Home Blog

Media, essential to self-government, need support

0

By Joy Franklin, Carolina Commentary

An unprecedented assault on the media by a sitting President and a landscape changed by technology continue to erode one of the pillars of self-government and community engagement. President Donald Trump recently endorsed Federal Communications Chair Brendan Carr’s threat to revoke broadcast licenses over news coverage of the U.S. Israeli war in Iran that he doesn’t like. The president wrote on Truth Social, “As I used to say in The Apprentice, FIRED.”


Carr, and presumably the President, know that actually revoking broadcast licenses would take years of legal wrangling and would likely be unsuccessful, but the threats cause harm nonetheless. By making unsupported accusations of network bias, Carr casts doubt on the accuracy of their reporting, especially among supporters of the administration. Such accusations fall into the same category as Trump’s “fake news” charges that have contributed to undermining American’s trust in all news platforms.

According to a Gallup poll conducted in September 2025, Americans who say they have a great deal of trust in the media reached a new low of 28 percent in 2025, down from 31 percent a year earlier. Another 36 percent say they have “not very much” trust in the media, while 34 percent say they have “none at all.” Trust in the media fell from 40% to 32% during the 2016 presidential campaign when Trump frequently tweeted critical or insulting comments about the media. Soon after his election in 2016, he began calling news stories he didn’t like “fake news.” His assault on the media has continued ever since.

Accurate information helps us make decisions about matters that affect our lives. But even if accurate information is available, if we can be convinced to doubt that information, we are far more vulnerable to a charismatic leader like Trump whose bravado convinces them he knows best and is acting in their interest.

The men who ratified our Constitution understood that a free people couldn’t govern themselves without a free press. Here’s the rub. The First Amendment doesn’t guarantee news will be fair or accurate or accountable. That’s why it’s a good idea to read or watch or listen to more than one source. That said, over the years at legacy media companies, thanks in part to national press associations like the American Society of Newspaper Editors, standards for accuracy and fairness evolved. The newsrooms of legacy media companies like ABC, CBS and NBC are committed to getting the facts right and making every attempt to balance the stories they report. There is no greater embarrassment for a reporter than to get the facts wrong or to report them out of context. And when they make mistakes, responsible news organizations run corrections.

Even though revoking licenses presents near insurmountable obstacles, Carr’s threats cause harm besides undermining public trust. The FCC doesn’t actually grant licenses to networks like ABC, NBC and CBS, but it does license the stations the networks own and independent stations that air their programming. Where it does have leverage, as this CNN article points out, is when a station owner wants to transfer a license, as was the case when Nexstar and Sinclair pulled Jimmy Kimmel’s show from their ABC-affiliated stations last fall. At the time, Nexstar needed FCC approval to buy rival company Tegna. The FCC has since approved the $6.2 billion acquisition which closed on March 19. Nexstar and its partners now own 265 television stations that reach about 80% of U.S. households. In the past, FCC rules prohibited any company from reaching more than 39% of U.S. households. These stations contract with the major networks for programming, but some have competing local news operations that will likely be consolidated by Nexstar.

NPR reported that Anna Gomez, a Democratic member of the FCC, condemned the FCC’s approval of the merger. She said it was done behind closed doors without an actual vote.

“Local journalism is under extraordinary strain,” she said. “Across the country newsrooms are being consolidated, reporters laid off and editorial decisions made far from the communities broadcast stations are licensed to serve. The Nexstar-Tegna merger will accelerate exactly that trend, concentrating broadcast power in fewer corporate hands, shrinking independent editorial voices and prioritizing national business interests over local needs.”


The attorneys general of eight states, including North Carolina, filed lawsuits in U.S. District Court in Sacramento, Calif., seeking to block the merger, arguing that it will lead to higher prices for consumers and result in less local journalism. DirecTV, Newsmax and several cable companies have also challenged the merger claiming it will result in higher retransmission costs that will be passed on to consumers. Several other groups have also asked the court to halt the merger until appeals can be heard.

