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Tag: Triangle

  • NC State Pride Center official no longer employed after new undercover video

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    A screenshot of the undercover video recorded by Accuracy in Media at NC State.

    A screenshot of the undercover video recorded by Accuracy in Media at NC State.

    jane.sartwell@newsobserver.com

    Another unsuspecting subject of an activist group’s undercover videos at UNC System schools is now out of a job. This time, the group targeted NC State University’s LGBTQ Pride Center.

    The group Accuracy in Media has posted videos shot at universities across North Carolina and in other states that it says shows evidence of diversity, equity and inclusion programs on campuses where such programming is restricted. The group describes itself as using “investigative journalism and citizen-led activism to expose government corruption, public policy failures, and radical activists.”

    The group shared a video Thursday of the center’s assistant director explaining how the school continues to support LGBTQ+ students despite changes in policy at the system level. By Friday morning, he was no longer employed by NC State, according to the university.

    “We’re still able to do the things that we want to do, have these events and programs. We have to be a little more careful,” the video shows the assistant director, Jae Edwards, saying in the undated video. “As a marginalized group, we’re used to these things, and we’re used to going around them and finding ways around.”

    In 2024, the UNC Board of Governors repealed its commitment to initiatives that focus on DEI, instead committing to “institutional neutrality and nondiscrimination.” Accuracy in Media is focused in part on revealing that despite the official policy change, the tenets of DEI are still honored among individual North Carolina employees. First came videos out of UNC Charlotte, then UNC Asheville, Western Carolina University, UNC Wilmington, and North Carolina A&T.

    Now, the conservative organization has made its way to the Triangle.

    Edwards is the fourth UNC System employee to lose their job as a result of Accuracy in Media’s work. NC State referred to the new anti-DEI policy in explaining the situation.

    “We were made aware of the video on Thursday, Feb. 5,” a spokesperson for the university told The News & Observer. “The individual seen in the video had no role in policy or compliance decisions and was not authorized to speak on behalf of the university. The staff member no longer works at the university. NC State complies with both the spirit and letter of all applicable federal and state laws and UNC System policies, and any violation is taken very seriously.”

    “The date of separation is today, Feb. 6,” the spokesperson said, but declined to answer whether the separation came as a result of the video.

    Efforts to reach Edwards weren’t immediately successful on Friday.

    Edwards said in the video the Pride Center has increased its focus on supporting student organizations, since anti-DEI policy doesn’t extend to student-led groups.

    According to the Society of Professional Journalists’ code of ethics, journalists should avoid undercover methods “unless traditional, open methods will not yield information vital to the public.”

    Accuracy in Media isn’t solely focused on universities. It has also recorded and posted undercover videos of staff at Rockingham County Schools, Lexington City Schools and Winston-Salem and Raleigh city governments.

    The group’s president, Adam Guillette, told The N&O that NC State was the last university on their list of UNC System schools. Accuracy in Media staffers, though, have revisited some of the UNC schools “that we’ve exposed in the past 12 months, and we’re shocked by some of the things we found, and we’ll be releasing those investigations in the next few months,” he said.

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    Jane Winik Sartwell

    The News & Observer

    Jane Winik Sartwell covers higher education for The News & Observer. 

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  • Three victims identified in UNC Rex sex assault case, nurse jailed without bond

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    Brayan Alvarez Ortiz, 28, a traveling nurse, has been accused of sexually assaulting sedated patients at UNC Rex Hospital. Police believe there may be more victims and are encouraging them to come forward. As a general policy, The N&O does not publish police mug shots. We are publishing this photo as it may help other victims.

    Brayan Alvarez Ortiz, 28, a traveling nurse, has been accused of sexually assaulting sedated patients at UNC Rex Hospital. Police believe there may be more victims and are encouraging them to come forward. As a general policy, The N&O does not publish police mug shots. We are publishing this photo as it may help other victims.

    Raleigh Police Department

    Prosecutors have identified a third victim in the case of a UNC Rex Hospital nurse accused of sexually assaulting patients who were recovering from surgery.

