Good morning, North Carolina. Here's what you need to know today.
Your Weather Planner
A round of showers and thunderstorms will develop Tuesday to our west, and that activity will then work its way toward the area from late Tuesday into Tuesday night. At this point, most of Tuesday looks dry, but then a round of showers and storms could sweep through at night.
Behind that system, cooler and drier air will take over for the end of the week with comfortable afternoons and cool mornings on the way.

Get the full forecast of areas around the state:
Charlotte | Triad | Triangle | Coastal | Mountains
Watch the latest local news and get your Weather on the 1s.
1. Fort Bragg paratrooper's cold case homicide marks 5 years
This month marks five years since Army Spc. Enrique Roman-Martinez’s partial remains washed ashore on the North Carolina coast. No other remains were found, and no one has been charged in his death, although Army investigators consider it a homicide. A $50,000 reward has been offered for information in the case.
2. 'Just amazed': Hidden stairwell puts a spotlight on secrets inside U.S. Capitol
A video posted by Rep. Tim Moore of a hidden stairwell in the Capitol has gone viral. The stairwell is located off the Capitol’s Statuary Hall, down a hallway from the Lincoln Room in the Majority Whip’s Office. U.S. Capitol Historical Society Public Historian Steve Livengood said every now again, secrets like this emerge.
3. Stein visits Rutherford County to pitch $891 million more for Helene relief
Gov. Josh Stein is asking state lawmakers for more money to help western North Carolina recover after Hurricane Helene. Stein, a Democrat who took office this year, was in Union Mills in Rutherford County on Monday to highlight his proposal for an additional $891 million in recovery funding. Lawmakers in March approved $528 million to help rebuild from the catastrophic September storm.
1. Trump says Russia-Ukraine ceasefire talks will begin immediately following call with Putin
2. Stocks, bonds and the dollar drift after latest downgrade to U.S. government's credit rating
3. For one sentinel, a final walk at Arlington's Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
Don't Miss This
The Florida Panthers were on their way to becoming the NHL's standard, headed to the Stanley Cup Finals two years ago before returning to win the Cup last year. In many ways, the breakthrough moment came in the exact spot they find themselves now: in the Eastern final, preparing to open a series on the road against the Carolina Hurricanes on Tuesday night. The Panthers swept that series with four one-goal wins, a grinding advance that began with a four-overtime thriller that went down as the sixth-longest game in NHL history.