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Romancing the Train: A Ride from Raleigh to Charlotte
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Record writer Jennifer Wig takes the train to Charlotte.
Raleigh Public Record (https://theraleighcommons.org/raleighpublicrecord/topics/featured/page/53/)
Record writer Jennifer Wig takes the train to Charlotte.
Drivers hitting a street in North Raleigh this week should start seeing a 9-foot-long reminder to share the road. Maintenance crews are scheduled to begin applying “sharrows,” this week on Northclift Drive. They’re just one part of a decades-long plan to make the city more bicycle friendly.
Councilors gave final approval for the Hillsborough St. bike lanes and started thinking about another set. They also passed $10 million in bonds for solid waste facilities and got a $1.3 million stimulus grant for a geothermal system.
A photo essay from Tuesday’s downtown protest over the Wake County School Board’s plans to end the socio-economic diversity policy and the board meeting later in the day where 16 people were arrested.
The Raleigh City Council has three public hearings on tap Tuesday, July 20. Councilors will hear public input on changing floodplain, tree conservation and stormwater drain funding rules and a new neighborhood overlay district for Cameron Park. The hearing will be at 6:30 p.m. in the city council chambers on the second floor of the municipal building at 222 W. Hargett St.
A 1939 law bars making chocolates and other sweets with alcohol, ending a big business for a downtown chocolate shop.
The new fare structure will save the city $100,000, eliminate transfers and allow senior citizens and children to ride free.
Councilors voted to approve a settlement closing down a New Bern Avenue nightclub. They also approved $30 million in bonds for Solid Waste Services facilities and gave historic landmark status to the Latta House site.
In our continuing efforts to bring more sunshine to Raleigh city government, this is our second annual edition of what we’ll now call the Expense Report. Below you will find the full documents of the expense reports, credit card statements and requests for reimbursements from city department heads, the mayor and city council members.
Fresh fruits and vegetables are in season and Raleigh is awash in diverse, local offerings, but it wasn’t always this way. The recent locavore and slow food movements have stimulated demand, but our local climate, terrain and the 2004 tobacco buyout allowed many former Wake County tobacco farmers to transition to other crops.