TCB Oct. 20, 2022 — The 2022 Election Guide

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Candidate information for *almost* all of the races in Guilford and Forsyth Counties

OCT. 20 - 26, 2022 TRIAD-CITY-BEAT.COM 2022 ELECTION GUIDE
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BUSINESS

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EDITOR

Brian Clarey brian@triad-city-beat.com

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EDITOR’S NOTEBOOK

George Floyd, human

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COVER: The

place

In so many ways, George Floyd was born to lose. His entire life was shaped by policies that seem designed to shorten the odds for young, Black men: His public schooling came during drastic cuts to education in his home state of Texas. He could not fulfill the terms of his athletic scholarship to college and found himself unemployed and without skills in Houston. He got caught up in drugs while the severe Rockefeller drug laws were in effect, so his arrest for a small amount of cocaine led to a lengthy prison sentence. The AIDS crisis, the crack epidemic, the COVID pandemic, police militarization and the sheer physical and mental toll of simply being a large Black man in America all conspired to bring George Floyd to that Minneapolis streetcorner in 2020, where he was murdered in broad daylight — and on camera — by a police officer.

Floyd immediately became a sym bol that kicked off a racial reckoning in those early days of the pandem ic. But Washington Post journalist Robert Samuels and a team of reporters dove deep into the details of his life, humanizing him in a way that no street mural can. Samuels and co-author Toluse Olorunnipa turned the resulting series of articles, “George Floyd’s America,” published in October 2020, into a book, His Name Is George Floyd: One Man’s Life and the Struggle for Racial Justice, which is how Samuels found himself at Wake Forest University on Mon day.

Using the tools of reporting and long conversations with Floyd’s sur viving relatives, Samuels was able to verify a family story: that their ances tor, born a slave but freed at 8 years old, became a prominent tobacco farmer in North Carolina, controlling

at one time more than 500 acres when that crop was king.

As the story goes, the family farm was reclaimed, parcel by parcel, from the farmer, who never learned to read or write. It was this demise that brought the family to Houston. This would have been after the Wilming ton Massacre, but perhaps before the assault on Black Wall Street in Tulsa, Okla.

It was all true. White folks took the family farm, all nice and legal and recorded for history in court docu ments.

“It didn’t happen all at once,” Sam uels told the room during his evening book reading. “It happened over time. And I wonder how many other stories there are like that.”

There is a sense of inevitability in the arc of Floyd’s life, but also so much hope. He kept trying, always, right up until the end, captured chillingly by Samuels in a Post piece about the health hazards presented merely by being George Floyd.

His kicker is told from the point of view of Floyd’s friends, eyewitnesses to his murder, providing a tragic coda to the narrative: They didn’t just see Floyd pleading for his life. They saw their friend realize there was no es cape, that the early warnings given to Black boys would become his destiny.

They knew that fear. It was the fear of practically every Black man they knew.

2 UP FRONT | OCT. 2026, 2022 1451 S. Elm-Eugene St. Box 24, Greensboro, NC 27406 Office: 336.681.0704 First copy is free, all additional copies are $1. ©2022 Beat Media Inc. TCB IN A FLASH @ triad-city-beat.com
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THURSDAY Oct. 20

Aquaverse @ ROAR Brands Theatre (W-S) 4 p.m.

Queer Fear Film Festival @ a/perture cinema (W-S) 9 p.m.

Queer Fear Film Festival returns for its second year of celebrating independent genre films that highlight queer horror stories and creators. For the first time, Queer Fear is offering in-person screenings at a/perture cinema as well as online screenings. Check out queerfearfilmfestival. com/2022-festival for the full film lineup.

SATURDAY Oct. 22

Fall 2022 Market @ High Point Market (HP) 9 a.m

SUNDAY Oct. 23

Flow Into Fall @ Stock + Grain Assembly (HP) 10 a.m.

You’re in for a unique, “underwater” experience at Aquaverse. This blacklight, 3-D art installation by Debi Cable features immersive, fluorescent murals that aim to bring attention to oceanic ed ucation and climate change. Find more informa tion and purchase tickets at roarbrandstheater. com

Dearly Departed @ Paul Robeson Theatre (GSO) 7:30 p.m.

The NC A&T Theatre Arts Program presents Dearly Departed, a comedy about death. Watch on as the Turpin family relies on each other and friends as they hilariously deal with the death of their father as his funeral approaches. For tick ets, call 336.334.7749 or visit ncataggies.com.

FRIDAY Oct. 21

Unplugged Fridays @ Steel Hands Brewing (GSO) 6 p.m.

High Point Market features meticulously de signed furniture, home furnishings and other lav ish items. There are also educational webinars, conferences and networking opportunities for you to enjoy. Find more information and register at highpointmarket.org

Fall Wine Expo @ Vintage 82 (GSO) 6 p.m. Head to Revolution Mill for a tasting of more than 35 wines from eight vendors. The outdoor event will be illuminated with Italian lights, making for an upscale experience. Find more in formation and register at https://tinyurl.com/3k 7ab2vj

Racist Roots Screening @ 1419 Waughtown Street (W-S) 2 p.m.

Flow into fall during this all-levels yoga class with meditation exercises, strength building and gentle stretches hosted by Humbled Warriors Yoga. Just bring your own mat and any other props you’d like. Visit the event page on Face book to register.

Green Eggs & Ham @ Winston-Salem Symphony (W-S) 2 p.m.

Winston-Salem Symphony kicks off their three-concert Ignite Family Series with a produc tion of Green Eggs & Ham: A Musical Setting By Robert Kapilow. In addition to live music, young listeners can participate in pre-concert activi ties such as a book fair provided by Bookmarks or interactive crafts with Kaleideum. Purchase tickets by calling the Symphony Box Office at 336.464.0145 or online at wssymphony.org.

TUESDAY Oct. 25

The Phantom of the Opera @ Carolina Theatre (GSO) 7 p.m.

Steel Hands Brewing invites you to the taproom to enjoy this new acoustic folk music series hosted by songwriter and producer Tom Troyer. Visit the event page on Facebook for more infor mation and updates.

The North Carolina Coalition for Alternatives to the Death Penalty (NCCADP) in partnership with the Center for Death Penalty Litigation will pres ent a free public screening of Racist Roots at Community Mosque. The film explores the death penalty’s roots of slavery, lynching and systemic racism. Following the film will be a panel dis cussion with Khalid Griggs, Alfred Rivera, Nick Courmon and Phoebe Zerwick. Learn more about the film and guest speakers at https://rac istroots.org/.

This screening of the classic silent horror film

The Phantom of the Opera will be enhanced by a live accompaniment on the Robert Morton Pipe Organ, the only remaining Robert Morton Pipe Organ in the state. In the film, aspiring opera singer Christine Daaé is taken hostage by Erik, a masked, disfigured loner who lives under the Paris Opera House as he aims to help her become a performer. Purchase tickets at caro linatheatre.com

3 UP FRONT | OCT. 2026, 2022
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2022 General Election Guide

Everyone knows that midterm elections draw out fewer voters than presidential elections but with abortion rights, marijuana legislation and immigration reform on the line, to name a few, political experts wonder if the turnout will go above the 40 percent average for midterms in NC. To get educated before you vote, check out our 2022 Election Guide which has almost all of the races on the ballot minus the judicial races and some smaller town elections.

Early voting starts on Oct. 20 and runs through Nov. 5. Voters can vote anywhere they choose during early voting. Election Day is Nov. 8. Voters have to go to their designated precinct on Election Day. If candidates did not have an opponent for the general election, they were not included in this guide. Candidates are listed alphabetically by last name; incumbents are always listed first.

