North State Journal Vol. 6, Issue 24

Page 1

VOLUME 6 ISSUE 24

|

WWW.NSJONLINE.COM

|

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 2021

the Wednesday

NC House unveils budget

NEWS BRIEFING

Members of the NC House of Representatives including House Speaker Tim Moore (R-Kings Mountain), at the podium are on track to approve their version of the state’s biennial budget this week.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo resigning over sexual harassment Albany, NY New York Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced his resignation Tuesday over a barrage of sexual harassment. “The best way I can help now is if I step aside and let government get back to government,” Cuomo said. The three-term governor’s decision, which will take effect in two weeks, was announced as momentum built in the Legislature to remove him by impeachment. It came after New York’s attorney general released the results of an investigation that found Cuomo sexually harassed at least 11 women. Cuomo still faces the possibility of criminal charges, with a number of prosecutors around the state moving to investigate him. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Next round of census data to be released Thursday Washington, D.C. The U.S. Census Bureau will release the first local-level results from the 2020 Census Thursday. States use these sets of data on race, voting-age population and more to redraw the boundaries of their congressional and state legislative districts. The Census Bureau will host a news conference providing initial analysis of the results. In anticipation of the release, the N.C. General Assembly is establishing its rules for the session. The joint redistricting committee will provide public access to draw maps at the legislative building and take comments on redistricting criteria. NSJ STAFF

Two state catfish records broken in July Raleigh Officials with the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission certified two catfish state records that were broken within one week of each other in July. Rocky Baker of Four Oaks broke the blue catfish record on July 10, and Taner Rudolph of Hubert broke the channel catfish record on July 17. Baker caught his 127-pound 1-ounce blue catfish on the Roanoke River. The fish measured 60 inches long and 40 1/4 inches in girth. Rudolph, who broke a record that was broken for the first time in 50 years last year, reeled in his 26-pound channel catfish on the Neuse River. The fish measured 38 5/8 inches long and 22 3/4 inches in girth. These are the first two freshwater fish state records certified in North Carolina this year. Three anglers broke state catfish records in 2020. NSJ STAFF

New state transportation maps available Raleigh New North Carolina State Transportation Map are available from the N.C. Department of Transportation. The cover of the new map features some of North Carolina’s most scenic views, including the Blue Ridge Parkway, the Greensboro skyline and Sunset Beach. First published in 1916 and updated every two years, the state map is NCDOT’s most popular publication, with 1 million copies printed this year. The new map details the more than 81,000 miles of state-maintained roads, one of the largest in the nation. The state map is available for free at any of the state’s 58 rest areas, nine welcome centers and NCDOT offices. NSJ STAFF

PHOTO VIA NC HOUSE REPUBLICANS

NORTH

STATE

JOURNaL

NC saw record 3,260 drug OD deaths in 2020, continued rise in 2021 ly evenly spread out across the state. “Looking at these numbers, RALEIGH — In July, the Cen- I’m incredibly concerned,” Elyse ters for Disease Control released Powell, the state’s opioid coorditheir predictions for national nator at the NCDHHS, told NSJ 2020 drug-overdose death num- in an Aug. 10 phone interview. bers and they again broke re- “These are frightening numbers to see, and it’s really cords, with 93,331, a heartbreaking to see 29% spike from the these large increas2019 total of 72,151. es. In our emergency North Carolina was departments, we did not spared from this “In our see a decrease two grim milestone, beat- emergency years ago. So it’s reing the national averdepartments, ally heartbreaking to age with a predicted see these numbers go total of 3,260, a 37% we did see a up again.” jump from 2019’s to- decrease two Powell said there tal of 2,383. And the has been a steady inmost recent month years ago. crease in overdose from North Caroli- So it’s really deaths over the last na Department of decade. With the opiHealth and Human heartbreaking oid epidemic specifServices data sug- to see these ically, those in her gests this upward numbers go up field refer to different trend is not slowing again.” “waves” of that criin 2021. sis. The first was due The NCDHHS to prescription pills, data for North Caro- Elyse Powell, the the second was more lina showed 685 visits about heroin, and to emergency rooms state’s opioid the third and fourth for opioid overdoses coordinator at the waves have been in April 2021, a 19% NCDHHS about synthetic opiincrease when comoids like fentanyl, espared with the 629 pecially when taken at the same point in 2020. McDowell County had in conjunction with other drugs. “Wave three, and we’ll call it the highest number of emergency-room visits due to opioid wave four, have been a move tooverdose — with 24 visits per ward a stronger drug supply and much more poly-substance use.” 100,000 residents. The hardest hit counties — Powell said. “So a long time ago, like McDowell County in the folks who used opioids primarily mountains, Stanly County in the just used opioids, but now what Piedmont, and Craven County in the coastal region — are fair- See OVERDOSES, page A2 By David Larson North State Journal

