VOLUME 2 ISSUE 58
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2018
Inside NC well-represented in Pyeongchang, Sports
MICHAEL MADRID | USA TODAY SPORTS IMAGES
Members of Team USA Short Track Speedskating skate during a training session at Gangneung Ice Arena on Feb. 5. For more Olympic news, see page 8.
the Wednesday
NEWS BRIEFING
Super Bowl audience dips from last year, data shows Raleigh The U.S. television audience for Sunday’s Super Bowl on NBC dropped nearly 3 percent from last year, according to preliminary Nielsen data released by the network on Monday. About 47.4 percent of households in 56 major markets tuned in to watch the underdog Philadelphia Eagles defeat the New England Patriots, NBC said, down from 48.8 percent a year earlier. Controversy over some players’ decisions to kneel in protest during the national anthem led to boycotts of the NFL’s broadcasts and merchandise. No players kneeled during singer Pink’s performance of the national anthem at the Super Bowl.
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Team USA rolls into South Korea ahead of games Pyeongchang, South Korea With the 2018 Winter Olympics on Friday, Team USA athletes are arriving in Pyeongchang, South Korea, for processing and settling into the Olympic Village. Five USA athletes are hoping to defend their titles with another gold medal: Jamie Anderson (slopestyle snowboarding), Maddie Bowman (halfpipe skiing), Ted Ligety (alpine skiing), Mikaela Shiffrin (alpine skiing) and David Wise (halfpipe skiing). Of the 243 members of Team USA, 103 are returning Olympians and three have been to five Olympic Games or more.
JOSHUA ROBERTS | REUTERS
U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI) departs with House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) ahead of an expected vote in the Republican-led U.S. House of Representatives on a short-term budget measure that would avert a rerun of last month’s three-day partial government shutdown, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. Feb. 6.
Cooper’s pipeline fund draws scrutiny $57.8 million from Duke Energy and Dominion Energy will be controlled by executive branch
The deal was outlined in a Memo of Understanding (MOU) from Cooper’s office last week, released along with an announcement that the administration’s Division of Environmental Quality had issued permits for conBy Donna King struction of the pipeline to begin North State Journal across eight counties in N.C. The RALEIGH — Gov. Roy Coo- project is drawing fire from enviper now says the $57.8 million ronmental groups who are traditionally allies of Cooper. deal he struck for the Last week, 60 people proapproving the Atlantic tested at Cooper’s office Coast Pipeline permits for 10 hours, leading to 15 is actually a “voluntary “During the arrests. contribution.” However, “We are here to deliver the General Assembly’s time it takes a message of deep disapfiscal research divisions to get us to is looking into its legal- a full renew- pointment about the actions of the Cooper adminity and how the money istration last Friday. It’s in the fund would be able energy future, we exactly the wrong thing controlled. for North Carolina, and we In a memo to law- will still are going to be in the way makers, Mark Trogdon, from now on,” said one director of the nonpar- need to rely protester with the N.C. Altisan Fiscal Research on other liance to Protect the PeoDivision, said he isn’t fuels.” ple and Places We Live. getting all the answers The Fiscal Research to his questions on Division said it did not money that Duke En- — Gov. Roy find any law addressing ergy and Dominion Cooper the creation of a multimilEnergy will put into lion-dollar fund specifian escrow account for cally for the governor’s use Cooper, or those he appoints, to spend on mitigation and without the legislative budgeting economic development in areas impacted by the pipeline. See PIPELINE, page A2
Lawmakers nearing budget deal to avoid another shutdown
A decade after recession, a jump in U.S. states with wage gains
By Richard Cowan and Steve Holland Reuters
Washington, D.C. The kind of pay raises for which American workers have waited years are here for a broadening swath of the country, according to a Reuters analysis of state-bystate data that suggests falling unemployment has finally begun boosting wages. Average pay rose by more than 3 percent in at least half of U.S. states last year, up sharply from previous years. The data also shows a jump in 2017 in the number of states where the jobless rate zeroed in on record lows, 10 years after the financial crisis knocked the economy into a historic recession.
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Republican and Democratic leaders on Capitol Hill say they are closing in on an agreement to expand spending levels for both military and domestic programs and ensure that the government will keep operating when temporary spending expires on Thursday. President Donald Trump said that he would accept a shutdown if a spending deal did not include changes to immigration laws, challenging Democrats on the issue that led to a three-day partial closure of government agencies last month. The deal could potentially put an end to the brinkmanship over
spending that has periodically roiled Washington and that resulted in funds running out for the government in January. "I'm optimistic that very soon we'll be able to reach an agreement," Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell told reporters. Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said the agreement would include an increase for domestic programs like drug treatment and broadband infrastructure that Democrats have sought, as well as a military spending increase championed by Republicans. "We're making real progress on a spending deal," he told reporters. See BUDGET DEAL, page A8
NORTH STATE JOURNAL | FILE
Roy Cooper speaks during a news conference in 2016.
INSIDE Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke meets with governor, lawmakers in Raleigh. Jones & Blount
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