    Brayan Alvarez Ortiz, 28, appeared in Wake County District Court Thursday via a feed from jail, where he is being held without bond.

    Police charged Ortiz Wednesday with sexual contact under the context of medical treatment, second-degree sex offense and sexual battery due to reports of assault in November. Officers spoke to a Rex patient who had been under anesthesia and soon found a second who reported being touched while sedated.

    On Thursday, Assistant District Attorney Kathryn Pomeroy said her office learned of a third victim less than 24 hours after police asked patients to come forward. All of them were recovering from surgery.

    “The defendant was sexually abusing patients who were incredibly vulnerable,” she said.

    Pomeroy added Ortiz is in the United States on a green card and that his case will involve immigration issues.

    First-degree kidnapping charges have been added to Ortiz’s case, and Pomeroy said more charges relating to the new victim will be added Friday.

    Ortiz spoke over a telephone and said only that he had hired an attorney. Defense counsel Seth Blum said he has not asked for a reduction in Ortiz’s bond because all the charges have not yet been filed.

    “It’s very early days,” he said outside the courtroom. “There’s a lot of information still to come out.”

    UNC Health spokesman Alan Wolf said Ortiz joined the Rex staff in 2019, put himself through nursing school and had only become a nurse this summer. He is no longer employed with the health system, Wolf said.

    The NC Nursing Board suspended Ortiz’ registered nurse license after a complaint on Nov. 21, records show. The report said Ortiz had improperly touched the genitals of two male patients after removing Foley catheters, which go into the urethra.

    Raleigh police and prosecutors have referred to Ortiz as a traveling nurse. Blum could not clarify that Thursday.

    “I don’t know what a traveling nurse is,” he said.

    Rex has set up a confidential reporting phone line where patients or family members can share information. Someone will contact them as soon as possible to discuss any concerns about this situation. The number is (919) 784-1800.

    Josh Shaffer

    The News & Observer

    Josh Shaffer is a general assignment reporter on the watch for “talkers,” which are stories you might discuss around a water cooler. He has worked for The News & Observer since 2004 and writes a column about unusual people and places.

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  • Our readers have a lot to say about the Border Patrol in North Carolina

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    A Border Patrol agent searches a neighborhood in Southeast Raleigh, Nov. 18, 2025.

    A Border Patrol agent searches a neighborhood in Southeast Raleigh, Nov. 18, 2025.

    ssharpe@newsobserver.com

    I personally never saw the federal agents patrolling North Carolina, looking for brown people to harass and detain, but I felt their presence. Fear permeated our community this week. I sensed it from the time I received a text from my son on Monday morning saying that his high school’s Culture Fest scheduled for that night was canceled because of “ice” and families being afraid to go out, and it took me a minute to realize he wasn’t talking about the weather.

    President Trump can tell us this was all about our safety, to protect us from “violent criminals,” but astute North Carolinians know better. Violent criminals who present a threat to public safety can and should be arrested – by law enforcement officers willing to show their faces, with judicial warrants bearing the suspects’ names. This was not about public safety. This was an indiscriminate roundup of brown people, designed to instill fear.

    The Trump administration underestimated how much we love our neighbors in North Carolina. I am proud of the way our community came together to protect each other. My guess is that the operation fell short of its quotas because of who we are. I hope and pray that memories of this week influence voters in 2026 and 2028. This cannot continue.

    Elizabeth Barrett Lippincott, Chapel Hill

    Hard but necessary

    There is definitely disruption within the illegal immigrant community. The outrage among the (mostly) liberal and immigrant community is loud and disruptive to law enforcement and borderline violent on occasion. Where was the outrage during the Biden Administration when illegal migrants crossed our southern border and were dispersed into our country from coast to coast?

    The tough stand and tactics of ICE are a result of lax law enforcement by the prior administration, and the lack of resolve by both parties in Congress to fix our immigration laws. Hard to watch, but necessary.

