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Tag: Mooresville

  • Mooresville mayor refutes lawsuit claims about late-night encounters

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    Mooresville Mayor Chris Carney listens during a town council meeting in Mooresville, N.C., on Monday, October 6, 2025.

    Mooresville Mayor Chris Carney listens during a town council meeting in Mooresville, N.C., on Monday, October 6, 2025.

    Knikouyeh@charlotteobserver.com

    Mooresville Mayor Chris Carney and the town’s police chief refuted claims Wednesday in two federal lawsuits about Carney’s behavior during two late-night encounters with police.

    “Enough is enough,” Carney said in an interview with The Charlotte Observer and Observer news partner WSOC. “We need to come out and set the record straight.”

    Carney said claims are false in the lawsuits filed against him, the town and other Mooresville officials by a former IT worker and ex-assistant police chief Frank Falzone.

    “It’s been awful, to be honest with you,” Carney said. “When you come into office trying to do the right thing” only to face “unfounded accusations.”

    “I just can’t sit back” and not contest the bogus claims in the lawsuits, Carney said. “My family deserves better than this, Mooresville deserves better than this.”

    Lawsuit claims

    Falzone filed a whistleblower lawsuit on Monday alleging he was forced to retire for raising concerns about the late-night incidents involving Carney.

    The lawsuit said Falzone was threatened with the loss of his pension if he didn’t retire, “depriving him of his career, reputation, and livelihood.”

    The 37-page lawsuit stems “from a deliberate and coordinated campaign by senior officials of the Town of Mooresville to silence, discredit and remove” Falzone for refusing “to participate in or remain silent about serious governmental misconduct,” according to the complaint.

    The allegations of misconduct involved Carney and Police Chief Ron Campurciani and “efforts of senior Town leadership to conceal that misconduct,” the lawsuit states.

    In an interview at Town Hall with The Charlotte Observer and WSOC, Mooresville Police Chief Ron Campurciani on Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2026, refuted claims in two lawsuits about incidents involving Mayor Chris Carney.
    In an interview at Town Hall with The Charlotte Observer and WSOC, Mooresville Police Chief Ron Campurciani on Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2026, refuted claims in two lawsuits about incidents involving Mayor Chris Carney. Joe Marusak jmarusak@charlotteobserver.com

    The lawsuit cites a late-night traffic stop involving the mayor and the police chief on Jan. 30, 2024, and Carney being in town hall with a woman one overnight in October 2024.

    The October 2024 incident prompted a lawsuit in January by Jeffrey Noble, a former IT employee who said he was fired in retaliation for reporting misconduct by the mayor that overnight, including video showing Carney pantless.

    In each incident, according to the complaint, Falzone “identified electronic evidence … that should have existed and been preserved, or properly classified, but which was instead missing, misclassified, incomplete, or rendered inaccessible under the supervision of senior officials.”

    Evidence included records, body-worn camera metadata and audit data, access-control logs, alarm data and surveillance footage, the lawsuit states.

    “Rather than investigate the Mayor’s conduct or address the serious irregularities Falzone identified, many of which directly implicated the Police Chief’s supervisory and administrative responsibilities, Defendants turned the machinery of government inward.”

    Mayor addresses claims

    In Wednesday’s interview, Carney said separate investigations into the incidents found no truth to the claims, including by U.S. ISS, an outside, independent investigative agency, into the Jan. 30 incident.

    In an interview at Town Hall with The Charlotte Observer and WSOC, Mooresville Mayor Chris Carney on Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2026, refuted claims in two lawsuits about his behavior during incidents in the town.
    In an interview at Town Hall with The Charlotte Observer and WSOC, Mooresville Mayor Chris Carney on Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2026, refuted claims in two lawsuits about his behavior during incidents in the town. Joe Marusak jmarusak@charlotteobserver.com

    Earlier Wednesday, the Mooresville Board of Commissioners voted unanimously to release the findings of the separate reports through the town’s legal department. The reports were not yet released by 5 p.m.

    Commissioners said they voted to release the reports to be fully transparent.

    “I’ve sat here a long time,” commissioner Eddie Dingler said. “I don’t hide anything.”

    “Our brand has taken a hit, and we should release what we can,” commissioner Gary West agreed.

    Carney asked the board to approve releasing the reports.

    “This is solely so we can tell the great citizens we were not going to hide behind laws,” he said. “We’re going to give you everything we have. The people expect that. We could not have done this more transparently.”

    Falzone retired on his own, police chief says

    Carney and Campurciani later addressed various claims in the lawsuits, telling the Observer and WSOC the allegations were simply untrue.

    Campurciani said Falzone retired on his own after he was placed on administrative leave, as is standard practice, after preliminary results of an outside investigation into his conduct toward the owner of a local boat repair company. Falzone hired the company to do extensive repairs on his personal boat, according to a letter the owner wrote about the incident.

    The findings “were troubling,” Campurciani said, but the full investigation was still being conducted by the outside agency, not his department when Falzone retired.