Whatever the outcome, one thing is certain, the media landscape continues to shift. Many areas already feel like local news deserts thanks to newspaper mergers and slashed newsrooms, a result of advertising revenue shifting to online platforms. The FCC shift seems to be driven in part by the fact that streaming services and social media platforms have disrupted the traditional local advertising market for television broadcasters, as well. Regulators have determined that the survival of local broadcasting takes precedence over diversity of local news.


How can those of us who want to keep up with what’s going on in our communities stay informed? We can take New York Times publisher A.G. Sulzberger’s advice. In an advertisement that ran for the first time in March, which a spokesperson told the Nieman Journalism Lab will run across most New York Times podcasts, Sulzberger urges listeners “to support any news organization that’s dedicated to original reporting. If that’s your local newspaper, terrific — local newspapers in particular need your support. If that’s another national newspaper, that’s great too.”


The good news is that non-profit online news organizations are experiencing tremendous growth across the nation, offsetting the loss of news organizations whose newsrooms have been merged and/or slashed. There are now more than 400 nonprofit online newsrooms across the U.S. They’re typically funded by donations, foundations, memberships and events, not advertising. Most are part of the Institute for Nonprofit News, where you can find a non-profit online newsroom near you.


In addition to local newspapers, news organizations deserving special consideration in North Carolina include non-profits such as local National Public Radio affiliates, Carolina Public Press, Asheville Watchdog, and The Assembly. For most of our history, news organizations relied on advertising revenue to keep their companies afloat. That model no longer holds as it once did. But our need for fair and accurate reporting is, if anything, greater than ever. Our support has become essential.

Joy Franklin is a journalist and writer who served as editorial page editor of the Asheville Citizen-Times for 10 years. Prior to that she served as executive editor of the Times-News in Hendersonville.

Used downdraft equipment for sale

0
The old courthouse in Swan Quarter was the home of the former MATTIE Arts Center. Photo courtesy of MATTIE

The nonprofit “Friends of Hyde County’s Historic 1854 Courthouse” in Swan Quarter has some downdraft equipment and related items for sale.

These items were purchased in 2013 and were used for a very short time in the MATTIE Arts Center, which was located in the old courthouse at that time. Many of the smaller items are still new, in the original cases/boxes and never used.  

 The air filtration system that sucks up wood shavings or tiny bits of metal, fumes, etc., was made by JDS Company and consists of the following:

  • Dust Collector, Model 14040, 1.5 HP motor, 60 HZ, Phase 1 (operating manual & parts list included)
  • Air-Tech High Performance Air Filtration, 3A amp, 1/3 HP motor, 110 Volt, 60 HZ, Phase 1 (operating manual & parts list included)
  • Dust Collection Trunk line to point of intake dust ports, 20-24 gauge 6” and 5” metal piping collection line & fittings, blast gates, adaptors, clamps, hander, 4” flex hose station collection and dust port hoods

Miscellaneous safety items include North CFR dust masks, Safety Fog-Free over lasses (goggles), Western Safety industrial ear muffs, Western Safety dust & particle masks, Western face masks with elastic ear loop, Western Safety ear plugs.

Also available are

  • Dremel tool kits (in cases), drill bits, and high-speed cutters
  • Chicago Electric Power Tools rotary accessory kits
  • Weller W525WB 15-piece woodburning & hobby kits
  • Other miscellaneous items such as pliers, and diamond points

Interested parties may email the nonprofit at: hydecourthousefriends@gmail.com for more information. Please include your name and phone number.

Ocracoke events March 30 to April 5

0
Eduardo Chavez giving a cooking lesson for this year’s Ocracoke Alive Winter activities. He will be the guest this Friday (April 3) on WOVV’s “What’s Happening on Ocracoke.” Photo: P. Vankevich/Ocracoke Observer

Tuesday, March 31
Ocracoke Access Alliance public meetingon the future of ferry service. 7 pm Community Center. Streamed on OCBA Facebook page.

