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  • New litter of red wolf pups brings hope for most endangered wolf in the world

    New litter of red wolf pups brings hope for most endangered wolf in the world

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    For the first time since 2019, the Museum of Life and Science has welcomed a litter of red wolves, the world’s most endangered wolf.


    What You Need To Know

    • Durham’s Museum of Life and Science welcomed a litter of red wolves for the first time since 2019
    • The red wolf is the most endangered wolf in the world, with a combined population under 300 in the wild and captivity
    • The species was declared extinct in the wild in 1980, but 45 facilities around the U.S. have started breeding programs
    • The Museum of Life and Science received its first red wolf in 1992, and has seen five litters before this most recent one

    Seven pups were born at the museum on Sunday. All seven pups, four males and three females, were found to be in good health on Wednesday.

    “Their arrival is a beacon of hope for the species and a significant milestone in our conservation efforts,” the museum said in a press release.

    Oak and Adeyha, the first-time parents to the new litter, were identified by the museum last summer as a “high-value breeding pair.” The museum said their litter will help maintain genetic diversity in a red wolf population that has dwindled to fewer than 300 in the wild and under human care combined.

    Red wolves suffered a similar fate as gray wolves. Their population was decimated by predator control programs and degradation of their habitats.

    The species was declared extinct in the wild in 1980 after the last remaining red wolves were captured for a captive-breeding program. Once common throughout Eastern and South-Central United States, the Fish and Wildlife Service says only there are only 15 to 17 red wolves in the wild.

    Red wolves are currently classified as critically endangered. While they could once be found from Texas to New York, they are now confined to a small area in eastern North Carolina.

    It’s the sixth litter of red wolves born at the museum. (Museum of Life and Science)

    But there are around 250 red wolves in captivity at 45 captive breeding facilities throughout the United States, including the Museum of Life and Science in Durham.

    The museum received its first red wolf in 1992, and has since had five litters before this most recent one. Throughout the years, the museum has been home to over 50 red wolves and had more than 30 pups born.

    The museum’s Senior Director of Animal Care Sherry Samuels said that the parents and pups are healthy, and regular monitoring is scheduled throughout the next few weeks.

    “This summer promises to be filled with excitement as we watch this family grow,” Samuels said in a press release. “Patience and quiet observation will be key when observing our new pups.”

    The public could see the baby wolves late next month, but the museum says red wolves tend to be reserved around crowds and loud noises. Museum staff will be present throughout the summer to help the public respectfully observe the new family.

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    Walter Reinke

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  • Fares to resume for most GoTriangle riders starting July 1

    Fares to resume for most GoTriangle riders starting July 1

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    Starting July 1, GoTriangle riders will have to start paying fares again, officials said.

    Riders haven’t had to pay those fees since March 2020. The regional transit operator dropped the fares during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    There will be, however, new ways to pay those fees, according to GoTriangle. That includes things like digital ticketing and what they call a “convenience pass” for the community’s lower-income riders. People can still pay in cash, but will need exact change.

    Weekly and monthly fare caps will be added as well, according to GoTriangle.

    Some things will stay the same, though. Teens 18 and younger and seniors 65 and older will still ride at no charge.

    To qualify, those riders must join a GoPass program and use the Umo phone app, which will hold their digital tickets. 

    “Through the Umo app, users already can track their trips to see where their buses are in real time. GoPass will allow us to roll out a range of fare options to fit everyone’s needs,” GoTriangle President and CEO Charles Lattuca said in a news release.

    Bus boarding will also revert from the front. Riders had been boarding from the back during the pandemic.

    Before the pandemic, rider fares generated $2 million in revenue annually, according to a release.

    (GoTriangle)

    Find more details on GoTriangle fare options.

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    Daniel Gray

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  • Women’s Health Conference happening this weekend at Hillside High School

    Women’s Health Conference happening this weekend at Hillside High School

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    DURHAM, N.C. (WTVD) — The Women’s Health Awareness Conference celebrates 10 years of transforming communities by empowering women to live healthier lives.

    On Saturday, April 13, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., the event tackles health disparities by offering women guidance on accessing services, resources, and products to enhance their physical, mental, and environmental well-being.

