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Tag: App Top Stories – NC

  • Community college program aims to ease HVAC labor shortage

    Community college program aims to ease HVAC labor shortage

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    GREENSBORO, N.C. — As skilled labor shortages persist across the state, some community colleges are working to ease the problem. 


    What You Need To Know

    • HVAC professionals say a skill gap has contributed to a labor shortage in the industry
    • More than 700 HVAC positions are listed on indeed.com in North Carolina 
    • Guilford Technical Community College held a job fair last week connecting its HVAC program students with businesses 
    • About 90 students are enrolled in the school’s HVAC program

    Guilford Technical Community College held an HVAC job fair on Tuesday. 

    Students training in the school’s HAVC program got the opportunity to be hired by local employers. 

    GTCC student Candice Foreman said it’s one of the many ways the college helps with career development.

    “You have every opportunity out there to be successful, and this job fair is pretty much bringing that to light,” Foreman explained. 

    School officials say fewer people willing to learn a skilled trade is what led to the shortage, but that is something that is starting to shift.  

    “Companies are having to pay more to retain those employees. It is a highly skilled industry, and it is getting more technical,” said Jeff Underwood, director of GTCC’s HVAC program. 

    About 90 students are enrolled in the program.

    The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics shows North Carolina is among one of the states that employ the most HVAC workers. 

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    Sasha Strong

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  • Nutritionist helping people live healthier lives

    Nutritionist helping people live healthier lives

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    CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A North Carolina woman is channeling her passion into teaching people how to live healthier lives. 


    What You Need To Know

    •  Women’s History Month is a time to celebrate the contributions of women across the globe 
    •  A North Carolina resident is being recognized for her efforts to keep people healthier 
    •  She hopes her story inspires others to live their life to the fullest 


    Ini Isangedighi, known as the Naija Goddess, is a board-certified holistic nutritionist and chef. Every Sunday, she leads a two-hour nutrition and cooking class for residents. 

    The event is sponsored by the Arts & Science Council Culture Blocks of Mecklenburg County, which allows people to attend the classes for free. 

    Isangedighi says it’s important to give back in ways that will help others live life to the fullest.

    “I just know I suffered for 25 years,” she said. “I’m spreading education [about] nutrition, giving tasty plant-based recipes people will actually enjoy and want to prepare.”

    Isangedighi says for years, she struggled with being sick.

    “It was almost like a normal part of my life,” she said. 

    She says her health worsened when she started her undergraduate education. 

    “I gained about 80 pounds in the span of about three months with no change to my diet or physical activity level, and I couldn’t figure out what was going on,” Isangedighi said. “I went to a host of doctors; they didn’t know what was going on.”

    Isangedighi says she was later told she had several serious health conditions, including high cholesterol and pre-diabetes. 

    “They said all these things were not reversible and could be managed with medications,” Isangedighi said. “I didn’t want to live that life anymore. It never sat well with me.”

    Things changed for her when she reached her mid-30s. 

    “I watched a documentary wth my father that changed my life,” she said. “I changed my diet to a whole food plant-based diet and 80 pounds melted off of me with no effort. All my illnesses went away. No doctor [I visited] ever told me food is medicine.” 

    Isangedighi made the decision to go to school and become a certified holistic nutritionist. 

    She now runs her own company, The Naija Goddess. Her brand is dedicated to teaching people how to live healthier lives. 

    “Naija means Nigerian,” Isangedighi said. “I was always called Nigerian Barbie Doll growing up. I changed it to goddess to represent the God in me, so that’s why the Naija Goddess is my company name.” 

    She says her father and husband played pivotal roles with motivating her to become the leader she is today. 

    “I started this journey with my father,” she said. “Unfortunately, he was taken from us. My dad, his last years were his best years, I’m grateful for the time we did share. Since he’s been gone, my husband has been my rock, my inspiration. He’s my muscle, he carries all the stuff [I need] in. I always say I couldn’t do this without him.” 

    Ini Isangedighi with her husband, Demond Carter, left, and her father, Kpoto Okon Isangedighi. (Courtesy Ini Isangedighi)

    Deborah Carson lives in Charlotte. She recently made the decision to stop eating meat. 

    Carson and her mother started attending Isangedighi’s classes to learn more about plant-based meals. 

    “It’s going to help me to live longer and to be here,” Carson said. “I can’t be of service to anybody if I’m all broke down with diseases. It helps us think about cutting down on disease, the prevention of cancer. I don’t have them, but I think about all those things because those things have been in my family. This is going to be beneficial all around. [Plus] the food is good.” 

    Carson says she’s grateful for the work Isangedighi is doing to enrich so many people’s lives. 

    “She gives us homework, and she tests you the next time, but she makes it fun,” Carson said. “She’s very knowledgeable, very supportive.”

    “At 41, I feel like I’m 21 because at 21 I felt 91,” Isangedighi said. “It was my loving obligation to share [what I learned] with the community. I’m not saying it’s the only way, but this is a way you can live a healthier and happier way where you’re fulfilled. It’s an honor to see the impact it’s had on our community.” 

    Isangedighi’s nutrition and cooking demonstration class takes places 3-5 p.m. Sundays at Love in Action Cafe. The classes wrap up on June 30. 

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    Jennifer Roberts

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  • Huntersville business raising money for St. Augustine’s University

    Huntersville business raising money for St. Augustine’s University

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    HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. —  Kaldi’s Coffeehouse & Roastery is donating 30% of profits from its special Saint Augustine’s University coffee line to the university’s Falcon Pride Initiative Fund


    What You Need To Know

    • Saint Augustine’s University launched a Falcon Pride Initiative Fund with the goal of raising $5 million to prove the school is financially stable as it seeks to keep accreditation
    • A Charlotte based coffeehouse and roastery launched a special HBCU series, donating 30% of proceeds from its “1867” branded coffee beans to the Falcon Pride Initiative Fund
    • The owner, a fellow HBCU graduate, says she wants to do what she can to help

    St. Augustine’s launched the fund in February, hoping to raise $5 million to elevate its financial stability as the university seeks to keep its accreditation.

    Marcia Cox, Kaldi’s Coffeehouse & Roastery owner, graduated from North Carolina A&T in 2023. She said when she saw another historically Black university in need, she wanted to step in and help.

    “It just felt like the right thing to do,” Cox said. “I just felt like if that were my school, and I were a student there or an alum there, I’d want someone to do something to help out as well and bring awareness.”

    Cox launched an HBCU line of coffee beans. Roastery customers can order special North Carolina A&T, Winston-Salem State University and St. Augustine’s University branded coffee. The N.C. A&T and WSSU options will donate 10% of proceeds to the respective schools. Thirty percent of profits from the St. Augustine’s branded coffee beans will be donated to the Falcon Pride Initiative Fund.

    Cox says in two weeks, she has received more than 30 orders for the St. Augustine’s line and plans to write her first check to the university at the end of the month. 

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    Alexis Bell

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  • Justice Department sues Apple, alleging illegal monopoly over smartphones

    Justice Department sues Apple, alleging illegal monopoly over smartphones

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    The Justice Department and 16 state and district attorneys general filed an antitrust lawsuit against Apple on Thursday, accusing the tech giant of creating an illegal monopoly over smartphones in the United States.

    The lawsuit, filed on Thursday in federal court in New Jersey, alleges that the company’s so-called “walled garden” ecosystem — which allows Apple to maintain total control over its hardware and software — creates a monopoly by stifling competition. It accuses the company of using control over the iPhone to “engage in a broad, sustained, and illegal course of conduct.”

    “Each step in Apple’s course of conduct built and reinforced the moat around its smartphone monopoly,” the complaint reads, charging that the company uses “a series of shapeshifting rules and restrictions in its App Store guidelines and developer agreements that would allow Apple to extract higher fees, thwart innovation, offer a less secure or degraded user experience, and throttle competitive alternatives.”

    “We allege that Apple has maintained monopoly power in the smartphone market, not simply by staying ahead of the competition on the merits, but by violating federal antitrust law,” Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement. “If left unchallenged, Apple will only continue to strengthen its smartphone monopoly.”

    In a statement, the company said it disagrees with the claims made in the lawsuit and vowed to “vigorously” fight it.

    “This lawsuit threatens who we are and the principles that set Apple products apart in fiercely competitive markets,” the company’s statement reads. “We believe this lawsuit is wrong on the facts and the law, and we will vigorously defend against it.”