Wednesday, April 1
Latin cardio dance with Arturo, 6 pm. Community Center

Thursday, April 2:
Chinese Acupressure for self-care with Ann Ehringhaus, 4 pm. Deepwater Theater. (Donations accepted but not necessary)
Ocracoke Volunteer Fire Department (OVFD) meeting, New volunteers always welcome. 6 pm. 822 Irvin Garrish Hwy.

Ocracoke Decoy Carvers Guild meeting. First Thursday of the month. 7 pm. Community Center.

Friday, April 3:
Ocracoke Tourism Development Authority, 9 am. Community Center. Please find the link to the board packet here: https://acrobat.adobe.com/id/urn:aaid:sc:us:42d6a41c-a5b8-4e60-873a-4f5ae3ed71eb

WOVV “What’s Happening on Ocracoke:”  Eduardo Chavez Perez (Eduardo’s Taco Stand), 11:30 am, 90.1 FM on the island and wovv.org.

1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Brooke & Nick, 7 pm

Saturday, April 4:
Ocracoke Oyster Company: Shane Thomas

Howard’s Pub: Aaron Caswell Band, 9 pm

1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Sam on Sax, 7 pm

Sunday, April 5 Easter:
Church services:
Easter morning sunrise service: Lifeguard beach, 6:30 am.
Ocracoke United Methodist Church, 11 am. See Holy Week events below. Thursday dinner is full, but everything else is open.
Ocracoke Life Saving Church, 11 am
Stella Maris Chapel: Sunday Mass time at 4:30 p.m. unless otherwise noted. Go to Masstimes.org and type in the zip code 27960 but refresh your browser for it to work properly.

Starting Monday April 6, 2026, Springers Point will be closed on Mondays to give the preserve some much needed rest.

The entrance to Springer’s Point on Loop Road.

Outer Banks Community Foundation annual meeting features Ocracoke highlights

0

Observer staff report

Ocracoke has a lot of off-island friends, and one of its biggest supporters is the Outer Banks Community Foundation.

In Fiscal Year 2025, the foundation received $2.8 million in donor gifts and awarded $1.5 in total grants and scholarships.

Last year, four Ocracoke nonprofit organizations received a total of 10 grants amounting to $66,861 through the foundation’s competitive grant programs (Community Enrichment and Impact grants) and donor-advised funds.

That’s the most granted to Ocracoke so far outside the more than $1 million the foundation sent to Ocracoke as the fundraising conduit after the island was inundated by Hurricane Dorian on Sept. 6, 2019.

Randal Mathews of Ocracoke NC 2020
Ocracoke County Commissioner Randal Mathews will join the OBCF Board of Directors .Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer

In addition to large grants awarded last year to the Ocracoke Preservation Society, Ocracoke Alive, the Ocracoke Health Center and the Ocracoke Community Pool Association, these groups also received smaller grants from donor-advised funds.

Randal Mathews, Ocracoke’s county commissioner, has joined the board of directors, succeeding islander Ruth Toth.

His appointment was announced at the organization’s annual meeting on March 10 at Jennette’s Pier in Nags Head.

Ruth Toth outgoing OBCF director from Ocracoke. Photo: P. Vankevich/Ocracoke Observer

Founded in 1982, the Outer Banks Community Foundation (OCBF) is a charitable nonprofit organization dedicated to managing and growing permanent endowment funds established by individuals, families and businesses.

Through competitive grants and scholarships, it supports local nonprofits, helping to strengthen education, protect the environment, and promote the arts, culture and historic preservation.

Pastor Desiree Adams of Ocracoke United Methodist Church, who has lived on Ocracoke for 14 years, offered the opening blessing.

Her remarks, slightly edited below, reflected the strong tradition of charitable support within the Ocracoke community.

“An amazing transformation I have witnessed on Ocracoke since Hurricane Dorian (September 2019) is that we are now slowly beginning to shift our attention from restoring and surviving, to building and thriving.

