VOLUME 7 ISSUE 8
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WWW.NSJONLINE.COM
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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 2022
Berger endorses Budd in US Senate primary Raleigh Senate Leader Phil Berger (R-Eden) endorsed U.S. Rep. Ted Budd in the May 17 Republican U.S. Senate primary. “North Carolinians will decide control of the U.S. Senate this November,” said Berger in a statement. “That’s why it’s imperative Republicans nominate an electable conservative candidate, and that candidate is Ted Budd. Ted is the only candidate with a record of job creation, fighting for common sense immigration measures, and standing up for working people.” Budd has been endorsed by over 50 current and former members of the General Assembly, most of which were in office at the same time as former one-term Gov. Pat McCrory in Raleigh. “Whether he was opposed by Democrats or certain Republicans who shall remain nameless, Phil Berger did not back down from doing what’s best for North Carolina’s working families,” said Budd of the endorsement.
Ukraine invasion battle shifts to east
Russia’s new offensive in eastern Ukraine reflects Moscow’s hope to reverse its battlefield fortunes after a catastrophic seven weeks of war. Russian forces have sharply intensified artillery barrages and airstrikes on Ukrainian positions in the industrial heartland known as the Donbas.
Florida judge voids US mask mandate for planes, other travel
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CDC launches new forecasting center for infectious diseases Washington, D.C. A new U.S. government center aims to become the National Weather Service for infectious diseases — an early warning system to help guide the response to COVID-19 and future pandemics. The new Center for Forecasting and Outbreak Analytics launched Tuesday. Its leaders say predicting the course of the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. has been hampered by datacollection problems. The center is housed at CDC. Its initial $200 million in funding came from the 2021 coronavirus relief package. The center has awarded $21 million to academic institutions to develop modeling and forecasting methods. The United Kingdom uses regular population sampling with swab tests and blood draws to get a clearer picture of infections, said Marc Lipsitch, the new center’s science director. He said similar sampling should be considered in the U.S. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Justices reject states’ appeal over cap on tax deductibility Washington, D.C. The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday rejected a challenge from New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Maryland to the 2017 tax law that capped federal tax deductions for state and local taxes. The lawsuit had previously been dismissed by lower courts. It argued that the Republican-led tax law, signed by then-President Donald Trump, unfairly singled out high-tax states in which Democrats predominate. The law caps a deduction for state and local taxes, known as SALT, at $10,000. The lawsuit claimed that lawmakers crafted the provision to target Democratic states, interfering with the states’ constitutionally granted taxing authority. Legislation to raise the cap has passed the House of Representatives but not the Senate.
By Curt Anderson The Associated Press
Secretive education nonprofit received federal paycheck relief funds ARP Committee questions about $8M allotment reveal more detail about ‘HighTech Learning Accelerator’
creased between 2019 and 2020. In 2019, McColl’s salary was listed as $176,600 and Ableidinger’s at $137,012. Executive total combined compensation in 2020 came to $360,621 or almost 33% of the reported gross receipts reported By A.P. Dillon that year. The previous year, exNorth State Journal ecutive compensation came in at RALEIGH — An education 34.7%. The non-profit was previousnonprofit that funds itself in part ly reported on by through in “memberNorth State Journal ship dues” paid for by as having received at school districts in North least $1.35 million Carolina also received from school districts Paycheck Protection The Innovation around the state in Program (PPP) funds Project (TIP) for their respective during the pandemic. superintendents to be The Innovation Proj- retained two members. ect (TIP) retained two PPP loans Large donations PPP loans totaling totaling from various founda$115,187; an ongoing tions have also been loan of $60,940 and one $115,187; an received by TIP since for $54,247 which has a ongoing loan being established as status of “paid in full or a non-profit in 2017 forgiven.” Information of $60,940 such as a grant from for both loans list just and one for W.K. Kellogg Fountwo applicable employ$54,247 which dation’s totaling ees. $982,445. Around TIP’s most recent IRS has a status $150,000 in start990 filings for the period of “paid in full up funding for TIP ending June 2020 show was provided by the the group took in gross or forgiven.” left-leaning Z. Smith receipts of $1,103,561. Information Reynolds Foundation. That filing shows two Most recently, paid employees; Presi- for both loans TIP was named in dent Ann McColl with a list just two the most recent state salary of $184,485 plus budget signed by Gov. additional compensa- applicable Roy Cooper last year. tion of $16, 186 and Vice employees. A total of $8 million President Joe Ableidingin federal relief funds er with a salary of $139,902 and additional compen- was allocated to TIP to create a “NC High-Tech Learning Accelersation of $20,048. Tax filings show that McColl and Ableidinger’s salaries in- See NONPROFIT, page A2
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ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — A federal judge in Florida struck down a national mask mandate on airplanes and mass transit Monday, and airlines and airports swiftly began repealing their requirements that passengers wear face coverings. The judge’s decision freed airlines, airports and mass transit systems to make their own decisions about mask requirements, resulting in a mix of responses. The major airlines switched to a mask optional policy, with some eliciting cheers from passengers when the changes were announced over loudspeakers. The
Transportation Security Administration said Monday night that it would it will no longer enforce the mask requirement, and airports in Houston and Dallas almost immediately did away with their mandates after the TSA announcement. Los Angeles International Airport, the world’s fifth-largest by passenger volume, also dropped its mandate but the Centers for Disease Control continued to recommend masking on transportation “and I think that’s good advice,” LAX spokesman Heath Montgomery said. Sleepy passengers on a Delta Air Lines flight between Atlanta See MANDATE, page A3
Democrat-linked organization tied to funding offer for NC absentee ballot portal Democracy Live offered a grant from Tusk Philanthropies, a group with ties to the Biden administration By A.P. Dillon North State Journal RALEIGH — In 2020, N.C. State Board of Elections Director Karen Brinson Bell made a successful push to for the state to establish an online absentee ballot portal during COVID-19, however, emails show such a portal was already in the works long before the pandemic began. Emails obtained by North State Journal show discussions between the N.C. State Board of Elections (NCSBE) and Democracy Live about adding an online absentee ballot portal happening as early as June of 2019; almost nine months prior to the emergence of COVID-19 in the state. Democracy Live’s system utilizes “OmniBallot,” an online ballot replication system. The online absentee ballot portal powered by Democracy Live was first publicly named by the NCSBE in September of 2020. According to a 2020 security analysis of OmniBallot conducted by Michael Specter of MIT and J. Alex Halderman of the University of Michigan, “OmniBallot uses a simplistic approach to Internet voting that is vulnerable to vote manipulation by malware on the voter’s device and by insiders or other attackers who can compromise Democracy Live, Amazon, Google, or CloudFlare.” The records request also revealed that Democracy Live offered grant funding from a Dem-
ocrat-tied organization called Tusk Philanthropies to NCSBE officials to help pay for an online absentee ballot portal. President of Democracy Live Bryan Finney confirmed in an email that North Carolina declined the Tusk grant offer but did not answer how and why the grants came into play or how much the grants were for and which states took them up on the See BALLOTS, page A2