    The owner called 911 to request police response after he said Falzone grew angry at him at Stumpy Creek Access Area on Lake Norman. Carney provided the Observer a copy of the letter the owner wrote about the incident. In the letter, the owner called Falzone’s angry behavior “unethical and outrageous,” including “jumping on and kicking my hitch” to remove his boat trailer from his truck.

    Late-night traffic stop claims

    Carney and Campurciani said Falzone’s lawsuit contains false claims about what happened during the Jan. 30, 2024, traffic stop. It wasn’t even a traffic stop, they said.

    The mayor said he was driving from a fundraiser for Iredell County District Attorney Sarah Kirkman when he saw Campurciani driving from the event, too, and the two pulled over to chat for a few minutes.

    Carney said he hosted the event and gave speeches throughout the time. Multiple people at the event would confirm he wasn’t drinking, unlike the lawsuit claim, he said.

    The lawsuit cited a police captain saying the mayor appeared impaired at the scene. Carney and Campurciani said the captain happened to drive by as they chatted. The captain never left his car but continued on when he realized no stop was needed.

    So there was no police body-camera footage of the scene, contrary to the lawsuit claim that footage was tampered with, Carney said. “The facts just don’t support it,” he said.

    Mayor addresses pantless claim

    The mayor said allegations in the IT worker’s lawsuit about his conduct in town hall in October 2024 are likewise false, including that he was walking around pantless.

    Carney has repeatedly said in media interviews that he fell ill after medications he was on mixed with alcohol after a gathering at a bar near Town Hall.

    The woman who accompanied him to Town Hall is a longtime family friend who sent a photo of Carney ill at Town Hall to his wife that night, so she’d know the condition he was in, he said. He’d gone there to retrieve his phone when he got sick, he said.

    “I never thought, to be fair, that vomiting and making a mess would become a national story,” the mayor said Wednesday. “I really couldn’t have imagined that.

    “And I would tell the public, I am so sorry,” he said. “I truly didn’t think anything other than I needed my phone and then, when I felt bad, this is a safe space … a place where, when I felt better, I would go home.”

    Regarding the pantless claim, he said, he was cleaning vomit off himself, “by myself. The other person was multiple offices away, behind two sets of doors.

    “When do I get to have my own dignity?” Carney asked. “Anybody who’s reviewed that film, there’s nothing inappropriate.”

    This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

    This story was originally published February 11, 2026 at 5:23 PM.

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    Joe Marusak

    The Charlotte Observer

    Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news.
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  • Man suspected of robbing Lake Norman Dollar Tree found in Virginia, police say

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    A man charged in the robbery of this Lake Norman Dollar Tree is under investigation in a string of other Dollar Tree holdups, police said.

    A man charged in the robbery of this Lake Norman Dollar Tree is under investigation in a string of other Dollar Tree holdups, police said.

    jmarusak@charlotteobserver.com

    In the Virginia mountains Wednesday, Jan. 7, U.S. Marshals apprehended a 62-year-old Rowan County man suspected of robbing a Lake Norman Dollar Tree store and possibly ones in nearby towns recently, police said.

    The man was caught four days after a robber approached employees in the Dollar Tree at 221-R Norman Station Blvd., flashed a handgun and ordered the workers to give him all the cash in a safe, Mooresville police said on social media, citing surveillance footage.

    “Once the suspect had the money, he took the store’s phone and left the store,” according to a Mooresville Police Department news release. The suspect drove away in a dark Honda sedan, police said.

    Through further investigation, police said they identified a suspect who was arrested without incident in Bristol, Virginia, 180 miles from Mooresville.

    The China Grove man was jailed without bond pending extradition to Mooresville. He was charged with robbery with a dangerous weapon and possession of a firearm by a felon, police said.

    “More charges are forthcoming from Mooresville Police Department, as well as surrounding jurisdictions,” police said.

    Mooresville police thanked the U.S. Marshals Service and police in Bristol for helping apprehend the man.

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    Joe Marusak

    The Charlotte Observer

    Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news.
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  • Walmart developer seeks Lake Norman town’s approval for a nearby restaurant

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    The developer of a Walmart Neighborhood Market in rapidly growing east Mooresville wants to add a restaurant and a gas station/convenience store nearby.

    Iredell Avenue Residential Development LLC will seek a rezoning from the Mooresville Board of Commissioners on Monday for a Wendy’s and a 7-Eleven in its Harris Crossing development on Coddle Creek Highway (N.C. 3) at Harris Crossing Boulevard, Mooresville Planning & Community Development documents show.

    At a neighborhood meeting held by the developer in May, residents raised concerns about traffic, safety, noise and potential pollution, according to the town documents.

    The developer said existing trees, a proposed berm and an eight-foot-tall wall with landscaping on both sides would create sound and visual barriers along the southern end of the nearly five-acre property.

    A proposed 50-foot-wide buffer of trees and other vegetation “would deter the possibilities of vagrants trying to walk through and get to the existing backyards of the adjacent homes along the east side of the property,” according to town planning documents.