Desiree Adams, pastor of the Ocracoke United Methodist Church, gives the opening blessing at the Outer Banks Community Foundation annual meeting. Photo by Biff Jennings

“We ask the same question as many of you: What can we do to support the flourishing of all members of our community, especially the most vulnerable and those in need, and, like many of you, we have found great encouragement in the foundation, who sincerely asks, how can we help?

“One is that our board of trustees has worked hard to have our rec hall licensed as a commercial kitchen for community use.

“Five days a week, free community lunches are prepared in the kitchen and delivered to homebound community members, school children and those who suffer from food insecurity.

“This program has become a partnership with the Bread of Life Food Pantry run by the Life Saving Church. Our joint capacity to respond to community needs has enabled us to become reliable partners to the school when it seeks assistance for families or children in need.

“In partnership with Ocracoke Alive, our church facilities and members have provided after-school programming while our rec hall has been used for cooking classes.

“Last year after hurricane Helene hit the western part of the state, OUMC and Stella Maris Catholic Chapel formed a volunteer response team that traveled to the mountains three times in two months to help with clean up and rebuilding.

“Recently, we joined with Ocracoke Alive for a community compost system in which we are partnering with local restaurants, the school and individuals in decreasing our waste and the carbon footprint of having it transported off the island.

“We’re turning that waste into fertilizer for a community food garden now in the making.

“We hope that by leading workshops in gardening, cooking and sustainable living, others will be encouraged to implement these practices in their own yards and homes.

“This winter, we started a Friday Social Club for seniors, especially those who are usually homebound, have early onset dementia, are recently widowed, or whose families are working during the day. We gather under the guise of a craft or activity, but it’s usually just some really good storytelling and a lot of laughter.

“In the absence of facilities and programming for our elder community, this has been a very special addition.

“These ministries are just a few of the ways in which we have the honor of working with this incredible community and its many valuable organizations.

“Our partnerships are often blessed by the grants from the Outer Banks Community Foundation, whose willingness to support initiatives keeps our communities connected, resourced, inspired and able to thrive.”

Division of Marine Fisheries seeks advisers for Southern Flounder committee

0
A Southern Flounder under water.

MOREHEAD CITY – The N.C. Department of Environmental Quality’s Division of Marine Fisheries is accepting applications for commercial and recreational fishermen, scientists and interested parties to serve on the Southern Flounder Fishery Management Plan Amendment 5 Advisory Committee.

The panel will assist the Division in developing Amendment 5 to the N.C. Southern Flounder Fishery Management Plan. The Division is developing Amendment 5 to further address the NC Marine Fisheries Commission’s request to expand recreational access to the flounder fishery while continuing to rebuild the Southern Flounder stock. Amendment 5 will also seek to address issues in the commercial fishery.

The deadline to apply is April 10, 2026.

The Division will hold an in-person, workshop-style meeting that will allow committee members and Division staff to collaborate on drafting potential Southern Flounder management measures in a more effective and less formal setting than traditional meetings.

The Division is looking for individuals with expertise in Southern Flounder fisheries. Commercial and recreational fishermen from all coastal regions are encouraged to apply. Scientists and representatives of non-governmental organizations with an interest in Southern Flounder are also invited to participate.

To be qualified to serve on the committee, applicants must not have had a significant fisheries violation within the past three years.

Interested individuals must attend and actively participate in the three-day workshop scheduled for June 2 to 4 at Carteret Community College in Morehead City. Participation includes reviewing documents to provide input to the Division for consideration to refine management options in draft Amendment 5.

Advisors who complete the necessary paperwork will be reimbursed for travel and other expenses incurred in relation to their official duties. Apply to serve as an advisor by completing the online Southern Flounder Fishery Management Plan Advisory Committee application. If you would prefer to apply by mail, please download the printable application and send it to:

N.C. Division of Marine Fisheries
P.O. Box 769
Morehead City, N.C. 28557
Attention: Southern Flounder FMP

Applications must be submitted online or postmarked by April 10, 2026.

