Greensboro, North Carolina | |
General information | |
Mayor of Greensboro
Nancy Vaughan | |
Last mayoral election: | 2022 |
Next mayoral election: | 2025 |
Last city council election: | 2022 |
Next city council election: | 2025 |
City council seats: | 9[1] |
City website | |
Composition data (2019) | |
Population: | 291,303 |
Race: | White 47.3% African American 41.4% Asian 5.0% Native American 0.5% Pacific Islander 0.1% Two or more 3.0% |
Ethnicity: | Hispanic 7.9% |
Median household income: | $48,964 |
High school graduation rate: | 89.8% |
College graduation rate: | 38.2% |
Related Greensboro offices | |
North Carolina Congressional Delegation North Carolina State Legislature North Carolina state executive offices |
Greensboro is a city in Guilford County, North Carolina. The city's population was 299,035 as of 2020, according to the United States Census Bureau.
Click on the links below to learn more about the city's...
The city of Greensboro utilizes a council-manager system. In this form of municipal government, an elected city council—which includes the mayor and serves as the city's primary legislative body—appoints a chief executive called a city manager to oversee day-to-day municipal operations and implement the council's policy and legislative initiatives.[2]
The mayor is a member of the city council. He or she presides over council meetings and official city ceremonies. The mayor also represents the city on the state, national and international levels. The current Mayor of Greensboro is Nancy Vaughan. Vaughan assumed office in 2013.[2]
The city manager is the city's chief executive. The responsibilities of the city manager include overseeing the city's day-to-day operations, planning and implementing the city's operating budget, and appointing departmental directors and other senior-level positions.[2]
The Greensboro City Council is the city's primary legislative body. It is responsible for adopting the city budget, approving mayoral appointees, levying taxes, and making or amending city laws, policies and ordinances.[2]
The Greensboro City Council has nine members, including the mayor. Five members are elected by the city's five districts, while the mayor and three other members are elected at large.[2]
The widget below automatically displays information about city council meetings. The topic list contains a sampling of keywords that Voterheads, a local government monitoring service, found in each meeting agenda. Click the meeting link to see more info and the full agenda:
Ballotpedia does not cover any additional city officials in Greensboro, North Carolina.
Greensboro has a Democratic mayor. As of August 2024, 63 mayors in the largest 100 cities by population are affiliated with the Democratic Party, 25 are affiliated with the Republican Party, one is affiliated with the Libertarian Party, four are independents, five identify as nonpartisan or unaffiliated, and two mayors' affiliations are unknown. Click here for a list of the 100 largest cities' mayors and their partisan affiliations.
Mayoral elections are officially nonpartisan in most of the nation's largest cities. However, many officeholders are affiliated with political parties. Ballotpedia uses one or more of the following sources to identify each officeholder's partisan affiliation: (1) direct communication from the officeholder, (2) current or previous candidacy for partisan office, or (3) identification of partisan affiliation by multiple media outlets.
The city of Greensboro, North Carolina, held general elections for mayor and city council on July 26, 2022. A primary was scheduled for May 17, 2022. The filing deadline for this election was March 4, 2022.
The offices were originally scheduled to be on the ballot in 2021. They were moved to 2022 due to redistricting delays.[3][4]
On Dec. 8, 2021, the Supreme Court of North Carolina ordered that the state's 2022 primary election be postponed from March 8 to May 17. The postponement applied to all primaries originally scheduled for March 8, 2022. The court suspended candidate filing, which had been scheduled to close on Dec. 17. The court issued the order in response to two separate lawsuits challenging North Carolina's newly enacted congressional and state legislative district plans. The court cited "great public interest in the subject matter of these cases, the importance of the issues to the constitutional jurisprudence of this State, and the need for urgency in reaching a final resolution on the merits" as its rationale for ordering the postponement.[5]
The city of Greensboro, North Carolina, held a general election for mayor and city council on November 7, 2017. A primary election was scheduled for October 10, 2017. The filing deadline for candidates who wished to run in this election was July 21, 2017.
The city of Greensboro, North Carolina, held elections for mayor and city council on November 3, 2015. A primary took place on October 6, 2015. The filing deadline for candidates who wished to run in this election was August 7, 2015. All eight city council seats were up for election.[6]
The table below shows demographic information about the city.
Demographic Data for Greensboro | |
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Greensboro | |
Population | 299,035 |
Land area (sq mi) | 131 |
Race and ethnicity** | |
White | 41.8% |
Black/African American | 43.1% |
Asian | 5.3% |
Native American | 0.4% |
Pacific Islander | 0% |
Two or more | 5.8% |
Hispanic/Latino | 9% |
Education | |
High school graduation rate | 90.1% |
College graduation rate | 39.9% |
Income | |
Median household income | $55,051 |
Persons below poverty level | 13.4% |
Source: population provided by U.S. Census Bureau, "Decennial Census" (2020). Other figures provided by U.S. Census Bureau, "American Community Survey" (5-year estimates 2017-2022). | |
**Note: Percentages for race and ethnicity may add up to more than 100 percent because respondents may report more than one race and the Hispanic/Latino ethnicity may be selected in conjunction with any race. Read more about race and ethnicity in the census here. |
The city's budget process operates by fiscal years running from July 1 to June 30 of the next year. The city manager presents a proposed budget to the city council in May and the council adopts the budget in June.[7]
The fiscally standardized cities (FiSC) data below was compiled by the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy to make municipal budgets comparable across cities in the United States.[8]
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FiSCs are constructed by adding revenues and expenditures of each central city municipal government to a portion of the revenues and expenditures of overlying governments, including counties, independent school districts, and special districts. The allocations to FiSCs are estimates of the revenues collected from and services provided to central city residents and businesses by these overlying independent governments. Thus FiSCs provides a full picture of revenues raised from city residents and businesses and spending on their behalf, whether done by the city government or a separate overlying government.[9] |
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—Lincoln Institute of Land Policy[10] |
The tables below show estimated finances within city limits. As such, the revenue and expenses listed may differ from the actual city budget.
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To see the historical total revenue or expenditures as a rounded amount in this city, hover over the bars.[8]
Below is a map of the nationwide salaries and pensions in this city over $95,000. To search a different ZIP code, enter it in the search bar within the map.
Mayor's office
PO Box 3136
Greensboro, NC 27402-3136
Phone: 336-373-2396
City Clerk's office
PO Box 3136
Greensboro, NC 27402-3136
Phone: 336-373-2397
Click here for city council contact information.
The city of Greensboro is in Guilford County. A list of ballot measures in Guilford County is available here.
During the weekend of May 29-31, 2020, demonstrations and protests took place in cities nationwide, including Greensboro, following the death of George Floyd. Events began in Greensboro, North Carolina on Saturday, May 30, 2020, near the downtown Civil Rights Museum.[11] No curfews were issued over the weekend. The national guard was not deployed.
In July 2015, the Movement Advancement Project described Greensboro, North Carolina, as a city or county that prohibited discrimination in employment on the basis of sexual orientation via ordinances that apply to public and private employers. At that time, a total of 71 of America's largest 100 cities prohibited private employers from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation, while 69 of those cities also prohibited discrimination based on gender identity. This did not include those jurisdictions that prohibited discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity for government employees.[12]
Nondiscrimination laws can cover a variety of areas, including public employment, private employment, housing, and public accommodations. Such laws may be enacted at the state, county, or city level.
State of North Carolina Raleigh (capital) | |
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