    On May 27, the Mooresville Planning Board sided with residents in recommending the rezoning be denied by the town board.

    The Mooresville Board of Commissioners will consider the rezoning at 6 p.m. Monday at Town Hall, 413 N. Main St.

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    Joe Marusak

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    Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news.
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  • Exclusive: Mooresville mayor unveils plans for village of free homes for veterans

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    The town of Mooresville is partnering with Lowe’s and the New York-based nonprofit Building Homes for Heroes to develop a “village” of free homes for veterans, Mayor Chris Carney said Thursday.

    The 14 homes will sprout over the next year or so on 4 1/2 town-owned acres along North Maple Street, across from the town’s War Memorial Recreation Center.

    Carney announced the initiative before about 75 veterans at Welcome Home Veterans Military Museum at Richard’s Coffee Shop on North Main Street.

    Andy Pujol, founder, CEO and chairman of the board of Building Homes for Heroes, joined Carney for the announcement.

    “We love our soldiers, we love our veterans, and we want to treat them with pride and appreciation,” Pujol told The Charlotte Observer on a visit later Thursday to the site of the planned homes with Lowe’s and town officials. “But we also want to treat them better.”

    Pujol participated in the search and rescue after the World Trade Center terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. He was not there on the day of the attacks, but was part of the bucket brigade alongside first responders in the aftermath

    He later developed cancer, which doctors strongly believe is linked to the toxins he inhaled during that time.

    Town got legislation passed for veteran housing

    Carney said the location for the homes is fitting. It’s a short walk along a path and a bridge to the town’s six-acre Liberty Park, where markers honor the service of veterans of various wars. The back entrance to Welcome Home Veterans is across Church Street from the park.

    North Carolina cities and towns are prohibited by state law from giving away government property, but Mooresville worked with legislators on a local bill to let the Lake Norman town do so when benefiting veterans, Carney said.

    The law was enacted in much less time than most legislation and can serve as a model for communities across the state, the former state senator said.

    With military bases including Fort Bragg and Camp Lejeune, North Carolina has many veterans who could benefit from such initiatives, Carney said.

    Lowe’s has been ‘a great partner’

    Building Homes for Heroes has gifted 440 homes in 36 states, including nine in North Carolina, David Weingrad, director of communications, told the Observer in a phone interview later Thursday. That includes new homes and modified and renovated ones, he said.

    Veterans apply for homes on the organization’s website. Those with the greatest need, because of injuries both physical and mental suffered during their service, are the likeliest to receive homes, Weingrad said. They also can’t be homeowners.

    “Lowe’s has been a great partner with us,” donating several million dollars to the organization and several million dollars from customers through its Round Up for Charity effort, he said. Customers can round up their bills to the higher dollar, with the change going to the donation program.

    “It’s because of Lowe’s generosity that we’re able to achieve this amazing milestone,” Weingrad said of the number of homes the organization has given to veterans.

    Joe McFarland, executive vice president of stores and merchandising at the Mooresville-based home improvement retailer, serves on the Building Homes for Heroes board, Weingrad said.

    The homes effort will be formally announced during Veterans Day events in downtown Mooresville on Nov. 11, Carney said.

    This story was originally published October 24, 2025 at 5:00 AM.

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    Joe Marusak

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    Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news.
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  • Major Lake Norman road closed for hours after gas line break prompts evacuations

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    Construction barrels line N.C. 150 from U.S. 21 to Talbert Road in Mooresville NC on Saturday, Feb. 8, 2025, for the long-awaited expansion of the highway to six lanes. A gas line rupture along this stretch prompted evacuations and the closing of the road on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025.

    Construction barrels line N.C. 150 from U.S. 21 to Talbert Road in Mooresville NC on Saturday, Feb. 8, 2025, for the long-awaited expansion of the highway to six lanes. A gas line rupture along this stretch prompted evacuations and the closing of the road on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025.

    jmarusak@charlotteobserver.com

    Crews expanding a major Lake Norman-area highway cut a gas line Friday, prompting evacuations and closing the busy road for hours, witnesses and town officials said.

    The line ruptured on West Plaza Drive (N.C. 150) in Mooresville, near the Randy Marion auto dealership, town officials said on social media.

    Fumes shot skyward, along with red clay dirt caught in the spewing gas, Charlotte Observer news parter WSOC reported.

    Dirt blanketed the dealership’s sign and outdoor vehicles, according to the station.

    “We heard the sound, and at first I was like, that’s a pretty loud sound,” Corky Trutza, manager of the nearby Mooresville Golf Range, told WSOC. “Next thing I know, fire guys are knocking on the door.”

    On the town’s Facebook page, a witness said he was 200 feet from the gas line when a back hoe operator ruptured the line.

    “It was pretty crazy,” the man said. “Dirt and natural gas shooting about 60 feet in the air.”

    No injuries were reported.

    Highway widening project

    Crews are expanding the highway to three lanes in each direction as part of the $249 million widening of N.C. 150 in Iredell and Catawba counties.

