North State Journal Vol. 6, Issue 17

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VOLUME 6 ISSUE 17

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WWW.NSJONLINE.COM

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WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 2021

the Wednesday

NEWS BRIEFING

President Biden to visit Raleigh Thursday Raleigh President Joe Biden will travel to Raleigh on Thursday to highlight the ongoing COVID-19 vaccination effort. An email sent from the White House press office said that President Biden’s trip will tout the ease of getting vaccinated, encourage vaccinations and mobilize grassroots vaccine education and outreach efforts. The announcement comes a week after Vice President Kamala Harris visited Greenville, South Carolina, to push vaccinations and recent trips by EPA administrator Michael Regan to Charlotte and Raleigh. The trip is Biden’s first official visit to N.C. since becoming president. NSJ STAFF

Folwell backs NC Senate budget agreement Raleigh State Treasurer Dale Folwell released a statement in support of the N.C. Senate’s budget, saying he thanked the members for advancing a “fiscally responsible budget.” “Like Olympic gymnast Simone Biles, they not only showed courage in attacking these long-term needs, but really ‘stuck the landing’ with this budget. The current proposal fully funds the State Health Plan, the state retirement systems and the state’s debt service as well as setting aside, for the first time ever, money for the Pension Solvency Reserve,” Folwell said. He also said the proposal provides unparalleled resources for water and sewer infrastructure needs at a time when communities are struggling to maintain fiscal stability. NSJ STAFF

Cooper records 55th veto in tenure as governor Raleigh Gov. Roy Cooper vetoed Senate Bill 43 late last week, which would have expanded concealed-carry laws to include places of worship that are shared with a school campus, as long as the worship activities do not take place during school hours. “For the safety of students and teachers, North Carolina should keep guns off school grounds,” Gov. Cooper said in a statement. The veto marked No. 55 in his five years thus far as governor and the second of the 2021–22 legislative session. House Speaker Tim Moore said the bill was “a narrowly targeted legislation that simply allows North Carolinians to exercise their Second Amendment rights at a religious meeting place that is also the location of a school, as long as it is outside school operating hours.” The bill did attract bipartisan support; however, legislative Democrats have sided with Cooper on numerous veto override votes in the past five years. NSJ STAFF

North Mecklenburg intersection receives national award Huntersville A local project’s innovative intersection design has earned national recognition by the American Council of Engineering Companies at its 2021 Virtual Engineering Excellence Awards gala. The continuous flow intersection at N.C. 16/ Brookshire Boulevard and Mount Holly-Huntersville Road, a first for North Carolina, received the award, considered “the Academy Awards of the engineering industry.” The design shifts traffic into two stages, so vehicles cross N.C. 16 several hundred feet before making a left turn. This increases the intersection’s efficiency by up to 70%. Drivers started using the new traffic pattern in late 2019. NSJ STAFF

TRAVIS LONG | POOL VIA AP

Senate leader Phil Berger answers questions from reporters during a press conference outlining the state budget, Monday, June 21, 2021, at the North Carolina Legislative Building.

NORTH

STATE

JOURNaL ELEVATE THE CONVERSATION

Summit’s Greear presides over Southern Baptist national meeting with race, sex abuse in spotlight Raleigh pastor completes 3-year term as president over 14-million-member denomination By David Larson North State Journal RALEIGH — In his last act as president of the denomination, Pastor J.D. Greear of the Raleigh-Durham area’s Summit Church led the Southern Baptist Convention’s annual gathering, which was held in Nashville, Tennessee, June 15–16. The event drew more participation and media attention than usual due to a number of controversies — including how to address race and sexual abuse within what is the largest Protestant denomination in the United States. “Leading this meeting was one of the most challenging and rewarding experiences of my life. Thank you, Great Commission Baptists, for entrusting me with this sacred privilege,” Greear said on social media after the meeting. Greear chose “We are Great Commission Baptists” as the theme for the meeting to signify what should unite members of the SBC, a reference to Jesus’ “Great Commission” to his followers to make disciples of all nations. The decisions made by the SBC’s 15,726 present “messengers” — as participants from the various represented congregations are called — focused on finding a peaceful and united path forward despite ongoing divisions. On Critical Race Theory, which was a hot-button topic prior to the meeting, the messengers voted to reject a proposal to denounce CRT by name and instead approved a proposal to reject “any theory or worldview that denies that racism, oppres-