    States joining the Justice Department’s lawsuit include New York, California, Maine and Wisconsin, as well as the District of Columbia.

    This is a developing story. Check back later for further updates.

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    Justin Tasolides

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  • From mountains to coast, social districts are popping up across North Carolina

    From mountains to coast, social districts are popping up across North Carolina

    [ad_1]

    As the weather warms up, people in many cities and towns across North Carolina are able to take a stroll with a beer in hand. 

    Social districts allow people in cities across the state to do something previously unheard of: take their beverage of choice to go. 

    As of March, there are 55 registered social districts across North Carolina, according to the ABC Commission. Just three years ago, there were zero.

    In September 2021, the General Assembly passed a law that allowed city and county governments to create social districts, like the ones you can now find in more than a quarter of counties across the state. 

    Social districts allow people to carry open alcohol away from the places they buy it from, which has allowed for districts like Sip n’ Stroll in Downtown Raleigh, which comprises more than 20 city blocks. 

    In July 2022, Governor Roy Cooper signed into law a bill that clarified the requirements for social districts. The law laid out very specific rules for these areas. 

    Not all businesses inside of a social district have to participate, but those that do have to be registered with the ABC Commission. Alcohol purchased from participating establishments can be carried outside and into other participating businesses, but not outside of the designated social district boundaries. 

    Alcoholic beverages must have a sticker on them that says what business and social district the drink is from. As of this year, drinks cannot be served in glass containers.

    Social districts must have clear signage at the boundaries, and have to operate within defined hours. For example, Lexington’s social district, which just opened last Friday, operates from 10 AM to 10 PM seven days a week. 

    Since these guidelines were put in place in 2022, social districts have exploded across the state. In many places, they’ve revitalized downtown areas. 

    Selma, a town north of Raleigh in Johnston County, launched their social district two years ago. Since then, people have been able to roam the downtown streets with drinks in hand. The social district is particularly popular during Rockin’ on Raiford, an annual concert series that shuts down a block. The social district debuted with the concert two years ago, and the event is set to return.   

    The map below shows all of the social districts currently registered with the ABC Commission. The ABC Commission says some districts may still be in the process of submitting registration paperwork, so some towns that are starting a social district may not be included on this map.  

     

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    Walter Reinke

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  • Some rural hospitals shifting to emergency-only care

    Some rural hospitals shifting to emergency-only care

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    As rural hospitals continue to struggle financially, a new type of hospital is slowly taking root, especially in the Southeast.


    What You Need To Know

    • Rural hospitals that close their inpatient care beds to offer emergency care can get federal funding and higher Medicare reimbursements
    • The federal government’s effort, which started in 2023, is seen as a solution for some struggling rural hospitals
    • It means rural patients might have to travel farther to receive inpatient care

    Rural emergency hospitals receive more than $3 million in federal funding a year and higher Medicare reimbursements in exchange for closing all inpatient beds and providing 24/7 emergency care. While that makes it easier for a hospital to stay open, experts say it doesn’t solve all of the challenges facing rural health care.

    People might have to travel farther for treatments for illnesses that require inpatient stays, like pneumonia or COVID-19. In some of the communities where hospitals have converted to the new designation, residents are confused about what kind of care they can receive. Plus, rural hospitals are hesitant to make the switch, because there’s no margin of error.

    “It’s ironic” that the facilities that might need the most help can’t afford to take the risk, said Carrie Cochran-McClain, chief policy officer at the National Rural Health Association.

    She pointed to having to give up certain services and benefits, such as a federal discount program for prescription drugs.

    The government, which classifies hospitals by type, rolled out the rural emergency option in January 2023. Only 19 hospitals across the U.S. received rural emergency hospital status last year, according to the University of North Carolina’s Sheps Center for Health Services Research.

    The majority are in the South, but some are in the Midwest, and hospitals in Nebraska and Florida recently started to explore the option.

    The designation is aimed at a specific population, said George Pink, deputy director of the Sheps Center’s Rural Health Research Program, and that’s rural hospitals on the brink of closure with few people getting inpatient care already.

    Saving rural care

    That was the case for Irwin County Hospital in Ocilla, Georgia, which was the second rural emergency hospital established in the U.S.

    Weeks prior to converting, the hospital received at least $1 million in credit from the county so it could pay employees — money that county board of supervisors chairman Scott Carver doubted he’d see returned.

    “We operate on a $6 million budget for the county, so to extend that kind of line of credit was dangerous on our part to some degree,” he said. “But … we felt like we had to try.”

    Irwin County Hospital became a rural emergency hospital on Feb. 1, 2023. Quentin Whitwell, the hospital’s CEO, said it was an ideal candidate.

    “We’re still finding out what some of the impacts are, given that it’s a new thing,” said Whitwell, who through his company Progressive Health Systems owns and manages six hospitals in the Southeast, most of which are rural emergency hospitals or have applied for the designation. “But the change to a rural emergency hospital has transformed this hospital.”

    A combination of state programs and tax credits, plus the new designation, means the hospital has $4 million in the bank, Carver said. Simply put, the work was worth it to him.

    Traci Harper, a longtime Ocilla resident, isn’t so sure. About a year ago, she rushed her son to the hospital for emergency care for spinal meningitis.

    Because the new designation requires the hospital to transfer patients to larger hospitals within 24 hours, Harper’s son was sent to another in-state facility and three days later ended up getting the care he needed in a hospital in Jacksonville, Florida.

    “That’s two hours away,” she said. “The whole time I could have taken him there myself, but nobody told me that.”

    ‘Barely surviving’

    Nebraska’s first rural emergency hospital opened in February in a city called Friend.

    Warren Memorial Hospital had reached a breaking point: Federal pandemic relief money had dried up. The city, which owns the hospital, had to start extending lines of credit so hospital employees could get paid. A major street repair project was even delayed, said Jared Chaffin, the hospital’s chief financial officer and one of three co-CEOs.

    “Back in the summer, we were barely surviving,” said Amy Thimm, the hospital’s vice president of clinical services and quality and co-CEO.

    Though residents expressed concerns at a September town hall about closing inpatient services, the importance of having emergency care outweighed other worries.

    “We have farmers and ranchers and people who don’t have the time to drive an hour to get care, so they’ll just go without,” said Ron Te Brink, co-CEO and chief information officer. “Rural health care is so extremely important to a lot of Nebraska communities like ours.”

    The first federal payment, about $270,000, arrived March 5. Chaffin projects the hospital’s revenue will be $6 million this year — more than it’s ever made.

    “That’s just insane, especially for our little hospital here,” he said. “We still have Mount Everest to climb, and we still have so much work ahead of us. The designation alone is not a savior for the hospital — it’s a lifeline.”

    Rural troubles

    That lifeline has proven difficult to hold onto for Alliance Healthcare System in Holly Springs, Mississippi, another one of Whitwell’s hospitals and the fourth facility in the country to convert.

    Months after being approved as a rural emergency hospital in March 2023, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services reneged on its decision.

    Hospital CEO Dr. Kenneth Williams told The Associated Press that the government said the hospital isn’t rural because it is less than an hour away from Memphis. A CMS spokesperson said the facility was “inadvertently certified.”

    The hospital has until April to transition back to full service, but many in the community of mostly retirees believe the hospital has closed, Williams said. Patient volume is at a record low. If the federal payments stop coming, Williams isn’t sure the hospital will survive.

    “We might have been closed if we hadn’t (become a rural emergency hospital), so … something had to be done,” he said. “Do I regret all of the issues that for some reason we’ve incurred that the other (hospitals) have not? I don’t know.”

    Though Alliance appears to be one of few facilities that have been hurt by converting to a rural emergency hospital, Pink said it’s too soon to know if the federal designation is a success.

    “If my intuition is correct, it will probably work well for some communities and it may not work well for others,” he said.

    Cochran-McClain said her organization is trying to work with Congress to change regulations that have been a barrier for rural facilities, like closing inpatient behavioral health beds that are already scarce.

    Brock Slabach, the National Rural Health Association’s chief operations officer, said over 30 facilities are interested in converting to rural emergency hospitals this year.

    As Whitwell sees it: “As this program evolves, there will be more people that I think will understand the value.” 

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    Associated Press

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  • Some rural hospitals shifting to emergency-only care

    Some rural hospitals shifting to emergency-only care

    [ad_1]

    As rural hospitals continue to struggle financially, a new type of hospital is slowly taking root, especially in the Southeast.


