Campaign Corner 2019: Houston gets a challenger, mayor’s race requires primary
With two 11th-hour changes just before filing ended today, three of four positions open for re-election on Mooresville’s Board of Commissioners now have a
With two 11th-hour changes just before filing ended today, three of four positions open for re-election on Mooresville’s Board of Commissioners now have a
Mark your calendars, Mooresville. We’re gonna have a debate!
The Scoop is partnering with YOU, the Mooresville community, to get to know our town board candidates and their platforms a bit better. We will hold a candidate forum on Thursday, Sept. 21, beginning at 6 p.m. in the Joe V. Knox Auditorium in the Charles Mack Citizens Center.
Mooresville’s town manager has a busy week ahead of him. Randy Hemann will spend the week in Oak Ridge, TN, where he is one
As cases of the coronavirus rise in Iredell County, don’t expect to be told the specific area of the county’s new diagnoses.
That would risk identifying a patient … and that is illegal, said Iredell County Health Director Jane Hinson.
Hinson cited Iredell’s size as the reason health officials here – unlike in other counties – don’t offer more detailed information about general locations of diagnoses. “The risk of identification related to the sharing of cities and zip codes is much greater in Iredell County than it is in a county with a population of greater than a million people,” she wrote in an email to the Scoop this week.
Chris Carney is Mooresville’s next mayor by a landslide, collecting 3,617 total votes to Bobby Compton’s 1,592 in yesterday’s municipal election.
Someone in Mooresville is siccing state regulators on Josh’s Farmers Market. Last week, for the first time in 30 years, representatives from the N.C.
Mooresville’s planning director, Danny Wilson, has resigned. Wilson has been the town’s planner for three years and is perhaps best known for creating Mooresville’s current Unified Development Ordinance (UDO) then using it
In Mooresville’s Wellesley neighborhood, spooky, scary skeletons are every child’s delight in the front yard of a home that bills itself “Nightmare Manor on Bushney Loop.”