The Regional Weekly May 1, 2020

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Inside: Woman poses as FBI agent on dating sites • Page 2A

THE REGIONAL

Jim Tarulli

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Business Development Manager - NC, SC, GA NC License I-88593 NMLS 1890921

Cell: 704-661-5940 jim.tarulli@snmc.com SN Mortgage Company NMLS 3116 21430 Cedar Drive/Ste 200 | Sterling, VA 20164

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Friday, May 1, 2020 • Vol. 13 • No. 18

ABOUT US P.O. BOX 1104 Matthews, NC 28106 (704) 849-2261 justin@cmgweekly.com

Mecklenburg loosens restrictions County now following state's stay-at-home order by Justin Vick

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CHARLOTTE – Mecklenburg County is now following Gov. Roy Cooper's stay-at-home order. The county, city and towns had previously agreed that Mecklenburg's stay-at-home order would be extended if the governor extended his order, which he did through May 8. But towns have been growing increasingly concerned about businesses. County Manager Dena Diorio told

Mecklenburg commissioners April 28 that the county, city and towns agreed to rescind its stay-at-home order to align with the governor's order based on COVID-19 data that included cases and hospital capacity. The governor's order gives increased flexibility to businesses such as car dealerships, craft and hobby shops, dog groomers, funeral homes, housekeepers, mattress stores, real estate agents and vape shops – just to name a few. see LOOSENS, Page 3A

Matthews commissioners discuss supporting Gov. Roy Cooper’s stayat-home order and other issues during an April 27 virtual meeting.

Justin Vick Managing Editor

Fuller misses the mark

WHAT'S INSIDE:

Towns are not acting politically No foul play Sheriff’s office IDs skeletal remains, 2A

24 Hours of Booty has endured for 19 years partly due to the camaraderie of riding with neighbors for a common cause: Atrium Health’s Levine Cancer Institute and Levine Children’s Hospital. CMG file photo

24 Hours of Booty is going virtual Plan B Firms adapt to COVID-19, 4A

CHARLOTTE – The 24 Foundation is reformatting its signature 24 Hours of Booty fundraiser into a virtual event due to COVID-19. The event will include a week of “summer games” culminating in the 24-hour experience from 7 p.m. July 24 to 7 p.m. July 25. “While not hosting an in-person event was a difficult decision to make, the safety and well-being of our participants, volunteers, staff, spectators and our cancer community is our top priority,” said Katy Ryan, executive

director of 24 Foundation. “We know the strength we possess when we unite for a larger purpose, which is why we will unite virtually in support of our beneficiaries that are meeting the needs of the cancer communities we serve. While the event will look different this year, our mission and purpose are more important than ever, and we will get through this together.” Instead of convening in Myers Park, participants of the 19th annual event can engage in 24 Hours of Booty see BOOTY, Page 2A

Familiar faces Area alumni headed to NFL, 1B

Thawing brains Libraries offer digital resources, 2B

Cute pets Send us photos of your fur babies, 4B

Biz-savvy teens make snazzy masks by Karie Simmons karie@cmgweekly.com

WEDDINGTON – Two juniors at Weddington High School are using their popular Etsy shop as a platform to sell trendy face masks during the coronavirus pandemic. Gracie Goldberg and Maia Bennett started Pebble and Pine Company after becoming friends their freshman year. The girls bonded over a shared in-

terest in entrepreneurship and started making fabric keychains and hair bows to sell on Etsy. Their business changed when the coronavirus began to spread. Gracie said her mom works in the medical field and needed masks when the outbreak started. This was before her workplace eventually closed. “Maia and I realized all see ETSY, Page 5A

Masks made by Gracie Goldberg and Maia Bennet come in a variety of light and airy colors and patterns. Photo courtesy of Pebble and Pine Company

T

revor Fuller adds tremendous value to discussions had by the Mecklenburg County Board of Commissioners, but he was way off base in criticizing the towns for supporting Gov. Roy Cooper's stay-at-home order. Closing and reopening our economy are two of the most important decisions our elected leaders will make in their lifetimes because those decisions affect the lives of so many people. It is intellectually lazy to suggest elected leaders in Matthews, Mint Hill and other Mecklenburg County towns are politically motivated in wanting to loosen stay-at-home restrictions. Fuller came off as an aggressive attorney trying to badger a witness when asking County Manager Dena Diorio about how the towns wanted to back out of the original agreement to support Mecklenburg's stricter stay-at-home order. He said such actions undermine the county's public health authority. “People who have been pushing this effort to undermine our actions to respond to this COVID-19, Fuller they ought to be ashamed of themselves – who are pushing to reopen in this reckless and political way,” Fuller said. Fuller is conflating national debate with local reality. Matthews commissioners voted 4-3 to authorize Mayor John Higdon to send a letter to Mecklenburg County in support of the state's stay-at-home order. Before the vote, the president of Novant Health Matthews Medical Center told commissioners the hospital was treating just one patient for COVID-19. The president of the Matthews Chamber of Commerce told them businesses were taking a nosedive just as an aircraft could be heard flying over her home. As Matthews Commissioner Jeff Miller frames it, when you consider see VICK, Page 3A

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