    Jerry Doliner, Raleigh

    There are an estimated 10 million to 12 million undocumented immigrants in the United States. Their “crime” was entering the country without following legal steps. “Hardened criminals” the vast majority of them are not. A large number of them come from Central America, where for decades repressive military dictatorships — backed by U.S. government officials obsessed with what they perceived as a looming “Communist threat” — kidnapped, tortured, executed and “disappeared” thousands.

    If the administration was truly concerned about “criminality,” it would take an honest look at the way successive U.S. administrations supported cruel military dictatorships for decades in Central America, which in turn led people to flee violence and poverty in their countries. Then it would instruct legislators to stop dithering and craft an immigration bill to address a flawed system that’s not been reformed in 40 years. The bill should include fair and humane avenues for decent and law-abiding undocumented families to remain.

    Until Congress acts, the mobilization of masked forces in battle gear, cruising our neighborhoods to round up brown, Latino “illegals,” whose heinous crime was bringing their fleeing families across our border, is nothing but shallow and immoral political theatrics.

    Joe Moran, Durham

    Fear from citizens, too

    My wife and I are in our late 80s and still live in our house but require weekly cleaning help. We have been using a couple from Mexico to help us with this task. They have been helping us for over ten years. We always look forward to their presence. This morning they called saying they would be unable to make it because they were afraid to leave their house for fear of being rounded up by ICE with no due process, no warrant with nothing other than they speak with an accent. They are in the US legally, pay their taxes, obey the law, and do what all good citizens do. Now, they are afraid. Why?

    Ed Eggers, Raleigh

    How to respond

    I‘m appalled at the actions of Border Patrol and ICE in NC. They’re targeting and abusing people on suspicion of what? Most of the people arrested aren’t violent offenders; some are citizens. Not having papers doesn’t deprive you of the right to due process, to respect and to dignity.

    The billions of tax dollars we’re spending on brutalizing people could be spent on building community rather than destroying it.

    Separating families, brutally manhandling people, and terrorizing communities do not align with my values or my vision of America. We need to change course. Be sure you’re registered to vote!

    Helen Wolfson, Durham

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  • Triangle traffic headaches: What’s being done about them

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    Look anywhere in Triangle, and it won’t take long for you to see the signs of a growing region. Cranes tower over downtown Raleigh and Durham, expanding the skyline. Crews clear another swath of trees to make room for another townhouse development.

    Another sign of the rapid growth: Heavy congestion on the Triangle’s roads.

    We asked our viewers and followers to share their biggest Triangle traffic headaches. You shared many trouble spots:

    • The stop-and-go traffic along Interstate 40 between Raleigh and Durham,
    • the long-delayed widening project on I-440 in west Raleigh,
    • the tangle of traffic that chokes the Durham Freeway near the I-885 and N.C. 147 interchange.

    One spot people mentioned more often than any other was the I-40/U.S. 1 interchange between Raleigh and Cary. Drivers trying to get on or off I-40 West have about 600 feet to weave across heavy traffic.

    “That’s when you [tell] your passenger, ‘Hey, do you see anybody coming? Check all windows,’” said driver Ginia Cooper-Gay, who said it’s a tricky interchange to navigate. “You need a co-pilot!”

    Chris Lukasina is the executive director of the Capital Area Metropolitan Planning Organization (CAMPO), the group of Triangle-area municipalities making plans for how our region will deal with growth in the decades to come. He says the DOT is going to get rid of that tricky interchange and replace it with a much better design.

    “That will provide some relief for a lot of folks and make getting through that interchange a lot easier,” he said.

    They’re also planning to keep lanes open during construction. It’s great news for drivers, but here’s the catch: It won’t be ready until 2030 at the earliest.

    Lukasina says identifying transportation problems is the easy part. The hard part is figuring out how to pay for it.

    “We have to have a long-range plan, but we also have to have a budget,” he said. “We have to stay within that budget.”