    What You Need To Know

    • Rural hospitals that close their inpatient care beds to offer emergency care can get federal funding and higher Medicare reimbursements
    • The federal government’s effort, which started in 2023, is seen as a solution for some struggling rural hospitals
    • It means rural patients might have to travel farther to receive inpatient care

    Rural emergency hospitals receive more than $3 million in federal funding a year and higher Medicare reimbursements in exchange for closing all inpatient beds and providing 24/7 emergency care. While that makes it easier for a hospital to stay open, experts say it doesn’t solve all of the challenges facing rural health care.

    People might have to travel farther for treatments for illnesses that require inpatient stays, like pneumonia or COVID-19. In some of the communities where hospitals have converted to the new designation, residents are confused about what kind of care they can receive. Plus, rural hospitals are hesitant to make the switch, because there’s no margin of error.

    “It’s ironic” that the facilities that might need the most help can’t afford to take the risk, said Carrie Cochran-McClain, chief policy officer at the National Rural Health Association.

    She pointed to having to give up certain services and benefits, such as a federal discount program for prescription drugs.

    The government, which classifies hospitals by type, rolled out the rural emergency option in January 2023. Only 19 hospitals across the U.S. received rural emergency hospital status last year, according to the University of North Carolina’s Sheps Center for Health Services Research.

    The majority are in the South, but some are in the Midwest, and hospitals in Nebraska and Florida recently started to explore the option.

    The designation is aimed at a specific population, said George Pink, deputy director of the Sheps Center’s Rural Health Research Program, and that’s rural hospitals on the brink of closure with few people getting inpatient care already.

    Saving rural care

    That was the case for Irwin County Hospital in Ocilla, Georgia, which was the second rural emergency hospital established in the U.S.

    Weeks prior to converting, the hospital received at least $1 million in credit from the county so it could pay employees — money that county board of supervisors chairman Scott Carver doubted he’d see returned.

    “We operate on a $6 million budget for the county, so to extend that kind of line of credit was dangerous on our part to some degree,” he said. “But … we felt like we had to try.”

    Irwin County Hospital became a rural emergency hospital on Feb. 1, 2023. Quentin Whitwell, the hospital’s CEO, said it was an ideal candidate.

    “We’re still finding out what some of the impacts are, given that it’s a new thing,” said Whitwell, who through his company Progressive Health Systems owns and manages six hospitals in the Southeast, most of which are rural emergency hospitals or have applied for the designation. “But the change to a rural emergency hospital has transformed this hospital.”

    A combination of state programs and tax credits, plus the new designation, means the hospital has $4 million in the bank, Carver said. Simply put, the work was worth it to him.

    Traci Harper, a longtime Ocilla resident, isn’t so sure. About a year ago, she rushed her son to the hospital for emergency care for spinal meningitis.

    Because the new designation requires the hospital to transfer patients to larger hospitals within 24 hours, Harper’s son was sent to another in-state facility and three days later ended up getting the care he needed in a hospital in Jacksonville, Florida.

    “That’s two hours away,” she said. “The whole time I could have taken him there myself, but nobody told me that.”

    ‘Barely surviving’

    Nebraska’s first rural emergency hospital opened in February in a city called Friend.

    Warren Memorial Hospital had reached a breaking point: Federal pandemic relief money had dried up. The city, which owns the hospital, had to start extending lines of credit so hospital employees could get paid. A major street repair project was even delayed, said Jared Chaffin, the hospital’s chief financial officer and one of three co-CEOs.

    “Back in the summer, we were barely surviving,” said Amy Thimm, the hospital’s vice president of clinical services and quality and co-CEO.

    Though residents expressed concerns at a September town hall about closing inpatient services, the importance of having emergency care outweighed other worries.

    “We have farmers and ranchers and people who don’t have the time to drive an hour to get care, so they’ll just go without,” said Ron Te Brink, co-CEO and chief information officer. “Rural health care is so extremely important to a lot of Nebraska communities like ours.”

    The first federal payment, about $270,000, arrived March 5. Chaffin projects the hospital’s revenue will be $6 million this year — more than it’s ever made.

    “That’s just insane, especially for our little hospital here,” he said. “We still have Mount Everest to climb, and we still have so much work ahead of us. The designation alone is not a savior for the hospital — it’s a lifeline.”

    Rural troubles

    That lifeline has proven difficult to hold onto for Alliance Healthcare System in Holly Springs, Mississippi, another one of Whitwell’s hospitals and the fourth facility in the country to convert.

    Months after being approved as a rural emergency hospital in March 2023, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services reneged on its decision.

    Hospital CEO Dr. Kenneth Williams told The Associated Press that the government said the hospital isn’t rural because it is less than an hour away from Memphis. A CMS spokesperson said the facility was “inadvertently certified.”

    The hospital has until April to transition back to full service, but many in the community of mostly retirees believe the hospital has closed, Williams said. Patient volume is at a record low. If the federal payments stop coming, Williams isn’t sure the hospital will survive.

    “We might have been closed if we hadn’t (become a rural emergency hospital), so … something had to be done,” he said. “Do I regret all of the issues that for some reason we’ve incurred that the other (hospitals) have not? I don’t know.”

    Though Alliance appears to be one of few facilities that have been hurt by converting to a rural emergency hospital, Pink said it’s too soon to know if the federal designation is a success.

    “If my intuition is correct, it will probably work well for some communities and it may not work well for others,” he said.

    Cochran-McClain said her organization is trying to work with Congress to change regulations that have been a barrier for rural facilities, like closing inpatient behavioral health beds that are already scarce.

    Brock Slabach, the National Rural Health Association’s chief operations officer, said over 30 facilities are interested in converting to rural emergency hospitals this year.

    As Whitwell sees it: “As this program evolves, there will be more people that I think will understand the value.” 

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Some rural hospitals shifting to emergency-only care

    Some rural hospitals shifting to emergency-only care

    [ad_1]

    As rural hospitals continue to struggle financially, a new type of hospital is slowly taking root, especially in the Southeast.


    What You Need To Know

    • Rural hospitals that close their inpatient care beds to offer emergency care can get federal funding and higher Medicare reimbursements
    • The federal government’s effort, which started in 2023, is seen as a solution for some struggling rural hospitals
    • It means rural patients might have to travel farther to receive inpatient care

    Rural emergency hospitals receive more than $3 million in federal funding a year and higher Medicare reimbursements in exchange for closing all inpatient beds and providing 24/7 emergency care. While that makes it easier for a hospital to stay open, experts say it doesn’t solve all of the challenges facing rural health care.

    People might have to travel farther for treatments for illnesses that require inpatient stays, like pneumonia or COVID-19. In some of the communities where hospitals have converted to the new designation, residents are confused about what kind of care they can receive. Plus, rural hospitals are hesitant to make the switch, because there’s no margin of error.

    “It’s ironic” that the facilities that might need the most help can’t afford to take the risk, said Carrie Cochran-McClain, chief policy officer at the National Rural Health Association.

    She pointed to having to give up certain services and benefits, such as a federal discount program for prescription drugs.

    The government, which classifies hospitals by type, rolled out the rural emergency option in January 2023. Only 19 hospitals across the U.S. received rural emergency hospital status last year, according to the University of North Carolina’s Sheps Center for Health Services Research.

    The majority are in the South, but some are in the Midwest, and hospitals in Nebraska and Florida recently started to explore the option.

    The designation is aimed at a specific population, said George Pink, deputy director of the Sheps Center’s Rural Health Research Program, and that’s rural hospitals on the brink of closure with few people getting inpatient care already.

    Saving rural care

    That was the case for Irwin County Hospital in Ocilla, Georgia, which was the second rural emergency hospital established in the U.S.

    Weeks prior to converting, the hospital received at least $1 million in credit from the county so it could pay employees — money that county board of supervisors chairman Scott Carver doubted he’d see returned.

    “We operate on a $6 million budget for the county, so to extend that kind of line of credit was dangerous on our part to some degree,” he said. “But … we felt like we had to try.”

    Irwin County Hospital became a rural emergency hospital on Feb. 1, 2023. Quentin Whitwell, the hospital’s CEO, said it was an ideal candidate.

    “We’re still finding out what some of the impacts are, given that it’s a new thing,” said Whitwell, who through his company Progressive Health Systems owns and manages six hospitals in the Southeast, most of which are rural emergency hospitals or have applied for the designation. “But the change to a rural emergency hospital has transformed this hospital.”

    A combination of state programs and tax credits, plus the new designation, means the hospital has $4 million in the bank, Carver said. Simply put, the work was worth it to him.

