WUNC aims to provide consistently high quality public service programming presented with integrity. Correcting our mistakes is an essential element of that integrity.
WUNC editors will determine when a mistake needs to be corrected or a story needs to be clarified. Digital versions of the story will be corrected or clarified and a note of the correction placed at the bottom of the text. Those stories will also appear on this page. Broadcast corrections will occur as soon as possible and/or at a similar time of day as the original broadcast at the discretion of WUNC editors.
To request a correction, please email news@wunc.org or call 919-445-9150 or 800-962-9862. Effective February 28, 2023.
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The new policy gives UNC System President Peter Hans a greater role in search committees for chancellors who lead public universities in North Carolina.
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The system developed and being implemented by Tyler Technologies is being blamed for wrongful arrests and unlawful detentions.
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The UNC-Chapel Hill School of Education has received a federal grant to train graduate students in school counseling in Person and Granville Counties. The students will then commit to work in rural school districts.
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This year marks the 45th anniversary of the Grateful Dead’s 1978 show in Durham that is regarded by many as one of the best stops on the tour.
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Republican state lawmakers say they’re working on legislation that would add new restrictions on abortion in North Carolina. But two months into this year’s session, they haven’t yet filed a single bill.
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The Neighborhood Energy Resiliency Project is helping about two dozen homeowners in Carrboro upgrade their homes for free to reduce energy usage and cost.
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Two new hospitals in Wake County, including a new behavioral health hospital, received regulatory approval. When the dust settles on any appeals, it would mean one of the fastest expansions of new hospitals in the county's history.
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Anderson Clayton, the new Chair of the NC Democratic Party, speaks with WUNC's Jeff Tiberii about her surprise victory, her focus for 2024, and a personal topic of much discussion: her age.
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An analysis by The Associated Press, Stanford University’s Big Local News project and Stanford education professor Thomas Dee found 230,000 students in 21 states who have gone missing from schools. They did not move out of state, and did not sign up for private school or home-school.
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Catherine Truitt sat down with WUNC education reporter Liz Schlemmer for a wide-ranging conversation. Truitt is entering her third year as North Carolina's state superintendent of public instruction.