    The project will include a massive new 10-lane bridge over the highway at Interstate 77 exit 36.

    In the first phase of the bridge work, crews will build additional eastbound lanes on N.C. 150, according to NCDOT. The second phase will add westbound lanes, officials said.

    “The final phase will complete the transition to a 160-foot-wide structure featuring ten travel lanes, tying in the bridge to the existing roadway, and removing the existing bridge,” according to the NCDOT statement.

    Between U.S. 21 and I-77 exit 36 in Mooresville, crews are installing storm drains, hauling and grading dirt, moving water meters and building small retaining walls, according to an update by the town on Friday.

    Major fill work is underway near Chick-fil-A, and a temporary traffic signal is being installed, town officials said. Wall construction has started, beginning at the exit 36 bridge.

    15-mile, five-year highway expansion

    The overall, 15-mile N.C. 150 widening project is needed to ease decades-old congestion and handle future crowding, officials said. Charlotte-based contractor Blythe Development LLC heads the work.

    Construction began this year and is expected to finish in 2030.

    .

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    Joe Marusak

    The Charlotte Observer

    Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

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  • 9 things to know about the food scene in Lake Norman

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    The Lake Norman food scene is thriving, with new eateries, expansions, and local spots pushing culinary boundaries.

    A new Mooresville family restaurant, The Happy Egg, serves chef-owner Cornelio Garcia’s homemade recipes, featuring dishes like shrimp and grits with a Cajun cream glaze.

    7 Brew Coffee expands with its first Charlotte-area drive-through, offering a plethora of drink combinations.

    Hilda and Gabriel Manjarrez introduce Lake Norman diners to their popular Charlotte restaurant, La Michoacana, known for its tacos al pastor.

    Meanwhile, Whataburger plans to open a branch in Mooresville, offering specials to its first 100 customers.

    These developments from the past couple of months signal a dynamic growth in food options around Lake Norman, catering to diverse tastes and preferences.


    NO. 1: HERE’S WHERE TO GO APPLE PICKING THIS FALL NEAR CHARLOTTE

    Grab your best flannel and a Pumpkin Spiced Latte and get ready to pick some apples at these local farms. | Published August 16, 2022 | Read Full Story by Lorenza Medley



    Duckworth’s offers a variety of game day foods, including burgers, nachos and sandwiches. By guerrillaRAW

    NO. 2: MY FRIENDS ARE NEW TO THE CHARLOTTE AREA. HERE’S WHERE WE EAT IN HUNTERSVILLE

    In a stroke of good luck, my husband‘s best friend and his family — the couple who set us up together and have been by our side ever since — have moved to the Charlotte area this year and landed in Lake Norman. | Published October 8, 2025 | Read Full Story by Heidi Finley



    Whataburger has set the opening date of its Lake Norman location in Mooresville, shown here on Saturday, Sept. 6, 2025. By JOE MARUSAK

    NO. 3: WHATABURGER OPENS LAKE NORMAN LOCATION THURSDAY. FREEBIES TO FIRST 100 CUSTOMERS

    Texas-based Whataburger is scheduled to open its Lake Norman location in Mooresville at 9 a.m. | Published September 6, 2025 | Read Full Story by Joe Marusak



    Tacos Al Pastor at The Happy Egg.

    NO. 4: NEW MOORESVILLE FAMILY RESTAURANT FEATURES CHEF-OWNER’S HOMEMADE RECIPES

    After decades as a chef at well known Lake Norman and other Charlotte-area restaurants, Cornelio Garcia fulfilled a longtime dream recently. | Published September 16, 2025 | Read Full Story by Joe Marusak



    The eight-episode drama “The Hunting Wives” premieres on Monday, July 21, and parts of it were filmed in the Charlotte area.

    NO. 5: IS ‘THE HUNTING WIVES’ GETTING A 2ND SEASON ON NETFLIX? WE HAVE OUR ANSWER

    Netflix has officially confirmed that “The Hunting Wives” will return for a second season.The series, based on May Cobb’s novel, follows Sophie O’Neill, portrayed by Brittany Snow, as she gets pulled into the dangerous world of glamorous socialite Margo Banks, played by Malin Akerman. | Published September 12, 2025 | Read Full Story by Evan Moore



    Owner Gabriel Manjarrez poses outside the soon-to-open Lake Norman location of his family’s popular Charlotte restaurant on Friday, July 25, 2025. By JOE MARUSAK

    NO. 6: CHARLOTTE RESTAURANT WITH ‘BEST TACOS AL PASTOR’ EXPANDS TO LAKE NORMAN.

