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Alamance County outlines 2027 property revaluation process as sales push some values sharply higher County tax staff and outside appraisers described the 2027 revaluation timeline—data collection, schedule-of-values in the fall and notices in winter 2027—and showed recent residential and commercial sales that in some cases doubled assessed values, while stressing appeals will be available after notices.

Alamance County's upcoming 2027 property revaluation could see some homeowners facing tax increases of over 100%, sparking a wave of appeals!

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #CitizenPortal #PropertyRevaluation #MarketValue #TaxAccountability

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Health director recommends extending opioid-settlement projects, funding new education specialist Behavioral Health director Ashley Barber recommended extending existing opioid settlement resolutions through June 30, 2027, continuing county-funded positions and creating one new substance abuse education specialist; the county reported $3.4 million available and projected receipts over five years to sustain positions while litigation continues.

Alamance County is poised to tackle the opioid crisis head-on by extending key programs and adding a new substance abuse education specialist, backed by $3.4 million in settlement funds.

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #PublicHealth #CitizenPortal #CommunitySupport

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Alamance commissioners vote to release school bond funds for cameras and weapons-detection systems The board voted 4-0 to reallocate existing Burlington Schools bond funds to complete roofing projects and to fund school safety upgrades including cameras, keycard access and weapons-detection systems at multiple sites.

Alamance County commissioners unanimously approved the release of bond funds to enhance school safety with advanced security systems and essential roof repairs.

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #CivicAccountability #CitizenPortal #EducationReform #PublicSafety

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County and Crossroads seek up to $950,000 in federal grant for human-trafficking victims County staff and Crossroads representatives said they will partner on a victim-centered human-trafficking grant application with a potential award of up to $950,000 to support safe housing, legal assistance and mental-health services; Crossroads expects to provide matching resources.

Alamance County is teaming up with Crossroads to pursue a federal grant that could provide nearly $1 million to support vital services for human trafficking victims!

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #CitizenPortal #VictimSupport #HumanTrafficking #CommunityCare

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Health division recommends extending opioid-settlement spending, funding positions and new education specialist The behavioral-health division recommended extending current opioid-settlement resolutions through June 30, 2027, continuing funded positions and adding a substance-abuse education specialist; county has received about $6.5M to date and expects roughly $16.6M between 2022 and 2039.

Alamance County is poised to enhance its opioid-response strategy with a recommendation to extend funding and add a new substance-abuse education specialist amid ongoing settlement discussions.

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #PublicHealth #CitizenPortal #CommunitySupport

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Fifth-generation dairy farmer Randy Lewis works around the farm at Ran-Lew Dairy on a chilly morning on Dec. 22, 2025. The farm is located in southeastern Alamance County near Eli Whitney and Snow Camp, N.C.
#ranlewdairy #dairyfarm #triadbusinessjournal #alamancecounty #photojournalism #farm #rural

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Residents press commissioners to block heavy industrial access on Clap Mill Road tied to proposed LCID landfill Multiple residents told the Alamance County commissioners that a proposed LCID landfill and its associated heavy‑truck traffic would endanger Clap Mill Road and nearby neighborhoods; commissioners directed staff to draft ordinance language restricting high‑impact uses on certain rural road classes while noting DOT approval and vested‑rights limit reversal of an already‑filed connection.

Residents are urging Alamance County commissioners to take action against a proposed landfill that threatens the safety of their narrow, winding roads with heavy truck traffic.

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #RuralRoads #CitizenPortal #PublicSafety #CommunityInput

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Alamance County commissioners mark Haw River Trail anniversary, approve routine business and hear landfill concerns At the Feb. 2 meeting the board proclaimed the 20th anniversary of the Haw River Trail, approved advertising delinquent 2025 taxes and appointed Jenny Brown as clerk; the largest public comment topic was local opposition to a proposed LCID landfill on Clap Mill Road and requests for county support of Sesquicentennial Park.

Alamance County commissioners faced heated opposition over a proposed landfill while celebrating the 20th anniversary of the Haw River Trail and addressing critical community concerns.

