New memorial and nonprofit foundation to honor fallen Concord Police Officer, Rowan County native Jason Shuping The City filed necessary state and federal paperwork to establish a new nonprofit Concord Police Foundation to assist officers who are injured or killed in the line of duty and their families. (Source: City of Concord) By David Whisenant | February 23, 2021 at 12:02 PM EST - Updated February 23 at 12:02 PM
CONCORD, N.C. (WBTV) -
News release from the City of Concord: To honor the life of Concord Police Officer Jason Shuping the Concord City Council recently
approved a $100,000 budget amendment to fund a new Fallen Officer Memorial. The City also filed necessary state and federal paperwork to establish a new nonprofit Concord Police Foundation to assist officers who are injured or killed in the line of duty and their families.
Major Upgrades in the Works at Concord, N H s Municipal Airport : CEG
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Major upgrade planned at Concord airport
A front loader equipped with a plow works on clearing the runway at the Concord Airport on Wednesday. GEOFF FORESTER photos / Monitor staff
A front loader equipped with a plow works on clearing the runway at the Concord Airport on Wednesday, February 10, 2021. GEOFF FORESTER Monitor staff
The project is currently estimated to cost $2.5 million, which according to the city includes the demolition of the existing terminal (above), preparation of the building site, and construction of the new terminal. About $600,000 is expected to be made available from the Federal Aviation Administration.
Published: 2/14/2021 3:24:05 PM
David Rolla believes that as “one of the first impressions visitors get of the city,” the Concord airport has to create a more welcoming space.
A quiet political maneuver, an immediate ban, and a new effort to allow motorcycle riding on a frozen Concord pond
Jake Strong of Concord pulls a wheelie on his motorcycle as he heads out to the small oval at Hoit Road Marsh in Concord on Saturday, February 3, 2018. A group of motorcycle enthusiasts gather on Saturdays to race each other on the frozen marsh. GEOFF FORESTER
Motorcyclists drive on tracks plowed by snow plows on Hoit Road Marsh in Concord on Feb. 3, 2018.
Jeff Strong of Concord rides on a short oval track at the Hoit Road Marsh in Concord on Feb. 3, 2018. Monitor file photographs
How the Bay Area s biggest housing development fell apart in 2020
Adam Brinklow
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Overall views of the Concord Naval Weapons Station looking south towards the city of Concord, Calif. Weapons magazines are in the foreground, the city is off in the distance.Kim Kulish/Corbis via Getty Images
How do you kickstart a historically ambitious, multibillion-dollar housing development while the world’s economies remain paralyzed?
That’s the dilemma facing Concord after 2020, a year that not only dashed financial markets and upended everyday life across the Bay Area, but also wrecked this city’s critical redevelopment project at the Concord Naval Weapons Station, a huge disused military facility that could be its only means of significantly expanding housing stock.
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