    Gabriel and Hilda Manjarrez opened a Lake Norman location of their popular Charlotte family restaurant on Tuesday.With “the best tacos al pastor in Mooresville,” La Michoacana Taqueria y Tortilleria is now serving diners across from Walmart Supercenter off Interstate 77/N.C. | Published September 25, 2025 | Read Full Story by Joe Marusak



    Wichita’s second 7 Brew drive-through coffee shop opened today at Douglas and Rock. By Courtesy photo

    NO. 7: DRIVE-THROUGH COFFEE CHAIN CONTINUES EXPANSION WITH FIRST CHARLOTTE-AREA SHOP

    7 Brew Coffee, an Arkansas-based drive-thru coffee chain, is expanding its footprint in North Carolina with a new location in the Charlotte area. | Published September 29, 2025 | Read Full Story by Evan Moore



    Owner Case Warnemunde poses outside Old Town Public House in downtown Cornelius on Thursday, Oct. 2, 2025. The popular nightlife venue will close in January before the building is demolished for a major new development project. By DESIREE MATHURIN

    NO. 8: LAKE NORMAN NIGHTLIFE VENUE TO CLOSE AND BUILDING RAZED FOR MAJOR NEW PROJECT

    Old Town Public House, a popular nightlife venue in downtown Cornelius, will close in January before the building is demolished for a new development project, its owner said Thursday. | Published October 2, 2025 | Read Full Story by Joe Marusak



    Courtesy of Corkscrew Wine Pub

    NO. 9: CRAFT BEER, CROISSANTS AND MORE: NEW SHOPS ARRIVING SOON IN DOWNTOWN HUNTERSVILLE

    A Charlotte-area city is looking to grow its food and dining scene with two new options coming next spring. | Published October 17, 2025 | Read Full Story by Tanasia Kenney

    The summary above was drafted with the help of AI tools and edited by journalists in our News division. All stories listed were reported, written and edited by McClatchy journalists.

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  • Drones will soon track suspects in Lake Norman town, police chief says

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    A drone is pictured in this file photo.

    A drone is pictured in this file photo.

    Ricardo Gomez Angel via Unsplash

    Mooresville police will soon deploy drones to track robbery and theft suspects running or driving from the scenes of their crimes, Police Chief Ron Campurciani said.

    A trained drone dispatcher will simply press a button and release a drone from police headquarters at U.S. 21 and Brawley School Road/West Wilson Avenue, Campurciani told the Mooresville Citizens Academy on Sept. 24.

    The six-week academy, free to town residents, gives an inside look at various town departments. A Charlotte Observer reporter signed up for this year’s academy and was present when Campurciani announced the drone initiative.

    The drones will zip along at 58 mph, meaning they can often get to a crime scene faster than an officer, the chief said. The drone will tail the person until officers arrive, he said.

    The drone will be given the description of the suspect as called into police 911 by the person reporting the crime, he said.

    The police department is among only 12 in the nation deploying such drones, Campurciani told the group of about 25 residents. He didn’t name the other communities.

    Observer files public records request

    The department expected its shipment of drones this week, the chief said.

    He said a news conference will be held after dispatcher training.

    That could be a few weeks from now, town spokeswoman Rika White said when the Observer later requested more details about the drones from the chief.

    On Sept. 26, the Observer filed a public records request for any drone contract and the name of the provider. The Observer hadn’t received a reply from the town by Wednesday, Oct. 1; state public records law says responses should be done as promptly as possible.

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    Joe Marusak

    The Charlotte Observer

    Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news.
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  • Widow of NASCAR legend Dale Earnhardt reveals plans for her vast landholdings

    Widow of NASCAR legend Dale Earnhardt reveals plans for her vast landholdings

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    Teresa Earnhardt, widow of the late NASCAR legend Dale Earnhardt, plans to transform 399 of her rural acres in east Mooresville into an industrial park, according to her rezoning application for the vast former farmland property.

    Mooresville Technology Park would sprout between Patterson Farm Road and Rustic Road near Cabarrus County. The park would be just off N.C. 3, also known as Dale Earnhardt Highway.

    The acreage is 2 1/2 miles from Dale Earnhardt Inc., Earnhardt’s longtime racing headquarters on N.C. 3 in Mooresville.

    Dale Earnhardt celebrates at Daytona International Speedway on Feb. 16, 1998, after winning the Daytona 500. It was the only major race Earnhardt hadn’t won. An “impeccably preserved” No. 3 Dale Earnhardt race car tops the list of memorabilia his longtime friend and NASCAR team owner Richard Childress is auctioning off to benefit COVID-19 relief efforts.

    Earnhardt, who was from Kannapolis, died in a last-lap crash at the Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway on Feb. 18, 2001.

    Years ago, when they renamed the state route outside Earnhardt’s headquarters as N.C. 3, state highway officials denied to The Charlotte Observer that it had anything to do with Earnhardt’s famous car number.

    Teresa Earnhardt, widow of NASCAR legend Dale Earnhardt, plans to transform 399 of her rural acres in east Mooresville into an industrial park. Shown is part of the property off Rustic Road.Teresa Earnhardt, widow of NASCAR legend Dale Earnhardt, plans to transform 399 of her rural acres in east Mooresville into an industrial park. Shown is part of the property off Rustic Road.

    Teresa Earnhardt, widow of NASCAR legend Dale Earnhardt, plans to transform 399 of her rural acres in east Mooresville into an industrial park. Shown is part of the property off Rustic Road.