    Numerous breakout sessions and onsite screenings will be available, including those targeting cancer, diabetes, kidney function, liver and thyroid diseases, and reproductive health.

    This free event will be held at Hillside High School in Durham, with satellite locations in Buncombe and Granville Counties.

    Onsite registration is available. For more information, click here.

    ABC11 is a proud sponsor of the event.

    Copyright © 2024 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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    WTVD

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  • Durham mayor delivers first State of the City: ‘Durham is dope’

    Durham mayor delivers first State of the City: ‘Durham is dope’

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    DURHAM, N.C. (WTVD) — The sounds of NCCU’s marching band ushered in the Bull City’s newly elected leader, Mayor Leo Williams, who was eager to take the stage, but not without a special acknowledgment of his wife and son.

    He dived headfirst into public safety and told the audience he hopes that Durham becomes the most progressive city of public safety in America, but it won’t happen without money.

    “We need resources that bolster city staff and employees to be the best at their job from competitive market pay to cutting edge technology,” Wiliams said.

    The mayor delivered his first State of the City address on Tuesday night and spoke on such topics as strengthening the city’s relationship with one of its largest employers, Duke University, and announcing mentorship programs connecting at-risk youth with jobs.

    “The data speaks for itself. There’s a crucial need for more support for young Black men and boys. Simply put: we just have to do more,” he said.

    Williams touted that the GoDurham bus system is the second largest in the state. He also spoke of economic development and safer streets. Perhaps one of the biggest talkers was affordable housing.

    “Oftentimes, we talk about affordable housing,” he said. “I want to focus on affordable living.”

    Durham Housing Authority Director Anthony Scott approved.

    “I love the new phrase of it because we need to get out of this market rate..affordable lingo. We need to build solid communities for everybody involved,” Scott said.

    The mayor told the crowd those are the pillars that define the Bull City. That optimism was felt by residents.

    “A blueprint for the rest of the country on how a small town can come from the rubble in hard times and become something beautiful,” said Durham resident Davit Melikian.

    “Leonardo’s style is different. The people can feel him and his genuine persona,” said Durham resident Sandra Battle.

    Mayor Leonardo Williams to lay out his vision for the Bull City when he gives his first State of the City on Tuesday, April 9.

    Beverly Makhubele has seen firsthand the transformation of east Durham into a flourishing hotspot.

    “It’s given the area new life,” Makhubele said. “We’ve seen businesses, particularly black-owned businesses increase in the last three or four years.”

    Williams was just elected to lead the Bull City after serving two years as the City Councilman representing Ward 3.

    Williams told ABC11 back in November when he was running for the position that he wanted to capitalize on Durham’s growth, while also making longtime locals feel like they are a part of the growth.

    Mayor-elect Leo Williams shares vision for Durham

    According to a presentation in March, the City of Durham expects the population to nearly double to more than 450,000 by 2047.

    The speech was a grand opening and a grand closing with a possible new catchphrase.

    “Durham is dope,” said Wiliams. “Thank you all so much.”

    SEE ALSO | New housing project in Durham approved unanimously over concerns from neighbors

    Copyright © 2024 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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    Joel Brown

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  • Donald Trump, Nikki Haley hosting rallies in North Carolina days ahead of Super Tuesday

    Donald Trump, Nikki Haley hosting rallies in North Carolina days ahead of Super Tuesday

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    RALEIGH, N.C. — The state is getting visits this weekend from major political players in the presidential race days before Super Tuesday.

    Former President Donald Trump will be in Greensboro later today for a “Get Out the Vote” rally. He is speaking at the Greensboro Coliseum Complex at 2 p.m.

    Republican candidate Nikki Haley will also be in Raleigh later today for a rally. She is speaking at Union Station at 12:30 p.m.

    The former South Carolina governor is trailing behind Trump in the polls. But, she is vowing to stay in the race through Super Tuesday next week when North Carolina will host its primary election. .

    Vice President Kamala Harris also made a trip to North Carolina.

    On Friday, she was joined by North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper at 12:40 p.m. on Durham’s historic Black Wall Street.

    Vice President Kamala Harris visited Durham on Friday to talk about the White House plan to invest millions in the economy.