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #CommunityEngagement #CitizenPortal #EnvironmentalResponsibility

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Is This a Frog Boil or a Full Blaze and Are We Ready for What Comes Next? Is This a Frog Boil or a Full Blaze, and Are We Ready for What Comes Next? #GoRight with Peter Boykin Is America Arguing While the Fire Spreads, and Are You Ready for What Comes Next? Something feels different in America right now. The outrage cycle moves faster than ever, but it does not always move evenly. Some tragedies dominate headlines instantly, while others fade into silence. In this episode of #GoRight with Peter Boykin, we dive into the growing tension surrounding ICE enforcement, national protests, and the deeper question many Americans are asking: why does public outrage seem selective? This podcast examines recent events, including the fatal ICE-related shooting of ICU nurse Alex Jeffrey Pretti, the nationwide protests that followed, and how the conversation is playing out across North Carolina, from Durham to Raleigh to Alamance County. Is this simply political polarization, or are we witnessing a cultural shift that changes whose stories get told and whose voices get ignored? From a Constitutionalist for Liberty perspective, Peter Boykin explores the balance between enforcement and compassion, accountability and public safety, and the responsibility of local leadership when national issues reach the county level. This is not about race or hate. This is about consistency, equal value for human life, and asking hard questions when narratives clash with reality. Are we slowly boiling without noticing, or standing at the edge of a full blaze?  Watch, listen, and decide for yourself. Watch & Listen: https://rumble.com/v75lvws-is-this-a-frog-boil-or-a-full-blaze-and-are-we-ready-for-what-comes-next.html https://youtu.be/ItzpTNP0JAc https://www.spreaker.com/episode/is-this-a-frog-boil-or-a-full-blaze-and-are-we-ready-for-what-comes-next--69972646 Read: https://gorightnews.com/is-this-a-frog-boil-or-a-full-blaze-and-are-we-ready-for-what-comes-next/ Follow and support: https://GoRightNews.com https://PeterBoykin.com https://GoRightNC.com #GoRight, #GoRightNews, #PeterBoykin, #ConstitutionalistForLiberty, #ICE, #ImmigrationDebate, #BorderSecurity, #FreeSpeech, #PoliticalCommentary, #AmericaFirst, #NorthCarolinaPolitics, #AlamanceCounty, #NewsAnalysis, #CitizenJournalism, #PoliticsPodcast, #ConservativeVoices, #CivilLiberties, #RuleOfLaw, #PoliticalDiscussion, #USPolitics

📣 New Podcast! "Is This a Frog Boil or a Full Blaze and Are We Ready for What Comes Next?" on @Spreaker #alamancecounty #americafirst #bordersecurity #citizenjournalism #civilliberties #conservativevoices #constitutionalistforliberty #freespeech #goright #gorightnews #ice #immigrationdebate

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Alamance County staff warn of $12.9 million structural gap; commissioners debate cuts, reserves and debt Staff told the board Alamance County faces a roughly $12.9 million projected budget gap starting in FY 2026–27 and that unassigned fund balance is below the 20% policy (17.18% in draft figures). Commissioners pressed for spending cuts, options to shore reserves, and cautioned about debt and mandated costs.

Alamance County is facing a looming $12.9 million budget gap, prompting fierce debates among commissioners about cuts, reserves, and the future of essential services.

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #FiscalResponsibility #CommunityInput #CitizenPortal

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Alamance EMS seeks paramedics and pitches on‑scene blood transfusions, new airway tools Interim EMS Director William Money told commissioners the county faces a paramedic shortage (42 on staff vs. ~64 needed), plans a $115,000 field blood transfusion capability with hospital partnership, and seeks about $30,000 for video laryngoscopes to improve airway care and safety for providers and patients.

Alamance County’s EMS is facing a critical shortage of paramedics and is proposing groundbreaking investments like on-scene blood transfusions to save lives—will they get the support they need?

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #PublicSafety #CitizenPortal #HealthcareInnovation

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Alamance County approves pay-plan implementation after Baker Tilly study; board votes 3-1 After a third-phase compensation study by Baker Tilly, the Alamance County Board of Commissioners voted 3-1 to implement a pay-plan scenario effective Jan. 1, charging $207,142 to the HR budget for the remainder of the fiscal year; the consultant recommended regrading 40 positions and a new starting salary of $33,790.

Alamance County's Board of Commissioners just approved a significant pay-plan overhaul to enhance employee retention and competitiveness, with an investment of over $200,000 starting January 1!

