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VOLUME 2 ISSUE 12
www.NSJONLINE.com |
SATURDAY, April 8, 2017
Inside Masters underway in Augusta. Sports
madeline gray | NORTH STATE JOURNALfile
John Maurer, a staff aquarist, cleans a tank at the North Carolina Aquarium at Pine Knoll Shores.
the weekend
News BRIEFing Election worker arrested for alleged attempt to alter 250 voter registrations Oxford, N.C. On Wednesday the Granville County Sheriff’s office said that Joy Wilkerson, 41, of Henderson was arrested for fraudulently altering voter registrations to try and restore voting privileges to more than 250 felons. Wilkerson is alleged to have committed the crimes in 2015 and 2016 while working as a temporary election worker during the preparation for the 2016 elections. She’s been charged with two counts of felony fraudulent unlawful voter registration and misdemeanor unlawful altering of voter registration. She was released on a $14,000 bond.
$500B in accounting errors uncovered at U.S. Housing and Urban Development Washington, D.C. Secretary Ben Carson, the new head of Housing and Urban Development, revealed results of an audit this week that found $520 billion in errors in the agency’s books from 2015 and 2016. HUD’s inspector general said that even with the corrections, a complete audit cannot be done because of a failure of HUD leadership to “implement adequate financial accounting systems, retain key financial staff, and identify appropriate accounting principles and policies.” The IG said the problems have been reported for the past three years.
NORTH
STATE
JOURNaL ELEVATE THE CONVERSATION
Contentious cases would await Gorsuch on high court
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months since the death of Justice Antonin Scalia, leaving the U.S. Supreme Court with just eight judges
President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee would join his new fellow justices in time to act on divisive cases
By Donna King North State Journal WASHINGTON, D.C. — This week Senate Republicans crushed a Democratic blockade of President Donald Trump’s U.S. Supreme Court nominee in a fierce partisan brawl, approving a rule change dubbed the “nuclear option” to allow for conservative judge Neil Gorsuch’s confirmation by Friday. With ideological control of the nation’s highest court at stake, the Republican-led Senate voted 52-48 along party lines to change its long-standing rules in order to prohibit a procedural tactic called a filibuster against Supreme Court nominees. That came after Republicans failed by a 55-45 tally to muster the 60-vote super-majority needed to end the Democratic filibuster that had sought to deny Gorsuch confirmation to the lifetime post. The Senate’s action paved the way to confirm Gorsuch by simple majority, with a vote expected at roughly 7 p.m. on Friday. Republicans control the Senate 52-48. The rule change was called the “nuclear option” because it was considered an extreme break with Senate tradition. Landmark cases concerning religion, guns and See gorsuch, page A8
INSIDE Step back in time at the annual N.C. Azalea Festival the good life
Jim Bourg | reuters
20177 52016 $2.00
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Title 1 schools have a low income population, but now they will get a taste of the ocean too By Laura Ashley Lamm North State Journal RALEIGH — The North Carolina Aquariums are preparing to offer more opportunities for school children across the state to experience and engage with the sights, sounds and environments of land and sea. The Aquarium Scholars Project, an educational outreach program, is designed to assist schools with significant low income student populations. The project helps fund their aquarium educational experiences though site visits to an aquarium or through aquarium staff traveling to the school and presenting educational programs. “The North Carolina Aquariums offer one of the largest informal science education programs in the state. The new Aquarium Scholars initiative will expand access to these offerings for at-risk students in Title I schools — an effort that can help close achievement gaps in both science and life skills for thousands of students across the state,” said Brenda Berg, president of NC BEST. Title I schools are schools with large concentrations of low-income students that receive supplemental federal funds to assist in meeting students’ educational needs. Typically, 40-80% of their students receive free or reduced-price lunches. There are 1,440 such schools in North Carolina. The Scholars Project is a joint partnership between the N.C. Aquariums, N.C. Department of Public Instruction, N.C. Department of Natural and Cultural Resources, N.C. State University Friday Institute, N.C. Aquarium Society and a consortium of friends.
U.S. Supreme Court nominee judge Neil Gorsuch responds to a question as he testifies during the third day of his Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S. on March 22, 2017.
1,440
Title 1 schools (schools with low-income students that recieve supplemental federal funds) in North Carolina
$175K raised so far by the Aquarium Society for the Aquarium Scholars Project
See aquarium, page A3
House Republicans revive elections board reforms deemed unconstitutional Senate Bill 68 would combine boards, expand the State Board of Elections, but modify executive authorities to satisfy court ruling By Jeff Moore North State Journal
It’s all about the dress!
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Aquarium Scholars Project to offer funding for schools
RALEIGH — The North Carolina General Assembly made further progress this week regarding confirmation proceedings of Gov. Roy Cooper’s cabinet choices. The N.C. Senate confirmed Dr. Mandy Cohen as secretary of the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services and Machelle Sanders as secretary of the N.C. Department of Administration. Two other Cooper appointments, Michael Regan and Tony Copeland, nominees to lead the N.C. departments of Environmental Quality and Com-
merce, respectively, each cleared committees on their way to a full vote by the Senate. While the Senate’s authority to advise and consent to the governor’s cabinet appointments was recently upheld in court, another facet of the same lawsuit that was ruled unconstitutional, 2016 legislation reforming the State Board of Elections and Ethics Commission, has now re-emerged in the form of a bill modified by Republican lawmakers to satisfy constitutional questions raised by the judicial panel. “In this bill we have addressed the concerns of the three-judge panel and this is no longer a separation of powers issue as the court ruled because we’ve given the executive branch the power to appoint members of the board,” said bill sponsor and House Rules ChairSee NCGA, page A2