    This is her second trip to the state this year. In January, Harris visited a middle school in Charlotte and announced an additional $285 million in federal funding from the Safer Communities Act.

    Saturday is the last day for early voting ahead of Tuesday’s election.

    Copyright © 2024 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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    WTVD

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  • Open Source: Nvidia is a $2 trillion company. And it’s hiring in Durham.

    Open Source: Nvidia is a $2 trillion company. And it’s hiring in Durham.

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    Nvidia corporate offices on Meridian Parkway in Durham.

    Nvidia corporate offices on Meridian Parkway in Durham.

    Brian Gordon

    Remember last spring when Nvidia surpassed a trillion dollars market cap? Well, the California chipmaker is now worth nearly twice that. With its dizzying stock ascent, it is the world’s fourth-most valuable company behind Microsoft, Apple and the Saudi Arabian Oil Group.

    Microsoft has offices in the Triangle in North Carolina. Apple does, too (though we’re waiting on the big promised campus). The Saudi oil group, to my knowledge, does not.

    But Nvidia is here, in Durham, and it seems to be hiring. On LinkedIn, the company lists 51 openings with the Bull City as a possible location, alongside cities like Austin, Santa Clara, and Redmond, Washington. Most of the roles are for various types of senior engineers. Several of the openings were posted just this week.

    Nvidia has been in North Carolina since 1998, company filings show, and Durham is among the 20 U.S. cities where it has an office.

    The company makes processing chips called graphics processing units, or GPUs, which work with other chips, called CPUs, to perform more complex computations. For most of its history, Nvidia GPUs were used to power video games; the original Xbox, for example, exclusively used the company’s chips.

    Today, the market has an insatiable appetite for Nvidia chips to run their expanding AI platforms. I hope employees have been getting paid in stock options: Since Jan 1., Nvidia stock is up 65%. Since this time last year, it’s risen 252%.

    Competitors are coming; Microsoft, Meta, and Google are among the giants investing in manufacturing their own chips. Yet AI-driven demand has for now made Nvidia the undisputed sector king. Last week, its market cap briefly eclipsed $2 trillion. Companywide, its headcount has swelled, too. At the start of 2020, Nvidia had 13,775 employees. As of late January, it employed 29,600.

    How many of those workers are in the Triangle? In May, Nvidia told me it had around 300 workers based at its Meridian Parkway office near Research Triangle Park. Last week, I asked for an updated area headcount and initially got rejected by a company spokesperson who said, in an apparent change in policy, that Nvidia doesn’t “disclose numbers by location.”

    I pushed to ask if 300 was still an accurate local employment figure, and the spokesperson said yes.

    “We’re a growing company and will continue to expand our presence in various industries including health care, automotive, and more,” she said.

    So Nvidia’s Durham footprint isn’t massive yet. It lists more than 1,500 positions on LinkedIn overall, which puts the 51 openings listing Durham in context. But the company is here. And it is posting jobs. It stands to reason its Durham workforce will grow. Whether Nvidia tells us about it in the future is less certain.

    On to the rest of this week’s news.

    Jobs deal comes, job deals go

    Every other Tuesday often turn into busy days for North Carolina business reporters. That is when the state’s Economic Investment Committee generally meets to approve new economic incentives or terminate previous deals. This week was no exception, with North Carolina doing both. First the good news, the EIC approved a grant for the Japanese pharma company Kyowa Kirin to bring 102 jobs to the Lee County city of Sanford.

    Japanese businesses and the Tar Heel State have had a strong relationship dating back to the 1970s. Gov. Roy Cooper’s team boasts his trip last fall to the East Asian country has helped North Carolina land multiple recent economic projects.

    Now the less positive news. On Tuesday, the EIC canceled incentive grants for Clorox in Durham and Syneos Health in Wake County. Both companies cited the rise of remote work among the reasons they weren’t going to reach their initial hiring commitments. Clorox appears to also be divesting from its vitamin/supplements division.

    Honestly, both Clorox and Syneos have larger area workforces than I realized. Syneos, a contract research organization, has its global headquarters in Morrisville, where it employs around 2,000. Clorox says it still has more than 500 employees in the Durham area, including at the Burt’s Bees headquarters.