Key: D - Democrat

- Green Party

- Libertarian

- Republican

- Incumbent

FEDERAL RACES US Senate

Despite flying under the radar nationally, this race may be one of the most im portant in the country come November. Democrats are putting their hopes on Cheri Beasley to flip the seat now held by Republican Sen. Richard Burr, increasing the narrow Democrat ic majority in the Senate while Republicans believe Trump-friendly candidate Rep. Ted Budd will come out victorious. As of the writing of this story, the race was neck-and-neck in the polls, with Budd leading Beasley on average by about 1.6 percentage points according to FiveThirtyEight.

Cheri Beasley (D)

Since handily winning the Dem ocratic primary back in May, former NC Supreme Court Chief Justice Cheri Beasley has been making the rounds across the state, campaigning against her opponent.

During an event in Greensboro in mid-September, Beasley highlighted the fact that Budd voted against lowering prescription drug costs and took money from lobbyists instead.

“Ted Budd, who’s been in Congress for six years, has had every opportunity to show that he would stand up for North Carolina and he just hasn’t done it,” Beasley said. “He did vote against lowering prescription drug costs one day and just a few days later took tens of thousands of dollars in corporate PAC money from Big Pharma.”

Beasley also pointed out Budd’s record of voting against infrastructure, emergency funding for baby formula and funding for veterans affected by burn pits.

In August, just a few weeks after the reversal of Roe v. Wade, Beasley made protecting abortion rights a central part of her campaign during an event in Win ston-Salem.

“This is the first time in our nation’s history that the court has taken away a constitutional right,” she said. “And if it can happen once, it can happen again. And that’s why it is so important that we are all here today because so many people don’t know that…. They don’t know that their vote and their voice matters. But we know that.”

Beasley served as the chief justice of North Carolina’s Supreme Court from 2019-20 after serving in district court for 20 years. In 2021, Beasley announced that she would run for Senate to fill the seat being vacated by Sen. Richard Burr. Now, she faces Budd, who has served as the representative for the state’s 13th Con gressional District since 2017.

Thus far Beasley has outraised Budd by almost $10 million, with the total raised at more than $16 million.

As of the end of June, Beasley had $4.8 million ending cash on hand according to the FEC

Shannon Bray (L)

Libertarian Shannon Bray was born in Louisiana and enlisted in the Navy after a short stint in college. Currently, he works for the Department of Defense and lives in Apex. According to his campaign website, Bray is

running to bring an end to “perpetual wars,” increase data privacy, improve homeland security and advocate for veterans. With a background in computer science, Bray advocates for modern solutions to immigration reform and does not support a wall at the border.

He also notes on his website that he wants to change healthcare by taking it out of the hands of the govern ment.

Ted Budd (R)

Winston-Salem born Republican Ted Budd has been involved in politics since he won his seat as the repre sentative of the 13th Congressional District in 2017.

Since then, he has been a close supporter of former President Trump, even going as far as voting against

impeachment (twice) and voting to overturn the results of the 2020 election. He has also spread falsehoods about the integrity of that election.

On the campaign trail, Budd has attacked Beasley for being too close to Biden and for attempting to bring “woke politics” to North Carolina. He is staunchly anti-abortion, and recently supported a national ban on abortions after 15 weeks. The bill failed to pass the Senate. Budd also opposes the Affordable Care Act, as well as expanding voting rights. Earlier this year, Budd was one of 39 Republi cans who supported the Merger Filing Fee Moderniza tion Act which would have cracked down on corpora tions for anti-competitive behavior.

Through June, Budd raised a total of $6.49 million and had $1.78 million ending cash on hand.

Matthew Hoh (G)

After the North Carolina State Board of Elections voted to recog nize the Green Party as an official party in the state, Matthew Hoh was officially on the ballot for the general election this November. According to his campaign web site, Hoh served in the Marines for 10 years across three wars, an experience that he says motivated him to get involved in politics.

“In 2009 I resigned from the State Department over the surge of troops to the war in Afghanistan, and started speaking out against the endless war machine and the growing rot in our political system,” his site states.

As a Green Party candidate Hoh says he wants to “break away from the corrupt two-party system beholden to the wealthy, the banks and the corpora tions.” He wants to raise the minimum wage to $17.14 per hour, advocate for workers, invest in public hous ing, cancel student debt, offer free public education through university, offer free childcare and pre-K and cancel medical debt.

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House of Representatives

District 5

Virginia Foxx (R, i)

Not much has changed for Rep. Virginia Foxx since we last wrote about her for the primary election in May.

Foxx has held her seat for almost two decades since first being elected in 2005 and has been at the forefront of conser vative politics in the state ever since. As reported, she is one of several NC reps who voted against impeaching former President Trump and voted against certifying the election in 2020. She is an ti-LGBTQ rights, opposes the Equality Act and doesn’t believe in abortion even in cases of rape or incest. Thus far, she has raised $1.9 million.

Kyle Parrish (D)

Despite knowing that he faces an uphill battle against Foxx, Democratic hopeful Kyle Par rish told the Win ston-Salem Journal in September that he’s running to let Republicans know that there are still those that oppose them.

“For them to have a free narrative, without any challenge from a compet itor, even if it’s not a strong challenge because we have trouble raising money or we have trouble with party support, it’s unconscionable,” Parrish said. “So I decided at that time that I was going to run for office in order to at least provide some kind of feedback into the echo chamber that was evolving.”

On his website he states that candidates like Foxx pose an existential threat to American democracy.

“The legislation arising from the ‘Big Lie’ is nothing more than an effort to subvert the future will/vote of the American people,” he states. Thus far, Parrish has raised $17,161.

District 6 Kathy Manning (D, i)

While Republi can Foxx may be comfortable in her seat come No vember, the same could be said about Democrat Rep. Kathy Manning who is facing re-election just one district over. Unlike Foxx’s district, Manning’s domain covers most of Greensboro and Winston-Salem and leans heav ily Democratic, especially since the redrawing of the districts in 2020. That year, Manning handily won the election against Republican nominee Lee Haywood with 62 percent of the vote.

Since taking office, she has sponsored legislation protecting abortion rights, forgiving loans and protecting gay and interracial marriages.

As of the end of June, Manning had raised $2 million and had $1.49 million cash on hand.

Christian Castelli (R) In May, Repub lican Christian Castelli narrowly beat Lee Haywood by less than 3 percentage points to become the Republican nominee for District 6. As a former Green Beret, Castelli is a strong supporter of the Second Amendment and national security; he supports fin ishing construction of the border wall. He also is against critical race theory and “political indoctrination in curriculum.”

He outraised all other Republicans during the primary and raised $606,502 through the end of June. He had $149,762 ending cash on hand.

Thomas Watercott (L)

Libertarian Thomas Watercott sup ports term limits for federal office, fiscal responsibili ty, the elimination

vote

ALAN BRANSON for Guilford County Commissioner

Quality School of Family’s Choice

. Funding for all men and women in uniform

Development for continued job cgrowth ontinued growth

. A conservative voice for all people

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Proven Leadership from 2012-2020
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Support
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Economic
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of income tax and removal of the government from abortion rights.

“I’m life-affirming pro-choice,” he states on his website. “The government shouldn’t be funding or promoting abortion, and it shouldn’t outlaw it either (on the federal level).”

Watercott has raised $3,755.27 in total, and spent $4,104.62.

STATE RACES

NC Senate

District 27

Michael Garrett (D, i) Sen. Michael Garrett has been a member of the state senate since winning office in 2018. As a young Democrat, Garrett falls in line with most of the Democratic party when it comes to issues such as abortion rights (for), expanding Medicaid (for) and some police reform (for). This past legislative session, Garrett sponsored a bill that would have created a mental health program for public schools as well as a bill that would have made the statewide general election an official paid state holiday. Both bills died in committee. Additionally, Garrett supports increasing teacher pay, a tax exemption for small businesses for the first $50,000 of income and increasing voting rights.