The Marine Fisheries Commission chairman will appoint members from the pool of applicants.

Community meeting on ferry service scheduled for March 31

4
The magic of Ocracoke begins on the Hatteras ferry. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer

Ocracoke Access Alliance to discuss the future of ferry service, including tolls & the impact to Ocracoke, at 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 31, in the Community Center. It will be livestreamed on the OCBA Facebook page.

By Connie Leinbach

Members of the Ocracoke Access Alliance are working on a proposal on the future of ferry service, including tolls and the impact to Ocracoke, to present to the North Carolina General Assembly this spring. This will be discussed at a community meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 31, in the Community Center,

In their budget last year, the Senate included a toll on the Hatteras ferry, but the House did not have that in their budget.

Since neither budget has passed, the state has been operating on last year’s budget, but that may change in April when the Legislature reconvenes.

Bob Chestnut, chair of the Ocracoke Civic & Business Association, reported at the March 17 meeting that the OAA is working on a plan to stop this yearly fight regarding tolls.

That plan will include a mechanism to exempt permanent island residents from having to pay the toll.

“If we come up with a reasonable plan for a visitor toll, we could leverage that for adequate funding for the ferries,” he said. “We need to buy more ferries.”

The toll should be designed to meet the ferry replacement plan need to cover the 20% match getting federal funding would require, he said. Toll revenues could go into a fund for that purpose.

There are a lot of issues surrounding tolls and their implementation, he said, but those details aren’t the focus just yet.

“Priority pass issue will be addressed later,” he said. “Right now we want to make sure we have a ferry, not who gets on first.”

Part of the plan the OAA is working on and which was discussed at a community meeting March 31 are as follows:

  1. The Ferry Division needs at least $85.5 million a year for operations, but this needs a caveat for rising fuel prices.
  2. It needs $69 million to address the backlog in ferry maintenance.
  3. Establish an annual pass for all ferries; change name from “commuter pass.”
  4. The ferries are a marine highway and thus residents should not have to pay to go home.
  5. Take vessel replacement out of the State Transportation Improvement Program (STIP). This NCDOT program identifies the construction funding and schedule for state transportation projects over a 10-year period. NCDOT updates the STIP approximately every two years.

The OAA is working on how much to recommend to the state legislators for a toll on the Hatteras ferry, but there’s a possibility of doubling the tolls on the Pamlico Sound ferries.

“The Senate has proposed a $20 price on the Hatteras ferry, but others have talked about making it $10 each way,” Chestnut said.

The Senate’s budget also includes doubling the toll on the Ocracoke-Swan Quarter route from the current one-way rate of $15 fee to $30.

The prospect of a toll on the Hatteras ferry, which is free and is the most used in the system, has been dormant since 2016 when the legislature’s spending plan excluded a toll on the Hatteras ferry.

But last spring during budget talks, the N.C. Senate’s budget proposed doubling the rates on the Ocracoke long-route ferries and the passenger ferry and adding tolls to the Hatteras-Ocracoke, Currituck-Knotts Island, and two other routes.

What is your measure of devotion?

5

By John W. Rolph, Retired JAGC, USN

In my opinion, the greatest strength of democracy is its ability to not just tolerate peaceful dissent, but to encourage it.  Peaceful dissent provides definition to the problems we face as a nation.  It brings clarity to issues that confound us and allows all voices to be heard in that quest.  It facilitates our ability to flag injustice – knowing, as MLK reminded us, that “an injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”

As I write these words, the rights and freedoms secured by our forefathers and memorialized in the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and its Bill of Rights are in clear and present danger. 

We all see it happening day after day — slowly but painfully deliberate; the tragic erosion of our long held American ideals.  Each of us needs to decide what we are going to do about it.  What role will you play in helping to preserve the freedoms many of our forefathers fought for and died to secure? 

Just how valuable is the liberty and democracy you have enjoyed and probably taken for granted most of your life?  What will you do to return basic human decency to our government and our nation? 

