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  • Highly-ranked basketball recruit transfers to West Charlotte, could play Friday

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    Janon Singh, center, welcomes West Charlotte Lions basketball team starters to the floor during introductions on Saturday, January 17, 2026. Singh, a junior is a top national recruit. West Charlotte hosted Hillside in a battle of traditionally black schools in the MLK Peace Basketball Showcase at West Charlotte High School in Charlotte, NC.

    Janon Singh, center, welcomes West Charlotte Lions basketball team starters to the floor during introductions on Saturday, January 17, 2026. Singh, a junior is a top national recruit. West Charlotte hosted Hillside in a battle of traditionally black schools in the MLK Peace Basketball Showcase at West Charlotte High School in Charlotte, NC.

    jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    The state’s top-ranked Class 8A high school boys’ basketball team is adding another talented player.

    Janon Singh, a 6-foot-7, 195-pound junior, has enrolled at West Charlotte High and hopes to be playing as soon as Friday night. West Charlotte, the No. 1-ranked Class 8A team in the state rankings compiled by The Charlotte Observer and the Raleigh News & Observer, improved to 12-2 Saturday with a 64-36 victory over visiting Durham Hillside.

    Janon Singh, center, welcomes West Charlotte Lions basketball team starters to the floor during introductions on Saturday, January 17, 2026. Singh, a junior is a top national recruit. West Charlotte hosted Hillside in a battle of traditionally black schools in the MLK Peace Basketball Showcase at West Charlotte High School in Charlotte, NC.
    Janon Singh, center, welcomes West Charlotte Lions basketball team starters to the floor during introductions on Jan. 17, 2026. Singh, a junior is a top national recruit. West Charlotte hosted Hillside in a battle of traditionally black schools in the MLK Peace Basketball Showcase at West Charlotte High School. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    “I want to be able to come here and compete at a high level,” said Singh, who is leaving Oak Hill Academy of Virginia to enroll at West Charlotte. “As far as me getting in school and getting my schedule, exams are going on right now, so as soon as exams are over, I’ll be able to play.”

    Singh is rated a three-star prospect by ESPN and 247sports.com, with 247sports.com ranking him the No. 4 prospect in Virginia (with former Lincolnton High star L.J. Smith, now at Oak Hill Academy, at No. 1).

    On April 15, Singh played with Team United’s Nike-sponsored travel team at Phenom Hoops’ travel basketball event in Rock Hill. Phenom Hoops’ recruiting analyst Chris Ewell, who also coaches at West Mecklenburg, came away impressed with the new Lions’ player.

    “Long, athletic, and loaded with upside, Janon Singh impressed with his two-way potential,” Ewell wrote for the recruiting website. “He rebounded actively, ran the floor with purpose, and showed the ability to finish above the rim with bounce. Offensively, Singh is comfortable spotting up beyond the arc and has the speed to push the ball coast-to-coast. Defensively, he moved his feet well on the perimeter and showed flashes of being a versatile stopper. With three-level scoring upside and a high motor, Singh’s ceiling continues to rise.”

    Janon Singh, left, walks to the West Charlotte Lions huddle during action against Hillside on Saturday, January 17, 2026. Singh, a junior is a top national recruit. West Charlotte hosted Hillside in a battle of traditionally black schools in the MLK Peace Basketball Showcase at West Charlotte High School in Charlotte, NC.
    Janon Singh, left, walks to the West Charlotte Lions huddle during action against Hillside on Jan. 17, 2026. Singh, a junior is a top national recruit. West Charlotte hosted Hillside in a battle of traditionally black schools in the MLK Peace Basketball Showcase at West Charlotte High School. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    West Charlotte plays in the N.C. High School Athletic Association, which allows players 24 regular-season games total. If Singh starts playing Friday at Chambers, the Lions would have a total of nine regular-season games remaining.