Richard (Josh) Sessoms (R)

Richard Sessoms was born in Greensboro and served in the Marines from 2002-09, according to election website Ballotpedia. Sessoms supports an increase in police officers in schools and is a strong supporter of the Second Amendment. His Twitter indicates that he is concerned with public safety and supports an increase in public funding for law enforcement. He also supports legalizing medical marijuana and writes that the lack of affordable housing is one of the state’s greatest challenges going into the future.

Sessoms also supports a ban on abortion with excep tions for rape, incest and the health of the mother, as well as, an implementation of voter ID.

District 28

Gladys Robinson (D, i)

Democrat Sen. Gladys Robinson is fighting to win her seventh term in office this November. A gradu ate of Bennett College, Robinson has been a staunch supporter of HBCUs, as well as public educa tion funding. She served on the UNC Board of Governors for a

decade. She was the executive director of Piedmont Health Services and supports abortions before 20 weeks, funding for public education and pushing back against CRT critics.

According to reporting by the News & Observer, Rob inson sees public school funding, affordable housing and mental health treatment as the main issues for her district. Robinson also supports legalizing medical marijuana.

Paul Schumacher (R) Air Force Veteran Paul Schum acher, whose website address is 4rfreedoms.com, wants to limit federal government when it comes to education, healthcare, abor tion, welfare and unemployment. When it comes to “bodily free doms,” Schumacher states that he is against vaccine mandates but is also anti-abortion. Like many other Republican candidates, Schumacher has made the issue of “parental consent” a central as pect of his platform, stating that “it is a parents honor duty and responsibility to monitor what is being taught and what indoctrination is being implemented.”

Schumacher is a strong supporter of law enforcement and advocates for neighborhood watches with neigh borhood deputies in his answers to the N&O

District 32

Paul Lowe, Jr. (D, i) Chairman of the NC Legislative Black Caucus, Sen. Paul Lowe is interested in finding “pathways to secure economic justice, educa tional equity and more affordable, accessible healthcare.” Preceded in office by the late Earline Par mon, Lowe has been state senator of District 32 since 2015.

In that capacity, Lowe has introduced bills to address many issues concerning Winston-Salem, including the possible establishment of a four-year fire adminis tration degree at WSSU and changing rules to allow DACA recipients to receive in-state tuition. A pastor of Shiloh Baptist Church, his efforts to have Juneteenth be recognized as a state holiday were blocked by colleagues but were vindicated when President Biden recognized it as a federal holiday.

George K. Ware (R) Ware, a private business owner and veteran, is a proponent of school choice and thinks “school choice with public-run, teach er-run, church-run and other pri vate schools is the best alternative

to our historically failing public schools.”

Ware believes that “the systemic educational policies of my opponent, Democrats, teachers unions and education bureaucrats are directly responsible for these systemic failures in our school systems.” By making the NC Dept. of Education provide a $7,000 voucher to students to attend private, home-school or charter run programs, Ware believes he can offer better education outside of a public school system, but still be funded by it.

When it comes to health care Ware wants to pursue a “health share program” that is “economical, provid er run and hospital run direct (private) health care programs” for the uninsured. By keeping healthcare private, Ware believes that this can protect citizens from the “the overwhelming and unaffordable health insurance costs of protecting their families.”

NC House of Representatives

District 57

Ashton Clemmons (D, i) Rep. Ashton Clemmons is run ning for her third term in office. Coming from a background as an educator — Clemmons worked as a principal in Rockingham and Guilford counties — Clemmons is a strong supporter of public education. She wants to fund im provements for school buildings and increase educator and school staff pay. She also supports investing in mental healthcare and infrastructure as well as a more streamlined transportation system. She also is con cerned with passing gun-control legislation.

She supports Medicaid expansion and supported legis lation that would have raised the legal age for marriage in NC to 18, up from 14. She also told the N&O that “there should be fewer restrictions on abortion after 20 weeks,” which is the limit currently according to state law.

Michelle Bardsley (R)

Michelle Bardsley is running for state house after losing a bid for Guilford County School Board back in 2020. Like her oppo nent, Bardsley has a background in education. She worked for more than 15 years in public education, mostly in career and technical education. Because of this background, she supports enrolling more students in CTE programs to bolster the workforce.

Bardsley supports funding law enforcement and police in schools. She also “believes in restorative practices for incarcerated individuals to improve life success when reentering society.”

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She supports competitive compensation for educators but also includes a line echoing the national Republican argu ment for increased parental involvement in their children’s education.

Bardsley opposed mask mandates last year, according to her Twitter.

District 58 Amos Quick (D, i)

Rep. Amos Quick is seeking his fourth term in office.

Quick works as the senior pastor of Calvary Baptist Church and is a Greensboro native. Prior to serving in state office, Quick was on the Guilford County school board for 13 years. During this past legislative session, Quick supported funding for affordable housing, an increase of the hourly min imum wage for school staff and funding an early childhood pilot program. All bills died in committee.

As a member of the House Select Com mittee on Community Relations, Law Enforcement and Justice, Quick pro posed “an early warning system to flag officers with a history of discipline prob lems,” allowing police review boards with subpoena power and a statewide ban on chokeholds.

Chrissy Smith (R)

Chrissy Smith works as a health and PE teacher at GTCC, according to her campaign website. Smith ad vocates for alterna tive medicine and healing therapeutics for the public to “heal themselves from chronic issues and diseases.” She also states on her website that she is involved with Take Back Our Schools, a conser vative group based in Guilford County that has mobilized around CRT, book bannings and anti-LGBTQ+ stances. Smith explains that she became involved in politics in 2020 due to “tyrannical overreach” by the government.

Smith also has a dedicated page on her

website for “alternative information” where she cites fringe websites that “give another view of what is going on in the world.”

District 59 Jon Hardister (R, i)

House Majority Whip Jon Hardis ter is running for his sixth term in office. Hardister has risen through the ranks over the years after first being elected in 2013 by being a rare NC Republican who works across the aisle with his Democratic colleagues, sometimes voting in favor of bills sponsored by Democrats.

However, Hardister has his fair share of conservative bills including the Don’t Say Gay bill, which he backed earlier this year and would have banned the instruction of sexual orientation or gen der identity from kindergarten to third grade. Another bill that he sponsored would have let parents opt out from vaccines and sex education for their kids.

Sherrie Young (D)

Like we mentioned in the spring, candidate Sherrie Young has minimal online presence when it comes to her run for state house. During a candidate forum with Mount Zion Baptist Church on Oct. 11, Young said that expanding healthcare access for the elderly, increasing voting rights and protecting abortion access are top priorities for her.

“I’m the person that will bring all of the real to the table,” Young said. “What I mean by that is I would like to bring ev erything that is happening in the homes that people do not discuss actually to the polls, actually to the legislative [sic], all the way through Congress to under stand and know that we have to bridge that gap…”

Her personal Facebook page notes that she went to Northeast Guilford High School and supports small businesses.

YOUR SHERIFF’S ACCOMPLISHMENTS

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AGENCY ACCREDITATION - CALEA COMMUNITY RESOURCE UNIT (CRU) SHERIFF’S COMMUNITY ROUNDTABLE RE-ENTRY PROGRAM SWORN & NON-SWORN ON THE JOB TRAINING CONTINUED EQUITABLE EMPLOYMENT PRACTICES

District 60

Cecil Brockman (D, i)

Democrat Rep. Cecil Brockman is running for his fifth term in office. Brockman is focused on investing in local higher education to bolster the economy as well as funding public education. He supports expanding Medicaid and more transparency when it comes to prescription drug costs. As an openly bisexual member of the state legislature, Brockman has sup ported LGBTQ+ rights and sponsored bills that seek to prevent hate crimes.

Brockman has also supported bills that would increase accountability for police who shoot and kill people including changes to the state’s body-worn camera footage law. He stated that “the current state law banning abortion after 20 weeks should remain,” in his responses to the N&O.

