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The Daily Tar Heel

Matthew McGibney


Augustus Cho came in a distant third in the race. DTH/Anika Anand
News

Label him a winner

10:40 a.m. Nov. 4 - The original version of this story cited election result numbers that only included Orange County precincts. The Chapel Hill mayoral and town council races also draw votes from one precinct in Durham County. This story has been updated to reflect the numbers being reported by the State Board of Elections, which reports on election results from all counties (Scroll to view the Chapel Hill race).In a polarizing mayoral campaign between “establishment” and “pro-business” candidates, the man labeled as the embodiment of current policies won.After serving eight years on the Town Council, Mark Kleinschmidt won the tight race with 48.62 percent of the vote.In the aftermath of the divisive campaign, Kleinschmidt said cooperation will be necessary to build on the successes of Kevin Foy’s term.

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Kleinschmidt could use ‘lawyerly skills’ as mayor

In Chapel Hill Town Council meetings, mayoral candidate Mark Kleinschmidt has restated issues and crafted positions so the rest of the council would approve them, other members said.If elected mayor, he said he’ll keep doing the same thing.“He did it in a way to bring everyone to table, instead of causing divisions,” said Sally Greene, who has served on the council with Kleinschmidt for six years. “He was able to use his lawyerly skills.”Kleinschmidt, a criminal defense lawyer, said his eight years on the council would make him the most effective mayor.

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Cho points to his life's many leadership roles

Chapel Hill mayoral candidate Augustus Cho is a Republican in a predominantly Democratic town.But he said his affiliation shouldn’t have a bearing in the nonpartisan race.“I am not a single-cause candidate, nor am I an ideologue,” Cho said. “It’s not about one party or another. No party has a monopoly on solutions or on problems.”He is one of four candidates for the seat Kevin Foy will vacate in December. The others are Matt Czajkowski, Mark Kleinschmidt and Kevin Wolff.

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Voyce wants more frugality

Carrboro mayoral candidate Brian Voyce would have preferred not to run for office. “I had hoped someone I could back would run,” Voyce said. “But you can’t complain unless you do something about it, and some things just need to be corrected in this town.”He said one of the main problems with current Carrboro policy is spending without investigating alternatives. He said he objects to the creation of Carrboro municipal buildings near similar Chapel Hill sites, such as a planned fire station in north Carrboro.

Carrboro Mayor Mark Chilton said he wants to ensure that the town isn’t Chapel Hill’s “little brother.
News

Chilton draws on experience

He may be a well-established political figure now, but almost 20 years ago, Carrboro Mayor Mark Chilton started his career as an experiment.“Some students had run for office in the 1980s and had taken control of the city government of Davis, California,” said Chilton, who graduated from UNC in 1993. “We were inspired by that idea to have a student run for Chapel Hill Town Council, and I was the guinea pig.”He said he found that many of the concerns on campus, such as the environment and transportation, were shared by members of the community.

Mayoral Candidate Amanda Ashley says she wants to create a town size limit.
News

Ashley competes as citizen

With radical ideas for the town of Carrboro, mayoral candidate Amanda Ashley eschews politics as usual.She said that’s not her style.“I’m running as a citizen,” she said, “not a politician. I’m not beholden to anyone and I’m not constrained by having to fit in. I can consequently have new ideas put before the voters.”Her central new idea is a town size limit and population cap to keep Carrboro’s small-town character intact.

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Immigrant policy to be Carrboro election issue

Carrboro Board of Aldermen candidates are carving out ideas for how to cater to the town’s dense and growing immigrant population.At least 12.3 percent of the town is of Latino or Hispanic descent, compared to 5.6 percent in Orange County, according to El Centro Latino. And the refugee population continues to grow drastically.Ilana Dubester, interim director at El Centro Latino, said Carrboro’s government should include more bilingual public officials.She also said immigrants tend to lack work, language services and access to affordable health care.

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Mayor candidates debate end to homelessness

Businesses have seen fewer panhandlers, and arrests have fallen in the last couple of years. Chapel Hill mayoral candidates will have to give their ideas for continuing the trend this election season.Several measures, like the Orange County 10 Year Plan to End Chronic Homelessness and the Real Change from Spare Change program have reduced the number of panhandlers, said Jim Norton, executive director of the Chapel Hill Downtown Partnership.

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