    Future transportation improvement plans

    The NCDOT has hundreds of projects on the books for the Triangle area. They’re spelled out in the State Transportation Improvement Plan, which outlines construction funding and priorities for transportation projects across the state. The state analyzes potential projects and assigns a score to each, weighing safety, congestion and local priorities. A project’s score is the main factor that determines if and when it will get built, but budget limits also affect the scheduling.

    There are some major projects under construction right now that should provide some significant relief.

    The I-440 widening project between Walnut Street and Wade Avenue now is expected to be finished in spring 2026. The last section of N.C. 540 connecting I-40 near Clayton with I-87 in Knightdale should be finished in late 2028. Milazzo says his group also is advocating for improvements to Glenwood Avenue between I-540 and I-440.

    Another big innovation in transportation is under construction in Raleigh. The city describes Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) as a “high-capacity bus-based transit system that delivers fast and efficient service.” Dedicated lanes and traffic signal priority will allow buses to run reliably approximately every 15 minutes.

    Joe Milazzo, executive director of the Regional Transportation Alliance, which advocates for transportation projects on behalf of the business community, calls it “buses resembling trains.”

    “It is a great solution, provides flexibility, also provides that transit priority so people can rely on it,” he said.

    Raleigh’s first BRT corridor is under construction along New Bern Avenue, linking the city’s east side. Other BRT routes will connect with northern, southern and western Raleigh. The city expects the buses to start rolling as early as 2028. Eventually, it will connect with downtown Cary.

    Durham and Chapel Hill also are planning to build a BRT system in the coming years. Milazzo says connecting those systems will provide a flexible solution for people to get around the sprawling region.

    “[BRT would be] at least an alternative for some trips,” he said.

    Lukasina said a commuter rail could be a piece of the puzzle in the future. Wake and Durham counties’ transit plans propose studying commuter rail in the region. That would put passenger cars on existing railroads, shared with freight traffic, focusing frequent service during the weekday commute.

    GoTriangle studied commuter rail in 2023, finding big benefits but also significant challenges in building it within the timeframes and budgets of the counties’ transit plans. Instead, CAMPO is working with the NCDOT to explore ways to enhance passenger rail service that would connect the Triangle’s cities and towns.

    Lukasina says another major upgrade eventually coming to the Triangle the idea of “managed freeways,” using technology to manage traffic flow. It would allow officials to adjust speed limits and lane use dynamically to keep traffic flowing as well as possible.

    “Helping to avoid those bottlenecks or minimize the time we have those bottlenecks out there will really help improve the traffic flow,” Lukasina said.

    It’s just roads that have to be expanded and improved Milazzo says keeping up with the Triangle’s growth means upgrading all forms of transportation. A big focus for the Regional Transportation Alliance is pushing for improvements at RDU. The new runway and expansion of Terminal 2 are major steps to accommodate growing numbers of passengers.

    “Airport expansion never ends, because this market never stops growing,” Milazzo said.

    As the Triangle grows, Milazzo said the business community wants these projects take “less ‘forever.’” He says as frustrating as the Triangle’s highway headaches can be, they are a sign of a healthy region.

    “Having growth is a wonderful thing. It certainly beats the alternative for a market,” he said. “We all would like to see things go faster, but if we work together and keep focused on it, we can get the solutions we want.”

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  • 19 Triangle restaurants in the new American South Michelin Guide: The breakdown

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    Nanas in Durham is one of 19 Triangle restaurants included in the new American South guide from Michelin.

    Nanas in Durham is one of 19 Triangle restaurants included in the new American South guide from Michelin.

    kmckeown@newsobserver.com

    The newest Michelin Guide includes 19 restaurants in the Triangle, from avant garde fine dining to a barbecue trailer in the Raleigh suburbs.

    For a century, the Michelin Guide has been the most coveted culinary honor in the world, bestowing its star system on the best restaurants in the biggest food cities.

    On Monday, Michelin unveiled its latest guide, The American South, which rates restaurants in Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee.

    Michelin is most famous for its star system, awarding one, two or three stars on the very best restaurants in the world. A Three Michelin Star restaurant represents an exclusive and rare tier of food quality and dining excellence, two stars means “excellent cooking” and one star is “high quality” cooking.