Bob Blasingame (R)

No information about this candidate could be found online.

District 62

John Faircloth (R, i)

Rep. John Faircloth is running for his seventh term in the state house. A former High Point Police chief and city council member, Faircloth is one of the more conservative members of the house. This legislative session, he sponsored HB 453, also known as the “Human Life Nondiscrimination Act/No Eugen ics,” which would have targeted patients by preventing them from getting abortions based on their supposed reasons for doing so.

Faircloth also supported anti-immigration bills and a bill that would have allowed the issuance of lifetime concealed handgun permits. All three bills died in committee.

Brandon Gray (D)

This is Brandon Gray’s second time running against Faircloth.

His first run in 2020 ended in defeat when he lost to Faircloth by less than five percentage points. Now Gray is back with a similar platform to the one he ran on two years ago.

An openly gay candidate, Gray states that expanding affordable healthcare, funding public schools, raising the minimum wage, building affordable housing and investing in renewable energy as his top priorities. He

states that he supports reproductive rights and legaliz ing medical marijuana as well.

Gray currently serves as the Guilford County Demo cratic Party’s vice chair and is on the state Democratic Party Executive Committee.

District 72

Amber Baker (D, i)

A WSSU graduate, Rep. Amber Baker received her doctorate from Ohio State University. She is a past principal at Kimberley Park School and is finishing up her first term in District 72. As the incumbent, Baker has introduced or sponsored more than 200 bills including many schoolwide proposals such as adding nurses to each school, expansion of pre-K funds and restoring benefits to teachers and retirees.

If reelected, Baker says “it is critical that the NC Democrats protect the veto. Access to reproductive healthcare, defending voting rights, and expanding Medicaid MUST be protected and prevent the Repub licans from steamrolling their agenda.” Endorsed by Vote Pro Choice, Baker “will continue to fight for the women to have the freedom to make medical decisions pertaining to their bodies.”

Shelton Stallworthy (R)

Shelton Stallworthy is a “a wife, a mother and ex-equestrian with a political habit that lead to a local house race.” A Trump-supporting conservative who is staunchly pro-life, even in the case of rape, Stallworthy was inspired by government mandates during the COVID-19 shutdowns to run for office.

Her campaign website contains a few blog posts that state her unapologetic conservative beliefs including objections to critical race theory, stances against laws promoting gender theory in schools and a belief against public health mandates that infringe upon personal freedoms.

District 74

Jeff Zenger (R, i)

Rep. Jeff Zenger is a former town councilperson of Lewisville and the owner of a construction busi ness. He defeated Dan Besse, who is now running for Forsyth Coun ty Commissioner, in 2020 and is running for his second term.

A “ principled conservative,” Zenger believes in a small role in government with a focus on decisiveness from local leadership.

While in office, he has been the sponsor of many bills that were proposed by conservatives as a result of COVID-19 mandates such as increasing penalties for rioters and “election integrity,” but has also support ed arts funding of the Stevens Center and property acquisition of the Shallow Ford area of the Yadkin.

Carla Catalán Day (D) Carla Catalán Day moved to Forsyth County with her family in the 1990s, attending Mead owlark Middle School and graduating from West Forsyth High School. Day is a registered environmental health specialist and owns a consulting agency in Winston-Salem.

The top priorities of her campaign include expanding Medicaid, funding public schools and increasing sup port for social services. As a working-class mother, Day says she understands the feeling of canceling a child’s medical appointment due to not being able to afford the service. She supports teachers when they say they need reduced classroom sizes and school supplies. Day fully supports the Leandro plan and increasing NC educators’ salaries to the national average of $63,645.

GUILFORD COUNTY RACES

Guilford County Sheriff

Danny Rogers (D, i) Democratic incumbent Sheriff Danny Rogers has served since 2018. Prior to that, he worked in the Guilford County Detention Center from 1985-87 and as a High Point Police officer from 1987-90. He also worked in the Guilford County Sheriff’s Office from 1990-93.

During his first term, Rogers accomplished getting the department a CALEA accreditation, a national standard which includes having comprehensive and written directives, community relationship-building and independent review.

If re-elected, he said he would continue to focus his efforts on reducing crime, eliminating drug and gang activity, combating sex trafficking, reducing recidivism, preventing domestic violence and addressing mental health concerns inside and outside of the detention centers. He said that staffing is his biggest concern and that he doesn’t believe in defunding the police but said he supports increased transparency through roundta bles.

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Phil Byrd (R)

Phil Byrd spent his 30-year career in law enforcement with the Guilford County Sheriff’s Office, retiring in 2014 at the rank of captain. During his three decades, he commanded the personnel and training division, internal affairs division, school resource officers division and field operations division. Byrd said if elected, he would focus on transparency and increasing depart mental morale. Byrd also disagrees with defunding the police, stating that, “the fact is we must have police in our communities.”

He advocated for changing the dy namics of policing through community policing, something he said has been forgotten.

Guilford County Commission

At-large

Kay Cashion (D, i)

Kay Cashion has held the seat since 2004 and told TCB that her 17 years of experience have helped her “get a good understanding of priorities.”

She has served on multiple budget com mittees, including the county’s internal budget and the joint school and county budget committee.

She said the county should spend more money on infrastructure, broadband ac cess, homelessness issues and behavioral health services, including transitional housing for women with children who are in recovery.

Alan Branson (R)

Alan Branson served as a county commissioner from 2012-20 when he narrowly lost his re-election bid to Democratic

newcomer Mary Beth Murphy. Branson said that during his tenure he helped lower county taxes, something he would push for if re-elected.

His priorities include increasing safety and security within the school system, Branson said. As such, he said he is not in support of defunding law enforce ment and said that “they need more money, not less.”

District 2

Alan Perdue (R, i)

Incumbent Alan Perdue has repre sented District 2 since first elected in 2014. Perdue mentioned that one of his pri orities includes making sure that county departments that provide essential ser vices are adequately staffed. This draws from Perdue’s experience as the former county Emergency Services Director and his time as a volunteer firefighter. He also noted that maintaining infra structure while keeping property taxes low is important for him.

Paul Meinhart (D)

Democrat Paul Meinhart worked as an aide to NC House Rep. Pricey Harrison from 2004-16 and has experience lobby ing lawmakers. Some of the topics that he is passionate about include envi ronmental/sustainability, social justice, equality, animal rights and fair/afford able housing issues.

If elected, Meinhart said that he would also bring his professional experience working as a state-licensed general con tractor to the role.

“I have a keen insight into zoning and development issues, housing issues and codes and ordinances,” he said.

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District 3

Derek Mobley (D)

Democrat Derek Mobley current ly works as a quantitative analyst, building mathematical models to predict how customers’ financial choices will affect the company. Mobley said that combatting generational poverty and violent crime are at the top of this list. He also said he wants to invest more in public schools and in first responders to alleviate the issues listed above. He also sees affordable housing and substance abuse as issues to tackle but said that job training and education programs for youth could help with those.

Pat Tillman (R)

Pat Tillman currently serves as the school board member for Dis trict 3, a seat he won in 2016. As a school board member, Till man said that one of his priorities is funding the schools. He said that funding career academies, which provide training for stu dents in areas such as health science, manufacturing and IT, will help to “reimagine public education.”

In terms of budgeting, Tillman said he would want funding to be focused on three areas: health and hu man services, education and public safety.

District 7

Frankie T. Jones Jr. (D, i)

Incumbent Frankie T. Jones, Jr. was first appointed to the District 7 seat after incumbent Carolyn Coleman, who had held the seat since 2005, passed away in late January.

Jones said that his priorities are affordable housing, economic de velopment, education and health and human services. He said the county should explore diverse housing op tions and solutions including having more streamlined and consistent property permitting regulations. Jones is also focused on funding the health department, which would help communities affected by infant mortality and hypertension.