    It’s not clear how many games Singh played at Oak Hill, which according to its MaxPreps page is 13-6 so far this season. Singh did not play for the Warriors when they played at West Charlotte on Dec. 19, which according to its MaxPreps schedule was Oak Hill’s 14th game.

    West Charlotte’s 10th-year head coach Jacoby Davis confirmed that Singh was enrolled at his school and said Lions athletic director Aljamon “AJ” Alexander is going through the “checks and balances” to determine when Singh would be eligible to play.

    Singh, who departed Grayson High (in Loganville, GA) to attend Oak Hill, said he expected to be in action Friday. West Charlotte, currently 2-0 in the Meck Power Six 7A/8A Conference that features two-time defending state champion North Mecklenburg, returns to league action this week with road games at Butler on Tuesday and Chambers on Friday.

    Janon Singh watches as members of the West Charlotte Lions basketball team warmup on Saturday, January 17, 2026. Singh, a junior is a top national recruit. West Charlotte hosted Hillside in a battle of traditionally black schools in the MLK Peace Basketball Showcase at West Charlotte High School in Charlotte, NC.
    Janon Singh watches as members of the West Charlotte Lions basketball team warmup on Jan. 17, 2026. Singh, a junior is a top national recruit. West Charlotte hosted Hillside in a battle of traditionally black schools in the MLK Peace Basketball Showcase at West Charlotte High School. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    “He brings a lot,” Davis said of Singh. “He brings energy, plays hard and is a tough kid. He seems to be a good kid too.” West Charlotte has been led so far this season by three talented underclassmen.

    Sophomores Chacho Womack (17.8 average) and Kaharri Coleman (17.5) and junior Amen “AC” Pressley (14.8) are the Lions’ top scorers.

    Coleman is a top 60 recruit nationally among sophomores.

    “It’s a great team, a young team and I want to come in as a leader and win a state championship,” Singh said of West Charlotte.

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    Richard Walker,Langston Wertz Jr.

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  • Why Duke Energy just spent nearly $7 million on land in Charlotte’s River District

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    As the River District in West Charlotte fills with people and homes, utilities are the next step. Starting with electricity.

    To that end, Duke Energy purchased almost 27 acres from developer Crescent Communities last week for about $6.7 million, according to Mecklenburg County records. The site is at the southern end of the 1,400-acre redevelopment near Beaverdam Creek and Garrison Road.

    It’s the latest purchase Duke Energy has made this year, as it looks to build more substations to power the growing city.

    While it’s unclear if the site will become a substation, Duke Energy spokesman Bill Norton said the purchase stems from planning for “grid enhancement projects” that will meet “the growing need for reliable electricity in the Charlotte region.”

    And this area of west Charlotte is growing.

    The River District is a 1,400-acre mixed-used project that in the next two decades will build 5,000 homes, millions of square feet of office space, half a million square feet of retail space and 1,000 hotel rooms.

    Duke Energy’s expansion moves

    Duke Energy’s customer-base is expanding, especially in the Charlotte-area as more than 157 people move to the region every day.

    In the last year, part of the utility’s plan to power the area includes the construction of substations, which converts high-voltage electricity to lower voltages for distribution to homes and businesses.

     Duke Energy purchased almost 27 acres last week at the River District, a 1,400-acre mixed-used project that in the next two decades will build 5,000 homes. The utility purchased the land for almost $7 million and will use it to meet Charlotte’s growing need for electricity.
    Duke Energy purchased almost 27 acres last week at the River District, a 1,400-acre mixed-used project that in the next two decades will build 5,000 homes. The utility purchased the land for almost $7 million and will use it to meet Charlotte’s growing need for electricity. John D. Simmons For the Observer

    For $9.7 million, the utility purchased 11.5 acres from the YMCA of Greater Charlotte in January. The property sites behind the Stratford Richardson branch at Donald Ross Road and West Boulevard

    In April, Duke Energy bought a 4.6-acre lot near Bank of America Stadium for $40 million from Tepper Sports & Entertainment.

