Mercury Local Weekly Wrap-Up: Transit Taxes, Ballantyne Updates, Farmington Politics, and Clean Design

Coffee, Cursor, Chaos

It’s 10:30 on the Friday before Labor Day. My coffee is cooling, the cursor is blinking, and the week is stacked with more moving parts than a Farmington zoning map. That’s Mercury Local in a nutshell: one hand on the cup, the other juggling stories across Charlotte, Ballantyne, and Farmington.

Charlotte: Pennies, Power, and Primaries

In Charlotte, the one-cent transit tax stole the show. The P.A.V.E. Act lays out $19.4 billion over 30 years, with rail, buses, and roads fighting for slices of the pie. Add in a new transit authority, candidate stances, and a November referendum—it’s enough to keep lawyers, planners, and voters buzzing.

District politics got personal. Malcolm Graham’s profile pulled back the curtain on his West End priorities and committee record. In District 1, Danté Anderson faces a rematch with Charlene Henderson, with wages, housing, and transit on the line. District 3 turned into theater: the Black Political Caucus endorsement decided by a single vote. And yes, for those keeping score, the ABC board announced its Labor Day store hours.

Ballantyne: Pizza, Pilates, and Plastic Castles

Strolling Ballantyne doubled down on the everyday. Einstein Bros reminded us breakfast can stretch past noon, Libretto’s Pizzeria mixed Pilates with pies, and BounceU rolled out five new inflatables that promise chaos for birthday parents everywhere. It’s the Ballantyne rhythm: local businesses making the neighborhood tick while we scribble it down.

Farmington: Sidewalks and Arrest Logs

Up north, Farmington kept its committees busy. The High School Building Committee approved minutes and eyed September timelines, while the 1928 Building Committee argued costs versus preservation to the tune of $1.8 million. Sidewalk disputes dragged on, farmland preservation collided with development, and the Historic District Commission approved everything from church doors to solar panels.

And then came the arrest logs: DUIs at 3:16 a.m. on Route 6, shoplifting charges, trespassing bonds. Names, dates, times—less glamorous, more real. That’s Farmington.

Our Fiddling, Your Patience

If you noticed our sites looking different this week, you’re not imagining it. We keep fiddling with colors, graphics, and typography like insomniacs rearranging furniture. One week it’s Senate-inspired palettes, the next it’s an ’80s throwback. The point isn’t whimsy—it’s speed. Clean, light pages that load fast and respect your attention.

Building Toward Something Different

Mercury Local is still an experiment. We’re not betting on Facebook shares or Google crumbs. We’re betting on readers who want the truth of their town and local businesses that deserve better than the algorithm lottery. That’s the work—slow, stubborn, and fueled by coffee.


About the Author

I’m Peter Cellino, often powered by cold brew and a healthy disregard for bedtime. Find me on Bluesky at @pc51.bsky.social if you want to debate fonts, politics, or the wisdom of zoning boards. More of my restless notes live on our Mercury Local blog.


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© 2025 Mercury Local / Mercury Local
This article, “Mercury Local Weekly Wrap: Charlotte Transit Tax, Farmington Sidewalk Fights, Ballantyne Inflatables,” by Peter Cellino is licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0.

“Mercury Local Weekly Wrap: Charlotte Transit Tax, Farmington Sidewalk Fights, Ballantyne Inflatables”
by Peter Cellino, Mercury Local (CC BY-ND 4.0)

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