    Teresa Earnhardt is scheduled to request the rezoning at the Oct. 22 Mooresville Planning Board meeting, according to the meeting agenda.

    Earnhardt Farms LLC is listed as the property owner. Teresa Earnhardt is the only managing member of the LLC, according to N.C. Secretary of State records.

    The Planning Board is an advisory panel that makes recommendations on rezoning requests to the Mooresville Board of Commissioners, which has final say. No date is scheduled for commissioners to consider the request

    This 1983 Charlotte Observer file photo shows, from left, Kelley Earnhardt Miller, her dad, Dale Earnhardt, brother Dale Earnhardt Jr., and Dale Earnhardt’s wife, Teresa Earnhardt.This 1983 Charlotte Observer file photo shows, from left, Kelley Earnhardt Miller, her dad, Dale Earnhardt, brother Dale Earnhardt Jr., and Dale Earnhardt’s wife, Teresa Earnhardt.

    This 1983 Charlotte Observer file photo shows, from left, Kelley Earnhardt Miller, her dad, Dale Earnhardt, brother Dale Earnhardt Jr., and Dale Earnhardt’s wife, Teresa Earnhardt.

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  • Public outcry prompts Mooresville developer to shrink number of planned Lake Norman homes

    Public outcry prompts Mooresville developer to shrink number of planned Lake Norman homes

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    A developer is proposing up to 660 homes and at least 10,000 square feet of commercial space on 52 wooded acres along Alcove Road at Lake Norman in Mooresville.

    A developer is proposing up to 660 homes and at least 10,000 square feet of commercial space on 52 wooded acres along Alcove Road at Lake Norman in Mooresville.

    MOORESVILLE PLANNING DEPARTMENT

    A Lake Norman developer that faced a public outcry over its planned 660-home community at the lake last year has shrunk the number of homes in hopes of getting the development approved Monday night.

    Proposed by Mooresville-based Southwest 33 Associates LLC, the community would cover 52 largely wooded acres in the 400 block of the narrow, two-lane Alcove Road. The developer now proposes 180 fewer homes in its revised rezoning request, according to documents filed with the Mooresville Planning Board.

    Alcove Road runs along Interstate 77 between Langtree Road and Williamson Road in Mooresville to the north, connecting the interstate’s exits 31 and 33. Exit 33 leads to the national headquarters of home improvement retailer Lowe’s Cos. Inc. and Lake Norman Regional Medical Center.

    Neighbors and town commissioners decried the developer’s original plan last year, citing concerns over traffic, fire response and a lack of retail-commercial space.

    “I don’t know that I’ve ever seen a project come in with such a lack of support,” commissioner Tommy DeWeese said at a town board meeting in November. “I think it’s almost a tragedy that we’re calling it mixed-use commercial.”

    Fairview ‘flyover’ road

    Commissioners are scheduled to vote on the rezoning request at their regular meeting at 6 p.m. Monday.

    In its rezoning application, the developer said its project will enhance the tax base, provide more housing for seniors and others and offer more retail to Mooresville.

    The developer also said it has worked closely with the N.C. Department of Transportation on a planned state road over I-77 known as the Fairview Flyover. The road is so named because it would connect Alcove Road on one side of I-77 with Fairview Road on the other side of the interstate.

    Construction of the Flyover is scheduled to begin in 2025.

    “The start of our development will closely coincide with the approved Flyover, allowing us to partner closely with NCDOT on site work and other construction opportunities,” the developer said in its rezoning application.

    Dog park, open recreational space

    The revised plan for the development, called Alcove Road, includes as many as 280 apartments in two multi-family buildings and 200 town homes, according to the developer’s application reviewed by The Charlotte Observer.

    The developer will provide 27,000 square feet of public recreational space on the west side of the project and a 2-acre commercial parcel on the east side.

    A dog park and multiple open-space park areas are planned, along with a club house, swimming pool and walking trails.

    The developer promises a 30-foot vegetative buffer along Alcove Road and a pedestrian connection across a realigned Fairview Road.

    A traffic impact analysis is under way by a consultant for the developer, according to town documents.

    The development’s landscaping will make the road “far more friendly to the eye than what otherwise would be displayed should (the Flyover) be built on its own,” according to the developer’s rezoning application.

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    Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news.
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  • Google Fiber set to expand in North Carolina. Here are the latest cities and towns.

    Google Fiber set to expand in North Carolina. Here are the latest cities and towns.

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    Google Fiber is expanding in North Carolina with right-of-way agreements in the works in several more cities and towns, a company official said.

    Google Fiber is expanding in North Carolina with right-of-way agreements in the works in several more cities and towns, a company official said.

    THE KANSAS CITY STAR

    Google Fiber is expanding in North Carolina, a company official said Friday.

    The high-speed internet provider is nearing right-of-way agreements to add service in Mooresville, Wilmington and Kannapolis, Jess George, head of government and community affairs for Google Fiber’s east region, told The Charlotte Observer in an exclusive interview.

