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VOLUME 2 ISSUE 30
www.NSJONLINE.com |
Wednesday, July 26, 2017
Inside Making Roman Gabriel’s HOF case Sports
PHOTO COURTESY OF the North Carolina Office of State Archaeology
Today, Condor rests in 25 shallow feet of water, roughly 700 yards off the beach in front of the North Carolina Aquarium at Fort Fisher.
the Wednesday
News BRIEFing
NC unemployment rate hits 11-year low Raleigh N.C.’s unemployment rate decreased 0.3 percentage points to 4.2 percent in June, an 11-year low and 0.2 points below the national rate. Seasonally adjusted “nonfarm” employment increased 12,600 in June, while total employment increased 86,185 over the year. Total unemployment dropped 14,892 over the month and fell 30,716 over the year. The number of persons unemployed fell by 14,892 (6.7 percent) in June. The national unemployment rate increased a tenth of a percentage point.
Federal judge allows Trump elections commission
Manafort to appear before Senate Judiciary Wed. Washington, D.C. Former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort will appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday under supeona regarding his activities with foreign governments. Manafort’s name was raised during two sessions earlier this week with Jared Kushner and Congressional intelligence committees staff. Kushner gave detailed accounts of his four meetings Manafort arranged with Russian officials, calling them a “waste of time” and denying any collusion with a foreign government.
20177 52016 $2.00
STATE
JOURNaL ELEVATE THE CONVERSATION
Navigating the Atlantic Coast Pipeline Crowds share views at public hearings
Washington, D.C. A federal judge rejected claims that President Donald Trump’s elections commission broke laws in asking for and storing publicly available voter data. The decision, out on Monday, clears the way for the advisory panel to continue its work studying allegations of voter fraud and making recommendations. The information will be stored on White House servers and will not contain Social Security numbers, ballots cast or birth dates.
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NORTH
By Laura Ashley Lamm North State Journal ROCKY MOUNT, N.C. — In the coming weeks, the N.C. Division of Water Resources will make a major decision on a proposed gas line that could affect one-third of the entire state. The Atlantic Coast Pipeline (ACP) is proposing to install approximately 600 miles of line running through West Virginia, Virginia and the length of North Carolina. On its quest to seek the state’s approval for water quality certification, the ACP has received more backlash than support from residents across eastern North Carolina this week. The Atlantic Coast Pipeline has plans to construct one compressor station and install approximately 186 miles of a 36-inch transition pipeline in
Northampton, Halifax, Nash, Wilson, Johnson, Sampson, Cumberland and Robeson counties. The proposed project will permanently impact 766 linear feet of jurisdictional streams and 0.80 acres of jurisdictional wetlands, and temporarily impact 35,951 linear feet of jurisdictional streams and 454 acres of jurisdictional wetlands. Officials with the N.C. Division of Water Resources spent the last week obtaining feedback from the public on the proposed pipeline. A public hearing in Fayetteville was held at the beginning of the week followed by Thursday evening’s hearing at Nash Community College’s Brown Auditorium in Rocky Mount. Officials were at the hearing to receive comments and answer questions regarding the pipelines application for a state water quality certification and See PIPELINE, page A2
One of the best-preserved shipwrecks is visible off the coast of Kure Beach By Donna King North State Journal KURE BEACH, N.C. — N.C. recreational divers and snorkelers can take a deep dive into the state’s history with an up-close look at the Condor, a civil war blockade runner that ran aground and sunk more than 150 years ago. The ship has a fascinating history that includes one of the Confederacy’s most notorious spies. The Condor ran aground on her maiden voyage to Wilmington on Oct. 1, 1864. She sank after launching out of Govan, Scotland, in June of that year, coming to rest just off the beach in Fort Fisher, located at the southern tip of Kure Beach. Today, the Condor is in 25 shallow feet of water, roughly 700 yards off the beach in front of the North Carolina Aquarium at Fort Fisher. The ship herself is largely intact with 218 feet of the original 220 remaining. The N.C. Office of State Archaeology has marked the site from May 1 until Nov. 1 this year, designating the Condor as the first North Carolina Heritage Dive Site. “The bow is still attached to the wreck along with her sternpost and rudder,” said Greg Stratton, archaeological dive supervisor for the N.C. Department of Natural and Cultural Resources. “In between are outer hull plating, intact I-beam frames, the water tank, ‘beehive’ boilers, both engines, paddle wheel shafts, paddle wheel hubs, keelson and too many pieces of structure to mention.”
Gov. Roy Cooper announces opposition to offshore drilling
By Jeff Moore North State Journal
Atlantic Coast Pipeline opponents hold up signs during a hearing at Nash Community College’s Brown Auditorium in Rocky Mount.
The Condor ran aground on her maiden voyage to Wilmington on Oct., 1 1864. She sank after launching out of Govan, Scotland, in June of that year, coming to rest just off the beach in Fort Fisher.
See SHIPWRECK page A3
Roy Cooper’s Department of Environmental Quality plans to made arguments against drilling last Friday to the U.S. Department of Interior
LAURA ASHLEY LAMM | NORTH STATE JOURNAL
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Sunken Civil War blockade runner has a story to tell NC divers and snorkelers
ATLANTIC BEACH, N.C. — Gov. Roy Cooper announced last week that his administration would be submitting documents to the U.S. Department of Interior arguing against the opening of waters off the North Carolina coast for seismic testing and drilling of oil and natural gas. Cooper gave the remarks in Atlantic Beach at Fort Macon State Park. “I can sum it up in four words:
Not off our coast,” exclaimed Cooper. The governor, a Democrat, said the risks of drilling to the coastal communities of the Old North State were too high and offered that there are safer and cheaper options such as renewable energy sources and natural gas. According to the Institute for Energy Research, the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS), which stretches north to south offshore of the East Coast of the United States, contains approximately 86 billion barrels of oil and 420 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. Cooper’s predecessor, Republican Pat McCrory, together with a coalition of coastal governors, lobbied the federal government See DRILLING, page A3