Kenny Abbe (R)

According to Kenny Abbe’s candidate website, the Republican candidate supports transparen cy in government, the Second Amendment, tax cuts, funding ed ucation and smaller government.

Abbe notes that he would not

support tax increases and is actively against mask man dates and vaccine mandates.

Guilford County Board of Education At-large

Demetria Carter (R)

Republican candidate Demetria Carter has made fighting against critical race theory a central part of her platform.

During a candidate forum at Mount Zion Baptist Church in Greensboro, Carter said that she lived through segregation and Jim Crow but that in today’s society, racism is no longer an issue.

“Racism was rampant, but when I look around today having grown up in this country and seen all of the progress that we’ve made, I am aghast at hearing peo ple say, ‘We still live in a racist society,’” Carter said. “No, we don’t. CRT is a pernicious fraud and I want to say that outright, and if you don’t like what I’ve said, please don’t vote for me.”

However, Carter did say that she supports teaching African-American history in schools.

Alan Sherouse (D)

Alan Sherouse attended graduate divinity school at Wake Forest University and currently works as senior pastor at First Baptist Church in Greensboro.

Sherouse said that his biggest con cerns facing GCS are the inequi table outcomes, empowering and trusting teachers and using money from the latest bond to renovate and construct school facilities.

He supports anti-bullying practices in schools and the hiring of more school counselors to decrease violence.

Sherouse said that CRT has been “used as a rallying cry to energize opposition” and that “understanding the difficult parts of our history, especially around racism and racial injustice, is part of how we ensure we do not repeat it.”

District 2

Amanda Cook (D)

Along with her opponent, Crissy Pratt, Amanda Cook is the only candidate with an education back ground running for school board.

From 2008-17, she taught in Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Schools as a dance educator and also monitored in-school suspension.

According to Cook, the biggest issues facing the school district are the staffing crisis, school nutrition and dis jointed communication between parents, staff, students and the school board.

If elected, she said she would be a strong advocate for educators.

“When the teachers who are on the ground, equipped with the knowledge of their students and communities are not empowered to teach responsively, we are going to continue to fail,” she said. “No teacher should be si lenced when it comes to providing a safe and rigorous education.”

Crissy Pratt (R)

Pratt has a bachelor’s degree in elementary education and a masters in instructional technol ogy. She has worked in Title I schools in Washington, DC, and helped develop a financial literacy curriculum for Johns Hopkins University.

Some of Pratt’s primary focuses if elected are the lack of consequences for disruptive students and poor aca demic performance. As a solution, Pratt said she would push for a “revision of discipline policy.”

Unlike some of the Republican candidates, Pratt acknowledged that critical race theory is not being taught in Guilford County Schools. She supports teaching “an accurate version of history that reflects our country’s painful reality…”

Additionally, Pratt said she supports reduction of stan dardized testing, a return to a 180-day school calendar and a focus on early reading intervention.

District 4

Linda Welborn (R, i)

Incumbent Linda Welborn has been on the school board since 2012. During her tenure, Wel born has been critical of the past superintendent, argued against mask mandates and voted against revisions to the short-term suspensions policy. If elected to another term, Welborn said she would focus on teacher retention by hiring more teacher assistants, social workers and counselors to lighten the load of educators.

Welborn supports limiting certain books in schools and also spoke out against CRT, stating that it is “demor alizing” to children because it “focuses on oppression identities.”

Deon Clark (D)

Democrat Deon Clark is currently pastor of Equation Church in Greensboro and has a history volunteering

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in the school sys tem: He has served as president and vice president of lo cal PTAs and most recently served on Guilford Coun ty’s reopening of schools task force.

Clark said that he’s running for District 2 to tackle learning loss, teacher and staff shortages, safety concerns and mental health challenges. He also stated that politicians are using critical race theory to sow division.

“Some politicians will use scare tactics to try and divide us along racial lines,” he said. “Schools should be a place where we come together.”

District 6

Khem Irby (D, i)

Democrat Khem Irby has been on the school board since first being elected in 2018.

During her tenure, she has pushed back against Take Back Our Schools and supported the short-term suspen sion appeals process.

Prior to joining the school board in 2018, Irby worked for four years as an After-School Care Enrichment Services teacher at Pearce Elementary as well as a substitute teacher.

If re-elected, Irby said she would support new Superintendent Whitney Oakley and collaborate with local and state government partners to address inequities in education.

She supports LGBTQ+ rights and doesn’t engage in arguments against CRT.

Tim Andrew (R)

For the past two decades, Tim An drew has worked in logistics and project management, skill sets he said would be useful on the school board.

I am a project-management profession

al formally trained in seeing projects through to completion within budget, time and scope,” he said.

His priorities if elected include increas ing test scores and the quality of educa tion and addressing staffing shortages.

He said that critical race theory means different things to different people and said that if “critical race theory is sim ply teaching the uglier parts of Amer ican history, then [he] will agree with you that history should be taught.”

FORSYTH COUNTY RACES

Forsyth County Sheriff Bobby Kimbrough (D. i)

Sheriff Bobby F. Kimbrough, Jr. was elected to office in 2018. A Forsyth County native, Kimbrough’s law enforcement career has spanned almost 40 years. As an arson investigator, a WSPD officer and as a special agent with the DEA, Kimbrough’s experience has suited him to the various aspects of being sheriff.

While Kimbrough has often run on a platform of transparency, that commit ment was put to the test when deputies killed John Neville, while he was being held in the Forsyth County jail. In the aftermath, weeks of protests and occupations by protesters called for ac countability from the sheriff’s office and Kimbrough who was slow to respond Kimbrough has also been criticized for the department’s dealings with ICE.

Ernie Lebya (R)

Ernie Lebya first ran for sheriff back in 2018 when he lost in the Republi can primary to Wil liam Schatzman.

Leyba has worked in law enforcement for more than years. Formerly of the LAPD, Lebya, worked with drug and gang units, among others.

In a video on his campaign Facebook

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page, Leyba says that one of his priorities is increasing police presence in schools, making sure there are one to two officers in each school. He also proposes imple menting metal detectors in all schools.

Data has shown that an increase in police in schools “have been linked with exacerbating racial disparities in justice involvement and youth being driven deeper into the juvenile and adult criminal justice systems,” according to the Brookings Institute Leyba is also concerned with recruitment within the sheriff’s office and would start by looking at military schools and increasing deputy pay. He said he would also increase patrol within the county and implement a citizen’s patrol, similar to a neighborhood watch.

Forsyth County District Attorney

Jim O’Neill (R, i)

Appointed by Governor Perdue in 2009, Jim O’Neill is currently serving his third term as district attorney.

O’Neill touts one of the highest conviction rates for sexual assault crimes and made headlines when he took advantage of NC’s Second Chance Act and expunged the records of 30,000 offenders who were prosecuted as adults while juve niles, under a previous law.

O’Neill’s opposition to review the case of Kalvin Mi chael Smith’s conviction in the brutal assault of Jill Marker caused controversy until a judge released Smith in 2016 due to his attorney’s error in releasing evidence that would have shortened his sentence. The death of John Neville in the Forsyth County jail did result in O’Neill prose cuting five detention officers and a nurse — only the nurse was indicted.

While expressing support for Neville’s family, O’Neill also took the opportunity during a press conference to speak out against defunding the police and to threaten Black Lives Matter protesters with prosecution.

Denise Hartsfield (D)

Denise Hartsfield has a long histo ry as an attorney for Legal Aid, an assistant county attorney handling child support and abuse cases and a district court judge.

Hartsfield thinks that low-level drug offenses overload the docket and should be treated as public health issues, not crime. Hartsfield would also like to investigate the causes of recidivism and revolving door policies of the justice system.

