NC teacher protest, WakeMed hospital merger and the Canes: The Triangle’s top stories
Friday brought major developments across North Carolina, from a massive teachers rally in Raleigh to a hospital merger that could reshape Triangle health care.
Here’s a recap of the top stories from The News & Observer on May 1, 2026.
• Teachers rally at Legislature: Thousands of educators, parents and supporters marched through downtown Raleigh in the “Kids Over Corporations” rally organized by the North Carolina Association of Educators, demanding higher pay, more school funding and higher corporate taxes. At least 22 school districts canceled classes as employees took the day off to attend.
Read more: Thousands from across NC join teachers protest in Raleigh
• WakeMed-Atrium merger: WakeMed announced plans to merge with Charlotte-based Atrium Health, part of Advocate Health, in a deal that would bring a $2 billion investment and 3,300 new jobs to Wake County over five years. State Treasurer Brad Briner raised concerns about reduced competition and called for regulatory scrutiny.
Read more: WakeMed moves to merge with Charlotte-based Atrium Health system
• Repeat offender on Raleigh streets: A Raleigh man with more than 40 convictions since 2010 has sparked discussion about public safety and mental health, with most sentences resulting in no additional jail time beyond credit for time served. Wake County District Attorney Lorrin Freeman cited the limitations of the justice system in handling individuals cycling through with mental illness.
Read more: Man has over 40 convictions — but keeps coming back to downtown Raleigh streets
• Inside an NC tobacco factory: Reynolds American hosted a tour of its 2 million-square-foot facility in Tobaccoville, which produces between 45 billion and 47 billion cigarettes annually. The visit highlighted the dissonance between the company’s economic significance and graphic health warnings displayed on international cigarette packs, including images of gangrenous limbs.
Read more: Inside an NC tobacco factory, where everything looks normal but the rotten foot
• First Target coming to Johnston County: Target will open its first Johnston County store on May 17 in Selma as an anchor tenant at the Eastfield development. The nearly 129,000-square-foot location will employ around 140 people and will feature an Apple at Target, CVS Pharmacy and Starbucks Café.
Read more: This Triangle county will get its first Target very soon
Sports
• Hansbrough Hall of Fame honor: Former UNC basketball star Tyler Hansbrough will be inducted into the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame on Friday night as part of a 10-member Class of 2026. Hansbrough, who led UNC to the 2009 national title, also expressed enthusiasm about new Tar Heels head coach Michael Malone.
Read more: UNC basketball legend talks about new head coach, NC Sports Hall of Fame honor
• Canes-Flyers playoff series set: The Carolina Hurricanes will host the Philadelphia Flyers in Game 1 of their second-round Stanley Cup playoff series Saturday at 8 p.m. at Lenovo Center, with ABC broadcasting. The Hurricanes swept Ottawa in the first round and went 3-0-1 against Philadelphia in the regular season.
Read more: NHL sets date for Hurricanes, Flyers second-round playoff series to begin
The summary points above were compiled with the help of AI tools and edited by journalists. The source reporting referenced above was written and edited entirely by journalists.
This story was originally published May 1, 2026 at 6:39 PM with the headline "NC teacher protest, WakeMed hospital merger and the Canes: The Triangle’s top stories."