    The Burt’s Bees headquarters at the American Tobacco Campus in Durham.
    The Burt’s Bees headquarters at the American Tobacco Campus in Durham. Mark Schultz mschultz@newsobserver.com

    Election years are good years for Bandwidth

    It’s an election year, which means Raleigh’s Bandwidth will be busy. The telecommunications software company provides mass messaging services — text and voice — for candidates. On an earnings call Wednesday, Bandwidth’s chief financial officer Daryl Raiford said the company projects “political campaign messaging and associated surcharges” to contribute $40 million in revenue.

    And Bandwidth had a good week overall, with earnings beating expectations, sending its stock up 65%.

    “In 2024, we expect our growth in commercial messaging to be joined by further benefit from the U.S. election season, where our capabilities uniquely serve many longstanding customers,” company CEO David Morken told investors.

    Bandwidth’s sprawling new 533,000-square-foot campus off Edward Mills Road in west Raleigh.
    Bandwidth’s sprawling new 533,000-square-foot campus off Edward Mills Road in west Raleigh. Chantal Allam

    Tillis talks taxes in WSJ

    In a Wall Street Journal op-ed, North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis said he would reject the Wyden-Smith Tax Bill that passed the House a month ago. “House Republicans let themselves get played by Democrats seeking to expand the welfare state,” he wrote. Tillis objects to how the legislation approaches the child tax credit — who would be eligible for the program and how Congress would fund it.

    In his opinion piece, Tillis didn’t mention the North Carolina startups that are staring down bankruptcy due to a recent accounting change to Section 174 of the federal tax code, which Wyden-Smith would address. This is disappointing, says Evan Garland, a business consultant in Raleigh who has led a lobbying effort to reform Section 174.

    “I feel it remains important for these companies’ voices be heard, as a counterpoint,” she told me in an email. .

    Short Stuff: Robots, haircuts and sports betting

    Bits and bytes. A handful of Triangle restaurants have debuted robots to bring food to tables. They’re hits at a pho place in Morrisville, a seafood spot in Rocky Mount, and a Mexican restaurant in Wake Forest.

    Over/under 7,000 commercials. Sports betting goes statewide March 11. I’ve been seeing a lot of North Carolina-specific ads from Fanduel and Draft Kings spokespeople like comedian Kevin Hart and former Duke star JJ Reddick.

    City accommodations. Boxyard RTP, the Research Triangle’s de facto downtown, has welcomed several new businesses, including a barber shop, New Wave Capitol Suites, which opened mid-February. A nice addition for the Park’s employees — and its future residents.

    A robot delivers an order to lunchtime guests at Pho 919 in Morrisville.
    A robot delivers an order to lunchtime guests at Pho 919 in Morrisville. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

    National Tech Happenings

    • The Federal Trade Commission is challenging Kroger’s attempt to acquire fellow giant supermarket chain Albertsons, arguing customers will suffer. The two companies disagree, arguing the competitive market now encompasses nontraditional grocers like Amazon. A decade ago, Kroger purchased Harris Teeter and later closed its Triangle-area Kroger stores.
    • The Supreme Court is hearing arguments around Florida and Texas laws that limit how social media companies moderate their platforms. The states say they want to ensure political fairness. The Florida law prevents a platform from banning a candidate while the Texas law restricts the companies from removing political content.
    • Can thermal batteries halve U.S. industrial heating costs? The startup Antora Energy raised $150 million to ramp up production.

    Thanks for reading!

    This story was originally published March 1, 2024, 9:02 AM.

    Related stories from Raleigh News & Observer

    Brian Gordon is the Technology & Innovation reporter for The News & Observer and The Herald-Sun. He writes about jobs, start-ups and all the big tech things transforming the Triangle. Brian previously worked as a senior statewide reporter for the USA Today Network and covered education for the Asheville Citizen-Times.

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    Brian Gordon

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  • Early voters make their voices heard ahead of Super Tuesday in North Carolina

    Early voters make their voices heard ahead of Super Tuesday in North Carolina

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    RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) — North Carolina’s 2024 primary election is approaching with top candidates, such as Donald Trump, Nikki Haley and Kamala Harris all slated to visit this week.

