VOLUME 7 ISSUE 3
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WWW.NSJONLINE.COM
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 2022
Four NC Republican congressmen sign onto Second Amendment protections bill By A.P. Dillon North State Journal RALEIGH — North Carolina Republican U.S. Reps. Dan Bishop (NC-09), Ted Budd (NC-13), Madison Cawthorn (NC-11), and Richard Hudson (NC-08) have signed on as co-sponsors for H.R. 6945, the No Retaining Every Gun In a System That Restricts Your (REGISTRY) Rights Act or No REGISTRY Act for short.
According to the measure’s two-page draft, the main purpose of No Registry is to “amend title 18, United States Code, to discontinue the collection by the Federal Government of firearm transaction records of discontinued firearms businesses, to require the destruction of such already collected records, and for other purposes.” The measure would require the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) to delete or remove all existing gun and firearms transactions, the records of which kept by the ATF is apparently creeping towards a billion, according to a Jan. 31 report in the Washington Free Beacon. The Washington Free Beacon article states that, “While the ATF denies that these records See GUN RIGHTS page A3
Federal grant will help former Rocky Mount QVC workers Raleigh NC has received a $4 million federal workforce grant to help workers who lost their jobs due to the tragic December 2021 fire at the QVC distribution facility in Rocky Mount, Gov. Roy Cooper’s office announced Monday. “This new grant will help hundreds of former QVC workers get back on their feet,” Gov. Cooper said. “While we’ve already helped many impacted employees get new jobs, many others still need the training and services this new grant provides to help them with new careers.” Eligible dislocated workers may receive career services to help them make informed decisions about reemployment and education, training services including both on-the-job training opportunities with area employers and classroom training at community colleges or other providers, and supportive services to address barriers that may prevent individuals from participating in employment and training. NSJ STAFF
US producer prices climbed 10% in February from a year ago Washington, D.C. Wholesale inflation in the United States shot up 10% last month from a year earlier — another sign that inflationary pressures remain intense at all levels of the economy. The Labor Department said Tuesday that its producer price index — which tracks inflation before it hits consumers — rose 0.8% from January. Wholesale energy prices were up 33.8% over the past year and food prices 13.7%. The report did not include price changes after Feb. 15, missing a spike in energy prices when Russia invaded Ukraine nine days later. Last week, the government reported that surging gas, food and housing costs pushed consumer prices up 7.9% in February from a year earlier — the sharpest spike since 1982. To combat rising prices, the Federal Reserve is set to hike interest rates several times this year, starting this week with a quarter-point rise in its benchmark short-term rate. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Liberal super PAC accuses Trump of breaking campaign laws by teasing 2024 run Washington, D.C. As former President Donald Trump continues to tease a future White House bid, a proDemocratic super PAC has accused him of violating federal campaign laws. In a complaint filed with the FEC, American Bridge accused Trump of “illegally using his multicandidate leadership PAC to raise and spend funds in excess of Commission limits for the purpose of advancing a 2024 presidential campaign.” Since leaving office, former President Trump has alluded to his plans, telling conservative hosts and Trump-friendly audiences that he is waiting to make an announcement until after the midterms. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
AP PHOTO
This file photo from Tuesday, Oct. 20, 2020, shows a first-grade teacher with students participating remotely and in-person. A recent report from the N.C. Dept. of Public Instruction shows severe learning loss and regression among students in the state’s public schools.
Educational therapist sees learning loss, regression in special needs students Some students have regressed multiple grade levels, particularly in language and reading skills By A.P. Dillon North State Journal RALEIGH — Pandemic learning loss in the state’s and nation’s public schools has dominated the headlines, but another set of students have also suffered devastating effects. Students with learning disabilities have seen a steep decline in academic performance and related behavioral issues as a result of remote instruction used during pandemic school closures. Last month, the state’s top education officials testified in front of a legislative committee about the impact of the pandemic on public education and the associ-
ated student learning loss. The report given to lawmakers was also presented this month to the N.C. State Board of Education and included data showing sizeable drops across all grade levels for students with disabilities. Brenda Brown, a certified educational therapist with a private practice in the Charlotte area, tells North State Journal her practice has been overwhelmed with students with certain learning disabilities and that her practice is not the only one seeing a flood of cases. Brown is licensed through the National Institute for Learning Development, which is accredited by the International Dyslexia Association. She holds a master’s degree in Reading, Language, and Literacy. “At the regional conference I attended in February, I found
out that some of the larger Charlotte private schools that have programs are exploding as well,” Brown said in an email to North State Journal. “They are unable to serve all the students and have waiting lists and are actively trying to hire more educational therapists.” Brown said there are many students who have been pulled from public school to attend private schools and that influx has overloaded their programs. “One school in Huntersville and another in South Charlotte were hiring therapists and had waiting lists for therapy students; both are K-12 schools,” said Brown. “The therapists were trying to make accommodations to the therapy programs that usually aren’t implemented just to serve more students.” Brown added “This is a long
term problem that just adding a session of summer school is not going to alleviate.” Having attended both the national and regional conferences given by the National Institute for Learning Development (NILD), Brown said there was a lot of discussion about the trends with students over the last two years in particular. “Our students have varying challenges, such as SLD (specific learning disabilities), autism, ADHD, and other lesser known diagnoses such as fragile X or XYY syndrome,” said Brown. “There is a definite trend since 2020 of learning loss and regression, particularly in the area of language and reading compared to previous years.” The learning loss and regresSee EDUCATION, page A2
Secretive education nonprofit receives ‘membership dues’ from schools, millions in grants By A.P. Dillon North State Journal RALEIGH — The Innovation Project, a non-profit with “equity” objectives, appears to fund itself in part with taxpayer dollars in the form of membership dues paid for by school districts across the state. As reported in part one of this series, it has been difficult to discern exactly what TIP does or how the group does it. According to its website, TIP is a “nonprofit collaborative working group of North Carolina public school district superintendents created to envision the future of education and design equitable, learner-centered strategies to get there.” The mission statement for TIP echoes a similar message of bringing together “forward-thinking” school district superintendents. The TIP website says the organization “formally began on July 1, 2015.” Gerry Hancock and Ann McColl co-founded and created it as “a service of the Raleigh law
firm, Everett Gaskins Hancock LLP.” In 2017, TIP became a 501(c)3 non-profit. At the time it went non-profit, Joe Ableidinger was the acting CEO while McColl is listed as “President Emeritus.” Ableidinger’s bio at TIP notes his prior involvement with the left-leaning NC Public School Forum, where he was formerly the Senior Director of Policy and Programs in 2014. The bio leaves out his consulting with Public Impact at the Progressive Policy Institute based in Washington, D.C. McColl, an attorney by trade, has past and current affiliations serving on left-leaning boards, according to the website Mapping the Left. Those affiliations include the NC Justice Center, Common Cause North Carolina, and serving as legal counsel for the teacher union affiliate the North Carolina Association of Educators. TIP has also received a contract totaling $8 million in federal funds through the most
recent state budget. From documents uncovered by North State Journal, it would appear the N.C. State Board of Education in 2018 gave approval to a request to bypass the procurement proposal process for TIP related to obtaining Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) federal funds. In addition to the $8 million in federal dollars allocated to TIP by the legislature, the organization has received funding in the form of grants, but also in “membership dues” paid for by school districts. The TIP website notes the group and its “TIP-SCAN” initiative has received “generous support and partnership of the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation.” That “generous support” came in 2015 in the form of $150,000 in start-up funds. The Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation has bankrolled the majority of progressive and left-leaning groups and non-profit organizations across the state, including See NONPROFIT, page A2
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