North State Journal Vol. 8, Issue 48

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VOLUME 8 ISSUE 48

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WWW.NSJONLINE.COM

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 24, 2024

the

BRIEF this week

Cooper proclaims 2024 ‘The Year of Public Schools’ Raleigh Gov. Roy Cooper proclaimed 2024 as “The Year of Public Schools” in North Carolina at an event Tuesday in Nash County. At the event, Cooper called for K-12 education and early childhood funding as well as “meaningful investments in greater teacher pay” in the upcoming legislative session. He also called for a stop to state spending on the state’s popular Opportunity Scholarship program until the state’s public schools are “fully funded.” “The legislature must fully fund public education in North Carolina, including meaningful investments in early childhood education and paying our teachers like the professionals they are,” said the governor in a statement. Cooper’s announcement came in the middle of National School Choice Week, an event which he previous issued a proclamation supporting. NSJ STAFF

AP PHOTO

Efrat Machikawa, whose uncle, Gadi Moses is in Hamas captivity in the Gaza Strip since his capture from Kibbutz Nir Oz on Oct. 7, as families of hostages call out to their loved ones on loudspeakers in hopes that the hostages will hear, at the Gaza border in Kibbutz Nirim, southern Israel, Thursday, Jan. 11, 2024.

US union membership rates fall to all-time low Detroit, Mich. Unions commanded big headlines last year, but that didn’t translate into higher membership rates, according to government data released Tuesday. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics said 10% of hourly and salaried workers were members of unions in 2023, or around 14.4 million people. That is an alltime low, down from 10.1% of workers in 2022. The number of unionized workers in the private sector increased by 191,000 to 7.4 million last year. But the percent of unionized workers in the private sector – 6% -- remained unchanged from the previous year, as unionization rates didn’t keep pace with overall hiring. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Hunter Biden agrees to private deposition with Republicans after months of defiance Washington, D.C. Hunter Biden has agreed to appear before House Republicans for a private deposition on Feb. 28, ending months of defiance from the president’s son, who had insisted on testifying publicly. “The president’s son is a key witness in this investigation and he’s gonna be able to come in now and sit down and answer questions in a substantive, orderly manner,” Rep. James Comer, chair of the Oversight Committee, told reporters. The impeachment inquiry into the president, which began in September, has focused heavily on Hunter Biden and his international business affairs, questioning whether the president profited from that work. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Bring them home: NC families of Hamas hostages speak out By A.P. Dillon North State Journal

The 411: Billions in federal EV school bus grants 15 NC schools and districts to receive grants, but no money for infrastructure By A.P. Dillon North State Journal

grants spanning 652 school districts with over 5,100 buses replaced. According to the White House press release, the program will benefit 7 million students and their families while promoting “environmental justice,” and generating “well-paying jobs.” “As part of our work to tackle the climate crisis, the historic funding we are announcing today is an investment in our children, their health, and their education,” Harris said. “It also strengthens our economy by investing in American manufacturing and America’s workforce.” The funding announced is the second round of such grants that also include a rebate program. The total awarded for the CSB is nearly $2 billion and funds around 5,000 electric and low-emission school buses nationwide. Overall, the EPA’s CSB Program is expected to provide $5 billion for EV school buses over a five-year period. In April 2023, the EPA announced the CBS grants pro-

RALEIGH — Earlier this month, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the White House announced the selection of 67 recipients that will receive almost $1 billion in grants through the Clean School Bus Program (CSB). “Every school day, 25 million children ride our nation’s largest form of mass transit: the school bus. The vast majority of those buses run on diesel, exposing students, teachers, and bus drivers to toxic air pollution,” Vice President Kamala Harris said in the announcement. “Today, we are announcing nearly $1 billion to fund clean school buses across the nation.” The initiative, part of President Joe Biden’s Investing in America agenda, aims to enhance air quality and protect children. The program’s current awards summary shows over $1.84 billion in the form of 439 See BUS, page A3

NC Attorney General wants cash apps regulated by CFPB Policy expert says the move is a “solution in search of a problem.” By A.P. Dillon North State Journal RALEIGH — North Carolina Democratic Attorney General Josh Stein, along with other Attorneys General, supports proposed federal protections for digital payment and

wallet services such as Venmo, CashApp, PayPal, and Zelle. “More and more North Carolinians are conducting business on Venmo and other digital payment platforms, and they need to be able to trust that their money is going where they want to spend it,” Stein said in a press release. “These digital payment platforms need to be playing by See STEIN, page A8

RALEIGH — On Jan.16, the Hostage and Missing Families Forum and N.C. House Republicans held a press conference calling for the immediate release of Jewish and American hostages still held captive by Hamas following the terror attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. The Hostage and Missing Families Forum, a 501(c)3 nonprofit registered in the U.S., was formed less than 24 hours after the attack with the singular goal of bringing the hostages home. “Today is not about geopolitics or anything like that,” House Speaker Tim Moore (R-Kings Mountain) said at the start of the press conference. “This is about really getting the word out about these families and about these hostages who need to be released.” Moore also said Anti-BDS (Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions) legislation was being worked on and acknowledged efforts by Rep. Steve Ross (R-Alamance) and by Rep. Erin Paré (R-Wake), who was also involved in a resolution in support of Israel last fall. In addition to the families and lawmakers present, Consul General of Israel to the Southeastern United States Anat Sultan-Dadon also made some remarks. Sultan-Dadon thanked everyone in the room for their support for Israel and in calling for release of the hostages. “It has been 102 days since babies, children, toddlers, women, men and the elderly were brutally dragged into captivity in Gaza,” Sultan-Dadon said. “We still have over 130 hostages remaining in captivity today, and the call to bring them home now should be heard everywhere, not just in Israel, but by anyone and everyone around the world who values life and freedom.” Family members Moshe Levi and Yair Moses shared their stories of their loved ones still being held by Hamas. Levi’s brother-in-law Omri Miran and Moses’ father Gadi Moses are both still hostages. Levi described the horror and chaos that occurred on Oct. 7, including Hamas terrorists pointing an RPG

at a two-and-a-half-year-old girl and the execution of an 18-year-old girl. “They attacked humanity on Oct. 7 and they’re committed to attack humanity over and over again unless they’ll be stopped,” Levi said of Hamas. “But what concerns us is that our loved ones, our family members, our neighbors, our friends, our country people will return to our families alive. And for that reason, we here sharing our stories.” “On Oct.7, his world and all our world, like, almost collapsed because they [Hamas] brutally entered the kibbutz after a brutal attack of missiles,” Moses said after describing his father’s agricultural work at the kibbutz and how his father “loves to help people.” Moses went on to describe the attack and the murder of friends and neighbors whose bodies were found in the fields nearby. Near the end of December 2023, the terror group Palestinian Islamic Jihad published a video depicting two Israeli hostages. One of them was Moses’ 79-year-old father and the other was 47-year-old Elad Katzir. Both were kidnapped by Hamas terrorists from Kibbutz Nir Oz on Oct. 7. Moses’ wife was murdered by Hamas terrorists that day. Katzir’s father was also murdered by the terrorists and his mother was kidnapped but later released in November. “We don’t know when it was taken,” Moses said of the terrorist-released video while holding a picture up of his father. “He looks very thin. He looks like 10 years older than what he looked in this picture that was taken this summer.” The Hostage and Missing Families Forum press conference follows Sen. Ted Budd’s (R-NC) trip to the region. He joined a congressional delegation led by Senator Joni Ernst (R-IA) on a trip to the Middle See HAMAS, page A8

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