By looking at gang violence and gun crimes from a “national” lens, Hartsfield believes collaboration with other city and county officials is imperative. In 2012, Hartsfield was accused of fixing traffic tickets for family and acquaintances and the NC Supreme Court suspended her from the bench for two and a half months, according to the Winston-Salem Journal. Hartsfield is past president of the Forsyth County Bar, and serves on the boards of H.O.P.E., the Carter G. Woodson School of Challenge and the Delta Fine Arts Center.

Forsyth County Commission At-large (choose 1)

Dan Besse (D)

Dan Besse served for 19 years as a Winston-Salem City councilmem ber, successfully running for election and re-election five times. If elected to county commission, Besse said he will primarily be concerned with the public.

“Public schools, public health, public safety, affordable housing development,” he said. “[T]here must also be investment in other com munity safety programs, including violence interrup tion, mental health services, neighborhood investment, education and poverty reduction programs.”

Besse has also made the gaps in equity between white and POC-areas of the county a priority.

“Let me be clear,” he says on his website. “Our Black and Hispanic/ Latino neighbors, fam ilies, and children, and other historically un derserved communities whether inside or outside of city limits, must no longer be left out or left behind. We must bridge the gaps in opportunity for all.”

Terri Mzarek is a self-described “political activist” who has been a prominent figure in local Republican pol itics the past five years. In 2020, she ran for a seat on the board of commissioners and finished fourth. She served as president of the Forsyth County Republican Women in 2021 and has managed other Republican campaigns.

An avid supporter of former President Donald Trump, Mrazek was in Washington, DC on Jan. 6 but said she opted to stay on the bus her group rode from Win ston-Salem rather than attend the insurrection within the Capitol, due to the cold weather.

Mzarek is concerned with the county budget, among other things. “I feel it is important to know your communities and the issues,” she says. “Spending less money, if not needed, create lower taxes.”

Mzarek believes that she is prepared to handle the du ties of having a seat on the Board of Commissioners.

“The key is not how much money you spend, but how you balance the budget.”

“Finding revenue sources other than property taxes is a key to success.”

District A (Choose 2)

Tonya McDaniel (D, i)

Tonya D. McDaniel was first elected as a county commissioner for District A in 2018. Citing the budget

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she has overseen as a commis sioner, she’s looking forward to helping put more resources in her community. She plans to work alongside state representatives and school board members to ensure a cohesive budget. “I am also looking forward to recognizing our LGBTQ+ com munities in the future and continuing the work on sup porting the state goal of 100 percent clean, renewable energy by 2050 and creation of green jobs,” she said.

Michael Owens (R)

TCB attempted to contact Owens multiple times for this story and received no response. All informa tion is sourced from his campaign website, and other media, where noted.

A lifelong resident of NC, Michael Owens has lived in Winston-Salem for over 20 years. From his website: “I didn’t go to medical school, and I’ve never owned my own business. I’ve spent my adult life working regular jobs, just like everyone else.”

A staunch believer in the Constitution, Owens believes the Affordable Care Act “is not something the federal government has any Constitutional authority to legis late.”

Owens also believes that education is strictly a state issue and that the federal Dept. of Education is uncon stitutional.

Reginald Reid (R)

TCB attempted to contact Reid multiple times for this story and received no response. All informa tion is sourced from other media, where noted.

Reginald Reid is a Forsyth County resident who has run in previous elections, most notably, the NC Senate in 2012 and NC House races in 2018. He lost both races by a landslide. There is currently no campaign page or social media page that definitively belongs to Reid.

Malishai Woodbury (D)

Voters will likely recognize Malishai Woodbury, who has served on the WS/FCS Board of Education for almost four years, three of those years as board chair. Woodbury thinks schools are still insufficiently funded, pre-K accessibility needs attention and her experience on the school board helps inform

her belief.

“The county should invest more money in increasing educator pay supplements, pre-K accessibility, and restorative juvenile justice, to name a few,” she said.

“I think Forsyth County should spend less money on luxurious amenities for certain parts of the county.”

Winston-Salem/Forsyth County School Board

At-large (Choose 3)

Deanna Kaplan (D, i)

Kaplan is the only incumbent running for re-election in this year’s at-large school board primary election. She won the seat in 2018 and currently serves as board chair. She is proud of all the great strides she has made as chair, “in bringing our board together to focus on children first and providing the best education possible.”

If re-elected, she plans to focus on teacher recruit ment and retention, adequate pay to attract the best teachers, competitive pay for support staff, custodians, cafeteria workers and bus drivers, learning loss, thirdgrade literacy and closing the achievement gap. Her biggest push will be to increase state funding so WS/ FCS can attract and keep “our most valuable resourc es, our teachers.”

Sarah Absher (R)

Sarah Absher is a nurse who, like many candidates, is a political newcomer this election cycle. “It became very clear to me during COVID that par ents don’t have the voice they should when it comes to public schools,” she said. “The biggest issue that faces our children is the lack of focus on academic rigor and career readiness.”

Absher is also concerned with transparency.

“I would push on day one for an in-depth, indepen dent audit of the school budget including all third-par ty contracts,” she said. “Then I would make sure those findings were published and easily accessible.”

Absher feels that her varied experiences as a nurse will be beneficial to the school board, coming as an outsider.

“The great thing about representative democracy is it allows people from a variety of backgrounds to partici pate in the political process.”

On critical race theory, Absher said, “We need to teach all aspects of history the good, the bad, and the ugly. But any curricula that teaches that all of America is systemically racist and that skin color dictates one’s status as either victim or oppressor is simply incorrect,

overly simplistic and should not be taught to our pub lic-school students.”

Sabrina Coone-Godfrey (D)

Sabrina Coone-Godfrey has been an active volunteer in WS/FCS for the last nine years. She has two children in the district, both at Title 1 Schools. Her campaign focuses on pushing for more lobbying for funding and securing grants. Additionally, she wants to free up teachers’ time to get them back to teaching.

She feels educators currently have too many demands related to teaching for the sole purpose of tests. If elected, she wants to let teachers transition back to working with students directly. She told TCB she’s also concerned about the current staffing crisis in WS/ FCS. She feels providing funding and resources to teachers will allow them to better address academic, social, and emotional needs of students.

Allen Daniel (R)

Daniel volunteered in the WS/ FCS school district from 2010-15 while maintaining a long-term career in software development.

In 2015, he left that career for a one-year internship at the Early College of Forsyth for licensure as a middle- or high school math teacher. Daniel taught during the 2016-17 school year and was a sub in fall 2017. He is currently a math tutor, both privately and for a local non-profit organi zation.

His campaign focuses on giving a voice to everyone in the system who feels unheard, addressing an ineq uitable distribution of resources, both human and financial, and holding every student accountable for their behavior. Regarding student accountability, he feels schools are currently facing an issue with a lack of discipline and those students who want to learn cannot do so due to constant disruptions.

Regina Garner (L)

TCB attempted to contact Garner multiple times for this story but did not hear back. All informa tion is sourced from her campaign website and other media, where noted.

Regina Garner “never had any expectations or aspirations in becoming a politician or serving on a school board” before she decided to run.

In Feb. 2021, Garner played a part in the disruption at a school board meeting when a national QA non-aligned group encouraged conservative activists

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across the country to “serve” notices at school board meetings with frivolous liability insurance scares. Garner’s platform includes a “complete overhaul” of the school system without the influence of “bribes” like ESSER funds (Elemen tary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief) to force mask-wearing. Staunchly against the promotion of social and emotional learning and critical race theory, Garner believes that schools should “leave the parenting to parents” and that these programs promote racial division and gender confusion.

Michael Hardman (R)

According to a video posted on Hardman’s campaign Facebook page, he attended schools in the WS/FCS district and graduated from Mt. Tabor. He studied civil engineering at Virginia Tech and is a licensed civil engi neer who works for a local construction company, at which he helps build schools.