Survey on expansion of COVID-19 K-12 testing pilot shows lack of interest Majority of schools surveyed show little or no interest in COVID-19 testing pilot or NCDHHS ‘end-to-end’ testing vendor pilot program By A.P. Dillon North State Journal RALEIGH — A survey sent to schools across the state on expanding the current COVID-19 testing pilot program shows limited and mixed results. According to data obtained by North State Journal, schools were asked a number of questions including their district location, student-population-size range and questions about the pilot program. The data included responses from 228 school entities from public district schools, private schools and charter schools. The majority of respondents were charter schools (57) and private schools (121). Around 40 respondents identified themselves as a district local education agency (LEA) and 10 had no identifier listed. The N.C. Department of Health and Human Services (NCDHHS) first rolled out a COVID-19 testing pilot program for K-12 schools in December of 2020. At that time, at least 16 districts and 10 charter schools were included in the list of approved participants. An expansion of the program was announced by NCDHHS at the beginning of March of this year. That same month, Dr. Aditi Mallick, director of the COVID-19 Operations Center, updated the State Board of Education, noting that some 53,000 tests had been sent to 200 schools across 17 districts, and 11 charter schools engaged in the pilot program that began in late 2020. Schools were asked whether or not they were interested in using a COVID-19 screening program for the coming school year. Choices of answers included, “yes,” “no” and “yes, but It depends on the type of test.” For that question, 47 were “yes” responses and 67 of the respondents answered “yes, but it depends on the type of test.” The vast majority, 114, said “no.” Schools were also asked if their

University policies, lawsuit threat led trustees to approve Nikole Hannah-Jones’ tenure offer By Matt Mercer North State Journal CHAPEL HILL — According to former UNC Chapel Hill trustee Charles Duckett, what actually happened behind the scenes was a much different process than what played out publicly in the controversy surrounding the journalism school’s attempted hiring of Nikole Hannah-Jones. After weeks of uncertainty from a routine board meeting to a final emergency closed-session discus-

sion, the trustees approved tenure for the writer — only to see her opt for a position at Howard University in Washington, D.C., days later. Duckett told NSJ in an interview earlier this month that the journalism school’s dean, Susan King, had recruited Hannah-Jones “two years ago,” pre-dating the publication of her controversial “1619 Project.” He says the Knight Foundation was also involved in the recruitment process in the fall of 2020. “When this process started, I wrote an email in January

[which Duckett says is pending release] saying ‘There’s going to be a lot of questions here, and I don’t want this to come up [without prior knowledge],’” Duckett says. “I wanted some questions answered and asked for a delay, meaning it would come up in March.” King says she first met Hannah-Jones in 2017 and confirmed discussions began in 2019 to bring the New York Times Magazine writer to campus. See TRUSTEES, page A8

school or school district would have interest in being “a pilot site for a NCDHHS end-to-end vendor testing program prior to the fall.” Only 57 expressed interest in becoming a pilot site and an overwhelming majority, 172, said “no.” According to the responses, the main reasons given for not having a testing pilot program was a “lack of interest or concern from families/ students/teachers,” as well as concerns about testing performance and staffing support. Districts were asked if they already were or intended to “support vaccine access” for their students. Those responding “no” were in the majority with 148. Around 80 responded “yes” and one respondent did not answer the question. The COVID-19 testing pilot will be continuing as students head back to the classroom this fall and department spokeswoman Catie Armstrong said that the state hopes to expand the pilot to “as many schools as possible in the future.” NCDHHS announced on Aug. 5 that MAKO Medical and Concentric by Ginkgo had been picked to run the testing services in schools. According to Armstrong, districts are not expected to keep test results in a student’s file but they are required to report all positive results to local health departments as well as sending all results to NCDHHS. When asked if schools will become de facto testing sites for K-12 students and See TESTING, page A2


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
North State Journal Vol. 6, Issue 24 by North State Journal - Issuu