
Home delivery of a different kind
Labor pains push plans aside as baby is born at home.
Little Jaclyn Rose just couldn't wait.
Despite months of preparation stemming from a previous close call, and a flexible assortment of well-designed, carefully choreographed game plans factoring in time, distance, hospital arrangements and intricate details for all those involved, Jaclyn Kopstein's entry into this world last Thursday morning didn't go as scheduled.
Out-of-town calls causing a state of confusion
Georgia group using 'Hope House' name to solicit funds here.
HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. -- What's in a name?
When it involves a charitable organization giving once-homeless women and children the first real home they've had in a very long time, that name represents the reputation of the entity.
Or when that name is tied to an organization committed to protecting and helping victims of domestic and sexual abuse, it is a reflection of the group's integrity.
Soup Kitchen needs bag lunch supplies
HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. -- Angels and Sparrows Soup Kitchen is about to embark on its summertime program that provides free lunches to hundreds of children who will not be receiving free or reduced lunches at school. Volunteers will be packing an anticipated 11,000 bag lunches throughout the summer months, and Angels and Sparrows Executive Director and founder Sandy Tilley is asking for donations that will allow her to extend her ministry beyond the soup kitchen's walls.
Race weekends have arrived. Here's how to get around
CONCORD, N.C. -- In preparation for the 10 days of racing at Charlotte Motor Speedway May 17-26, speedway officials are working to inform race fans and area residents about race day traffic by providing safe and efficient travel routes and information.
With the help of the North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT), the North Carolina State Highway Patrol and the City of Concord, Charlotte Motor Speedway offers the following tips for fans heading to and from the races.
Huntersville zeroes in on FY14 budget
HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. -- The chassis of Huntersville's municipal budget for the next fiscal year appears to be rolling toward adoption with few bumps in the road. But despite general acceptance of the nearly $49 million package proposed by Town Manager Greg Ferguson and Finance Director Janet Stoner, commissioners spent Monday morning picking at the nuts and bolts of the town's financial vehicle and — when examining the town's largest expenditure item — aggressively kicking the tires and probing under the hood.
For two-and-one-half hours, commissioners moved section by section through the budget proposal, asking Ferguson, Stoner and department heads questions about bits and pieces but, for the most part, signing off on bottom-line numbers adding up to nearly $30 million in general income and expenses, with $18 million in spend-what-you-make enterprise categories accounting for the remainder of the overall package.
Davidson board approves retirement complex
Hillside Drive house gets historic designation.
DAVIDSON, N.C. -- Parking is often a subject of conversation in Davidson where, unlike in its neighboring northern Mecklenburg towns, downtown is the primary draw.
It was a perception that Davidson lacked vehicle spaces that led the town to commission a 2011 parking study, which found that the supply is adequate, at least in the near term.
Expanded dealership doesn't fit vision for exit
Cornelius board rejects redux of Lake Norman Hyundai expansion. Some call it a "big parking lot.'
CORNELIUS, N.C. -- Work on the diverging diamond interchange at Exit 28 off I-77 has Cornelius officials looking forward not only to a functionally efficient bridge connecting Catawba Avenue with West Catawba Avenue, but also to the gleaming aesthetic treatment that will serve as the visual gateway to the town.
Sam rehabbing after surgery
HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. -- Thanks to a tremendous outpouring of support and compassion from folks throughout the Lake Norman community, Sam the Jack Russell Terrier has undergone surgery for his shattered leg and has begun an eight-week recovery period at Main Street Veterinary Hospital in Cornelius.
A champion with a heart
CSD's Malia Ellington puts team first.
DAVIDSON, N.C. -- On a gray day in late April that seemed to have trouble deciding whether to be cloudy or sunny, chilly or warm, Malia Ellington found herself in an unfamiliar position.
When the sophomore at Community School of Davidson took the baton for the anchor leg of the 4x400-meter relay at the Buccaneer Classic Relays at Charlotte Country Day School, she not only was in last place, but was one-quarter lap behind the closest competitor.