    Traci Harper, a longtime Ocilla resident, isn’t so sure. About a year ago, she rushed her son to the hospital for emergency care for spinal meningitis.

    Because the new designation requires the hospital to transfer patients to larger hospitals within 24 hours, Harper’s son was sent to another in-state facility and three days later ended up getting the care he needed in a hospital in Jacksonville, Florida.

    “That’s two hours away,” she said. “The whole time I could have taken him there myself, but nobody told me that.”

    ‘Barely surviving’

    Nebraska’s first rural emergency hospital opened in February in a city called Friend.

    Warren Memorial Hospital had reached a breaking point: Federal pandemic relief money had dried up. The city, which owns the hospital, had to start extending lines of credit so hospital employees could get paid. A major street repair project was even delayed, said Jared Chaffin, the hospital’s chief financial officer and one of three co-CEOs.

    “Back in the summer, we were barely surviving,” said Amy Thimm, the hospital’s vice president of clinical services and quality and co-CEO.

    Though residents expressed concerns at a September town hall about closing inpatient services, the importance of having emergency care outweighed other worries.

    “We have farmers and ranchers and people who don’t have the time to drive an hour to get care, so they’ll just go without,” said Ron Te Brink, co-CEO and chief information officer. “Rural health care is so extremely important to a lot of Nebraska communities like ours.”

    The first federal payment, about $270,000, arrived March 5. Chaffin projects the hospital’s revenue will be $6 million this year — more than it’s ever made.

    “That’s just insane, especially for our little hospital here,” he said. “We still have Mount Everest to climb, and we still have so much work ahead of us. The designation alone is not a savior for the hospital — it’s a lifeline.”

    Rural troubles

    That lifeline has proven difficult to hold onto for Alliance Healthcare System in Holly Springs, Mississippi, another one of Whitwell’s hospitals and the fourth facility in the country to convert.

    Months after being approved as a rural emergency hospital in March 2023, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services reneged on its decision.

    Hospital CEO Dr. Kenneth Williams told The Associated Press that the government said the hospital isn’t rural because it is less than an hour away from Memphis. A CMS spokesperson said the facility was “inadvertently certified.”

    The hospital has until April to transition back to full service, but many in the community of mostly retirees believe the hospital has closed, Williams said. Patient volume is at a record low. If the federal payments stop coming, Williams isn’t sure the hospital will survive.

    “We might have been closed if we hadn’t (become a rural emergency hospital), so … something had to be done,” he said. “Do I regret all of the issues that for some reason we’ve incurred that the other (hospitals) have not? I don’t know.”

    Though Alliance appears to be one of few facilities that have been hurt by converting to a rural emergency hospital, Pink said it’s too soon to know if the federal designation is a success.

    “If my intuition is correct, it will probably work well for some communities and it may not work well for others,” he said.

    Cochran-McClain said her organization is trying to work with Congress to change regulations that have been a barrier for rural facilities, like closing inpatient behavioral health beds that are already scarce.

    Brock Slabach, the National Rural Health Association’s chief operations officer, said over 30 facilities are interested in converting to rural emergency hospitals this year.

    As Whitwell sees it: “As this program evolves, there will be more people that I think will understand the value.” 

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    Associated Press

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  • Meet a man on a mission to rebuild Ocean Isle beaches

    Meet a man on a mission to rebuild Ocean Isle beaches

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    OCEAN ISLE, N.C. —  Dunes represent a natural coastal protection measure. Henry Cooke is trying to revitalize them in Brunswick County, making the beach fronts a buildable space and safer from flooding issues.


    What You Need To Know

    • Sand dredging helps to replace sand that is carried away by wave action and currents, essentially “reclaiming” the beach and preserving its appearance and usability
    • Sand fencing and grass installation helps replenish the dunes on the beaches
    • To view the requirements for building an ocean front home, click here

    “Without an adequate dune system for protection, the town will not issue a permit to build housing,” Cooke said.

    Homes are not built on the dunes themselves, but rather near the dune lines. However, the ground isn’t stable enough for construction, according to Cooke, who is working to make a difference on that front. 

    Dunes are essentially small sand hills, built up to serve as a defensive line against floods from hurricanes and other storms. Many are protected by different laws and ordnances to keep people from damaging them. 

    Cooke started Dune Doctor LLC as a way to help the beaches he loves. He began this journey to help the dunes after his family lost their real estate business in Brunswick County. 

    “We were unable to make any kind of profit last year due to two storms back-to-back, which took our entire rental season for an entire year,” Cooke said. 

    Cooke is now using plants to stabilize the beaches and help keep sand from washing away. He said it’s important to use native plants, including American Beach Grass. 

    “[It’s] native to North Carolina, and they are pasture grown in a field the same as tobacco or another plant. Just the same. They’re hardy, which makes them hardy and makes them stronger. They’ve already endured the wind and the cold,” Cooke said. 

    Cooke isn’t the only one trying to revitalize the beaches, however, as many towns across North Carolina are now using dredging, a process that involves pumping sand from the sea and adding it back to the shores to build up the beach. 

    “Dredging is the other side of it. We work with the sand. They work with the sand, but they’re just in the water, and they move it around a little bit differently, depending on when they depend on water. It’s a much bigger job that they do, but it’s very important, especially in this coast of North Carolina,” Cooke said. 

    Cooke said his efforts to replant the beaches are just one small piece to revitalizing them. As more dredging projects happen, the extra sand they dig up helps these beaches grow and gives Cooke and his team more to work with. 

    “It has helped. And I would say with the most recent job of dredging here, we’ve if not doubled, maybe even more, this the width of the entire beach here,” Cooke said. “I was here last year measuring for these plants, and we didn’t have near as much.”

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    Spectrum News Staff

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  • Daycare director charged with child abuse

    Daycare director charged with child abuse

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    CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A North Carolina community is reeling after a daycare director was charged with child abuse. 


    What You Need To Know

    • A daycare facility director faces several offenses of misdemeanor child abuse 
    • The Charlotte Mecklenburg Police Department (CMPD) arrest warrant states the director created a substantial risk for the children 
    • Community members say they’re in shock after learning about the child abuse charge 

    According to Charlotte Mecklenburg Police Department arrest warrants, Midwood Learning Academy facility director Leslye Denise Torrence faces several offenses of misdemeanor child abuse. 

    The documents state in February, Torrence created a substantial risk transporting the children in a vehicle without a car seat or seat belt, with the rear driver’s side door left open while the vehicle was in motion. 

    The Division of Child Development and Early Education at the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) suspended the license for one of the daycare facility buildings. 

    The DHHS order states they received information related to the health and safety of children at the daycare. Based on that information, the Division of Child Development and Early Education determined emergency action is required to protect the health, safety and welfare of children. 

    Midwood Learning Academy is located on Central Avenue, close to many businesses and residential homes. 

    Spectrum News 1 spoke with several people on and off camera about the incident. Many expressed shock about a daycare worker being charged with child abuse charges. 

    One woman, Cristie, did not want to share her last name, but lives near the daycare facility.

    Cristie said it’s concerning to learn someone who has the responsibility to keep kids safe is accused of putting the children in harm’s way. 

     “It’s sad,” Cristie said. “I work in the children’s hospital, so I’m around kids. We as adults are supposed to protect these babies. You would think they’re in a daycare. They’re supposed to be safe.”

    Spectrum News 1 attempted to speak with employees at the daycare about the incident. However, our news reporter was told to leave the property. 

    Additional updates on this story will be covered by Spectrum News 1.

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    Jennifer Roberts

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  • FDA delays decision on Eli Lilly Alzheimer’s drug, wants further review

    FDA delays decision on Eli Lilly Alzheimer’s drug, wants further review

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    The Food and Drug Administration’s decision on approving a closely watched Alzheimer’s disease drug developed by Eli Lilly and Co. has been delayed as the agency asks an advisory panel to weigh in, the drugmaker said Friday.


    What You Need To Know

    • The FDA’s decision on approving a closely watched Alzheimer’s disease drug developed by Eli Lilly and Co. has been delayed as the agency asks an advisory panel to weigh in, the drugmaker said Friday
    • Lilly said the FDA informed it that it wants to further understand the safety and efficacy of donanemab and will convene a meeting of its Peripheral and Central Nervous System Drugs Advisory Committee.
    • The FDA was widely expected to authorize the drug this month
    • Lilly’s clinical trial of more than 1,700 people found the donanemab slowed cognitive and functional decline in patients with early symptomatic Alzheimer’s by 35% at 76 weeks compared to those who took a placebo

    Lilly said the FDA informed it that it wants to further understand the safety and efficacy of donanemab and will convene a meeting of its Peripheral and Central Nervous System Drugs Advisory Committee.