Trust me, I am struggling with the same questions right now.

In “The American Crisis #1” (Dec. 23, 1776), written in the second winter of our revolutionary war when things looked utterly hopeless, Thomas Paine reminded us in powerful words that freedom and liberty come at a cost, and no true patriot should ever ignore this reality:

“THESE are the times that try men’s souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands by it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph. What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly: it is dearness only that gives everything its value. Heaven knows how to put a proper price upon its goods; and it would be strange indeed if so celestial an article as FREEDOM should not be highly rated…”

Paine was imploring his countrymen to get into the fight for America’s revolutionary cause and stay the course no matter how bleak things appeared.  He understood that freedom, liberty, the right to representation, and the preservation of human rights are priceless gifts worth protecting at any cost.  

He went on to plead that, “If there must be trouble, let it be in my day that my child[ren] may have peace.”  Tacitly, he acknowledged what we all know — that our unique freedoms and the blessings of liberty must be secured for future generations.

Peggy Noonan, the gifted columnist (and presidential speech writer for Ronald Reagan), once wrote an op-ed piece (circa November 2002) about the dilemma of honoring one’s principles and maintaining one’s values in trying times. She astutely noted that it is easy to have “principles” when there is nothing at stake for doing so. 

However, there are times when a heavy price must be paid for where you stand, and that is not necessarily a bad thing. 

Steadfast adherence to one’s values and principles in the darkest and most trying times is what we all recognize as integrity.  And while many assert that their personal integrity is something they would never compromise, we often see that commitment flounder and fail as the price for doing so rises. 

So, the real question for all of us to answer — right here and now — is what is the true measure of our devotion? 

How high of a price are we willing to pay to stand fast on the principles we define as essential to maintaining the democracy and constitutional form of government we profess to honor and love?  What sacrifices are we willing to make for the cause of human rights? 

Will we sail passionately and confidently into this storm not knowing the outcome of the maelstrom because it is what we know we must do, or will we instead strike sails and seek safe harbor? 

Will we be just “fair-weather friends” to our country and our Constitution?  As our democratic ideals and basic human decency are threatened with extinction, will we be merely “summer” citizens and “sunshine patriots”?  

The time to define what price you are willing to pay is NOW! 

Every American who cherishes freedom, democracy, and human rights must weigh anchor and get into this fight.

We know this will be a lengthy, uncertain, and costly battle, but it must be undertaken.  We love this country too much to choose otherwise. 

May God grant each of us the strength, courage, and fortitude to set our personal price high enough so that it honors the original measure of devotion given by so many in providing us our liberty, our democratic ideals, and our constitutional republic.

Captain John W. Rolph, JAGC, USN, describes himself as Husband, Father, Son, Brother, Veteran, All-Seasons Citizen/Patriot.
He served as both an enlisted man and an officer in the U.S. Navy during a 35-year career. He served as an officer in the Judge Advocate General’s Corps of the U.S. Navy from 1982 until 2008.

Ocracoke events March 22 to 29

0
The rebuilding of Jolly Roger progresses. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer

Monday, March 23:
Ocracoke Alive: Spanish/English Coffee hour, 8:30 to 9:30 am.

Ocracoke Alive: Envisioning the future of Ocracoke, the first of eight discussion-based, creative workshops about the island’s long-term future, with Hannah Aronson, a master of city planning student at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 6 to 7:30 pm. Deepwater Theater.

Ocracoke Alive: ESL English/Spanish, 7 pm. Ocracoke Community Library

Tuesday, March 24:
Ocracoke Alive: Chinese acupressure for self-care with Ann Ehringhaus (Session 1), 4 pm. Deepwater Theater

Ocracoke Alive: Vegan cooking with Deborah Ralston, 6 pm. OUMC Rec hall.

Ocracoke Alive: Yoga in Spanish, 7:30 pm. Deepwater Theater.

Wednesday, March 25:
Ocracoke Alive: Yoga in Spanish with Sarah Shellow, 8:30 to 9:30 am. Deepwater Theater.