    Simply earning one star would represent a monumental achievement in the restaurant world.

    Only one North Carolina restaurant earned a Michelin Star, Counter in Charlotte. Owned by chef Sam Hart, Counter also earned a Green Star, recognizing the restaurant’s sustainability practices.

    In the Triangle, 19 restaurants are included in the American South Guide. Of those, 15 earned a “Michelin Recommended” designation, representing “good cooking” in the region. Three others earned Bib Gourmand honors, which highlight good quality restaurants that also offer a good value, according to inspectors.

    Michelin was expected to unveil its new American South guide Monday night, Nov. 3, at a ceremony in Greenville, SC, but instead appeared to release the list Monday morning. Michelin has not confirmed the restaurant selections included in the email

    Herons in Cary, regarded as one of the South’s top fine dining restaurants, is one of 19 Triangle spots included in the new American South Michelin guide.
    Herons in Cary, regarded as one of the South’s top fine dining restaurants, is one of 19 Triangle spots included in the new American South Michelin guide. Anna Routh Barzin Courtesy of The Umstead Hotel & Spa

    Here are the Triangle’s Michelin honorees:

    Bib Gourmand, which Michelin describes as “recognizes eateries for great food at a great value.”

    Mala Pata Molino & Cocina

    2431 Crabtree Blvd Suite 102, Raleigh

    Prime Barbecue

    403 Knightdale Station Run, Knightdale

    Sam Jones BBQ

    502 W. Lenoir St., Raleigh.

    Nanas in Durham is one of 19 Triangle restaurants included in the new American South guide from Michelin.
    Nanas in Durham is one of 19 Triangle restaurants included in the new American South guide from Michelin. Kaitlin McKeown kmckeown@newsobserver.com

    Michelin Recommended restaurants, which means “simply a good meal.”

    Brewery Bhavana

    Brodeto

    Crawford & Son

    Dampf Good

    The Fearrington House

    Herons

    Jolie

    Little Bull

    Nanas

    Nikos

    Poole’s Diner

    St Roch

    Seraphine

    Stanbury

    Tamasha

    The Fearrington House

    The Pit Authentic BBQ

    Flautas de papas are pictured during a soft opening of Mala Pata on Tuesday, May 6, 2025, in Raleigh, N.C.
    Flautas de papas are pictured during a soft opening of Mala Pata on Tuesday, May 6, 2025, in Raleigh, N.C. Kaitlin McKeown The News & Observer

    This story was originally published November 3, 2025 at 2:09 PM.

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    Drew Jackson

    The News & Observer

    Drew Jackson writes about restaurants and dining for The News & Observer and The Herald-Sun, covering the food scene in the Triangle and North Carolina.

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  • 19 Triangle restaurants in the new American South Michelin Guide: The breakdown

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    The newest Michelin Guide includes 19 restaurants in the Triangle, from avant garde fine dining to a barbecue trailer in the Raleigh suburbs.

    For a century, the Michelin Guide has been the most coveted culinary honor in the world, bestowing its star system on the best restaurants in the biggest food cities.

    On Monday, Michelin unveiled its latest guide, The American South, which rates restaurants in Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee.

    Michelin is most famous for its star system, awarding one, two or three stars on the very best restaurants in the world. A Three Michelin Star restaurant represents an exclusive and rare tier of food quality and dining excellence, two stars means “excellent cooking” and one star is “high quality” cooking.

    Simply earning one star would represent a monumental achievement in the restaurant world.

    Only one North Carolina restaurant earned a Michelin Star, Counter in Charlotte. Owned by chef Sam Hart, Counter also earned a Green Star, recognizing the restaurant’s sustainability practices.

    In the Triangle, 19 restaurants are included in the American South Guide. Of those, 15 earned a “Michelin Recommended” designation, representing “good cooking” in the region. Three others earned Bib Gourmand honors, which highlight good quality restaurants that also offer a good value, according to inspectors.