    The FDA was widely expected to authorize the drug this month. Lilly called the delay “unexpected” and noted it is unusual for an advisory committee to be called upon after the anticipated FDA action date.

    It’s not yet known when the meeting will take place. Lilly said the FDA’s decision will be delayed at least into the second quarter of 2024. 

    The FDA told Spectrum News it cannot comment on possible or pending product applications or approvals.

    “We are confident in donanemab’s potential to offer very meaningful benefits to people with early symptomatic Alzheimer’s disease,” Anne White, executive vice president of Eli Lilly and Co., said in a statement. “It was unexpected to learn the FDA will convene an advisory committee at this stage in the review process, but we look forward to the opportunity to further present the … results and put donanemab’s strong efficacy in the context of safety.”

    Lilly’s clinical trial of more than 1,700 people found the donanemab slowed cognitive and functional decline in patients with early symptomatic Alzheimer’s by 35% at 76 weeks compared to those who took a placebo, and all groups of trial participants saw improvement.

    Given as a monthly intravenous infusion, the drug targets amyloid plaque that builds up between nerve cells in the brain.

    About 6 million Americans are living with Alzheimer’s disease, the most common type of dementia, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    More than three-quarters of all participants in the study achieved amyloid clearance at 76 weeks, compared to 0.3% in the placebo group.

    There, however, were side effects with donanemab, including brain swelling in 24% among those who took the drug. There was brain bleeding in 31.4% of participants in the donanemab group and 13.6% in the placebo group.

    While Lilly said the majority of the side effects were mild to moderate and resolved or stabilized with appropriate management, three participants died from brain swelling.

    If authorized by the FDA, donanemab would become the third Alzheimer’s drug in its class to hit the market in the United States. Regulators granted accelerated approval to Leqembi, developed by Eisai and Biogen, in January 2023. 

    In 2021, the FDA approved Aduhelm, made by the same two companies. That authorization was controversial because there was weak evidence showing it would benefit patients. Biogen announced in January it was abandoning its ownership rights to the drug.

    Note: This article was updated to include the FDA’s response.

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    Ryan Chatelain

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  • FDA delays decision on Eli Lilly Alzheimer’s drug, wants further review

    FDA delays decision on Eli Lilly Alzheimer’s drug, wants further review

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    The Food and Drug Administration’s decision on approving a closely watched Alzheimer’s disease drug developed by Eli Lilly and Co. has been delayed as the agency asks an advisory panel to weigh in, the drugmaker said Friday.


    What You Need To Know

    • The FDA’s decision on approving a closely watched Alzheimer’s disease drug developed by Eli Lilly and Co. has been delayed as the agency asks an advisory panel to weigh in, the drugmaker said Friday
    • Lilly said the FDA informed it that it wants to further understand the safety and efficacy of donanemab and will convene a meeting of its Peripheral and Central Nervous System Drugs Advisory Committee.
    • The FDA was widely expected to authorize the drug this month
    • Lilly’s clinical trial of more than 1,700 people found the donanemab slowed cognitive and functional decline in patients with early symptomatic Alzheimer’s by 35% at 76 weeks compared to those who took a placebo

    Lilly said the FDA informed it that it wants to further understand the safety and efficacy of donanemab and will convene a meeting of its Peripheral and Central Nervous System Drugs Advisory Committee.

    The FDA was widely expected to authorize the drug this month. Lilly called the delay “unexpected” and noted it is unusual for an advisory committee to be called upon after the anticipated FDA action date.

    It’s not yet known when the meeting will take place. Lilly said the FDA’s decision will be delayed at least into the second quarter of 2024. 

    The FDA told Spectrum News it cannot comment on possible or pending product applications or approvals.

    “We are confident in donanemab’s potential to offer very meaningful benefits to people with early symptomatic Alzheimer’s disease,” Anne White, executive vice president of Eli Lilly and Co., said in a statement. “It was unexpected to learn the FDA will convene an advisory committee at this stage in the review process, but we look forward to the opportunity to further present the … results and put donanemab’s strong efficacy in the context of safety.”

    Lilly’s clinical trial of more than 1,700 people found the donanemab slowed cognitive and functional decline in patients with early symptomatic Alzheimer’s by 35% at 76 weeks compared to those who took a placebo, and all groups of trial participants saw improvement.

    Given as a monthly intravenous infusion, the drug targets amyloid plaque that builds up between nerve cells in the brain.

    About 6 million Americans are living with Alzheimer’s disease, the most common type of dementia, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    More than three-quarters of all participants in the study achieved amyloid clearance at 76 weeks, compared to 0.3% in the placebo group.

    There, however, were side effects with donanemab, including brain swelling in 24% among those who took the drug. There was brain bleeding in 31.4% of participants in the donanemab group and 13.6% in the placebo group.

    While Lilly said the majority of the side effects were mild to moderate and resolved or stabilized with appropriate management, three participants died from brain swelling.

    If authorized by the FDA, donanemab would become the third Alzheimer’s drug in its class to hit the market in the United States. Regulators granted accelerated approval to Leqembi, developed by Eisai and Biogen, in January 2023. 

    In 2021, the FDA approved Aduhelm, made by the same two companies. That authorization was controversial because there was weak evidence showing it would benefit patients. Biogen announced in January it was abandoning its ownership rights to the drug.

    Note: This article was updated to include the FDA’s response.

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    Ryan Chatelain

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  • School shootings prompt more states to fund digital maps for first responders

    School shootings prompt more states to fund digital maps for first responders

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    When a motion detector went off overnight at Kromrey Middle School, a police dispatcher called up a digital map of the building, pinpointed the detector, clicked on a live feed from the nearest camera and relayed the intruder’s location to responding police.


    What You Need To Know

    • Spurred by mass shootings, thousands of school districts have hired companies to produce detailed digital maps that can help police, firefighters and medical professionals respond more quickly in emergencies
    • More than 20 states have enacted or proposed digital school mapping measures in the past few years, according to an Associated Press analysis aided by the bill-tracking software Plural
    • Critical Response Group, run by an Army special operations veteran, has been driving the trend. The company’s CEO, Mike Rodgers, recently told lawmakers in Maryland how he used gridded digital maps during deployments and was surprised the school where his wife taught had nothing similar. So he mapped her school, then expanded — to 12,000 schools and counting, nationwide
    • Many schools have long provided floor plans to local emergency responders. But they haven’t always been digital. As with Uvalde, some plans have lacked important details or become outdated as schools are renovated and expanded

    Within moments, they captured the culprit: a teenager, dressed in dark clothes and a ski mask but carrying no weapon.

    The map and cameras “let the dispatcher keep things from becoming super-escalated,” said the school’s security director, Jim Blodgett. “The dispatcher could see that it looked like a student … just kind of goofing around in the building.”

    Spurred by mass shootings, thousands of school districts have hired companies to produce detailed digital maps that can help police, firefighters and medical professionals respond more quickly in emergencies.

    The Middleton-Cross Plains Area School District, where the teenage trespasser entered from a roof hatch, was an early adopter in Wisconsin, which has since provided mapping grants to about 200 districts.

    More than 20 states have enacted or proposed digital school mapping measures in the past few years, according to an Associated Press analysis aided by the bill-tracking software Plural. Florida approved $14 million in grants last year. Michigan allotted $12.5 million. New Jersey allocated $12.3 million in federal pandemic relief funds to complete digital maps of every school in the state.

    Critical Response Group, run by an Army special operations veteran, has been driving the trend. The New Jersey-based company’s CEO, Mike Rodgers, recently told lawmakers in Maryland how he used gridded digital maps during deployments and was surprised the school where his wife taught had nothing similar. So he mapped her school, then expanded — to 12,000 schools and counting, nationwide.

    “When an emergency happens at a school or a place of worship, most likely it’s the first time those responders have ever gone there,” Rodgers told the AP. “They’re under a tremendous amount of stress and they’re working with people they’re not familiar with, which is exactly the same problem that the military is faced with overseas, and ultimately that’s why this technique was born.”

