North State Journal — Vol. 2., Issue 31

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VOLUME 2 ISSUE 31

www.NSJONLINE.com |

Wednesday, august 2, 2017

Inside Panthers put 2016 in past Sports

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

The N.C. Department of Transportation Ferry Division today loaded two 90,000-pound electrical generators bound for Ocracoke Island aboard the Motor Vessel Sea Level. The Tideland Electrical Membership Corporation is hoping to use the generators to restore temporary power to much of the island.

the Wednesday

News BRIEFing

President of NC Community Colleges steps down Raleigh The State Board of the N.C. Community College System announced Monday evening that Dr. James “Jimmie” C. Williamson has resigned as system president, effective Sept. 30. The board will begin a search for the next system leader. Chief of Staff Jennifer Haygood will serve as acting president upon Williamson’s departure until a new president is named. The state’s community college system has 58 schools and more than 710,000 students. It is the third-largest institution of higher education in the U.S.

NORTH

STATE

JOURNaL ELEVATE THE CONVERSATION

Butterfield bill would rename Durham courthouse Washington, D.C. Rep. G.K. Butterfield (D-N.C.) introduced legislation this week to name the federal courthouse in downtown Durham for John Hervey Wheeler, a lawyer, civil rights leader and bank president. A community leader in Durham for decades, Wheeler successfully litigated several school integration cases in the late 1940s. Ten U.S. Reps. from North Carolina — Walter Jones (R-2nd District), David Price (D04), Virginia Foxx (R-05), Mark Walker (R-06), David Rouzer (R-07), Richard Hudson (R-08), Patrick McHenry (R-10), Mark Meadows (R-11), Alma Adams (D-12), and Ted Budd (R-13) — are co-sponsors.

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Officials say Tuesday electricity could be restored in six to 10 days By Cory Lavalette North State Journal RALEIGH — Last week’s power outage on the southern Outer Banks that led to the evacuation of about 50,000 people and brought parts of the coastal region’s tourism industry to a screeching halt is still being repaired, officials said in a press release Tuesday. “Cape Hatteras Electric Cooperative (CHEC) continues its execution of two simultaneous solutions to restore transmission service to Hatteras and Ocracoke Islands,” CHEC said in the statement. The outage occurred last Thursday when PCL Civil Constructors

Rough surf and riptides at NC beaches Coastal North Carolina This weekend will bring rough waters as Tropical Depression Emily passes the North Carolina coast on Thursday. Emily was downgraded Tuesday from a tropical storm but not before dumping 8 inches of rain over much of Florida on Monday and triggering a state of emergency in 31 of the state’s 67 counties. Emily is the fifth named storm of the 2017 Atlantic hurricane season which the National Weather Service projects will have more named storms and hurricanes than normal. The 2016 hurricane season was the most active since 2012.

OBX power outage has businesses, visitors anxiously waiting severed two underwater power cables while working on the new 2.5-mile Bonner Bridge over the Oregon Inlet that connects Bodie Island and Pea Island. The mistake cut power to the southern Outer Banks, leading to the mandatory evacuation of all visitors to the seven villages on Hatteras Island (Rodanthe, Waves, Salvo, Avon, Buxton, Frisco and Hatteras) and Okracoke Island. The evacuation cut short the vacation of several travelers and put at risk the plans of upcoming visitors as repairs continue during the peak tourism season. “It’s tough. Tourism is a huge business in the state — a $23 billion business that employs more than 200,000 people,” Wit Tuttell, executive director of the state See POWER OUTAGE, page A3

EAMON QUEENEY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

Board member Steven Long, center, is interviewed after a meeting of the University of North Carolina Board of Governors Committee on Educational Planning, Policies and Programs at the UNC Center for School Leadership Development in Chapel Hill.

UNC Board of Governors to consider news limits on litigation from law centers that get state money UNC Center for Civil Rights draws ire for political engagement while using taxpayer-paid resources By Donna King North State Journal CHAPEL HILL — A subcommittee of the UNC Board of Governors voted on Tuesday 5 to 1 to move forward a new policy that would remove the UNC Center for Civil Rights’ ability to represent parties in litigation outside of a law school clinical program. The debate will now move to the full UNC Board of Governors. The public comment session was one of several on this issue. In May, the director of the UNC Center for Civil Rights, Theodore M. Shaw, spoke to the committee outlining the mission of the center which he says is to provide law students with real-world litigation experience and to continue the legal battles over civil rights. “It represents an embodiment the reconciliation with African-Americans in N.C,” said Shaw. “It trains new generations of civil rights lawyers to continue the work of eliminating the legacy of racial See UNC, page A3

“Law firms have clients. Schools have students. Schools and students do one thing, law firms and clients do another.” — Joe Knott, lawyer and member of the UNC Board of Governors.

EAMON QUEENEY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

Sen. Michael Lee (R-New Hanover) looks over maps during the first joint meeting of the Select Committee on Redistricting at the Legislative Office Building in Raleigh.

Lawmakers lay out mapdrawing plan as federal judges consider arguments Lawmakers met Wednesday to plan the structure for public hearings and criteria selection, while judges ask why more progress has not been made By Jeff Moore North State Journal GREENSBORO — A U.S. federal court has ruled that North Carolina will not need to hold special elections prior to November 2018 for legislative voting districts that the court deemed were unconstitutionally gerrymandered

just one year ago. However, the same three-judge panel that struck down the Republican drawn 2011 legislative districts last year, also ordered state lawmakers to redraw the maps by September 1, 2017, albeit with a little wiggle room. The order read that if the Republican-led General Assembly is transparent in drawing the remedial districts on or before August 21, the court will extend the deadline to September 15, 2017. Members of the joint Redistricting Committee convened last week for “organizational and inSee REDISTRICTING, page A2


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