VOLUME 3 ISSUE 1
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WWW.NSJONLINE.COM |
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 2018
inside NSJ predicts the best to come in 2018, Sports 2018 Midterms to dominate headlines as both parties look for leverage
NORTH
STATE
Republicans battled to pass key tax reform legislation with repeal of the Obamacare individual mandate. Next up — infrastructure and more reform and for 34 seats in the 100-member Senate where Republicans hold a slim two-seat majority. N.C.’s senators are not up for re-election this year; Sen. Thom Tillis will face voters again in 2020, and Sen. Richard Burr would run in 2022, but announced last year that he won’t seek re-election. The elections will be seen as a referendum on President Donald Trump and his administration,
By Donna King North State Journal
JOURNaL
RALEIGH — As 2018 dawns, the congressional midterm campaigns elections, along with the impact of historic tax cuts, are expected to dominate this year’s news cycle. In November 2018, elections will be held for all 435 seats in the U.S. House of Representatives, including N.C.’s eight,
ELEVATE THE CONVERSATION
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See MIDTERMS, page A2
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and Republicans and Democrats are planning their strategies accordingly. In nearly two-thirds of 34 Republican-held districts that are top of Democrat’s target list, household income or job growth, and often both, have risen faster than state and national averages over the past two years, according to an analysis of census data, presenting a hurdle to the party. However, the Democrats were taking careful notes on the special Senate election in Alabama. Dem-
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# 0Buckingham CARLOS BARRIA | REUTERS President Donald Trump celebrates with Congressional Republicans after the U.S. Congress passed sweeping tax overhaul legislation, on the South Lawn of the White House Cumberland in Washington on Dec. 20. Jefferson National Forest
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Is the student loan debt bubble poised to burst?
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By Jessica Furr North State Journal
— Dr. Gary Cummings, chancellor of UNC Pembroke
ACCORDING to some economists, the nation’s student loan debt is an emerging problem, and many say it will capture national attention in 2018. According to the U.S. Department of Education, 43 percent of the 22 million Americans who received student loans are behind in their payments or have gotten permission to stop paying due to “economic hardship.” Economists call it the student debt bubble —and if it bursts it could be a financial shockwave so sudden and large that it gathers the full force of the savings and loan, insurance, energy, tech, and mortgage crashes, creating a blockbuster-level perfect storm. A December 2017 study from Goldman Sachs blamed the problem on loose underwriting standards, because lenders require few credit checks or cosigners and don’t screen applicants for college readiness and the marketability of their majors. The analysts said that “a substantial percentage of student loan risk is borne by the See STUDENT DEBT, page A2
NC lawmaker named national chairman of American Legislative Exchange Council Jones & Blount
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While economic developers call the ACP project critical to boosting Eastern NC’s economy, environmental groups work to stop it By Laura Ashley Lamm North State Journal
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RALEIGH — The Atlantic Coast Pipeline gained support and opposition during 2017 and as the new year begins, it is still a hot topic with state leaders, organization officials, environmentalists and residents across North Carolina. The Atlantic Coast Pipeline (ACP) is proposing to install approximately 600 miles of line running through West Virginia, Virginia and through Eastern North Carolina until its final See PIPELINE, page A3
North Carolina takes on prison reforms Following the deaths of five corrections employees in 2017, legislators look to make key reforms in NC prison management By Liz Moomey North State Journal
INSIDE
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“NC Promise will go a long way toward ensuring that financial concerns don’t stop students from pursuing their dreams.”
Chesapeake
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RALEIGH — Five North Carolina prison employees were killed in 2017. Sgt. Meggan Callahan was killed by an inmate in April at Bertie Correctional Institute. Then, during a prisoner escape attempt at Pasquotank Correctional Institute in Elizabeth City on Oct. 12, Wendy Shannon, Veronica Darden, Geoffery Howe, and Justin Smith died from injuries
they sustained when inmates attacked employees with hammers and scissors. Going into 2018, Rep. Bob Steinburg (R- Chowan), who represents the area, is leading legislative efforts to review of prison management, including officer pay, training and staffing. “For the last six months, I have been speaking with corrections personnel from many of the 55 correction facilities across the state,” Steinburg said in an NSJ op-ed on Dec. 6. “They have been sharing information with me about what amounts to a ‘secret society’ that exists within a closed circle of management. It protects the See PRISONS, page A3
EAMON QUEENEY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL | FILE
A look at the North Carolina Department of Correction’s Central Prison near downtown Raleigh.