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The Durham staff of The News & Observer works the Bull City to dig up the news and tell its stories. Read here about insider stuff that fills their notebooks but doesn't always make the paper.
The Durham city council has set April 6 for a public hearing on the way it is elected.
"Let the public discourse begin," said elections director Mike Ashe.
By voting Monday night to hold the public hearing, the council began the process that could change Durham's council elections from a non-partisan primary and general election system to a non-partisan pluraity system.
That means holding one election instead of two — or three, when a runoff primary is needed.
Durham County Board of Elections chairman Ronald Gregory requested the change in a February letter to council members and Mayor Bill Bell.
According to Ashe, the switch would save taxpayers between $170,000 and $180,000 per municipal election year.
"This is purely a way to save money we don't have right now," Ashe told council members Monday.
"We don't believe this helps or hurts anyone, any group, any candidate," he said.
Read more about it in Wednesday's News & Observer.
Jim Wise is a Durham News/N&O reporter and columnist who follows city and county government land-use and neighborhood issues. He's author of "Durham: A Bull City Story" and "Durham Tales: The Morris Street Maple, the Plastic Cow, the Durham Day That Was and More ... "