    “These locations were selected based on anticipated growth of energy demands in the immediate area and the proximity of the sites to existing grid infrastructure,” Duke Energy previously said.

    Duke Energy is also working on expanding its natural gas-power abilities.

    In July, the utility notified the state’s Utilities Commission that it will be requesting permission to build two natural gas-powered combustion turbines at the former Buck Steam Station site.

    The new units would generate 850 megawatts of energy and would be the utility’s most efficient generators, reaching full power within 10 to 15 minutes, Norton said. That amount of energy could power more than 600,000 homes.

    Duke Energy predicts that in the next 15 years, Carolina customers’ annual electric use will increase by about 58,000 gigawatt-hours. The utility said that amount of energy is higher than the combined annual electric consumption of Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, New Hampshire and Wyoming.

    River District growth

    The River District is on its way to increasing Charlotte’s population.

    Last month, Crescent Communities held a formal opening for the development’s first neighborhood, Westrow.

    Westrow is the district’s town center where there will be a pavilion with an event lawn, a farmers’ market and a 5,000-square-foot lifestyle building.

    In August, residents began moving into the neighborhood where single-family and town homes are being built by David Weekley Homes, DRB Homes, Saussy Burbank, and Toll Brothers. The area could potentially house 2,300 single-family homes.

    A rendering of the River District, a 1,400-acre development expected to transform a largely vacant tract along the Catawba River about 8 miles from uptown Charlotte.
    A rendering of the River District, a 1,400-acre development expected to transform a largely vacant tract along the Catawba River about 8 miles from uptown Charlotte. Rendering courtesy of Crescent Communities

    The apartments are also under construction.

    The Novel River District will be a 318-unit, seven-building multifamily development. And Laurel Street Residential is constructing a mixed-income building. Once complete, 87 units will be available to those making 80% of the area median income or less. For a family of four, 80% AMI is about $84,800.

    The River District is also beginning to work on its second neighborhood, Basswood. Crescent closed on the land in August and the area will house 140 single-family homes.

    In July, Charlotte Fire Department announced that Engine 44 would serve the River District. The River District Firehouse will be a two-story, 14,000-square-foot station off Dixie River Road. The department filed a construction plan with the city last week to begin working on the site. For now, the engine is being housed at Firehouse 43 off Clanton Road.

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    Desiree Mathurin

    The Charlotte Observer

    Desiree Mathurin covers growth and development for The Charlotte Observer. The native New Yorker returned to the East Coast after covering neighborhood news in Denver at Denverite and Colorado Public Radio. She’s also reported on high school sports at Newsday and southern-regional news for AP. Desiree is exploring Charlotte and the Carolinas, and is looking forward to taking readers along for the ride. Send tips and coffee shop recommendations.

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  • CMPD: Officer under investigation after video shows West Charlotte student slammed

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    A Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department officer is under two investigations and on administrative leave after video showed him slamming a female student onto the ground while trying to break up a fight at West Charlotte High School.

    CMPD Deputy Chief Ryan Butler said during a Friday evening news conference that criminal and internal affairs investigations are being conducted into the officer’s actions. The officer is a school resource officer, but his name has not been released.

    The fight occurred around 2:15 p.m. during school dismissal, Butler said.

    “At that time, a fight with a large crowd broke out,” Butler said. “Officers responded to that fight and were trying to separate parties. During the officers’ response, one of the officers engaged with a female student.”

    Video circulating online shows a crowd of people near buses in a parking lot as a fight is unfolding. A police officer in the middle of the crowd is holding a stun gun as he picks up a female student and slams her onto the ground. Another officer walks over. The girl is motionless after being slammed.

    The student was transported to the hospital, treated and released, Butler said during the news conference.