Based on Hardman’s campaign website, he plans to focus on teaching basic subjects without political agenda or bias, reducing the amount of screen time that students experience for school and homework, teaching students about Ameri can exceptionalism, restoring high expectations and empowering administrators to enforce behavioral standards. He will also push to make curriculum and lesson materials easily available to parents online so they are able to make per sonal health decisions for their families.

Richard Watts (D) Watts has served Forsyth County public education for over 32 years. During that time, he was a teacher at Wiley Middle School, an assistant principal at South west Elementary School, and principal of Kimberley Park Elementary, Julian Gibson Elementary School and Winston-Salem Preparatory Acade my School. He was named Principal of the Year twice. He received an education specialist degree from Appalachian State University, master’s degree from Appalachian State University and bachelor’s degree from Wake Forest University. His platform focuses on safety for students and staff, creating a sense of community in schools, academic achievement and closing the achieve ment gaps, building relationships and respect within schools through increasing morale, and sustainable funding.

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District 2 (Choose 4)

Leah Crowley (R, i)

Leah Crowley successfully won a District 2 board seat in 2018, coming in second behind Lida Calvert Hayes, who is not running for re-election. Over the years, Crowley has volunteered as a PTA board member, coach, mentor, and substitute teacher. While on the board, Crowley has been a supporter of school choice and continues to push for options for parents. If reelected Crowley plans to focus on more support for teachers to address reading and math proficiency and equity in school facilities and resources.

On her website and campaign Facebook page, Crow ley regularly talks about the importance of reading. When it comes to the wave of book-bannings across the country, she said, “children should have access to as many books as possible that are age appropriate (no pornography). Books that feature a non-traditional family (i.e. two moms) is not pornography.”

Robert Barr (R)

Robert Barr formerly served as an at-large member of the school board from 2014-18. He lost his bid for reelection in 2018 as a wave of Democratic female candidates won all three seats. Ac cording to his campaign website, he taught at Moore Elementary School, Paisley Middle School, and Kernersville Mid dle School. Additionally, he worked as a curriculum coordinator at Atkins Middle School. He received a master’s in education from Wake Forest University and his undergraduate degree from Winston-Salem State University. His campaign focuses on academics, paren tal involvement, empowering teachers and inspiring students to learn.

Jennifer Castillo (D)

Jennifer Castillo is a WS/FCS graduate who founded the Jennifer Castillo Foundation in 2020, an organization that “aims to increase civic engagement, en trepreneurship, and philanthropy among the Latinx community in Winston-Salem, NC.”

If elected, Castillo plans to focus on safe schools, from protecting classrooms to mental health assessments, increasing teacher pay and resources, and being an advocate for homeless students and partnering with agencies that can best assist school resources. “Having worked with the most vulnerable in our community for over 10 years, I am passionate about the issues affecting our staff and students,” she said on her website. “Homelessness, poverty, gang vio lence, legal issues, family violence, and immigration concerns-these are all things that are affecting our communities and spilling over into our schools.”

Stanley Elrod (R) Elrod has served more than 30 years in the WS/FCS system with a range of positions that include teacher, coach, athletic director, assistant principal and principal. His campaign focuses on how his past work as an educator and ad ministrator helps him understand the struggles educators are currently dealing with daily. His goals focus on supporting teachers and helping students get back to pre-pandemic learning.He shared that students, parents, and teachers need to evaluate losses and work together to find a solution.

From his site: “All students in our system are equally important and it is our job to make them feel that way. They are all different, they are all special, and it is our job to teach each one of them.”

Steve Wood (R)

Steve Wood, a Tobaccoville/ Pfafftown native, served in the state legislature from 1985-2005, with two terms as House Educa tion Chair. He attended Forsyth County Public Schools and later received a masters in history from UNCG, a master of divinity at Houston Graduate School of Theology and a doctor ate at Luther Rice University in Georgia. He taught history and served as assistant academic dean at his alma mater John Wesley College.

Wood believes public schools are moving away from basic premises and “are embracing the ‘woke’ political agenda.” He said he wants to move the system “back to the basics of literacy and numeracy and away from social engineering.”

Wood also wants to reconfigure the school board.

“WS/FCS should consider recommending that our legislature eliminate the cumbersome and anachro nistic multi-member school board districts in favor of single member districts and limited countywide elected board members,” he said.

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NOVEMBER 3–6 | 2022

EDITORIAL

We should all be unaffiliated voters

On the cusp of this year’s midterm election — the Most Important Election Of Our Lifetimes, most candidates will tell you — we want to take a moment to acknowledge the most important trend in North Carolina politics this year, perhaps even this decade.

It happened in March: Unaffil iated voters became the largest subset of the electorate in the Old North State, and the gap between those who ally with a political par ty and those who do not has since widened even more.

As of Oct. 15, just shy of 2.5 million North Carolinians are reg istered with the Democratic Party; Republicans number just north of 2.2 million. But more than 2.6 mil lion are registered as independent, or “Unaffiliated” in the state’s official language. And no body, really, knows who they are.

Surely a lot of them are con servatives who see RINOs everywhere in the legacy GOP operation; perhaps just as many are young voters who distrust all party politics; many must be disillusioned progressives who can no longer relate to the Dem ocrats; some may acknowledge the fallacy in thinking one ideology can come up with solutions to all our society’s ills.

But no one has any hard num bers on this, and it’s blowing

electoral politics all to hell in NC, where even seasoned candidates and their fixers can’t read the tea leaves clearly.

It’s a good thing. When one registers to a political party, they are basically saying, “I will vote for you candidate no matter what.” Not always, of course, but enough to base election math on it. The converse is also true: The unaffil iated voter is saying, “I will vote for whomever I agree with the most about X.” The X, of course, is a moving target. Could be gun rights. Could be abortion access.

And the unaffiliated voters are voting! Of the 36,197 votes cast by mail before the cutoff day on Tuesday, 12,057 of them came from unaffiliated voters, compared to 5,916 Repub lican and 18,153 Democrats.

What does that mean? Nobody knows!

Regardless of its detrimental effect on election handicapping, we all benefit from large numbers of unaffiliated voters. Party registration is one of the mechanisms for partisan gerrymandering, remember. Party politics are more divisive than col lege basketball in our state. And when politicians can no longer rely on political parties to get them elected, it forces them to consider their positions more closely.

It’s hard for candidates to play to the room when they cannot get a read.

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No one has any hard numbers on this, and it’s blowing NC electoral politics all to hell.
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CULTURE

The Queer Fear Film Fest expands in its second year by Autumn Karen

We’ve seen it all before.

Lumbering male killers chasing scantily clad young women up narrow staircases to their bloody end. Wholesome teenag ers drive out into the woods to party only to find the car won’t start as the monster closes in.

Horror films have a reputation for having a certain narrowness with tradi tional tropes like the masked killer and the final girl long been the hallmark of scare films.

In the last few years, an increasing number of films have expanded to include innovative structures and diverse storytelling that represents the genre’s broad fanbase. Enter the Queer Fear Film Fest, based in the Triad and now in its second year, as a unique film festival which celebrates all the pos sibilities of zombies, monsters, apocalyp tic happenings and dark intentions.

Festival founder Tiffany Albright conceived QFF as a way to bridge the divide between her two passions - queer culture and horror - highlighting the wide spectrum of experiences that each can encompass. This year, QFF saw a 50 percent increase in the number of submissions over last year. The festival is also adding an in-person component through its partnership with a/perture theater, which will include Q&A sessions, and cash prizes for winning films.

QFF defines both queerness and horror in broad terms, allowing for the inclusion of filmmakers and genres that might not be welcomed at other horror gatherings. Films must either have LGBTQIA+ content or have creators who identify as part of the community, but they can be in any horror subgenre and of any length. This year, all but one film is created by a queer identifying creative team.

