VOLUME 2 ISSUE 2
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SATURDAY, MARCH 4, 2017
the good life Celebrating Mardi Gras in Durham
MADELINE GRAY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL
Adam Dipert, left, of Durham, and Irene Krohn, right, of Raleigh, perform on stilts during the Mardi Gras celebration in downtown Durham.
the weekend
News BRIEFing Flu deaths on the rise in N.C. Raleigh There have been 63 flu deaths in N.C. since the season started on Oct. 2, four more than died in last year’s entire flu season. The N.C. Department of Health and Human Services reports 16 deaths last week alone. The department urges vaccination even late in the season, frequent hand washing and covering coughs. The highest N.C. death rate in recent history was in 2014-2015 flu season which claimed 218 lives.
Cooper appoints mayor, former convicted felon, to head ABC Raleigh Governor Roy Cooper appointed former Surf City Mayor Zander Guy to replace Jim Garner at the head of the N.C. Alcoholic Beverage Commission. The choice drew fire from Republicans because Guy was convicted in 1990 of fraudulently billing clients of his insurance company. He served three months of his three year sentence before his sentence was commuted and he was pardoned by then-Governor Jim Martin, a Republican. Gov. Beverly Purdue, a Democrat, later appointed him to the ABC commission in 2009. Guy starts his new post in the Cooper administration on Monday, March 6.
Snap’s shares continue to defy doubts New York Snap’s stock jumping nearly 50 percent in their first day of trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The owner of the Snapchat messaging app raised $3.4 billion in its initial public offering on Wednesday night, and saw its market capitalization bubble up to as much as $29.1 billion. The IPO has tested investor appetite for a social media app that is popular among people under 30 for applying bunny faces and vomiting rainbows onto selfies, but has yet to convert “cool” into cash. Despite a nearly sevenfold increase in revenue, Los Angeles-based Snap’s net loss widened 38 percent last year.
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Cooper unveils budget recommendations to lawmakers The $23.5 billion budget represents a 5-percent increase in spending, sparking criticism from Republican legislative leaders By Jeff Moore North State Journal RALEIGH — Gov. Roy Cooper announced his administration’s first two-year budget proposal Wednesday morning, presenting suggested spending priorities to the N.C. General Assembly as lawmakers commence biennial budget negotiations. “This is a fiscally sound budget,” said Cooper at a press conference. “All of these investments ... contribute to a robust
economy.” Totaling nearly $23.5 billion in the first year, and eclipsing $24 billion in the second, Cooper’s budget emphasizes teacher and state employee pay raises, expands Medicaid to cover more than 600,000 additional state residents, and allocates $100 million for additional disaster relief related to Hurricane Matthew and Western North Carolina wildfires. “Gov. Cooper’s plan makes sound investments in our schools, our students and our work force, and creates opportunities to bring quality jobs to North Carolina again,” said Senate Minority Whip Terry Van Duyn (D-Buncombe). “We believe in our people; I’m hoping Republicans will give the See BUDGET, page A2
20177 52016 $2.00
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Secretary Ryan Zinke arrived for his first day of work on horseback, signaling a new take on the agency that manages 75 percent of federal land By Valerie Volcovici Reuters WASHINGTON, D.C. — New Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke plans to review Obama-era measures that limited energy development on some federal land and undertake a “bold” reorganization of his 70,000-employee agency, he said on Friday. The former U.S. congressman from Montana addressed employees at the Department of Interior’s headquarters on his second full day on the job, assuring them he would not sell off federal lands — as some had feared — but also promising change. “You can hear it from my lips: We will not sell or transfer public lands,” he said. The Interior Department, which is in charge of conserving fish, wildlife and their habitat, manages one-fifth of the land in the United States. It employs more than 70,000 people across the country.
“Fishing, hunting and other outdoor recreation generate thousands of jobs and billions of dollars in economic activity.” — Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke
See ZINKE, page A8
TAMI HEILEMANN | REUTERS
New Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke rides on horseback with a U.S. Park Police horse mounted unit while reporting for his first day of work at the Interior Department in Washington.
Opioid bill proposed to fight widespread drug addiction According to the CDC, opioids were involved in 28,647 deaths in the United States in 2014, with 1,358 of those overdose deaths in N.C. alone By Donna King North State Journal
MADELINE GRAY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL
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New Interior chief promises ‘bold’ agency restructuring
(L to R) Attorney General Josh Stein, Rep. Gregory Murphy (R-Pitt) and Carteret County Sheriff Asa Buck discuss the STOP Act, which will aim to help prevent opioid misuse, following a press conference at the General Assembly on Thursday.
RALEIGH — A bipartisan group of lawmakers filed a bill Thursday designed to tackle N.C.’s widespread opioid abuse crisis. The Strengthen Opioid Misuse Prevention Act, or STOP Act, puts new reporting requirements and stricter controls on the distribution of opioid medications, usually prescribed for pain.
Opioid pain relievers are generally safe when taken for a short time and as prescribed by a doctor, but they are frequently misused. N.C. Department of Health and Human Services reports that there are four deaths a day in N.C. due to medication or drug overdose. The state has also seen a more than 800 percent increase in the use of prescription pain pills over the past five years. Reps. Greg Murphy (R-Pitt), Ted Davis (R-New Hanover), Chris Malone (R-Wake) and Craig Horn (R-Union) sponsored the bill saying that it is overdue and takes needed action toward a long road to recovery for the state’s opioid addiction. The companion bill, S.B. See OPIOIDS, page A2