    The criminal investigation is being conducted by CMPD’s Criminal Investigations Bureau, Butler said. That means CMPD detectives will make the decision about whether to charge one of their own officers with a crime. Officers are interested in speaking with “any witnesses that are out there,” he added.

    Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools said it’s aware of the fight that occurred at West Charlotte High School and reviewed a video circulating online that it said was “deeply concerning and difficult to watch.”

    CMS said the West Charlotte Principal Paula Cook sent the following message to families at 5 p.m. Friday:

    West Charlotte Families, this is Principal Cook. I am reaching out to inform you of a fight that took place on our bus lot during dismissal today, a video of which you may have seen circulating on social media. We understand this footage may be disturbing. We have contacted the families of all students involved.

    School leadership is aware and this incident is being investigated by both Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools and CMPD. We will provide updates as we are able.

    Every student deserves to feel and be safe at school. The safety and wellbeing of our students and staff remains our top priority. Thank you for your understanding and continued support of West Charlotte High School.

    This story was originally published October 31, 2025 at 7:08 PM.

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    Rebecca Noel

    The Charlotte Observer

    Rebecca Noel reports on education for The Charlotte Observer. She’s a native of Houston, Texas, and graduated from Rice University. She later received a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Missouri. When she’s not reporting, she enjoys reading, running and frequenting coffee shops around Charlotte.

    Josh Bergeron

    The Charlotte Observer

    Josh Bergeron is the government editor at The Charlotte Observer. Previously, he was the editor of the Salisbury Post in Salisbury, N.C. and worked as an editor and reporter at newspapers in North Carolina, Kentucky, Alabama and Mississippi. He’s a proud LSU alumnus — Geaux Tigers.

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  • Pittsburgh bank sets sights on iconic Bar-B-Q King site for Charlotte expansion

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    F.N.B. is exploring expanding in west Charlotte at the site of Bar-B-Q King on Wilkinson Boulevard in west Charlotte.

    F.N.B. is exploring expanding in west Charlotte at the site of Bar-B-Q King on Wilkinson Boulevard in west Charlotte.

    Observer file photo

    First National Bank is exploring expanding in west Charlotte at the iconic drive-in restaurant site of Bar-B-Q King.

    First National Bank, the largest subsidiary of Pittsburgh-based F.N.B. Corp., submitted a meeting request with city of Charlotte for a bank branch project at 2900 Wilkinson Blvd. The plan also includes a future drive-thru restaurant.

    The 64-year-old Bar-B-Q King was included in a $4.2 million property sale listing in 2023 by Coldwell Banker, The Charlotte Observer previously reported.

    Bar-B-Q King is about 3.5 miles from Charlotte Douglas International Airport on Wilkinson Boulevard and about 2.5 miles to Bank of America Stadium in uptown. The restaurant, which saw a surge in business during the pandemic shutdowns, was featured on Season 1 in 2007 on Food Network’s “Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives” with Guy Fieri.

    The restaurant’s corner lot is one of four parcels that were listed for sale by Coldwell Banker real estate specialist Vasili Kakavitsas. The other lots are mostly wooded. The combined acreage is 1.76 acres with road frontage on Wilkinson Boulevard and Weyland Avenue.

    The carhop restaurant’s lease agreement was good for three years, with an option for a five-year renewal, Kakavitsas told the Observer in 2023.

    The restaurant is not affiliated with the longtime Bar-B-Q King in Lincolnton at 2613 E. Main St.

    About F.N.B.

    Last month, F.N.B. announced expansion plans for nearly 30 new branches over the next five years in North Carolina, South Carolina, Maryland, Virginia and Washington, D.C.

    In 2021, Dominion Realty Partners and New York Life Real Estate Investors opened FNB Tower at 401 S. Graham St. The bank’s regional headquarters occupies 40,000 square feet in the 29-story, 420,000-square-foot skyscraper. The tower also includes 156,000 square feet of office space with ground-floor retail and 196 apartments.

