VOLUME 1 ISSUE 22
SUNDAY, JULY 24, 2016
www.NSJONLINE.com
the Sunday News Briefing
Donald Trump with Indiana Gov. Mike Pence and their families celebrates on stage after his speech during the Republican National Convention at Quicken Loans Arena in downtown Cleveland, July 21. Donald Trump spent more than an hour accepting the Republican Party’s nomination for president on the fourth and final day of the RNC.
Multiple deaths reported at Munich shopping mall shooting Munich Multiple people were reported to have been shot during a mass shooting at a shopping mall Friday in Munich. While details were still unfolding during press time, reports from German newspaper Muencher Abendzeitung said up to 15 people were killed, according to Reuters. The shopping mall is adjacent to the Munich Olympic stadium, where in 1972 the Palestinian militant group Black September took 11 Israeli athletes hostage and eventually killed them during the 1972 Olympic Games.
PGA Championship stays in Charlotte while NBA moves All-Star Game over H.B. 2 Charlotte The NBA announced Thursday it is moving the 2017 All-Star Game out of Charlotte, citing its objections to North Carolina’s House Bill 2. Following that news, PGA of America announced Friday the 2017 PGA Championship will remain at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte. PGA of America CEO Pete Bevacqua said in June the PGA would consider pulling the event out of the state if H.B. 2 was not overturned, but decided against it. “The PGA of America strongly opposes North Carolina H.B. 2,” the PGA said in a statement. “It contradicts our commitment to create an inclusive and welcoming environment at our events. We remain hopeful that the law will be changed. As we look to future events, our willingness to consider coming back to the state of North Carolina will be severely impacted unless H.B. 2 is overturned.” For more info on the issue, check out page B1.
EAMON QUEENEY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL
NORTH
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JOURNaL ELEVATE THE CONVERSATION
EASTERN NC BOOST
Schurmeier sworn in as SBI director Raleigh Gov. Pat McCrory swore in Robert Schurmeier Jr. as director of the State Bureau of Investigation Friday during a ceremony at the Executive Mansion. McCrory nominated Schurmeier for the position in April, saying, “As a law enforcement veteran and proven executive, Robert Schurmeier will be a strong leader for the SBI and our state.” Schurmeier has nearly three decades of law enforcement experience from the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department, which he retired from in 2004 as deputy chief of investigations.
INSIDE
Midseason NASCAR Power Rankings B4 2016 PGA Championship Preview B7 Sports A chat with author Kristy Woodson Harvey, an author crafting stories in familiar N.C. places. C1 the good life
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CONVENTIONs
RNC ends, calling delegates to action By Jeff Moore North State Journal CLEVELAND/RALEIGH — North Carolina’s GOP delegation rolled back home late Friday, exhausted but motivated for the campaign season. The Republican National Convention wrapped Thursday evening in Cleveland with nominee Donald Trump delivering the longest acceptance speech in four decades focusing on restoring law and order. The N.C. delegation celebrated all week, enjoying a group scavenger hunt through the arena and the N.C. tradition of “seersucker Wednesday” for a group picture. “This has been the most exciting political convention of my lifetime,” said Republican vice presidential candidate Mike Pence on Friday. “I’ve spent time with this man and his family, I say with absolute confidence, if we work with all our hearts between now and Election Day, we will make Donald Trump the 45th president
and we will make America great again.” Not all in the N.C. group were on board the Trump train. N.C. GOP Chairman Robin Hayes emphasized to the group in the weeks ahead of the convention that unity was the word of the day. When a handful of delegates who flew up with Hayes on his private plane broke ranks and voiced public support for Ted Cruz’s controversial non-endorsement speech, they ended up having to find their own way back to N.C. Overall, most in the delegation thought Cruz’s speech was in bad taste and were ready to rally around Trump. Trump’s daughterin-law Lara Trump, a Wrightsville Beach native and NCSU graduate, will be heading the campaign in her home state. One of the first official Trump/Pence campaign stops will be in Winston-Salem on Monday. For full convention coverage see RNC A3-A5
MADELINE GRAY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL
Gov. Pat McCrory announces plans by CSX to build a container shipping hub in Edgecombe County on Tuesday, July 19.
McCrory announces CSX terminal By Laura Ashley Lamm North State Journal ROCKY MOUNT, N.C. — In what proved to be a monumental week for Edgecombe and Nash counties, Gov. Pat McCrory announced CSX will open a new intermodal terminal on the Edgecombe County side of Rocky Mount. The $272 million rail hub is a crucial infrastructure project that will bring long awaited jobs and growth to Eastern North Carolina. The announcement is being called the best economic news for Eastern N.C. in 20 years. Dubbed the Carolina Connector, the hub will transfer containerized cargo between trains and trucks, processing more than 260,000 containers per year initially. The building of the facility itself is slated to create 250 to 300 short-term jobs in engineering, technical services and construction. McCrory estimated the hub is expected to create 1,500 jobs throughout North Carolina as a result of the terminal’s operations. “The Carolina Connector will be a game-changer for our state’s economy, supporting North Carolina’s agriculture, ports and position as the Southeast’s No. 1 state for manufacturing jobs,” said McCrory. “We’re bringing new manufacturing back to Eastern North Carolina. …This is a quiet, environmentally sound
facility which will fit into the landscape of the area and create hundreds upon hundreds of jobs for the people of this area.” CSX will invest $160 million in the project that is expected to open in 2020. CCX will directly employ 149 workers at salaries averaging $64,047 per year. The estimated salaries are well over Edgecombe County’s annual wage of $32,725. Sealing the deal for CSX’s choice of North Carolina for the intermodal terminal was the passing of the Job Development Investment Grant by the state’s Economic Investment Committee. Under this grant, CSX is eligible to receive as much as $4.3 million in total reimbursements. North Carolina’s Department of Transportation will contribute $100 million for track improvements as well as terminal infrastructure through the state’s new Strategic Transportation Initiative (STI) funding formula established by McCrory during his first year as governor. He instituted the STI saying that the old system needed to change because it was too tied to politics. At the time McCrory faced criticism on the transportation funding reform from Attorney General Roy Cooper, who is now McCrory’s Democratic gubernatorial challenger. Cooper told See CSX TERMINAL, page A2
Focus turns to Clinton, Democratic Convention in Philadelphia By Cory Lavalette North State Journal PHILADELPHIA — Following the weeklong coronation of Republican Donald Trump at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Hillary Clinton and the Democrats take center stage in Philadelphia for her nomination as Trump’s main opponent. For Clinton, it marks her rise to the top of the Democratic Party eight years after she lost the nomination to current President Barack Obama, who now says he
is “ready to pass the baton” to his former secretary of state. While the GOP convention was often about who didn’t come in support of Trump — including both Bush presidents, Ohio Gov. John Kasich, and 2012 Republican nominee Mitt Romney — the DNC has a who’s who of high-powered Democrats. She will also introduce her running mate, Sen. Tim Kaine from Virginia. The convention kicks off Monday with keynote speakers MiSee DNCC, page A8
CARLOS BARRIA | REUTERS
Democratic U.S. presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine (D-VA) wave to the crowd during a campaign rally at Ernst Community Cultural Center in Annandale, Virginia, U.S., July 14.