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #WorkforceEquity #PublicEngagement #CitizenPortal

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Alamance County officials warn federal HR1 changes could cut local SNAP and Medicaid funding Department of Social Services Director Candice Goble told the board HR1 policy changes — expanded work requirements, changes to noncitizen eligibility and a reduced SNAP administrative match — will increase county workloads and could reduce local revenues by roughly $890,000 next fiscal year; statewide cost-sharing provisions could expose North Carolina to much larger liabilities.

Alamance County faces a potential $890,000 revenue drop next fiscal year due to new federal HR1 rules affecting SNAP and Medicaid, putting vital services at risk.

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #FederalPolicy #BudgetChallenges #SocialServices #CitizenPortal

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Connecting talent with opportunity! 🩺✨
JCS Health Connect Staffing Firm is now accepting healthcare professionals and facility partners.
📧 jcshealthconnect@outlook.com

#nc #northcarolina #alamancecounty #greensboro #winstonsalem

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If We Ignore Local Elections, Are We Voting Ourselves Into Instability? If We Ignore Local Elections, Are We Voting Ourselves Into Instability? #GoRight with Peter Boykin Commentary Read more: https://gorightnews.com/when-evictions-rise-and-costs-explode-why-are-we-still-arguing-about-noise-instead-of-survival/ Watch and Listen: https://rumble.com/v73dlxm-if-we-ignore-local-elections-are-we-voting-ourselves-into-instability.html https://youtu.be/6EDcMQYuL1g https://www.spreaker.com/episode/if-we-ignore-local-elections-are-we-voting-ourselves-into-instability--69433122 There is a hard truth nobody wants to say out loud. Most people are not being failed by politics; they are being failed by neglect of the closest layer of power to their lives. Evictions do not happen because of a speech in Washington. Property taxes do not rise because of a viral clip on social media. Rent does not jump because of a trending argument on cable news. Those pressures are shaped locally, quietly, through decisions most people never show up to vote on. When evictions rise to record levels, that is not noise. That is policy meeting reality. When housing costs climb faster than wages, that is not ideological. That is arithmetic. When families are one missed paycheck away from court, that is not culture war. That is, instability is taking root. And yet, many of the elections that determine these outcomes barely register on the public radar. Small town elections in places like Haw River can be decided by a few dozen votes. Town council seats, mayoral roles, and local boards are often filled by default because turnout is so low. People assume those positions do not matter. They assume the real power comes later. But here is what actually happens. Those small offices become credentials. They become pathways. The person elected by a tiny fraction of voters today can later be appointed or elected into a countywide role that controls budgets, taxes, housing policy, courts, and services for everyone. The scale of influence explodes, but the original mandate was microscopic. That is how instability is built. Not through malicious intent, but through disengagement. When voters skip local elections, they surrender the most direct leverage they have over real-life outcomes. They allow leadership to be shaped without scrutiny. They allow priorities to drift away from affordability, stability, and accountability. Then people wake up confused. Why are taxes rising without clear explanations? Why are eviction filings accelerating? Why does it feel like nobody is listening? The answer is uncomfortable but simple. Too many people checked out when it mattered most. Effective leadership does not appear by accident. It is chosen early, locally, and deliberately. Leaders who understand that housing stability is public safety. That preventing eviction is cheaper than cleaning up homelessness. That transparency in taxes builds trust. That budgets are moral documents, whether politicians admit it or not. Ignoring those choices does not keep you neutral. It places you on autopilot while others steer. The loudest voices online want you distracted. They want you arguing about symbols instead of systems. Because systems require effort to understand. Systems require showing up to boring meetings. Systems require voting when the cameras are not rolling. If we want communities that are stable, affordable, and livable, the path does not start with outrage. It starts with participation. Especially in the elections that seem too small to matter. Because those elections decide who eventually holds the power that affects everyone. Ignoring local elections is not harmless. It is how instability becomes normal. #GoRight,#GoRightNC,#GoRightNews,#LocalElectionsMatter,#EvictionsCrisis,#CostOfLiving,#HousingAffordability,#AlamanceCounty,#NorthCarolina,#RealIssues,#LocalLeadership,#CountyPolitics,#VoteLocal,#CivicResponsibility,#CommunityStability