    F.N.B. has total assets of nearly $50 billion and about 350 branches in seven states, including 100 branches in the Carolinas. F.N.B. has about 4,200 employees companywide.

    It’s also not the first time a bank recently snagged a restaurant site as part of expansion plans in the Charlotte market. Cincinnati-based Fifth Third Bank demolished the T.G.I. Fridays restaurant at 12811 S. Tryon St. for a new branch. The 1.2-acre Steele Creek site property is an outparcel of RiverGate shopping center. The bank is expected to open by the end of this year.

    More development on Wilkinson Boulevard

    The real estate listing for Bar-B-Q King’s site touted Wilkinson Boulevard as “booming with new development.”

    New development has been spreading west from uptown on Wilkinson Boulevard, including new apartments and townhomes.

    In August, Alliance Residential Co. opened Broadstone West End, a five-story, 332-unit apartment at 2220 Wilkinson Blvd.

    Bowery West with 46 townhomes and 167 apartments also recently opened at 2401 Wilkinson Blvd., a partnership of Catalyst Capital Partners, Beauxwright and Mission Properties.

    Next door to Bar-B-Q King, a 7-Eleven recently opened in the former Shell site.

    Across the street from Bar-B-Q King, Dunkin Donuts opened in 2023. Within the last nine years, an ABC store and QuikTrip convenience store and gas station.

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    Catherine Muccigrosso

    The Charlotte Observer

    Catherine Muccigrosso is the retail business reporter for The Charlotte Observer. An award-winning journalist, she has worked for multiple newspapers and McClatchy for more than a decade.

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  • Fire burns through roof of west Charlotte home

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    A fire burned through the roof of a home in west Charlotte around 5 p.m. Tuesday.

    ALSO READ: Multiple fire departments battle massive fire in South Carolina

    The fire burned on Radley Court, north of Tuckaseegee Road. Chopper 9 Skyzoom could see thick smoke and one side of the house entirely gutted.

    Charlotte Fire controlled the incident in 33 minutes and are working to determine the cause of the fire. No injuries have been reported.

    WATCH: Suspect arrested after 2 shooting victims found dead in mobile home fire

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  • Charlotte restaurant known for its ‘Brooklyn-inspired comfort food’ opens new location

    Charlotte restaurant known for its ‘Brooklyn-inspired comfort food’ opens new location

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    Good Food by Food Geeks offers burgers, wings, salads and more.

    Good Food by Food Geeks offers burgers, wings, salads and more.

    A local restaurant is bringing a taste of New York to the Charlotte area.

    The team behind Food Geeks Eatery has opened the doors of its newest concept: Good Food by Food Geeks. It’s inside the Goodwill Opportunity Campus in the space formerly home to Community Table Bistro — which closed at the end of last year.

    The restaurant, run by Brooklyn native TR Burns and his family, was previously selling its signature comfort food creations across state lines at a Walmart in Indian Land before closing that spot and making the move to open in west Charlotte.

    Good Food by Food Geeks is located inside Goodwill Opportunity Campus in Charlotte, NC.
    Good Food by Food Geeks is located inside Goodwill Opportunity Campus in Charlotte, NC. Courtesy of Good Food by Food Geeks

    Though it’s a new concept in the Queen City, the family behind the restaurant has been in the food business for over a decade.

    “Our restaurant started in my church 15 years ago in Pennsylvania,” Burns told CharlotteFive. “Ultimately, we had such a buzz that we ended up moving from operating out of our church into a full brick-and-mortar restaurant.

    “Since then, we’ve created multiple concepts, and Food Geeks is just a culmination of all the different concepts that we’ve owned.”