    As of Sunday, February 25, more than 25,000 people voted early in Wake County, with women and Democrats making up most of the turnout, according to Wake County’s unofficial early voting daily turnout.

    “Saturday is the last day to participate in in-person early voting,” Wake County Board of Elections director Olivia McCall said. “We’re hoping that it picks up and people get involved.”

    More than 820,000 voters have registered as of January 2024, according to the Wake County Board of Elections.

    McCall said this is the first time the new ID requirement is in effect, so voters should make sure their information is up to date.

    There’s a whole lot for voters in North Carolina for March 5, especially with the Republican party and the Democratic party both holding primaries that day, according to political analyst David McLennan.

    “For the governor and for the president, both parties have a front runner and a pretty clear frontrunner for President,” McLennan said. “Donald Trump is well out in front of Nikki Haley and for governor, Lieutenant Governor Mark Robinson seems to be the front runner in that race. On the Democratic side, Joe Biden looks like he has a pretty easy time in North Carolina, and then Josh Stein is leading his challengers quite handily.”

    McLennan said there are also more competitive races in addition to the race for Governor, other Council of State offices, House of Representatives, Congress, and legislative seats.

    “Lieutenant Governor is a very competitive race,” McLennan said. “We have 14 candidates on the Republican side. We see some congressional races like the one just outside of Raleigh … another 13 candidates. So, we have a lot of people running for open seats.”

    Many issues are at the forefront of candidates’ minds, including immigration, crime and abortion.

    Eloise Best, who cast her ballot on Monday, said abortion is one of the main issues she cares about.

    “I think women should have the right to make their own choice and not have the government decide for them,” Best said.

    More than 106,000 people turned out in the 2022 primary on Election Day. McCall said they hope that number picks up and more people get involved.

    “Vote early, avoid the lines,” McCall said.

    Copyright © 2024 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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    Cindy Bae

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  • What shows are included in DPAC’s 2024-25 Truist Broadway season? Here’s the schedule.

    What shows are included in DPAC’s 2024-25 Truist Broadway season? Here’s the schedule.

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    From Marty McFly and Doc Brown to Mrs. Peacock and Col. Mustard, the Durham Performing Arts Center’s 2024-25 Truist Broadway season features some new takes on iconic characters.

    “Back to the Future: The Musical,” “Clue” and “The Wiz” are all coming to Durham, along with the Tony Award-winning “Shucked” and “Some Like it Hot.” DPAC announced the new line up Saturday.

    Here is a look at the schedule, according to the news release.

    Clue,” Sept. 3-8. Based on the classic board game and 1985 movie, the comedy dives into murder and blackmail as it explores whether it was Mrs. Peacock in the study with the knife or Col. Mustard in the library with the wrench.

    & Juliet,” Oct. 1-6. Written by one of the writers from the Emmy-winning series “Schitt’s Creek,” the new musical and romantic comedy explores what would happen if Juliet didn’t kill herself after finding Romeo dead.

    A Beautiful Noise: The Neil Diamond Musical,” Jan. 7-12, 2025. Created in collaboration with Neil Diamond, the musical tells the true story of how Diamond went from a kid in Brooklyn to an American rock icon.

    Shucked,” March 4-9, 2025. A Tony Award-winning musical comedy that involves corn and the “battle for the heart and soul of a small town,” according to the musical’s website.

    Kimberly Akimbo,” April 29-May 4, 2025. The new musical comedy is about a 16-year-old determined to find happiness while facing multiple challenges. It has won five Tony Awards, including Best Musical.

    Back to the Future: The Musical.” May 20-25, 2025. Creators of the “Back to the Future” movies bring Marty McFly and Doc Brown’s epic, 1985 science-fiction adventure to the stage.

    Some Like it Hot,” June 17-22, 2025. Winner of four Tony Awards, the musical follows two musicians forced to flee Prohibition-era Chicago after witnessing a mob hit.

    The Wiz,” Aug. 5-10, 2025. The musical returns to the stage in the first Broadway tour in 40 years with a new adaptation on the soulful twist on “The Wizard of Oz.”