📣 New Podcast! "If We Ignore Local Elections, Are We Voting Ourselves Into Instability?" on @Spreaker #alamancecounty #civicresponsibility #communitystability #costofliving #countypolitics #evictionscrisis #goright #gorightnc #gorightnews #housingaffordability #localelectionsmatter #realissues

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Are Alamance County Schools Fully Funded or Fully Accountable? Are Alamance County Schools Fully Funded or Fully Accountable? Why Citizens Have the Right to Demand Both Read More:  https://gorightnews.com/are-alamance-county-schools-fully-funded-or-fully-accountable-why-citizens-have-the-right-to-demand-both/ Can Schools Earn Trust Without Transparency? #GoRight with Peter Boykin Commentary Watch and Listen:  https://rumble.com/v73dkum-are-alamance-county-schools-fully-funded-or-fully-accountable.html https://youtu.be/YRAfaduORlA https://www.spreaker.com/episode/are-alamance-county-schools-fully-funded-or-fully-accountable--69433107 Every time this debate comes up, it follows the same tired pattern. Someone asks where the money went. Someone else shouts, “Fully fund the schools.” And just like that, accountability is treated as heresy. Here is the truth many officials do not want to admit: funding without accountability is not compassion. It is negligence with a friendly slogan. Public money is not a donation jar. It is a trust. When citizens see increased funding approved again and again, followed by system-wide failures like mold and HVAC breakdowns, the proper response is not silence. It is scrutiny. That scrutiny is not cruelty. It is a responsibility. HVAC systems do not fail everywhere at once. Mold does not spread across districts by accident. These failures point to deferred maintenance, misaligned priorities, and leadership decisions that deserve examination. Pretending otherwise insults the intelligence of the people paying the bills. Across North Carolina and across the country, this same story repeats. Warning signs are ignored. Concerns are dismissed. Emergencies follow. Then officials demand more money and accuse skeptics of being anti-education. That is not leadership. That is avoidance. In a Constitutional Republic, authority flows upward from the people. Auditing the government is not rebellion. It is the mechanism that prevents collapse. What makes these failures worse is the refusal to learn from citizens who spoke up early. Leadership that listens only after disaster strikes is not proactive. It is reactive. And reactive governance is always more expensive and more destructive. Taxpayers are not asking for perfection. They are asking for honesty. They want leaders who can say, we failed here, here is what we learned, and here is how we will prevent it from happening again. Supporting education and demanding accountability are not opposites. They are inseparable. One without the other is a lie. If schools want lasting public trust in Alamance County, across North Carolina, and nationwide, transparency is not optional. It is the price of legitimacy. That is not anti-education. That is not anti-teacher. That is pro student, pro taxpayer, and pro citizen. That is Go Right. Follow more local accountability reporting athttps://GoRightNews.com and https://GoRightNC.com. #GoRight,#GoRightNC,#GoRightNews,#LocalElectionsMatter,#EvictionsCrisis,#CostOfLiving,#HousingAffordability,#AlamanceCounty,#NorthCarolina,#RealIssues,#LocalLeadership,#CountyPolitics,#VoteLocal,#CivicResponsibility,#CommunityStability

📣 New Podcast! "Are Alamance County Schools Fully Funded or Fully Accountable?" on @Spreaker #alamancecounty #civicresponsibility #communitystability #costofliving #countypolitics #evictionscrisis #goright #gorightnc #gorightnews #housingaffordability #localelectionsmatter #localleadership

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Commissioners approve narrow majority purchase of 301 W. Pine Street for courthouse parking after debate After extended debate about courthouse parking, footprint and project costs, the Alamance County Board voted 3-2 to approve acquiring 301 W. Pine Street from heirs of Nancy Allen at tax value ($183,000) for expanded courthouse parking.

In a heated vote, Alamance County Commissioners narrowly approved the purchase of 301 West Pine Street to tackle escalating courthouse parking issues, igniting debates over costs and future plans.

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #CommunityPlanning #PublicSafety #CitizenPortal

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Alamance County authorizes manager to negotiate with CT Wilson for emergency services center renovation The board authorized the county manager to negotiate a contract with CT Wilson for the renovation of an emergency services center in Burlington; commissioners discussed bids, a $25.4 million estimated project cost, and funding from a SCIF grant and other sources.