    Good Food by Food Geeks offers burgers, wings, salads and more.
    Good Food by Food Geeks offers burgers, wings, salads and more. Courtesy of Good Food by Food Geeks

    ‘Comfort food the Brooklyn way’

    Inspired by the flavors of Brooklyn’s comfort food scene, the new restaurant will have a wide variety of dishes for breakfast, lunch and dinner — along with some plant-based options, too. Menu options include:

    • Salmon BLT salads

    • Smoked Jamaican jerk chicken

    • Smash burgers

    • Smothered chicken and grits

    • Sweet potato chicken and waffles

    Pies from Good Food by Food Geeks in Charlotte, NC.
    Pies from Good Food by Food Geeks in Charlotte, NC. Courtesy of Goof Food by Food Geeks

    If you’re not grabbing a full meal, Good Food by Food Geeks also has grab-and-go offerings, small bites, a coffee bar and hot buffet lunch specials.

    “I just love food and I’m a geek, and I just wanted to bring something great to the Carolinas that is fun, that tastes great. And the real goal is to get people — when they come here — to experience, not just good food, but good fellowship,” Burns explained.

    “By coming to the Goodwill campus, it allowed us to be centrally located where everyone can get to us but also … we have a huge kitchen, we have a catering kitchen, so we are able to expand our brand and our menu.”

    Good Food by Food Geeks’ official grand opening will be Thursday, May 3 from 4-9 p.m.

    Good Food by Food Geeks

    Location: Goodwill Opportunity Campus, 5301 Wilkinson Blvd, Charlotte, NC 28208

    Cuisine: Brooklyn, NY-inspired comfort food

    Instagram: @foodgeekseatery

    This story was originally published May 23, 2024, 6:30 AM.

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    Chyna Blackmon is a service journalism reporter for The Charlotte Observer. A native of the Carolinas, she grew up in Columbia, SC, and graduated from Queens University of Charlotte. She’s also worked in local television news in Charlotte, NC, and Richmond, VA.
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  • TD Bank will offer financial programs to sites in Charlotte. Some question their timing.

    TD Bank will offer financial programs to sites in Charlotte. Some question their timing.

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    Come late summer and fall, Charlotte will start seeing more TD Bank branches offering financial literacy programs and resources at sites called community-centered storefronts.

    Three locations currently under construction — Beatties Ford Road, Wilkinson Boulevard and North Sharon Amity/Albemarle roads — are in neighborhoods with large Black and brown communities. TD Bank chose these sites after a conversation with Mayor Vi Lyles about what areas of town need these resources most, according to Hugh Allen, regional president of mid-South metro for TD Bank.

    “We want to help people with wealth creation and be an asset to the community so it can grow,” Allen said.

    The New Jersey-based firm announced last fall it would expand its footprint into North Carolina with as many as 15 new sites by 2025, The Charlotte Observer previously reported. While other marquee brands, such as Bank of America and Truist, are closing branches amid greater online services, TD is banking on brick-and-mortar locations to provide a unique opportunity for financial education in Charlotte.

    Each of the community-centered storefronts will have up to 1,000 square feet in extra space to accommodate the financial programming and be available for local businesses or nonprofit groups to reserve. Each will be open seven days a week and offer later hours, to improve accessibility for people who can’t get to a bank during the day, Allen said.

    TD Bank’s motivating goal in establishing these community centers is to give back to the surrounding neighborhoods — which is why all of the programming at these stores is completely free.

    Allen said the bank wants to help people who have lived in Black and brown neighborhoods for generations have access to capital and financial services. Branches will offer courses on building credit, first-time homebuying, fraud and how to break the paycheck-to-paycheck cycle, according to Jay Johnson, retail market manager for TD in the Midlands/Charlotte region.

    Knowing your neighbors

    TD Bank community centers may be the first of their kind in Charlotte, but some in these selected neighborhoods question the bank’s timing.

    Alesha Brown founded and is the executive director of For The Struggle Inc., a Charlotte nonprofit focused on fighting systemic racial and social injustice. The organization works in the Beatties Ford Road corridor, where one of the TD storefronts is set to open late July.

    “There’s no real incentive to get folks to participate in the programming,” Brown said. “They have to trust you, and there’s no shortcut to achieve that.”