    Michelin was expected to unveil its new American South guide Monday night, Nov. 3, at a ceremony in Greenville, SC, but instead appeared to release the list Monday morning. Michelin has not confirmed the restaurant selections included in the email

    Herons in Cary, regarded as one of the South’s top fine dining restaurants, is one of 19 Triangle spots included in the new American South Michelin guide.
    Herons in Cary, regarded as one of the South’s top fine dining restaurants, is one of 19 Triangle spots included in the new American South Michelin guide. Anna Routh Barzin Courtesy of The Umstead Hotel & Spa

    The Triangle’s Michelin Bib Gourmand honorees

    The Bib Gourmand restaurants, which Michelin recognizes as “eateries for great food at a great value.”

    • Mala Pata Molino & Cocina, 2431 Crabtree Blvd Suite 102, Raleigh
    • Prime Barbecue, 403 Knightdale Station Run, Knightdale
    • Sam Jones BBQ, 502 W. Lenoir St., Raleigh

    Nanas in Durham is one of 19 Triangle restaurants included in the new American South guide from Michelin.
    Nanas in Durham is one of 19 Triangle restaurants included in the new American South guide from Michelin. Kaitlin McKeown kmckeown@newsobserver.com

    Michelin Recommended restaurants in Raleigh, Durham, Cary

    Here are the Michelin Recommended restaurants, which means “simply a good meal.”

    • Brewery Bhavana, 218 S Blount St, Raleigh
    • Brodeto, 2201 Iron Works Dr suite 137, Raleigh
    • Crawford & Son, 618 N. Person St., Raleigh
    • Dampf Good BBQ, 6800 Good Hope Church Rd., Cary
    • Herons, 100 Woodland Pond Dr, Cary
    • Jolie, 620 N. Person St., Raleigh
    • Little Bull, 810 N. Mangum St., Durham
    • Nanas, 2514 University Dr., Durham
    • Nikos, 905 W Main St Unit 21B, Durham
    • Poole’s Diner, 428 S. McDowell St., Raleigh
    • St Roch Fine Oysters + Bar, 223 S Wilmington St, Raleigh
    • Seraphine, 324 Blackwell St Suite 4, Durham
    • Stanbury, 938 N Blount St, Raleigh
    • Tamasha Modern Indian, 4200 Six Forks Rd Suite # 130, Raleigh
    • The Fearrington House, 230 Market St, Pittsboro
    • The Pit Authentic BBQ, 328 W Davie St, Raleigh

    How Michelin divides NC

    With the American South guide, Michelin is introducing a new regional culinary look, rather than focusing on a state or major city. Throughout the seven states included in the guide, Michelin selected 228 restaurants offering 44 different cuisines, by its own count.

    Beyond the single star for Counter, Michelin gave North Carolina seven Bib Gourmand designations and 37 Michelin Recommended honors.

    To be in the Michelin guide, Visit NC and tourism offices Visit Raleigh, Discover Durham, Charlotte Regional Visitors Authority and Explore Asheville will pay Michelin a little more than $1 million over the course of a three-year deal.

    In this first year of the guide, Michelin selected only restaurants in those cities or metro areas.

    Prime Barbecue in Knightdale, NC, serves a variety of smoked meat sandwiches including the pork topped with slaw.
    Prime Barbecue in Knightdale, NC, serves a variety of smoked meat sandwiches including the pork topped with slaw. Juli Leonard jleonard@newsobserver.com

    North Carolina BBQ shines

    While Michelin has a global reputation for recognizing fine dining, the new American South guide also put a spotlight on North Carolina’s greatest regional delicacy: barbecue.

    Four Triangle barbecue joints were selected in this first guide — Prime Barbecue and Sam Jones BBQ — which each nabbed Bib Gourmand honors. The outdoor barbecue trailer Dampf Good BBQ in Cary and the influential barbecue institution The Pit were also included.