    Wilmington will become the first community along the North Carolina coast with the service, she said. The company did not provide details on the timing or exact locations of the expansion. But George said she anticipates “big announcements” about the plans for Mooresville, Kannapolis and Wilmington “within the next couple of months.”

    “It’s a very exciting time,” George said. “We’re thrilled to be able to serve these communities.”

    Earlier in the week, Google Fiber revealed that it will expand to the Union County town of Stallings and extend service to its first community in Huntersville, Hambright Junction. Google Fiber will be the sole internet provider in that neighborhood, a 300-unit, multi-family development, company officials said.

    Ongoing Charlotte-area expansion

    Google Fiber arrived in Charlotte in July 2016. The first neighborhood to get the gigabit high-speed internet service was Highland Creek, which is mostly north of Interstate 485, The Charlotte Observer previously reported.

    The company has served Concord residents since 2022.

    Google Fiber has no projected start date for service in Stallings and has not decided which areas of the town will be served first, George said.

    “We will now go into high-level design,” she said.

    Google Fiber “huts”

    To begin rolling out the service, Google Fiber first identifies where to build a fiber “hut” in a community, George said.

    Huts hold all of the hardware for the Google Fiber internet network and are typically constructed near an existing cell phone tower or other transmission site, she said.

    Google Fiber huts are 28 feet long and 9 feet tall, The (Raleigh) News & Observer previously reported.

    “They’re the size of a trailer,” George said.

    An entire construction project in a community can take two to three years to complete, George told The Charlotte Observer in March 2023 when the company first announced its Huntersville plans.

    Google Fiber is already serving some customers in Huntersville, George said Friday. The company doesn’t disclose its exact number of customers in communities, she previously said.

    The company, however, doesn’t “cherry-pick” neighborhoods, she said.

    “Our goal is to construct our network to as many Huntersville residents as possible,” George told the Observer when Google first announced its plans.

    By doing so, the company aims to “bridge the digital divide” in communities, she said Friday.

    Besides offering higher internet speeds, the company also helps lower internet bills in communities by providing competition to existing providers, she said.

    Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news.
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  • Lake Norman farm-to-table restaurant expands its menu, unveils new name

    Lake Norman farm-to-table restaurant expands its menu, unveils new name

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    SCREEN SHOT FROM EAT. DRINK. SHOP. MOORESVILLE ON FACEBOOK

    A farm-to-table restaurant in Mooresville near Lake Norman is rebranding with a new name beginning Monday and will add breakfast plus other menu items, management said this week on the Facebook community group “Eat. Drink. Shop. Mooresville.

    The former Johnny’s Farmhouse on River Highway (N.C. 150) is now Mooresville Family House. The new sign went up on the building Thursday and the restaurant has been closed a few days while crews continued refurbishing the interior.

    The restaurant will reopen at 7 a.m. Monday and will be open daily until 9 p.m., management said.

    Breakfast classics and everything in between,” Mooresville Family House posted on Facebook Saturday afternoon, promising to post its menu later in the day.

    Mooresville Family House also has added vegetarian and weight-watching meals, according to its Facebook post earlier in the week.

    The restaurant has “upped the quality” of its food while reducing prices, according to the post.

    Mooresville Family House is affiliated with the China Grove Family House farm-to-table restaurant on Main Street in China Grove, Rowan County, management said.

    “Our new menu is something that our owner has worked extremely hard on!” according to the Mooresville Family House Facebook post. “With definite improvements! We have options for everyone. We have mainly focused on quality products and pricing for our customers!”

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    Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news.
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  • Longtime Charlotte-area bagel shop and deli to expand with second location

    Longtime Charlotte-area bagel shop and deli to expand with second location

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    Bagel Bin & Deli in Huntersville plans a second location in the Lake Norman area this summer, its owner said on Thursday, Feb. 15, 2024.

    Bagel Bin & Deli in Huntersville plans a second location in the Lake Norman area this summer, its owner said on Thursday, Feb. 15, 2024.

    A popular longtime bagel shop and deli in Huntersville plans a second location in the Lake Norman area this summer, its owner said Thursday.

    Bagel Bin & Deli intends to open in June or the beginning of July in the Harris Teeter-anchored Village at Byers Creek shopping center at N.C. 150 and Perth Road in Mooresville at the lake, owner Alex Cook told CharlotteFive.

    With its bagels, sandwiches, salads and hot daily meal specials, the Huntersville location of Bagel Bin & Deli has been a fixture in the Northcross Shopping Center on Sam Furr Road for 28 years.

    Cook, a longtime chef in Little Italy, New York, has owned the Bagel Bin for about a year and half. He said customers who drove from Mooresville urged him to consider a location in their town, and he looked at several. He liked the vibrancy of Byers Creek and its proximity (across N.C. 150) from Lake Norman High School.

    The Mooresville location will add homemade grab-and-go Italian meals for families of four — such as lasagna, meatballs and baked ziti, he said.

    Two of the three other chefs at Bagel Bin will head to the Mooresville location, Cook said.