    Lobbying and competition

    Many of the state laws and bills contain nearly identical wording championed by Rodgers’ company. They require verification by a walk-through of each campus and free compatibility with any software already used by local schools and public safety agencies. They must be overlaid with aerial imagery and gridded coordinates, “oriented true north” and “contain site-specific labeling” for rooms, doors, hallways, stairwells, utility locations, hazards, key boxes, trauma kits and automated external defibrillators.

    The standards create “a competitive, fair environment” for all vendors, Rodgers said. But when New Jersey sought a mapping contractor, the Critical Response Group had “the only product that was available in the state that answered the legislative criteria,” State Police mapping coordinator Lt. Brendan Liston said.

    The New Jersey law required “critical incident mapping data,” a phrase that Critical Response Group tried to trademark.

    Critical Response Group has hired lobbyists in more than 20 states to advocate for specific standards, according to an AP review of state lobbying records. Competitors also have engaged lobbyists to wrangle over the precise wording. In some states, lawmakers have gone with a more generic label of “school mapping data.”

    Four companies offering digital mapping among their services — Critical Response Group, Centegix, GeoComm and Navigate360 — have together spent more than $1.4 million on lobbyists in 15 states, according to an AP analysis. Their costs are unknown in some states where lobbyist payments aren’t publicly reported.

    Delaware and Virginia also chose the Critical Response Group program. Iowa has contracted with GeoComm. Other states are leaving vendor decisions to local schools.

    A response to tragedy

    U.S. Department of Justice review of the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, noted police had only “a basic map” that didn’t show windows or doors connecting classrooms as they waited to confront the gunman.

    The Texas Education Agency responded last year with new standards requiring an “accurate site layout” and door designations to be provided to 911 agencies. The Legislature reinforced this by requiring silent panic buttons and armed security officers as part of a more than $1 billion school safety initiative.

    Creating each map can cost several thousand dollars, and costs can escalate as maps are linked to other security systems, such as wearable panic buttons. But integrations also add value.

    “If it’s not integrated with a crisis response system that can be pushed electronically to the dispatch center and police, then it’s probably not going to mean anything to them in the first minutes,” said Jeremy Gulley, the school system superintendent of Jay County, Indiana, which uses a Centegix mapping and alert system.

    Because of their detailed information, digital school maps are exempt from public disclosure under legislation in some states. That’s critical to school safety, said Chuck Wilson, chair of the Partner Alliance for Safer Schools, a nonprofit coalition of education groups, law enforcement and security businesses.

    “If bad people had access to the drawings, that would be almost worse than not knowing” a school’s layout, Wilson said. He added, “We’ve got to be really, really mindful of protecting this information.”

    Maps need updating

    Many schools have long provided floor plans to local emergency responders. But they haven’t always been digital. As with Uvalde, some plans have lacked important details or become outdated as schools are renovated and expanded.

    Washington began digitally mapping every school in the state 20 years ago, after the deadly Columbine High School shooting in Colorado, and provided annual funding to the Washington Association of Sheriffs & Police Chiefs to operate the map repository.

    But over time, schools quit updating the information and the maps grew stale. The state funding proved insufficient and legislators ended the program in 2021, just as more states launched similar initiatives.

    Security consultant David Corr ran the program and wishes it could have continued, but he said that for emergency responders, “wrong information is even worse than lack of information.”

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    Associated Press

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  • Dare Co. deputy cleared in fatal shooting. Family calls for DOJ investigation

    Dare Co. deputy cleared in fatal shooting. Family calls for DOJ investigation

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    A special prosecutor said the deputy who shot and killed Sylvester Selby in Manteo on Oct. 3 will not face charges. But Selby’s family and the prosecutor disagree with what body camera video shows in the case.

    The family’s lawyers are asking federal officials to investigate what happened in the shooting. 


    What You Need To Know

    •  The Dare County deputy who shot and killed Sylvester Selby in Manteo Oct. 3 will not be charged
    •  A special prosecutor said the shooting was justified
    •  The Selby family, through their lawyers, disputed the special prosecutor’s account of what body camera video showed
    • The family’s lawyers are asking federal officials to investigate the case

    The prosecutor contends Selby, 44, ran down a set of stairs with a knife and lunged at officers. The family said Selby, who already had a stab wound to the chest, stumbled down the stairs and fell over a bicycle before he was shot, according to the family’s lawyers. Deputy Edward Glaser shot Selby twice more as he tried to get up, the lawyers said. 

    Sylvester Selby, 44, was shot and killed by a Dare County deputy Oct. 3. (Courtesy the Selby family)

    “The use of deadly force appears reasonable under the circumstances, and Deputy Glaser was justified under North Carolina law in that it appeared that it was necessary to kill in order to save himself or others from death or great bodily harm,” said special prosecutor Charles Spahos.

    Spahos was appointed to take over the case after a request for an independent special prosecutor from Dare County District Attorney Jeff Cruden.

    “Some factual statements that were made inside the report, for example about Mr. Selby running towards the officer. They disagreed with that. That was not the case. As well as the allegation of some type of lunging,” said Harry Daniels, a civil rights attorney representing the family. 

    The family sued the Dare County Sheriff’s Office and Glaser, the deputy, in December. 

    The body camera video has not been made public. In North Carolina, body camera video from law enforcement cannot be made public without an order from a judge. 

    Chantel Cherry-Lassiter, another attorney, said she was with the family last year when they watched the body camera video. 

    “Mr. Selby was not coming down the steps in a threatening manner, nor was he running towards the officers,” she told Spectrum News 1. “The facts that are listed in the report are not accurate.”

    In his report, the special prosecutor said Glaser and a sergeant with the sheriff’s office went to a home in Manteo for a trespassing call, where Selby was allegedly “trespassing and tearing stuff up inside of the residence.”

    When the deputies got to the single-wide trailer, the homeowner who called police was outside, and the officers called for Selby to come out, the report said. 

    The special prosecutor said Selby eventually came out carrying a large knife and had blood on his shirt. The report said he ran down the steps at the deputies, and then Glaser shot him. Selby fell to the ground.

    The deputies told Selby to stay on the ground, but he tried to get up again, the report said. 

    “Mr. Selby is on his hands and knees, leaps to his feet, and lunges at Deputy Glaser. Deputy Glaser, who had attempted to back away from Mr. Selby, fires two more rounds, striking Mr. Selby again,” according to the special prosecutor. 

    But the lawsuit filed in the case, and the response filed by the sheriff’s office, tell the story in a different way. 

    Selby was carrying a kitchen knife when he came out of the home. He stumbled down the stairs and tripped over a bicycle, according to the federal lawsuit. Glaser shot Selby as he fell, the lawsuit said. 

    Glaser shot Selby two more times as he tried to get up from the ground, according to court filings. 

    A filing by the sheriff’s office in the civil suit agreed with that summary.

    The lawyers for Selby’s family said they will ask the federal Department of Justice to investigate the shooting.

    “Based on what was said and what was told, it appears that an outside agency needs to come in to evaluate this shooting and determine if criminal charges should be brought,” Daniels said. 

    “Based on what transpired, what happened, it was adequate enough, the facts there alone to charge Glaser with the criminal charge of unlawfully killing Mr. Selby,” he said.

     


    SPECTRUM NEWS 1 SPECIAL REPORT: POLICE SHOOTINGS IN NORTH CAROLINA


     

     

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    Charles Duncan

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  • Making farm fresh products more accessible and affordable

    Making farm fresh products more accessible and affordable

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    CHATHAM COUNTY, N.C. — Customers at the Pittsboro Farmers Market can now pay with tokens from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

    A new sign greets customers at the Pittsboro Farmers Market letting them know they can trade SNAP/EBT benefits for market tokens. (Rachel Boyd/Spectrum News 1)


    What You Need To Know

    • Vendors at the Pittsboro Farmers Market are accepting SNAP and EBT
    • SNAP and EBT can be turned in for one-dollar and five-dollar tokens
    • This is the first market in Chatham County to accept the benefits

    The Pittsboro Farmers Market has been around since 1997, but for the first time, vendors can now accept SNAP and EBT benefits.

    The farmers market is the first in Chatham County to accept SNAP and EBT, increasing access to a variety of fresh local vegetables, fruits, meats and breads.

    “It is so nice to be able to get it on the tables of everyone, regardless of income,” Mackenzie Withington, a vendor from Lilly Den Farm, said. “Throughout all these years, people asking if we accepted Snap, EBT and we always had to tell them no.”

    Eggs from Lilly Den Farm are one of the things customers can purchase with SNAP/EBT tokens (Rachel Boyd/Spectrum News 1)

    The push to bring SNAP and EBT to the market first started three years ago, while Patricia Parker was the market manager.