sion, or discrimination is rooted, ultimately, in anything other than sin.” Resolutions also reiterated earlier SBC statements condemning and apologizing for the denomination’s historic support for slavery and racism. This balance was aimed at finding common ground in a church with a deeply conservative theology and membership that is also quickly becoming more racially diverse. “We should heed the counsel of our leaders of color who tell us that our denunciations of justice movements fall on deaf ears when we remain silent on the suffering of our neighbors,” Greear said to those gathered, according to Baptist Press, SBC’s in-house news agency. “And we must make certain that our zeal to clarify what we think about CRT is accompanied by a pledge to fight with [Black Southern Baptists] against all forms of discrimination against our neighbors; to make clear that we stand with our brothers and sisters of color in their suffering, lamenting the pain of their past and pledging to work tirelessly for justice in our present.” Mike Stone, the immediate-past chair of SBC’s powerful executive committee, ran to replace Greear as president on a platform partially defined by opposing CRT. Stone helped form the Conservative Baptist Network to oppose what he sees as a leftward direction in the denomination when discussing issues of identity. While Stone received the most votes of the four candidates running, his 36% was not enough to secure the necessary majority. In a subsequent runoff vote with the top two candidates from the first round, Ed Litton, pastor of Redemption Church in Saraland, Alabama, received See GREEAR, page A8

NC Senate budget cuts taxes, boosts infrastructure spending amid revenue surplus By David Larson North State Journal RALEIGH — The North Carolina Senate, who introduces their spending plan first this biennium, presented their budget on June 21, maintaining the conservative approach General Assembly Republicans have been following since they took over the budget-writing process 10 years ago — focusing on tax cuts, boosting savings, covering fiscal obligations and a more-methodical approach to raises for public employees. While the House and Senate had already agreed on how much

to spend on the 2021-23 budget, some observers thought the announcement of a $6.5 billion windfall in revenue might cause some upward adjustments in that number. But the Senate budget proposal stuck with early targets, spending $25.7 billion in 2021-22 and another $26.6 billion in 2022-23. “A huge surplus does not mean we’re spending too little. It means we’re taxing too much,” senate leader Phil Berger (R-Eden) said when the nonpartisan fiscal staff reported the surplus. Acting from that perspective, at See NC SENATE, page A2

Judge signs order requiring $8.29B Leandro plan be implemented ‘in full’ Lawmakers say Lee has no authority to dictate state spending By A.P. Dillon North State Journal RALEIGH — The judge in the decades-long Leandro case over education funding has signed an order requiring the General Assembly to implement the plan provided to the court “in full.” On June 7, Judge David Lee signed the order for the WestEd-produced comprehensive remedial plan to move forward. The order requires a progress report on “fulfilling the terms and conditions” of the order to be submitted by lawmakers to the court by Aug. 6. WestEd had submitted the 300page comprehensive remedial plan and appendix of implementation costs in March of this year after some delays. The order is a reversal from Lee’s stance in April, at which time he had expressed hesitancy to dictate WestEd’s $8.29 billion in new state-level education spending recommendations to the General Assembly. That spending would be spread out over an eight-year period. Senate K-12 Education Committee Co-Chair Deanna Ballard (R-Watauga) says Lee has no authority to direct spending by the General Assembly. “A court has no more authority to direct the legislature to spend money or enact policy than the legislature does to direct a trial judge how to decide a case,” Ballard said in a statement to North State Journal. “If Judge Lee wants a say in education policy, he can run for the state legislature. That is the only way his

opinions will have any weight.” Lawmakers have seemingly been left out of the equation, despite sevSee LEANDRO, page A2


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