1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Island Trivia, 6 to 8 pm

Ocracoke Alive: Oil painting with Durham artist Justin Leitner (session 1), 6-8 pm. Deepwater Theater.

Thursday, March 26:
Ocracoke Alive: 9:30am – 10:30am. Ukulele/Guitar with Lou Castro. Deepwater Theater.

Ocracoke School Varsity baseball game at home vs. Bear Grass. 4 pm. Community Ballfield.

Ocracoke Alive: Latin cardio dance class with Arturo. 6 pm. Community Center.

Ocracoke Alive: Oil painting with Durham artist Justin Leitner (session 2), 6-8 pm. Deepwater Theater.

Friends of Ocracoke Library: Annual meeting with crime and mystery author Stacy Woodson. See flyer below.

Friday, March 27:
What’s Happening on Ocracoke on WOVV 90.1 FM: Interview with Hannah Aronson, the MIT student doing the “Envisioning the Future of Ocracoke” workshops. 11:30 am.

Ocracoke Alive: Ocracoke Alive: Chinese acupressure for self-care with Ann Ehringhaus (Session 2), 4 pm. Deepwater Theater

Ocracoke Alive: Learn traditional Ocracoke Square Dance at 7, then participate in the dance at 8 pm. Ocracoke Community Center.

Saturday, March 28:
No Kings rally, noon. NPS Visitor Center at ferry docks.

Memorial service for Islander Fletcher O’Neal, 1 pm. Ocracoke Life Saving Church. Meet with family, 2-3 pm. Community Center

Ocracoke Preservation Society fundraising art auction, 3 to 5 pm. OPS museum, 49 Water Plant Rd.

1718 Brewing Ocracoke: Kate McNally, 7 pm

Sunday, March 29:
Church services:
|Ocracoke United Methodist Church, 11 am
Ocracoke Life Saving Church, 11 am
Stella Maris Chapel: Sunday Mass time at 4:30 p.m. unless otherwise noted. Go to Masstimes.org and type in the zip code 27960 but refresh your browser for it to work properly.

Screenshot

Fletcher O’Neal: 1975 to 2026

0
Fletcher O’Neal

Ocracoke native David Fletcher O’Neal, known as Fletcher, 51, passed away peacefully on March 18, 2026, in Norfolk, Virginia.

Born on February 20, 1975, in Newport News, VA, Fletcher lived a life deeply connected to the waters and the Ocracoke community.

Fletcher dedicated many years as an engineer with the NCDOT Ferry Division. After his retirement, he pursued his passion for the sea as an oyster farmer and an avid waterman, and he cherished his time on the water.

His love of farming oysters and boating was well known among his family and friends. He was actively involved in the Shellfish Growers Association and the Ocracoke Working Watermen’s Association.

Fletcher is preceded in death by his beloved son, Henry O’Neal; his mother, Doris Kathryn Hoggard O’Neal; his paternal grandparents, David and Peggy Ann O’Neal; his maternal grandfather, F.C. “Hoagie” Hoggard; and his aunt, Jean Williams.

He is survived by his maternal grandmother, Merian Hoggard; his father, David Farrow O’Neal, Jr.; his daughter, Maranda O’Neal; his four sons, David Hunter O’Neal, Ethan O’Neal, Brandt O’Neal, and William O’Neal; and his grandson, Dakota Barnett. He also leaves behind his sister, Rachel O’Neal, and her son, Austin O’Neal; his aunt, Sharon Justice, and his uncle, Vince O’Neal (Sue); his cousins, Eric Williams (Diana and their daughter, Emma Jean Williams), Robbie Lewis (Claudia and their daughter, Camryn Lewis), and Katie Brown, Carson O’Neal, and Noah O’Neal, who will fondly remember him.

A funeral service to honor Fletcher’s life will be held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, March 28, in the Ocracoke Life Saving Church. Following the service, the family will greet friends and relatives at the Ocracoke Community Center. A private burial will take place at the Ocracoke Community Cemetery.

