
Carrie Slatosky
A Common Sense, Conservative, Christian, Republican Candidate for Randolph County Commissioner Focused on Faith, Family, and Farms.


About carrie
Why I Am Running for County Commissioner
I am running for County Commissioner because I believe our county deserves leadership that is engaged, principled, and grounded in real-world responsibility.
I currently serve as a Soil and Water District Supervisor, where I have worked directly with landowners, farmers, and agencies on issues that affect property rights, land use, infrastructure, and long-term stewardship. That role has shown me how important practical decision-making and accountability are at the local level.
In addition to public service, I work as a medical office manager, where I deal every day with budgets, regulations, staffing, and compliance. That experience has given me a clear understanding of how government decisions affect small businesses, families, and access to essential services. It has reinforced my belief that local government must be efficient, fiscally disciplined, and respectful of the people it serves.
I am also a parent raising three children, which gives me a personal stake in the future of our community. I care deeply about protecting children, supporting parental authority, and ensuring that explicit or inappropriate material is not made accessible to minors in public spaces. These are not abstract issues to me; they are real concerns that affect families every day.
I am a lifelong Republican and a strong supporter of the Second Amendment. I believe constitutional rights should be treated as firm principles, not flexible suggestions. I am committed to limited government, lowering the property tax burden on families and seniors, and ensuring that county government lives within its means.
I also hold a private pilot’s license, which has reinforced values that carry directly into public service: preparation, discipline, respect for rules, and personal responsibility. Aviation teaches you quickly that decisions matter and that shortcuts have consequences. I bring that same mindset to public service.
I am running because I believe experience should be paired with accountability, and leadership should be earned continuously, not assumed. I want to bring thoughtful oversight, clear priorities, and a steady hand to county government, always guided by the principles of responsibility, freedom, and service to the community.
Carrie Slatosky
pro family
Statement on the Library Board
A book marketed online for children ages 5 to 8, addressing a highly controversial topic, was placed on a low shelf in the children’s section of the public library. Parents objected to their young children having unrestricted access. The fact that the book generated significant controversy among parents should have increased, not reduced, the library board’s responsibility to take those concerns seriously and review placement and accessibility.
At its core, this issue is about parental rights. Parents, not public boards or government employees, should decide when and how young children are exposed to sensitive or controversial material. Respecting parental involvement does not restrict access or silence ideas; it ensures that families, not institutions, remain the primary decision-makers for children.
The county commissioners did not ban the book. They first asked that it be moved to the adult section. When the library board refused, commissioners proposed a minimal alternative: placing the book on a higher shelf so parents, not toddlers, controlled access. The book would have remained available.
The library board refused again, stating they would not rearrange the library for a single book. That refusal dismissed legitimate parental concerns and rejected even modest accommodations, turning a manageable issue into a governance dispute.
Libraries already organize materials by age and audience every day. Claiming that no placement adjustments could be made was not credible. Public boards are accountable to the people, especially when controversy involves young children.
When the library board rejected reasonable direction and disregarded parents, the commissioners were right to remove them. This decision protected children, respected families, and restored accountability.
Carrie Slatosky


pro farmer
Supporting Agriculture and Protecting North Carolina Farmers
I strongly support agriculture and the farmers who built and sustain our county and our state. In North Carolina, working farms are not just part of our history. They are essential to our economy, our food supply, and our rural communities.
My support for agriculture is personal. I participated in FFA in school and grew up spending time on my grandfather’s farm, where I saw firsthand the work, responsibility, and uncertainty that come with making a living from the land. Those experiences shaped my respect for farmers and my understanding that farming is not a hobby or a political talking point, but a way of life that depends on long-term planning, private property rights, and fair treatment by government.
I believe farmland in North Carolina should remain in production, not pushed out by unchecked development or undermined by policies that ignore the realities of farming. I support North Carolina’s Right-to-Farm protections so farmers who operate lawfully and responsibly are not driven out by nuisance complaints after residential or commercial development moves in around them. Farms that were here first should not be punished because the area around them changes.
Local government should reduce unnecessary regulatory burdens and provide clear, predictable rules so farmers can plan, invest, and pass their operations on to the next generation. I support protecting Present-Use Value taxation so working farmland is taxed based on its agricultural use, not speculative development value. Without PUV, many family farms would be taxed out of existence.
I also support practical investments in rural infrastructure, including roads, bridges, and drainage systems that farmers rely on every day. Reliable infrastructure is not a luxury for rural communities. It is essential to getting products to market, maintaining safety, and keeping farms economically viable. Private property rights matter, and conservation efforts should be voluntary, incentive-based, and guided by sound science rather than one-size-fits-all mandates written without farmer input.
Most importantly, farmers deserve a seat at the table. Decisions affecting agriculture should be made with direct input from those who work the land. As an elected official, I will listen to farmers, respect private property rights, and support policies that keep North Carolina farms viable, independent, and productive.
Carrie Slatosky

When the library board rejected reasonable direction and disregarded parents, the commissioners were right to remove them. This decision protected children, respected families, and restored accountability.
Statement Regarding Library Board Action
pro firearm
A Strong Defender of the Second Amendment
I am a gun owner and a strong supporter of the Second Amendment because I believe constitutional rights are not optional or conditional. The right to keep and bear arms is a fundamental liberty that protects individual self-defense, personal responsibility, and the balance between citizens and government. Like many law-abiding Americans, I exercise this right responsibly and understand its importance firsthand.
I oppose regulations that undermine or erode the Second Amendment, while supporting laws that are consistent with the Constitution and applied fairly and objectively. Law-abiding citizens should not be punished or burdened for exercising a constitutional freedom. As an elected official, I will stand for the Second Amendment with clarity and consistency, and I will oppose efforts to weaken it through backdoor restrictions or selective enforcement.
Carrie Slatosky


pro faith and freedom
A Constitutionalist Who Will Fight For Your Religious Liberty
I respect public health guidance, but there is no pandemic exception to the Constitution. During COVID, state mandates treated churches more harshly than many secular activities. Federal courts raised serious First Amendment concerns and ruled that government cannot single out religious worship for unequal treatment. As a county commissioner, I would oppose and fight mandates that violate the Constitution or infringe on religious freedom.