Alamance County is set to transform a former building into a state-of-the-art emergency services center, with a staggering project cost of over $25 million!

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #PublicSafety #CommunityInvestment #CitizenPortal

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Commissioners authorize next step to negotiate contract for new emergency services/911 center funded largely by state grant County staff reported funding for an emergency services center renovation and asked the board to authorize the county manager to negotiate a construction contract with CT Wilson; commissioners debated cost, oversight and the project timeline before the authorization.

Alamance County is moving forward with a $25 million renovation of a former BD building to establish a state-of-the-art emergency services center, including a new 911 call center—will this upgrade transform local safety?

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #GrantFunding #PublicSafety

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Is Raleigh Forgetting Alamance County or Is Alamance Finally Waking Up? Is Raleigh Forgetting Alamance County or Is Alamance Finally Waking Up? | #GoRight with Peter Boykin Alamance County is no longer staying quiet. Parents are demanding answers. Schools are struggling with failing infrastructure. Law enforcement is under pressure from outside activists. And Raleigh continues to tighten its grip on decisions that once belonged to local communities. In this powerful episode of #GoRight with Peter Boykin, we break down what is really happening on the ground in Alamance County and across North Carolina. From school funding failures and parental rights battles to the growing tension between state power and local voice, this podcast examines why so many everyday citizens feel ignored by the political establishment. We also explore how national issues such as Trump, immigration, civil rights, federal education policies, and government overreach are playing out locally in North Carolina. The episode closes with an expanded Go Right commentary monologue on why Alamance County may be the spark Raleigh never expected. This is not just a county story. This is a warning sign for the entire state. Plus, hear the original Suno song “Carolina Rise,” written exclusively for this episode. If you want truth without fear and commentary rooted in liberty, justice, and accountability, this episode is for you. Read the full article at  https://gorightnews.com/is-raleigh-forgetting-alamance-county-or-is-alamance-finally-waking-up/ It is time to Go Right. Subscribe and follow for more commentary from a Constitutionalist for Liberty. FOLLOW ON ALL PLATFORMS 👉 Listen to the Full Podcast https://rumble.com/v72jnxi-is-raleigh-forgetting-alamance-county-or-is-alamance-finally-waking-up-gori.html https://youtu.be/o3obcbu7pcY https://www.spreaker.com/episode/is-raleigh-forgetting-alamance-county-or-is-alamance-finally-waking-up--68849247 Turn it up. Please share it. Use it as a soundtrack for unity, clarity, and purpose. #GoRight with Peter Boykin 📢 Listen and Subscribe: Rumble | YouTube | Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Amazon | Truth Social | X | Facebook | GAB | TikTok SUPPORT THE PLATFORM Cash App: $GoRightNews #GoRightNC, #GoRightWithPeterBoykin, #AlamanceCounty, #NorthCarolinaPolitics, #NCNews, #ParentalRights, #SchoolFunding, #LocalControl, #RaleighAccountability, #BurlingtonNC, #GrahamNC, #ElonNC, #ConstitutionalRepublic, #GrassrootsNC, #FreedomMovementNC

📣 New Podcast! "Is Raleigh Forgetting Alamance County or Is Alamance Finally Waking Up?" on @Spreaker #alamancecounty #burlingtonnc #constitutionalrepublic #elonnc #freedommovementnc #gorightnc #gorightwithpeterboykin #grahamnc #grassrootsnc #localcontrol #ncnews #northcarolinapolitics

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Alamance commissioners authorize contract to pursue purchase of former Bank of America building for tourism bureau The board voted 3-2 to authorize signing a contract to acquire the former Bank of America building in Graham to hold for the Tourism Development Authority; the purchase would use TDA funds, the county would hold title, and the TDA would receive a 20-year lease at no charge. Commissioners expressed concerns about renovation costs and parking; inspections are planned.

Alamance County is taking a bold step in tourism by acquiring the former Bank of America building, setting the stage for a vibrant hub of local attractions and events!

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #CitizenPortal #PublicSafety #CommunityDevelopment #LocalEconomy

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Commissioner Thompson asks for full accounting of Alamance County ICE contract and related revenue use Commissioner Thompson requested the sheriff and administration provide a historical accounting of the county’s ICE contract from inception through termination, including contract amounts, any profits, and how funds were used, and asked for further documentation and briefing.

