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For years, conservatives have said Facebook operates with a deep anti-conservative bias and Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill did not waste the opportunity this week to grill CEO Mark Zuckerberg on the subject during congressional hearings intended to focus on the company's sharing of user data.
WASHINGTON — North Carolina sisters Lynette Hardaway and Rochelle Richardson were discussed in the congressional hearing with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg on Wednesday.
CONCORD – The city is mourning the death of one of its beloved sons this week, since the death of William T.J. “Jimmy” Murphey Saturday morning.
Services for Murphey will be at 1 p.m. Saturday, April 14, at St. James Lutheran Church, at the corner of Union Street South and Corban Avenue.
On Tuesday, March 27, U.S. Representative Richard Hudson (R-NC) hosted a roundtable discussion at Serenity House in Concord to meet with local leaders, local officials, law enforcement, health care professionals and members of the community fighting addiction to talk about ways to improve public health response efforts.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. - With April being a month of awareness for child abuse prevention, the grandmother of Kilah Davenport - whose death inspired Kilah's Law several years ago - is continuing to put a spotlight on the tough subject.
Leslie Davenport has her days, when dealing with the loss of her granddaughter Kilah nearly four years ago, is just too much to handle.
U.S. Rep. Richard Hudson (R-NC) notified local high schools he is now accepting entries from all interested Eighth District high school students for the 2018 Congressional Art Competition.
Concord — On Tuesday, Serenity House in Concord outside of Charlotte opened its doors to policymakers to discuss ways to tackle opioid addiction. In a roundtable with local leaders, Congressman Richard Hudson (NC-08) heard from administrators of the substance abuse rehabilitation center on their front-lines perspective.
CONCORD — U.S. Rep. Richard Hudson met with staff members of Serenity House in Concord Tuesday for a roundtable discussion about a nationwide crisis.
The topic was opioid addiction, a problem far too real for Cabarrus County, according to emergency service and law enforcement personnel who attended.

