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J.D. Mazuera Arias

Council Member District 5Charlotte City Council

District 5 council member. Auto-captions ALWAYS wrong on name.
District 5

JD Mazuera Arias

District 5 · Term 2025–2027

JD Mazuera Arias represents District 5 on the Charlotte City Council. His district covers East Charlotte, including the Eastland Yards corridor — one of the city's largest redevelopment sites. First-term council member in the 2025–2027 term.

Mazuera Arias voted yes on the Crosland Southeast affordable housing project, which is located in his district. He has also been active in discussions about the CMPD staffing crisis and East Charlotte townhome density disputes. On April 13, 2026, Mazuera Arias emerged as the leading voice on Housing Trust Fund policy reform — questioning why developers can apply for HTF funding before their rezonings are approved, and arguing that the current system reconcentrates low-income housing in areas that lack amenities rather than coupling it with high-opportunity zones. He pointed to the Willora Lake proposal in his own district as the most expensive per-unit project in the round, a half mile from an identical concept already under construction at Eastland Yards.

Background

Mazuera Arias was born in Pereira, Colombia, and immigrated to the United States as an infant. He grew up in East Charlotte and is a former DACA recipient. He holds a political science degree from Queens University of Charlotte and an MPA from NYU’s Wagner School. Before running for council he worked at The Century Foundation, served as a CHCI Public Policy Fellow in the office of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and joined Kyndryl in a global public-policy role. He chairs the Hispanic Democratic Caucus of Mecklenburg and founded the North Carolina Latino Political Caucus. When he took the District 5 seat for the 2025–2027 term, he became Charlotte’s first Hispanic and first openly gay Latino council member. He defeated incumbent Marjorie Molina in the September 2025 Democratic primary.

In The Mercury

Charlotte Housing Trust Fund Staff Picks Are In. The Questions Are Already Louder Than the Numbers.

HTF staff recommendations · Rezoning timing question · Geographic equity argument

Charlotte City Council Passes First Post-Sales-Tax Transit Budget, Sends Street Vending Back to Committee

April 13 business meeting recap

Six Council Members Voted for Affordable Housing in East Charlotte. Four Who Champion Equity Voted No.

Crosland Southeast · In his district · Yes vote

Charlotte City Council Approves $4.3M Transit Authority Start-Up

Transit authority funding

When Neighbors Push Back: Far East Charlotte Residents Challenge Dense Townhome Plan

East Charlotte density and neighborhood pushback

Charlotte Police Union's National Guard Plea Signals Staffing Crisis

CMPD staffing and public safety

← Back to City Council

Coverage (14 articles)

A 49-Unit Faith in Housing Petition Reached Public Hearing at Council Monday

Jack Beckett·

Mission City Church, Freedom Communities, and the True Homes Foundation walked Charlotte City Council through their 49-townhome affordable-housing petition Monday night. The 5.38-acre Faith in Housing rezoning is petition 2025-027 in District 2 — all units sold (not rented), House Charlotte eligible, with a seven-year deed restriction. Council Member LaWana Slack-Mayfield used the floor for what is now her third public Faith in Housing argument of 2026: the program label, she said, is not "an automatic check."

Manor Theater Redevelopment Approved

Jack Beckett·

Charlotte City Council on Monday unanimously approved a partial rezoning of the Manor Theater site on Providence Road, clearing the way for SLRH Acquisitions to redevelop the long-closed Eastover landmark into 120 to 130 residential units and roughly 35,000 square feet of ground-floor retail. Three council members — Kimberly Owens, Danté Anderson, and J.D. Mazuera Arias — walked the room through their first memories of the building before the vote.

A 2.5-Million-Square-Foot Data Center Is Going Up off University City Boulevard.

Jack Beckett·

The Charlotte City Council deadlocked 5-5 Monday night on whether to even schedule a public hearing on a temporary moratorium for new data center approvals. Mayor Vi Lyles broke the tie, voting no. Meanwhile a 2.5-million-square-foot, 300-megawatt data center campus is going up at 10800 University City Boulevard — and under Charlotte's current zoning, the council had no role in approving it.

Vi Lyles Will Resign as Charlotte Mayor on June 30. The Race to Replace Her Already Started.

Jack Beckett·

Charlotte Mayor Vi Lyles announced Thursday that she will resign on June 30, ending a tenure that began in 2017. Under North Carolina law, the City Council will appoint a Democrat to serve the remainder of her term — and the field is already organizing in public, with former Mayor Jennifer Roberts offering to fill the vacancy and Council Member Dante Anderson breaking for the outsider option. The vote that decides who fills the seat has not been scheduled.

Brendan Maginnis Offers to Serve as Interim Mayor

Jack Beckett·

Brendan K. Maginnis, the runner-up in Charlotte's September 2025 Democratic mayoral primary, has volunteered for the interim mayor appointment — from Copenhagen, where his family moved in January, and with a demographic-counter argument the Mercury did not solicit. By his count — initially approximately 46, revised to 44 in a follow-up email — none of those Democratic elected officials representing Charlotte at various levels are white males. The pitch collides with Charlotte-Mecklenburg NAACP President Corine Mack's public call for the council to elevate the Mayor Pro Tem rather than install a placeholder.

Charlotte Council Deferred a Conventional Rezoning 5-4 Monday. Renée Johnson Led the Opposition.

Jack Beckett·

Council Member Renée Johnson pulled petition 2025-136 — a conventional rezoning at 1800 West Sugar Creek Road by Larry Cooper — off the consent agenda Monday, citing her standing concern about conventional petitions filed without site plans. The 5-4 vote that followed fell short of the majority needed for approval. The council then unanimously deferred the petition.

Manufacturing Land Near Woodlawn Station Just Became TOD-NC

Jack Beckett·

The Charlotte City Council on Monday rezoned a 0.16-acre Verbena Street parcel from ML-2 (manufacturing and logistics) to TOD-NC, 7-2. Council Member LaWana Slack-Mayfield and Council Member Renée Johnson voted no — not on the parcel, on the trajectory it represents. Council Member Victoria Watlington voted yes but asked staff to map Charlotte's remaining manufacturing-zoned acreage.

Charlotte Council Approves Both Faith in Housing Rezonings.

Jack Beckett·

Council Member LaWana Mayfield, the architect of Charlotte's Faith in Housing initiative, voted against a Faith in Housing petition Monday night. Both rezonings passed. The second carried on the bare minimum: six yes votes, no mayor in the chair.

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