Commissioner Thompson is demanding transparency on Alamance County's controversial ICE contract, seeking detailed financial records and an audit to uncover the truth behind its profits and impacts.

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #CitizenPortal #CivicAccountability

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Commissioners authorize county to proceed toward purchase of former Bank of America building for Tourism Development Authority after 3–2 vote The Alamance County Board of Commissioners voted 3–2 to authorize signing a contract to pursue acquisition of the former Bank of America building to hold for the Tourism Development Authority; the purchase would be funded with TDA occupancy-tax revenues and subject to inspections.

Alamance County is taking a bold step toward boosting tourism by moving to acquire the former Bank of America building, setting the stage for a vibrant visitor hub!

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #CitizenPortal #CommunityInvestment #EconomicDevelopment #VisitorAttraction

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County reports $16.6M in opioid settlement funds, details recovery, naloxone and reentry spending Health officials reported Alamance County expects $16.6 million in opioid settlement funds (2022-2038) and summarized funded strategies this year including peer-support/recovery navigation ($799,279.43), naloxone distribution (4,666 doses), residential treatment, reentry housing support and a newly launched recovery court.

Alamance County is set to receive $16.6 million from opioid settlements, funding vital recovery services and innovative programs to combat addiction and support reentry.

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #CitizenPortal #CivicAccountability #PublicHealthInvestment

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Via Health outlines services and payer gaps at Alamance Behavioral Health Center Via Health officials described the county ehavioral health center s a 24/7, walk-in hub with urgent-care, a 16-bed facility, on-site pharmacy and mobile crisis teams but said continuing care can be limited by commercial insurance paneling and reimbursement rules.

Alamance Behavioral Health Center offers vital crisis services, but many patients face hurdles in accessing necessary follow-up care due to insurance limitations.

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #CitizenPortal #MentalHealthCare #CrisisIntervention

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Residents press commissioners to block proposed 4115 Clap Mill Road landfill Several Southern Alamance residents urged the board to oppose a proposed 75-acre construction landfill at 4115 Clap Mill Road, citing traffic and road-safety risks, groundwater and air pollution worries, nearby concentration of disposal sites, and gaps in technical review.

Residents of Southern Alamance are raising their voices against a proposed massive landfill, citing serious safety and environmental concerns that could impact their community.

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #CitizenPortal #PublicSafety #EnvironmentalImpact #CommunityEngagement

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#ice #noicedetaineesjailed #AlamanceCounty #NorthCarolina

Alamance County, North Carolina:

Sheriff: Alamance County ends agreement with ICE and will no longer accept ICE detainees:

myfox8.com/news/north-c...

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Commissioner’s Analysis Flags Library Spending Growth as Usage Falls; Raises Questions About Partnerships Commissioner Priola presented a comparison of library performance to 2019 pre‑COVID levels, saying visitors and circulation are down while expenditures rose; he flagged a Democracy NC partnership and questioned remaining DEI links in the library annual report.

Alamance County's library system faces scrutiny as Commissioner Priola reveals a troubling disconnect between rising expenditures and plummeting usage, raising critical questions about its future and partnerships.

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #CitizenPortal #CommunityAccess

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County Reports $16.6M in Opioid Settlement Funds, Details Early Spending on Recovery Supports Alamance County will receive $16.6 million in opioid settlement funds (2022–2038); the county has authorized seven strategies including recovery supports, naloxone distribution and residential services and reports initial results and program launches.

Alamance County is transforming its $16.6 million opioid settlement funds into life-saving recovery programs, with impressive early results in treatment access and support services.

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #CommunitySupportServices #CitizenPortal #PublicHealthInitiatives

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Residents Push Back Against Proposed Clap Mill Road Landfill Near Coble Township Dozens of residents told Alamance County commissioners they oppose a proposed 75‑acre landfill at 4115 Clap Mill Road, citing road safety, nearby existing landfills, groundwater and air concerns; planning board asked the applicant for more information and will revisit the permit in January.

Residents of Southern Alamance are rallying against a proposed landfill that could jeopardize their community's safety and character, fearing it will turn their rural haven into a dumping ground.

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#AlamanceCounty #NC #CitizenPortal #PublicSafety #CommunityAction

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