    The new 1,300-square-foot location will have indoor seating for about 20, like the Huntersville location, and will have three or four outdoor tables, Cook said

    Cook moved from New York to Atlanta in 2008 to start a ministry that fed 650 people experiencing homelessness a day, he said.

    The Bagel Bin also features hot daily meal specials, such as Thursday’s roadhouse chili.

    “It’s a great business, a great product, and great customers,” he said.

    Bagel Bin & Deli

    Location: Northcross Shopping Center, 9815 Sam Furr Rd, Huntersville, NC 28078;

    Location: Village at Byers Creek, Argus Lane, Mooresville 28117 (opening this summer)

    Menu

    Cuisine: Bagels, sandwiches, Italian

    Instagram: @bagel_bin_huntersville

    Related stories from Charlotte Observer

    Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news.
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  • Longtime Charlotte-area bagel shop and deli to expand with second location

    Longtime Charlotte-area bagel shop and deli to expand with second location

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    Bagel Bin & Deli in Huntersville plans a second location in the Lake Norman area this summer, its owner said on Thursday, Feb. 15, 2024.

    Bagel Bin & Deli in Huntersville plans a second location in the Lake Norman area this summer, its owner said on Thursday, Feb. 15, 2024.

    A popular longtime bagel shop and deli in Huntersville plans a second location in the Lake Norman area this summer, its owner said Thursday.

    Bagel Bin & Deli intends to open in June or the beginning of July in the Harris Teeter-anchored Village at Byers Creek shopping center at N.C. 150 and Perth Road in Mooresville at the lake, owner Alex Cook told CharlotteFive.

    With its bagels, sandwiches, salads and hot daily meal specials, the Huntersville location of Bagel Bin & Deli has been a fixture in the Northcross Shopping Center on Sam Furr Road for 28 years.

    Cook, a longtime chef in Little Italy, New York, has owned the Bagel Bin for about a year and half. He said customers who drove from Mooresville urged him to consider a location in their town, and he looked at several. He liked the vibrancy of Byers Creek and its proximity (across N.C. 150) from Lake Norman High School.

    The Mooresville location will add homemade grab-and-go Italian meals for families of four — such as lasagna, meatballs and baked ziti, he said.

    Two of the three other chefs at Bagel Bin will head to the Mooresville location, Cook said.

    The new 1,300-square-foot location will have indoor seating for about 20, like the Huntersville location, and will have three or four outdoor tables, Cook said

    Cook moved from New York to Atlanta in 2008 to start a ministry that fed 650 people experiencing homelessness a day, he said.

    The Bagel Bin also features hot daily meal specials, such as Thursday’s roadhouse chili.

    “It’s a great business, a great product, and great customers,” he said.

    Bagel Bin & Deli

    Location: Northcross Shopping Center, 9815 Sam Furr Rd, Huntersville, NC 28078;

    Location: Village at Byers Creek, Argus Lane, Mooresville 28117 (opening this summer)

    Menu

    Cuisine: Bagels, sandwiches, Italian

    Instagram: @bagel_bin_huntersville

    Related stories from Charlotte Observer

    Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news.
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  • This busy Lake Norman DMV office will close next week. What it means for drivers.

    This busy Lake Norman DMV office will close next week. What it means for drivers.

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    A North Carolina license plate agency that often draws long lines out into the parking lot, will close next week after the current operator announced her retirement, a spokesman for the N.C. Division of Motor Vehicles said Thursday.

    The busy agency, at 125 N. Main St. in Mooresville, is set to close on Feb. 14 at 5 p.m., NCDMV spokesperson John Brockwell said in a news release. Pamela Morgan, who’s been operating the agency since 2015, is retiring.

    The shutdown should be temporary, though.

    “A new agency will open under a selected contractor at a later date,” according to the news release.

    People who need services will need to visit a license plate agency in another town, Brockwell said in the news release.

    NCDMV oversees the state’s license plate agencies, but private businesses or local governments manage them, according to the North Carolina Department of Transportation.

    In response to a public records request by the Observer, NCDOT released figures showing the Mooresville agency completed 165,094 total transactions from July 1, 2022, to June 30, 2023, and 74,747 transactions between July 1 and Dec. 31, 2023.

    DMV license plate agencies near Mooresville

    NCDMV recommends people who use the Mooresville agency visit any of these five nearby agencies until the Mooresville location re-opens with a new contractor. Each is open 9 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays, except for Huntersville, which operates from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays:

    Statesville, 121 W. Water St.

    Salisbury, 130 E. Kerr St.

    Kannapolis, 1509 Dale Earnhardt Blvd.

    Concord, 929-D Concord Pkwy. S.

    Huntersville Express, 12101 Mount Holly-Huntersville Rd..

    The state’s 117 license plate agencies offer vehicle registration services and title transactions, vehicle license plate renewals, replacement tags and duplicate registrations.

    Many of the services are available online, including property tax payments and registration renewals. Visit MyNCDMV.gov.

    This story was originally published February 8, 2024, 3:28 PM.

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    Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news.
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