    Although it didn’t come to fruition during her tenure, she’s excited as a current vendor to accept the one-dollar and five-dollar tokens for her produce.

    “It’s really cool to finally have a farmer’s market that accepts EBT,” Parker said. “People are looking for healthy food, fresh food and food that they can believe in, that they know who’s growing it.”

    SNAP and EBT can be used on meat, eggs, fresh produce, baked goods and more at the market. 

    “It’s not about just our family, it’s actually about our community,” Emily Fuller, of Heart Song Farm, said. “And it’s time to cultivate a healthier situation for everybody.”

    The market is currently working on a dollar-matching program so that SNAP beneficiaries can double-up on the amount they have to spend. The market takes place year-round each Thursday from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. at The Plant in Pittsboro.

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    Rachel Boyd

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  • Clemmons art teacher is advocating for heart health

    Clemmons art teacher is advocating for heart health

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    CLEMMONS, N.C. — Teacher Frann Paige is urging others to be on the lookout for signs of heart disease.


    What You Need To Know

    • The American Heart Association says Black and Hispanic women are disproportionately affected by heart disease and stroke
    • According to the American Heart Association, the warning signs of a heart attack include chest discomfort, shortness of breath, cold sweat, lightheadedness, nausea and discomfort in the arms, back, neck, jaw or stomach
    • Frann Paige, a Clemmons art teacher who was hospitalized after a heart attack, says some of the things she’s done to improve her health include reducing sodium intake, cutting down on caffeine and exercising 


    Paige is an art teacher at Clemmons Elementary, and her students have become a part of her life.

    “The love notes I get and the drawings I get every morning make my day,” said Paige, who was hospitalized in 2015 after a heart attack. “When I was sick in the hospital, I kept saying every day, I want to get back to my classroom. … It was the new normal, but I wanted to get back to what I thought was normal. I needed to get back with the kids.” 

    February is Heart Health Month, and the American Heart Association says cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in women, claiming more lives than all cancers combined.

    In June 2015, Paige’s life changed after a doctor’s appointment

    “I got there very early. Doctors weren’t really ready yet. And with that, the nurse started taking vitals and within 5 minutes, a doctor ran on with a portable EKG machine and they called the ambulance at the same time. I already had a heart attack and was walking around with it for a few days,” she said.

    It was a heart attack she didn’t know she had on the last day of school

    “Started really Friday night. And I didn’t go to the doctor until the next Thursday. And the last thing I remember is being wheeled into an emergency room. And then I woke up a month later from an induced coma,” Paige said.

    She had every symptom that should have been an alert, but she had an excuse for each one.

    “I was pale. My excuse — it was summer. I was hot. My excuse was summer, wasn’t feeling well. The kids gave me something,” Paige said. “But if you take all these symptoms and add them up, I should have known better. I should have known to go to a doctor.” 

    And heart disease runs in her family.

    “My father passed away at an early age of a heart attack. I have aunts with pacemakers. It should have been on my radar. It wasn’t,” Paige said.

    Now, she’s urging women to be aware of the symptoms and to have their affairs in order.

    “What I can tell you is take your body seriously and know your body,” she said. “Know if it’s not right and you are having more than one symptom.”

    “I had a pain, but I had a pain in my jaw, so I made an appointment with my dentist,” Paige said. “I didn’t have a pain in my arm like men have.”

    And now, to stay on top of her health, she has a defibrillator that helps regulate her heart, and she makes better decisions day to day.

    Paige says some of the things she’s done to better her health are reducing sodium intake, cutting down on caffeine and exercising as much as she can.

    The American Heart Association says Black and Hispanic women are disproportionately affected by heart disease and stroke.

    As with men, women’s most common heart attack symptom is chest pain or discomfort. But women are more likely than men to experience other common symptoms, particularly shortness of breath, nausea or vomiting and back or jaw pain.

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    Zyneria Byrd

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  • N.C. governor’s race features men who took different paths

    N.C. governor’s race features men who took different paths

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    ROXBORO, N.C. (AP) — One candidate is an Ivy League-educated attorney who over 25 years amassed allies as he climbed North Carolina’s Democratic ladder. The other is a former furniture factory worker with a history of blunt commentary who plowed into Republican politics four years ago after a viral video on gun rights vaulted him to prominence.

    While taking dramatically different paths, Attorney General Josh Stein and Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson have emerged as front-runners for their parties’ nominations for governor next month in the race to succeed term-limited Democrat Roy Cooper in the nation’s ninth-largest state.

    Each faces credible rivals, including two Republicans seeking to defeat Robinson using their own personal wealth to convince GOP voters that he’s too controversial to lead the state. But Robinson and Stein have led their fields in fundraising and won potentially pivotal support from Donald Trump and Cooper for their respective candidacies.

    As early in-person voting for the March 5 primaries began Thursday, national party groups were already gearing up for an expensive and heated general election campaign, regardless of who advances.

    North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein gives a campaign speech outside the student union at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, N.C., Thursday, Jan. 25, 2024. Stein spoke at a kickoff of his gubernatorial campaign’s “Students for Stein” movement. With a large fundraising advantage and support from outgoing Gov. Roy Cooper, Stein appears to be the frontrunner for the Democratic nomination, which will be decided in the March 5 primary. (AP Photo/Gary D. Robertson)

    “People are definitely considering it the most important competitive (gubernatorial) race in 2024,” said Mac McCorkle, a Duke University public policy professor who advised two of Cooper’s predecessors.

    Democrats aim to maintain and even build on their otherwise limited success in the South atop North Carolina government, where they have occupied the executive mansion for all but four of the last 31 years, including Cooper’s tenure since 2017. Republicans control the legislature and the appellate courts. A GOP gubernatorial victory would essentially neuter the veto power that Cooper has used a record number of times, with mixed outcomes.

    What both front-runners have in common is their potential to make history. Stein is Jewish and Robinson is Black, and North Carolina has never elected a governor from either demographic.

    Stein, the son of a prominent civil rights lawyer, grew up in Chapel Hill and went to Dartmouth and Harvard. He managed John Edwards’ winning 1998 U.S. Senate campaign and worked in the 2000s as Cooper’s consumer protection chief while Cooper was attorney general. Stein served in the state Senate before the first of two narrow AG election victories in 2016.

    While highlighting legal efforts by his office to protect citizens from polluters, predatory student loans and high electric bills, Stein is sticking closely to a Democratic platform also advanced by Cooper — though he is quick to assert his independence.

    “We are different people. We have different personalities. And I’m running my own campaign,” Stein said after a recent rally with over 150 people at the University of North Carolina’s flagship campus in Chapel Hill. “I want to fight for the people of North Carolina as their governor so that we have good schools, safe communities, a growing economy that works for everybody and where their fundamental rights are respected.”

    In contrast, Robinson tells a life story of childhood poverty in Greensboro, losing jobs that he blames NAFTA for eliminating, and personal bankruptcy. His 4-minute speech to the Greensboro City Council defending gun rights and lamenting the “demonizing” of police officers went viral — and led him to a National Rifle Association board position. Victory in a crowded GOP field in March 2020 in his first bid for elected office preceded a general election win that fall.

    “The call has gone out to serve, and I have answered the call to serve,” the now-lieutenant governor told a standing-room-only crowd of 200 people on a recent Friday night at a bowling, roller skating and entertainment complex near Roxboro, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) northwest of Raleigh. “It’s time for us to elect a crop of politicians that do not want to be politicians. They want to be servants of the people.”

    Robinson presents himself as a socially conservative change agent who will bring investment to rural areas, make education leaders accountable and teach students the basics.

    “He’s attractive to us because we feel like he’s one of us. He’s the common man,” supporter Doug Wingate, 73, a retired general contractor, said after the Roxboro event. “And he’s passionate about the things that we’re passionate about.”

    But GOP primary rivals State Treasurer Dale Folwell and trial attorney Bill Graham question whether Robinson can win a general election following harsh comments he’s made in office or earlier on social media.

    Robinson has criticized efforts to teach LGBTQ+ issues in sex education, with comments in 2021 associating gay and transgender people with “filth.” That led to calls for his resignation, but he defended his words, saying he was referring to sexually explicit books, not people.

    In other attention-grabbing comments, Robinson has said he ultimately prefers a complete ban on abortion and told a church audience that Christians are “called to be led by men.”

