club Boulevard Magnet Elementary School—the second day of a district-wide bus driver shortage that has left schools and parents scrambling—teacher Cierra Boyce was exasperated. “It was extremely hectic. As I was subbing for a...
Op-Ed: Wake County Models Lifesaving Animal Sheltering
North Carolina is ranked third in the country for the killing of dogs and cats in animal shelters. In 2022, almost 208,500 animals entered the shelter system in North Carolina, and 30,848 of those pets were killed. One of the animal shelters performing exceptionally well was Wake County Animal Services....
President Biden Visits the Triangle to Tout Broadband, Bidenomics
President Joe Biden visited the Abbotts Creek Community Center in Raleigh on Thursday to tout his administration’s investments in North Carolina and announce new funding for high-speed broadband internet access across the state. “Over the next three years, over 300,000 homes and businesses all across North Carolina will be...
In ‘Freud’s Last Session,’ Two Great Thinkers Square Off
Freud’s Last Session, the talky and cerebral U.K. film in theaters this week, is the kind of movie we don’t see much anymore. Adapted from a stage play, it’s a movie about two people talking—in this case, two of the greatest thinkers of the 20th century.
EPA Will Assess Coal Ash Site in Chapel Hill After Petition from Center for Biological Diversity
This story originally published online at NC Newsline. The EPA announced this week that it will determine whether 46,000 tons of coal ash at 828 Martin Luther King Blvd. in Chapel Hill, some of it exposed to the air, poses a “threat to human health or the environment and whether the threat requires further investigation.”
Innovative Early College High School Program to Help Fill Healthcare Job Vacancies in Durham
This story originally published online at NC Newsline. On Wednesday, Duke Health, Durham Technical Community College, and Durham Public Schools formalized a partnership to establish an early college for high school students interested in pursuing healthcare careers. The early college is made possible thanks to a $29.5 million grant from...
Sam’s Bottle Shop to Shutter In February
The store began as the Blue Light, then scaled back as Sam’s Quik Shop, then expanded with a second location called Sam’s Bottle Shop, its metamorphosis mirroring changes in the world around it—gas station, drive-in grill, convenience store, craft beer shop. Now, owner John Boy Jr. says,...
Durham Council Selects Legal Aid Attorney Chelsea Cook to Fill Vacant Seat
The Durham City Council voted unanimously to elect Chelsea Cook, an attorney for Legal Aid, to the vacant Ward Three seat during a special session on Tuesday morning. Out of an initial pool of 14 candidates, Cook was selected from a group of four remaining finalists. The other three were Amanda Borer, a director at Duke Health; Chastan Swain, a law and policy advisor for the state of North Carolina; and Shelia Huggins, an attorney and former city employee.
Durham’s JFK Towers Owner, Millennia, Restricted by HUD
Unsafe living conditions at North Durham’s JFK Towers apartment complex made headlines this past summer, with complaints including sewage filled bathtubs, widespread trash pile ups and breeding maggots, broken AC and heating units, and inoperable elevators. JFK Towers is an elderly living, low-income facility. All tenants have housing vouchers, and 12 units are designated for mobility-impaired residents.
NCCU Chancellor to Step Down at End of Academic Year
This story originally published online at NC Newsline. North Carolina Central University Chancellor Johnson Akinleye will step down from the university’s top leadership position at the end of this academic year, he told the campus board of trustees in a Friday morning meeting. His last day will be June...
Durham Public Schools Will Add 38 Electric School Buses to Its Fleet
This story originally published online at NC Newsline. Fifteen school districts, charter schools, and tribal schools will share nearly $27 million in federal dollars to purchase 114 electric buses as part of the EPA’s Clean School Bus Grant Program, Gov. Roy Cooper announced Tuesday. Cooper said in a statement...
DPS School Board Candidate Accused of Sexual Harassment
Durham school board candidate Atrayus Goode, who is running against Joy Harrell in the only contested school board race on March 5, was accused of sexual harassment in a meeting on Saturday. The INDY reviewed a recording in which the alleged victim’s father, Keith Corbett, spoke during the time allotted...
Exclusive: A Q&A With Sophia Chitlik Abram, Candidate for Durham’s NC Senate District 22 Seat
After a failed bid last fall to become Durham’s next mayor, longtime state Senator Mike Woodard faces his next challenge: a Democratic primary opponent in the NC Senate District 22 race. Sophia Chitlik Abram, a first-time candidate for a seat in North Carolina’s General Assembly, is running against Woodard...
2023: The Year in Pictures
The last year in news and culture was an eventful one for the Triangle—and the world. As 2023 commenced, it felt clear that the region was returning to some semblance of normality after the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. Restaurants were full again, and music halls and theaters drew crowds; INDY photographer Brett Villena expertly captured exciting new openings, such as those of Chapel Hill’s bold barbecue restaurant Bombolo and an underground location for the classic comedy club Goodnights, as well as long-loved destinations such as Love Bao and Banh’s Cuisine. Angelica Edwards brought downtown Durham’s new Ella West Gallery to life and documented the second coming of Raleigh’s beloved Rialto Theater.
A Youth Program at Dame’s Chicken & Waffles Offers a Primer on Running a Restaurant
Every Wednesday afternoon at 4:30 the sound of children laughing at Michael Newell’s jokes, singing along to SZA, and sharing what they want to be when they grow up resounds throughout Dame’s Chicken and Waffles in Chapel Hill. As one of this year’s after-school activities, the children of...
A Former Durham Public Schools Assistant Superintendent Will Lead Orange County Schools at a Troubled Time for the District
A new superintendent will step into the top spot at the Orange County school district next month, following the departure of four-year superintendent Monique Felder last year. Danielle Jones, who currently serves as an assistant superintendent for Durham Public Schools (DPS), will start in Orange County on February 1. Jones was selected by the Orange County Board of Education from a pool of 26 candidates from across the country, according to a news release.
A Durham League of Their Own
Game day atmosphere is electric. Bleachers are lined with fans; music blares through speakers, hyping up players as they go through their warm-up routines. Die-hard fans can watch highlight reels and check team stats on Instagram. No, this isn’t the NBA or WNBA—this is a game in the Durham League,...
Backtalk: ‘Every tool at our disposal to attack the gun violence plaguing Durham’
Last month, we published a report about the Durham City Council’s 4-2 vote to suspend the use of ShotSpotter as the city awaits data from a Duke University review of the gunshot detection technology’s pilot in a three-mile area covering East Durham. Following publication, we received a statement from Durham sheriff Clarence Birkhead, who supports the city’s use of ShotSpotter and calls the decision not to extend ShotSpotter “a setback to law enforcement’s ability to effectively address gun violence in Durham.” Here’s an excerpt from Birkhead’s statement:
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