“Film is so special because it’s a collaborative process,” Albright says. “In both queer and horror, we rely on each other to make the cut and also to exist in the world.”

The 19 films being screened at a/perture this weekend include everything from abstract doomsday horror to short thrillers, from a full-length, campy slasher to a heartfelt animated short. Creators range from those who have roots right here in the Triad all the way to those grounded in Korean tradi tions.

Albright shares that, though NC filmmakers tend to leave the state to find work, several of the pieces part of QFF maintain a connection with the area. An accomplished independent filmmaker in her own right, she understands the challenges of creating outside of mainstream studios and away from Hollywood. Raising the profile of all included groups is part of the longterm vision of the festival, which hopes to expand.

Though horror can seem like it’s only for those with a strong stomach, QFF has been curated to give everyone a chance to enjoy spine tingling thrills and high quality filmmaking. Here, knee-slapping comedies live harmoniously alongside occult gore. Each of the blocks of films appeals to a different element. TCB had the chance to preview several of the films, getting a taste of what audiences can expect from QFF this year.

Friday night: Block 1

On Friday night, Block 1 offers lighter fare that leans on emotion over en trails while still being slightly serious and seriously entertaining.

“What Being a Woman Means to Me” is a 27-minute short directed by North Carolina native Ezra Brain that explores the nuanced and often horrifical ly anxious inner journey of transgender identity. Challenging and deeply personal, this film is slow burning and at times deeply uncomfortable for the viewer thanks to a raw performance by actor Holly Gould. After a virtual showing as part of last year’s online QFF, the film is back this year to have its chance on the big screen.

Also showing in Block 1 is the emotive and lingering short “Night Waking.” Based on a short story by Benjamin Rosenbaum and directed by Shoshana Rosenbaum, this piece is an eight-minute crescendo that is powered by the breathtakingly resonant performance of star Marni Penning. Production designer and NC filmmaker Trystin Kier Francis will be in attendance at QFF to talk about this not-to-be-missed treasure.

In total, QFF will show seven spine tingling shorts as part of its Friday night offerings.

Saturday afternoon: Block 2

Block 2 on Saturday features the first full-length film for QFF, a campy horror comedy romp titled Mystery Solved

Written and directed by Tim Connolly, who also stars in this rolicking slash er adventure, this film keeps things fun while taking the audience through several unexpected twists. The stand out performance comes from Connolly himself, who steals the show with his authenticity and clear joy in the role. Though the pacing slows down towards the center of the movie, the last half hour offers gratifying payoffs that simul taneously challenge horror tropes while also satisfying even the most dedicated slasher fan.

Paired with a tongue-in-cheek short about a ghost who haunts her former roommate called “Gonna Haunt,” QFF has put together an easygoing and accessible afternoon for those who are more interested in fun than in nightmares.

Saturday evening: Block 3

Closing out QFF is the most intense content. Intended to elicit screams and sleepless nights, the 10 films in this section range from demonic posses sion to technological horror to monster sculptures that come to life. The world premiere of the horror/satire short “All the Way Down, This Time” takes place on Saturday night. Written by and starring North Carolina native and former UNCSA attendee Sophie Neff, who will be in attendance, this Michael Rogerson piece is 20 minutes of tauntly pulled emotional chords.

“All the Way Down, This Time” is a fierce, bone-chilling tale of three women who wind themselves into an intense “moon ritual” at a remote campsite. With electric performances by all three main actresses, it’s a film that hov ers on the edge of mystery and ferocity.

17 CULTURE | OCT. 2026, 2022
Find tickets and more info at aperturecinema.com/movies/queer-fear-film-festival A still from All the Way Down, This Time COURTESY PHOTO

SHOT IN THE

18 SHOT IN THE TRIAD | OCT. 2026, 2022
Flamingo situation at the Greensboro Science Center.
TRIAD
The Triad’s Finest Dining Guide For consideration, email brian@triad-city-beat.com

‘Packet and Go’ — it may ring a bell.

SUDOKU

19 PUZZLES | OCT. 2026, 2022
LAST WEEK’S ANSWERS: Across 1. “___ Good Men” (1992 film) 5. “Schitt’s Creek” Emmy winner Catherine 10. “Way more than necessary” 13. “Major” sky attraction 14. Mail-in ballot submitter 15. Author Lebowitz 16. Protection from flying pucks 18. Mystical presence 19. Historic Joan Crawford title role 21. “___ for Alibi” (Grafton novel) 22. British informant 23. “Uh-oh, better get ...” company 26. Used to be 29. Gets on one’s hind legs, with “up” 32. Actor’s hard-copy headshot, typically 35. Beavers’ sch. 36. Comedian Borg of “Pitch Perfect 2” 37. “Weird Al” Yankovic cult movie 38. Risk taker’s worry about a big decision, maybe 43. 2000 U.S. Open champion Marat 44. Funny twosome? 45. Boardroom bigwigs 46. No longer working (abbr.) 48. Marcel Marceau character 49. They may write independently about the press 55. Optimistic 56. Everywhere (or what Grover tried © 2022 Jonesin’ Crosswords (editor@jonesincrosswords.com) © 2022 Jonesin’ Crosswords (editor@jonesincrosswords.com) CROSSWORD
to teach by running a lot) 58. A single time 59. “The Crucible” setting 60. Having nothing to do 61. Feathery garb 62. Clear the DVR 63. Poses questions Down 1. Mo. with no major holidays 2. “Who’s it ___?” 3. “Ozark” actor Morales 4. Actor Eli of “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” 5. Do-___ (second chances) 6. Third follower, at times 7. Barely at all 8. Breathing, to an M.D. 9. “Argo” actor Alan 10. Long hauler’s itinerary 11. Mayor ___ (“My Little Pony” charac ter, fittingly) 12. TV chef Garten 15. Co-star of Kate and Jaclyn 17. “American ___” (Green Day album) 20. Big name in the Old West 23. “Let me in” sounds, perhaps 24. Tyler of “Archer” 25. Fruit drink at a taqueria 26. Chef Dufresne behind influential restaurant WD-50 27. Take ___ for the better
28. 1990-92 French Open winner 30. Body of morals 31. Slang for futures commodities like sugar and grains 33. #1 bud 34. Pester 39. T-shirt design Ben & Jerry’s sold in the 1990s 40. ___ Raymi (Inca-inspired festival in South America) 41. It started on September 8th, 2022 for King Charles III 42. Travel company that owns Vrbo 47. “___ Macabre” (Stephen King book) 48. Good-but-not-great sporting effort 49. Part of MSG 50. With “The,” Hulu series set in a Chicago restaurant 51. “___ Land” (Emma Stone movie) 52. Alloy sources 53. Farm country mailing addresses, for short 54. Bacteriologist Jonas 55. Take inventory? 57. Notes to follow do
10/21, 10/23 & 10/25 The Stevens Center of the UNCSA Winston-Salem, NC PiedmontOpera.org or 336.725.7101 Piedmont Opera presents the original Pretty Woman LA TRAVIATA Starring Ukrainian soprano Yulia Lysenko CItyBeatPrint.indd 2 10/5/2022 1:02:11 PM October 22 · 7:30 p.m. Tickets: $12; students $6 or free with ID or when accompanied by parent/guardian October 28 · 8 p.m. Featuring special guest DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY TOM ACKERMAN, UNCSA Featuring special guests RENATA JACKSON, UNCSA, AND COUNT ORLOK Marketplace Cinemas, 2095 Peters Creek Pkwy, Winston-Salem TICKETS AT RIVERRUNFILM.COM BEETLEJUICE NOSFERATU 100TH ANNIVERSARY SCREENING FREE AT MARKETPLACE CINEMAS

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