    Brown says it is imperative that TD Banks work with groups already involved in the community. Local organizations, like For The Struggle, know the community and its members well — and can speak for what is truly needed.

    A civil rights lawyer, Brown has plans to meet with a representative from TD Bank, she said, and looks forward to working with them if they are intentional about improving the community.

    TD Bank has been working with the Historic West End Neighborhood Association and the business school at Johnson C. Smith University since the planning stages of the community centers.

    These partnerships have remained central to TD working towards its goal of providing financial education for all businesses and individuals in the area, branch leaders said.

    Services needed for decades

    Over the past five years, Charlotte has rapidly grown, a trend that most expect will continue. While the city’s development has already been seen in the South End and NoDa, the city also has seen an uptick in gentrification in neighborhoods with large African American and Hispanic populations — such as around east and west Charlotte.

    Brown questions the intent of companies like TD entering the community at a time of such fruitful investment — when their services have been needed for decades.

    Three locations are currently under construction between west and east Charlotte, which are predominantly Black and minority communities. TD Bank chose these spots after conversation with Mayor Vi Lyles about what areas of town need these resources most, according to Hugh Allen, Regional President of Mid-South Metro for TD Bank. “We want to help people with wealth creation and be an asset to the community so it can grow,” says Allen.
    Three locations are currently under construction between west and east Charlotte, which are predominantly Black and minority communities. TD Bank chose these spots after conversation with Mayor Vi Lyles about what areas of town need these resources most, according to Hugh Allen, Regional President of Mid-South Metro for TD Bank. “We want to help people with wealth creation and be an asset to the community so it can grow,” says Allen. Melissa Melvin-Rodriguez mrodriguez@charlotteobserver.com

    Seniors in the Beatties Ford corridor already don’t trust big companies and banks, according to Brown. Nowadays, real estate prices have skyrocketed, and these seniors — most of whom are long-term renters — and the younger generations can barely afford to live in the area anymore.

    “[TD Bank] doesn’t have to be physically located in the community in order to make a meaningful impact on it,” Brown said. “They’re here because they see potential change in the neighborhood, and they want business here.”

    Financial literacy education can empower people in the face of imminent gentrification in Charlotte, says Dr. Alphonso Ogbuehi, dean of College of Business and Professional Studies at JCSU. Understanding how to make the best financial decisions contributes to a more informed, prosperous community, he said.

    For profit and for the greater good

    TD Bank believes that in-person programming is crucial to connect with the community and draw people in.

    Financial literacy can be an intimidating topic for a lot of people, and online resources aren’t always the easiest to understand. On top of that, if the community has yet to develop trust with the bank, there is even less incentive to visit their website, Johnson said.

    The community storefronts can provide a setting for people to come together and learn — and ask questions. Between organized programming and traditional banking services, TD Bank has been working to design a store format to encourage that discourse.

    “We’re not going to be a financial institution that’s going to take your check and deposit it,” Johnson said. “We want to coach, lead and develop as many people as possible to help them better their lives.”

    It was very important for TD to hire employees who are from the surrounding communities that these storefronts are in, so that they can better understand the unique needs of different neighborhoods.

    “We want the store to reflect the community that it is going to serve,” Allen said.

    TD Bank is a for-profit company, but helping the west and east Charlotte communities presents the opportunity for mutual benefit.

    “We recognize that if the community that we’re in can benefit from our storefronts in more ways than just as a place to transact, it’ll help that community flourish,” Allen said. “And that flourishing will help our business. We are all in it together.”

    This story was originally published June 20, 2023, 6:00 AM.

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    Anna Rebello is a metro news intern. She is a rising junior and public policy major at Duke University. She studies both French and journalism. A Charlotte native, Anna has experience in broadcast journalism and feature writing. She worked as a section editor for the Duke Chronicle student newspaper and FORM student magazine.

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