    “I’m literally blown away to be honored by such a prestigious organization,” Sam Jones said in an email. “Being a fourth-generation BBQ man, I wish my family who have gone before me could see where barbecue has gone and the opportunities we’ve had to take what they’ve started in a literal hole in the ground in Ayden, N.C. to a national spotlight. It’s nice to see the hard work and effort that we collectively put in on a daily basis be recognized and I’m glad that the torch that was passed to me burns brighter today than it did before.”

    Crawford crushes

    Raleigh chef Scott Crawford stands out on the North Carolina list with three Michelin Recommended restaurants: his flagship Crawford & Son, French bistro Jolie and ode to the Adriatic Sea, Brodeto.

    Most of Crawford’s career has been spent in luxury hotel dining throughout the South, leading fine dining kitchens at some of the region’s top resorts, including time at Herons and the Umstead Hotel in Cary. Staying in the south previously meant foregoing the pursuit of Michelin honors in New York or San Francisco or Chicago, but not anymore Crawford said.

    “Just Michelin coming here means the South is to be taken seriously for its restaurants and hospitality and its food,” Crawford said. “That alone is extraordinary. There are so many great and talented chefs working in the South doing amazing work. It’s gratifying to have them looking here and taking that work seriously and that that commitment to excellence is being recognized.”

    Flautas de papas are pictured during a soft opening of Mala Pata on Tuesday, May 6, 2025, in Raleigh, N.C.
    Flautas de papas are pictured during a soft opening of Mala Pata on Tuesday, May 6, 2025, in Raleigh, N.C. Kaitlin McKeown The News & Observer

    This story was originally published November 3, 2025 at 2:09 PM.

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    Drew Jackson

    The News & Observer

    Drew Jackson writes about restaurants and dining for The News & Observer and The Herald-Sun, covering the food scene in the Triangle and North Carolina.

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  • Live updates: ‘No Kings’ protests across Triangle, US oppose Trump policies, tactics

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    At a No Kings rally in June, more than 1,500 demonstrators lined Capital Boulevard in Raleigh to protest the policies and tactics of President Donald Trump. No Kings rallies are planned across the Triangle and N.C. on Saturday.

    At a No Kings rally in June, more than 1,500 demonstrators lined Capital Boulevard in Raleigh to protest the policies and tactics of President Donald Trump. No Kings rallies are planned across the Triangle and N.C. on Saturday.

    tlong@newsobserver.com

    Millions of Americans across the country are expected to gather today in their communities to protest the Trump administration’s “authoritarian policies.”

    At least nine Triangle communities planned “No Kings” protests, with around 60 scheduled across the state. Raleigh, Durham, Cary, Clayton and Charlotte will have protests, as will Carrboro, Pittsboro and Wake Forest.

    The protest in Raleigh is expected to be too large to share space with other events downtown — two festivals are also taking place Saturday — and instead will take place along Capitol Boulevard near Triangle Town Center.

    Organizers write on their website that among the complaints they have about the Trump administration are policies on immigration, election laws, health care, environmental protections, education, redistricting congressional maps and not giving enough attention to mass shootings. They also blame the Trump administration for the state of the economy.

    Organizers stress that these events are supposed to remain peaceful.

    “A core principle behind all No Kings events is a commitment to nonviolent action,” organizers said in a written statement on their website. “We expect all participants to seek to de-escalate any potential confrontation with those who disagree with our values and to act lawfully at these events. Weapons of any kind, including those legally permitted, should not be brought to events.”

    This is the second set of “No Kings” protests this year. The first protests brought an estimated 5 million people out on Trump’s birthday, in June, to counter Trump’s military parade down Constitution Avenue in Washington.

    News & Observer reporters and photographers will be covering today’s events across the Triangle. This story will be updated throughout the day.

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    Danielle Battaglia

    McClatchy DC

    Danielle Battaglia is the D.C. correspondent for The News & Observer and The Charlotte Observer, leading coverage of North Carolina’s congressional delegation and elections. She also covers the White House. Her career has spanned three North Carolina newsrooms where she has covered crime, courts and local, state and national politics. She has won two McClatchy President’s awards and numerous national and state awards for her work.

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