    Speaking generally about Robinson, Graham — who ran unsuccessfully for governor in 2008 — said that people “see the problem with having him at the top of the ticket and what a disaster it would be for the Republican Party.”

    Folwell, his other rival, said Robinson is ill-prepared to become governor and calls him “history’s latest example of someone who’s trying to rise to power by spewing hate.”

    Graham, who has committed to spending $5 million of his personal funds in the race, has run television ads that flag a 2018 Robinson social media post discussing Jews and the Holocaust as evidence that he’s not suitable to serve as governor and doesn’t support Israel.

    Robinson’s post read, “This foolishness about Hitler disarming MILLIONS of Jews and then marching them off to concentration camps is a bunch of hogwash.” Robinson’s campaign said he’s never questioned the Holocaust, and that the full post referred to how the pre-Nazi government in Germany disarmed Jews, not Hitler.

    Robinson also points out that he visited Israel after the October attack by Hamas.

    “When Israel was attacked, not only did I stand with Israel, I stood in Israel with the Israelis,” he said at the rally near Roxboro.

    Stein mentioned Robinson prominently in his stump speech outside UNC-Chapel Hill’s student union, warning students that “right-wing politicians” are ”taking a sledgehammer” to the state’s foundation.

    A Democratic victory would offset the slim veto-proof majorities the GOP currently holds in the General Assembly, which have given them several narrow wins during Cooper’s tenure. They overrode his vetoes in 2023 on legislation banning most abortions after 12 weeks of pregnancy, prohibiting gender-affirming medical treatments for youth and expanding taxpayer-funded scholarships for private schools.

    Stein is “going to be the stopgap that is able to stop the hurting and stop the bad effects of the Republican legislature, granted that we can break the supermajority,” said Tyler Smith, a student at the UNC rally.

    Stein’s chief Democratic rival is former state Supreme Court Associate Justice Mike Morgan, whose campaign had just $32,000 in cash as 2024 began, compared to over $11 million for Stein. Like Robinson, Morgan would be the state’s first Black governor.

    In an interview, Morgan criticized Stein for “hiding behind canned videos and orchestrated press conferences” and said Cooper’s endorsement of Stein in the primary violated the neutrality expected of party leaders.

    “This is not a matter of having the proverbial baton being passed to one’s successor,” Morgan said. “The people’s voices need to be heard in this.”

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    Associated Press

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  • The Velvet Room: Cinema and speakeasy coming to Wilmington

    The Velvet Room: Cinema and speakeasy coming to Wilmington

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    WILMINGTON, N.C. — From movies like “Dirty Dancing” to “Talladega Nights,” North Carolina has been the backdrop for many films. “Blue Velvet,” “Scream” and “Iron Man 3” were all shot in Wilmington, a city that’s been dubbed “Wilmywood.” 

    Wilmywood will soon be opening its doors to its newest independent cinema, The Velvet Room, a theater that will help highlight the history of Wilmington’s vibrant film industry.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Velvet Room Cinema and Bar will play cult favorites, foreign and silent films, and Wilmington productions
    • Behind The Velvet Room will be The Hideaway Lounge, a 1920s Prohibition-themed speakeasy where customers can have a drink, relax and discuss a good film
    • The Velvet Room is expected to be open within months 

    Ian Simpson loves movies and says he watches around five to seven a week. It’s been a passion since he was a kid.

    Anthony Durret, left, and Ian Simpson (Spectrum News 1/Natalie Mooney)

    “You know, I grew up watching Hitchcock at a young age because my mom loved to show me the old ‘Alfred Hitchcock Presents’ show and ‘The Twilight Zone’ and it moved into watching a bunch of Hitchcock and then a broad range of films,” Simpson said. “It’s just something I’ve always been interested in and a dream of mine of opening a movie theatre.”

    Now, Simpson’s dreams are coming true.

    He’s opening The Velvet Room Cinema and Bar with his partner Anthony Durret. The theater will play cult favorites, foreign and silent films and even Wilmington productions.

    Simpson says he hopes The Velvet Room can showcase some of the area’s iconic film history. It’s that history that makes Wilmington a perfect place for Simpson’s passion project.

    “I saw an opportunity to open kind of a smaller, more independent movie theater,” Simpson said. “Something that a film town could definitely use, but didn’t necessarily have.”

    Simpson says he’s excited to see his vision come to life.

    Ian Simpson starts an old film projector. (Spectrum News 1/Natalie Mooney)

    “You can kind of see where a lot of things will go — we’ve got a couple framed bathrooms here, and we’ve got some of our vintage theater seats sitting around, some posters around,” Simpson said. “And we’re looking to make this a third place where people can, like I mentioned, meet up with their friends, see a good film, enjoy some beverages and tasty treats, snacks, popcorn, and you can see over here, we’ve got an old vintage popcorn machine.”

    And that popcorn machine won’t be the only vintage thing in The Velvet Room.

    “We’ve also got the speakeasy opening in the back of The Velvet Room where, you know, it has a 1920s speakeasy Prohibition-inspired theme,” Simpson said. “After films you can go to the back with your friends, go grab a drink there, and kind of enjoy an experience that you’re not really able to find anywhere else.”

    Simpson started a crowdfunding campaign with a goal of $25,000. That money will go toward finishing the buildout, electric and plumbing work and new equipment. He says they raised $8,000 within the first week.

    The Velvet Room is expected to be open within months. (Spectrum News 1/Natalie Mooney)

    “The support we’ve gotten on social media and, you know, monetarily, and from people reaching out to help in any way they can has been incredible,” Simpson said. “You know we’ve got people who really want to see this happen and have the same vision as us as far as wanting to see, you know, a more independent and smaller movie theater.”

    Simpson says The Velvet Room Cinema and Bar is on track to open within the next couple of months and by summer at the latest. The cinema will open five to seven days a week.

    Simpson’s partner, Durret, says the speakeasy will be open just before the cinema and his newest venture, Sip N’ Chill, across the street is open now.

    If you would like to donate to The Velvet Room’s crowdfunding campaign, click here.

    The Velvet Room and Sip N’ Chill are on Castle Street in Wilmington.

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    Natalie Mooney

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  • Man taken to hospital after police shooting in Charlotte, CMPD says

    Man taken to hospital after police shooting in Charlotte, CMPD says

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    A man was injured in a police shooting in Charlotte on Thursday, authorities said. 

    The shooting happened Thursday morning on the 2100th block of Beatties Ford Road, according to the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department. 

    There was a heavy police presence outside the Fast Mart #5 convenience store late Thursday morning. 

    The man had life-threatening injuries when he was taken to the hospital, according to MEDIC. Police said the man was awake, speaking and alert at the hospital Thursday afternoon and will survive his injuries.

    No officers were hurt, police said. 

    Police said two officers went behind the convenience store and one ran toward them and pulled out a gun, pointing it at the officers.

    One of the officers shot the man, who has not been named, CMPD said. The officers started first aid on the man immediately, police said.


    SPECTRUM NEWS 1 SPECIAL REPORT: POLICE SHOOTINGS IN NORTH CAROLINA


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    Charles Duncan

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  • Could NC legalize medical pot? It’s coming up in the House – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Could NC legalize medical pot? It’s coming up in the House – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    The North Carolina Compassionate Care Act would legalize medical marijuana in the state. The bill has gotten further than earlier efforts to make prescription pot available in North Carolina.

    The legislation, SB3, passed the Senate in late February. On Tuesday, it will get its first hearing in the North Carolina House. The bill lays out tight regulations to make medical marijuana legal for a list of conditions, including cancer, AIDS/HIV and post-traumatic stress disorder.


    What You Need To Know

    •  A North Carolina House committee will take up legislation Tuesday that would legalize medical marijuana
    •  The Senate already passed the N.C. Compassionate Care Act with bipartisan support
    •  The bill lays out tight regulations for producing, prescribing and selling medical marijuana in North Carolina
    • The legislation limits the numbers of conditions for which patients could get a marijuana prescrption, incluing AIDS/HIV, cancer and PTSD

    Powerful Republican Sens. Bill Rabon and Michael Lee and Democrat Sen. Paul Lowe are the primary sponsors on the bill in the Senate. They shepherded the same bill through the Senate to pass last year, but that effort stalled out in the House.

    “It seems to me that the idea is gaining momentum and obviously there’s strong support in the Senate,” Rep. Jon Hardister, a Guilford County Republican and the majority whip in the House, said as the bill passed the Senate 36-10 in late February.

    “In general, it seems like the attitude among…

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

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    MMP News Author

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