Twiford Funeral Homes, Outer Banks, is serving the O’Neal family. Condolences and memories may be shared at www.TwifordFH.com.

Jubal Creech: 1972 to 2026

4

His … name was Jubal, he was the father of all those who play the lyre and pipe.
Genesis 4:21
Jubal – the first musician

Former Ocracoke Islander Jubal (Kennedy Patrick-jubal) Creech died on March 11, 2026, after a two-year struggle with cancer and complications.

He was a son of the late Merle Smith Davis and James Edward (Jimmy) Creech of Raleigh and stepmother, the late Chris Weedy.

Jubal was born on Aug. 7, 1972, in Raleigh. At the age of 10 months, he moved with his family to Ocracoke Island where he spent the next eight years of his life.

He then moved to Warsaw, North Carolina, where he discovered his musical passion for drums, playing in the James Kenan High School marching band. It was during a performance of the Chuck Davis African American Dance Ensemble at the school that his passion became a love affair with hand drumming.

From Warsaw, in 1987, Jubal moved with his family to Raleigh where he graduated from Needham Broughton High School in 1990.

Over the years, Jubal traveled with his family to France, China and Hong Kong. Later, he traveled to Gambia and lived in Haiti where he studied techniques of hand drumming from Gambian and Haitian musicians.

He was multi-talented. In addition to being an accomplished percussionist, with both drum sets and hand drums, he played the ukulele, was a poet, songwriter, massage therapist, artist, storyteller and teacher of English as a foreign language.

Jubal lived in Asheville and Raleigh, playing with local bands in each.

In Raleigh, he played with the Chuck Davis African American Dance Ensemble, and for the Paperhand Puppet Project and the Raleigh Little Theater.

He lived the greater part of his adult life on Ocracoke where he played with local bands, including Molasses Creek. He hosted Jubal Jams, a weekly show on WOVV, the island radio station.  He is remembered on the island as one whose hands and heart brought vibrant and magical energy to his music.

As one who taught how to listen to rhythm, to life, to oneself. As one who carried a quiet depth, with always more beneath the surface – more joy, more insight, more pain and unyielding truth. That depth was part of his gift, part of what made him so human, so real and so unforgettable. As one who had a humble love for all people, a gentleness that was there from the earliest days, moving through the world with kindness, openness and grace.

In 2017, Jubal moved to Chiang Mai, Thailand, where he lived until his death. There, he played with local bands and taught English to Thai and Chinese students, as well as percussion and ukulele. He especially enjoyed working with children.

His Thai friends remember him as a beautiful soul who lived authentically, a kind soul, one with compassion for the underdogs with a strong moral compass and dry wit, a genius musician, a sweet man, a generous spirit, and a lovely creative gifted man, sensitive percussionist, great group and community workshop leader who played and lived and loved with a beautiful sense of wonder.

Jubal’s ashes will be scattered on Ocracoke Island, the home he never truly left. His rhythm lives there – in the bird’s wings against the backdrop of the sunset over the sound, in the wind through the live oaks, in the pounding rain of a summer squall and in the quiet spaces between heartbeats.

In addition to his father, he is survived by his stepfather, Donald Davis (Ocracoke); step-sister Natalia Weedy (Durham); aunts Alice Creech Wilson (Raleigh) and Frances Creech Allen (Goldsboro), and cousins Susie Allen Daniels (Goldsboro) and Robert Allen (Wilmington).

Jubal’s birth announcement read:

         New life,

            Tender,

            Small and so grand,

            From life-loving

            Is this spirit

            Born of woman-man.

            Keeper of some future’s history,

            Nature’s miracle of hope,

            Truth veiled in mystery:

                        Sunshine felt …

                        Breath drawn …

                        Cries breaking

                                    From Life’s fleshed music …

                        And, we, this day

                        Have given New Life, New Spirit, New Hope, New Music

                                    To you with love.