North State Journal Vol. 7, Issue 4

Page 1

VOLUME 7 ISSUE 4

|

WWW.NSJONLINE.COM

|

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 2022

Audit: State failed to issue $438M in COVID unemployment claims in timely manner By A.P. Dillon North State Journal RALEIGH — North Carolina State Auditor Beth Wood’s office has issued a new audit report showing that the first COVID-related unemployment claims were not handled in a timely manner by the Department of Commerce’s Division of Employment Security (DES). “DES did not issue first unem-

ployment benefit payments timely during the period of January 1, 2020, through March 31, 2021,” the audit’s conclusion says. “As a result, $438 million of financial assistance was not received by unemployed North Carolinians during a time of tremendous need.” The audit says the payments didn’t go out in a timely fashion because DES’ unemployment claim process isn’t designed that

way and that the division’s management didn’t monitor how fast or slow the payments were going out. Additionally, the audit says that DES was “not prepared for economic downturns that will inevitably occur.” In its response to the audit, Commerce Secretary Machelle Baker Sanders did not disagree See COVID CLAIMS page A2

RNC registering voters at gas stations Charlotte The Republican National Committee kicked off a nationwide voter registration initiative by registering voters at gas stations across Mecklenburg County. The initiative in three states: North Carolina, Arizona, and Florida, comes as gas prices hit some of their highest levels ever recorded. AAA Carolinas data shows the highest levels of a gallon of gas and diesel were recorded on March 11, 2022. The price of a gallon of regular unleaded gas was $4.19 and diesel was $5.12. “Republicans know that every time North Carolinians are going to the gas station, they are reminded of Biden’s disastrous energy policies. That’s why the RNC is meeting voters at the source of the pain — the gas pump — and offering them an alternative future by voting Republican this November,” said RNC spokeswoman Alex Nolley. The Biden administration has attempted to pin the blame for higher gas prices and inflation on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. NSJ STAFF

Indianapolis Indiana’s governor on Monday vetoed a bill banning transgender females from participating in girls school sports. Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb signaled support for the bill last month but said in his veto letter that the legislation “falls short” of providing a consistent statewide policy for what he called “fairness in K-12 sports.” Republican sponsors of the bill said it was needed to protect the integrity of female sports and opportunities for girls to gain college athletic scholarships. Opponents of the transgender sports bill argued it was a response to a problem that doesn’t exist, with the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana saying it planned a lawsuit against what it called “hateful legislation.” The Indiana law would prohibit K-12 students who were born male but who identify as female from participating in a sport or on an athletic team that is designated for women or girls. But it wouldn’t prevent students who identify as female or transgender men from playing on men’s sports teams. Eleven other Republicanled states have adopted such laws. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

5

20177 52016 $0.50

Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson speaks during her confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Tuesday, March 22, 2022, in Washington, D.C. Brown Jackson faced questions regarding her past work with Guantanamo Bay detainees and what Missouri Republican Sen. Josh Hawley called ‘a pattern of issuing lower sentences in child pornography cases’ during her time as a trial judge.

NC House sees less competition among parties than two years ago Some students have regressed multiple grade levels, particularly in language and reading skills

Indiana governor vetoes transgender girls sports ban

8

MANDEL NGAN/POOL VIA AP

SCOTUS

By A.P. Dillon and Matt Mercer North State Journal RALEIGH — In the 2020 election cycle, Democrats fielded candidates for 119 of the 120 House seats. In this year’s midterm filings, Democrats are competing for only 92 seats whereas Republicans are represented in 111 of the 120 seat races, nearly equaling their 2020 recruitment.

Following the end of candidate filing on Friday, March 4, the fields are set for the May 17 primary and Nov. 8 general election. The General Assembly’s lower chamber consists of 120 seats across the state. The number of Republicans running unopposed for House seats dwarfs that of Democrats by a count of 20 to four. The four Democrats running unopposed are Allison Dahle (HD-11), Vernetta Alston (HD-29), Pricey Harrison (HD-69) and John Autry (HD-100). Seven former members of the House are running for seats this cycle and five of the seven are seeking seats that they previously

NCDHHS ends daily COVID reporting metrics By Matt Mercer North State Journal RALEIGH — The N.C. Department of Health and Human Services released what it calls its new plan for the current stage of the coronavirus pandemic and announced it would end daily updates to its COVID-19 dashboard. The changes become effective on Wednesday, March 23. Confirmed cases have bottomed out across the state, and state leaders say the situation looks much different now than two years ago. “Over the last two years, we’ve written a history of hardship and resilience, setbacks and successes,” said Gov. Roy Cooper. “But now, we enter the next phase. One of individual responsibility, preparedness and prosperity. This virus will still be with us, but it won’t disrupt us.” The state’s daily dashboard appears to be shutting down for public viewing and will now be updated weekly and highlight

“Now, we enter the next phase. One of individual responsibility, preparedness and prosperity. This virus will still be with us, but it won’t disrupt us.” Gov. Roy Cooper

seven metrics. Those include wastewater testing in community wastewater systems, COVIDlike illness in hospital emergency departments as a percentage of total emergency visits, confirmed COVID-19 hospital admissions, positive tests for COVID-19, COVID vaccine booster rates, tracking of new variants, and reliance on the CDC’s COVID-19 community levels to monitor the

held: Republicans Marilyn Avila (HD-40); Bill Brawley (HD-103); Christy Clark (HD-98); and Stephen Ross (HD-63); and Democrat Elmer Floyd (HD-43). Two of the seven are locked in a primary against one another: Democrats Tricia Cotham and Rodney Moore are both running for House District 112, which has no incumbent. There are also two additional candidates in the race. There are 18 House incumbents who are not seeking reelection, which means at least 15% of the current members will not return to Raleigh in 2023. Eleven are Democrats and seven are Republicans. Eight of the 18 are retiring. The five Democrats re-

spread of the virus. The state stopped reporting its own county transmission data, and the contact tracing page with data on the number of contact tracers will no longer be available. NCDHHS says weekly respiratory virus surveillance summaries will continue to be published on Thursdays and tabular data will continue to be provided on the Data Behind the Dashboards page. Data on positive tests as a percentage of total tests will be available but does not include athome test results. This comes as the department says they are becoming more widely used. Case data will only be reported weekly by date of specimen collection. “We have worked hard to get here. With a robust toolset, we are prepared now as individuals and as a state in ways we could have not been two years ago or even two months ago.” said NCDHHS Secretary Kody Kinsley in a statement. “As we move forward together, we will continue to ensure every North Carolinian has access to the tools and information they need to protect themselves and others.” At the briefing, Cooper, NCDHHS Secretary Kinsley, and See NCDHHS, page A2

tiring are John Ager, Verla Insko, Evelyn Terry, Billy Richardson, and Brian Turner. The four retiring Republicans are Pat McElraft, Allen McNeill, Larry Pittman and John Szoka. Richardson, who has served for five and a half terms, said he owes it to his immediate family to step down after sacrificing so much for him to serve. “Serving Cumberland County means so much to me, but this is not my seat, this seat belongs to the people of this county,” he said last month. Two sets of Republicans are facing off after the redrawn maps left them double-bunked. In House District 52, longtime state Rep. Jamie Boles faces first-term state Rep. Ben Moss in a district that covers southern Moore County and all of Richmond County. The district makeup is nearly even with 49% in See N.C. HOUSE, 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. 7, Issue 4 by North State Journal - Issuu