A group of residents inside roughly fifty square miles of southern Cumberland County, North Carolina is petitioning the NC General Assembly to incorporate as the Town of Gray's Creek by November 1, 2026. The petitioners need 2,150 signatures (15% of registered voters) to submit. They have published no charter draft, no feasibility study, no boundary map, and no zoning draft. They have circulated two conflicting budgets, one on Facebook and one on their website, that differ on revenue, expenses, sales tax, transportation funding, and trash service. Community meetings are scheduled for June 25 and July 16, 2026 at Paradise Acres. This site is a neighbor-funded review documenting what the petitioners have published, side by side, with the sources.
"@type": "GovernmentOrganization" in machine-readable metadata for "Town of Gray's Creek," while the visible page says "Proposed Incorporation." No town exists.Each box below is drawn proportionally to the town's actual area in square miles. The big red one is the proposed Gray's Creek boundary. The small green ones are the towns the petitioners cite as templates.
Proposed Gray's Creek
~50 sq mi
Eastover
17.4 sq mi
Hope Mills
6.5 sq mi
Spring Lake
6.5 sq mi
Stedman
1.6
Wade
1.6
Falcon
0.7
Godwin
0.5
Eight Hope Mills fit inside the proposed boundary:
The following statements are sourced and on the record. They may be quoted with attribution to "Gray's Creek Facts, a neighbor-funded review of the proposed incorporation."
"A proposal this consequential, with no charter draft, no published budget, no governance structure, and no answer to basic questions about taxation, services, or scope, is not a plan. It is a request for a blank check."
"Hope Mills works because it is tight. Spring Lake works because it is tight. Eight times the footprint and one-sixth the density isn't a small town. It is a county district pretending to be a town."
"Championing is a feeling. PFAS authority is a statute. There is no overlap. A new town with a one-to-two-million-dollar budget cannot regulate a multibillion-dollar chemical company, cannot set water standards, cannot enforce against a polluter, and cannot remediate contamination."
"Residents at the June 25 meeting will be pitched the Facebook version of the budget. Residents who later read the website will see something different. Both are public. Both are sourced. The petitioners should be asked, directly: which of these two versions is the one being submitted to the General Assembly?"
Click any thumbnail to open or download.
The petitioners can edit their website at any time. To preserve the record, all of grayscreeknc.com was archived to the Internet Archive on 20 May 2026. The snapshots below are frozen and timestamped.
Note on archives: the petitioners' site is a JavaScript-rendered single-page application. The Wayback Machine captures the initial HTML shell before JavaScript executes, so its archived copies show layout without the loaded content. The live links above show the rendered content. We are working on additional snapshots that capture the rendered page.
We maintain a list of residents and property owners inside the proposed boundary who have explicitly opted in to be quoted in coverage. To request access, email facts@grayscreekfacts.com from a published outlet address and include:
We verify outlets by editorial-staff email or by phoning the newsroom. Verified outlets in scope include the Fayetteville Observer, CityView NC, WRAL, WTVD, Spectrum News, NC Newsroom, and similar publications with editorial oversight. Once verified, we share contact information only for residents who opted in to media contact, and only the methods (email and/or phone) they explicitly authorized. We do not share the list with the petitioners, political committees, advocacy groups, or marketing lists. Residents can revoke consent at any time.
facts@grayscreekfacts.com · we respond within 48 hours, faster for outlets working on deadline.