    How to get DPAC tickets

    DPAC is currently only selling season tickets for the 2024-25 season, the release states. Tickets to individual shows go on sale later in the season.

    DPAC, which seats about 2,700, is owned by the city of Durham but managed by Nederlander and Professional Facilities management.

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    Virginia Bridges

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  • A 50/50 Weekend

    A 50/50 Weekend

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    First Alert Overnight Weather Forecast: Feb 23

    First Alert Overnight Weather Forecast: Feb 23

    RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) — Nice this morning with clouds increasing midday and some scattered showers around this afternoon into the early evening. Could have some clouds around tomorrow morning, then becoming brighter and a little cooler in the mid-50s.

    Warmer this week with plenty of clouds and some spotty showers around…Monday a few sprinkles possible, Tuesday the EURO has been bullish on some spotty showers, but the best chance for rain is later Wednesday into Wednesday night. It will be cloudy, warm and breezy too on Wednesday with highs in the low to mid 70s!

    Drying out Thursday but the clouds could be stubborn, then Friday night into Saturday morning another chance at getting some rain.

    Have a great day!

    Steve

    Copyright © 2024 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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    WTVD

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  • Runners fill the streets of Durham for annual ‘Cupid’s Undie Run’

    Runners fill the streets of Durham for annual ‘Cupid’s Undie Run’

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    Sunday, February 18, 2024 2:39AM

    Runners fill the streets of Durham for annual 'Cupid's Undie Run'

    Participants ran for a mile in their undergarments to raise awareness of neurofibromatosis.

    DURHAM, N.C. (WTVD) — Dozens of runners filled the streets of Downtown Durham Saturday for the annual Cupid’s Undie Run.

    Participants ran for a mile in their undergarments to raise awareness of neurofibromatosis (NF).

    NF is a genetic disorder that causes tumors to grow on nerves throughout the body.

    After the run participants enjoyed a dance party.

    ALSO SEE: Mild winter ushers in early start to allergy season in central NC

    Copyright © 2024 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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    WTVD

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  • 3 restaurants in the Triangle make Forbes list of the very best in the world

    3 restaurants in the Triangle make Forbes list of the very best in the world

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    Three Triangle restaurants were named Forbes Travel Guide Star Award Winners in a recent report, highlighting the very best restaurants in the world.

    One was ranked a five-star restaurant, earning that accolade from Forbes alongside only 77 other restaurants across the globe in 2024.

    The Forbes Travel Guide’s 2024 Star Awards reflect the best hotels, restaurants, spas and ocean cruises, taking into consideration “destinations offering meaningful experiences, as well as smaller U.S. cities that are often overlooked.”

    Six restaurants in North Carolina made the list, with restaurants in Charlotte, Asheville and Highlands.

    This is FTG’s 66th annual list of Star Awards winners. To read the full list of 2024 winners, visit forbestravelguide.com/award-winners. You can filter the list to specific areas across the world.

    Here are the three restaurants in the Raleigh area that received high praise.

    Herons, located inside the Umstead Hotel in Cary, is an elegant, contemporary setting.
    Herons, located inside the Umstead Hotel in Cary, is an elegant, contemporary setting. Juli Leonard jleonard@newsobserver.com

    Cary’s Herons named a 5-star restaurant

    Forbes declared Herons — a nature, art and wellness-inspired restaurant within Cary’s luxury Umstead Hotel and Spa — a five-star spot.

    “A passion for locally grown fruits and vegetables and farm-fresh meats and seafood is evident in the often-flawless fare. Fresh flavors, surprising combinations, and eye-catching presentations are the hallmarks of the dining experience here,” FTG wrote.

    Herons is one of only 78 five-star restaurants in the world on Forbes’ 2024 Star Awards list.

    Herons’ chef de cuisine Spencer Thomson, left, laughs with executive chef Steven Devereaux Greene in the Cary restaurant’s kitchen at the start of dinner service on Tuesday, Jan. 18, 2019. Thomson and Greene have worked together for years at various restaurants including Devereaux’s.
    Herons’ chef de cuisine Spencer Thomson, left, laughs with executive chef Steven Devereaux Greene in the Cary restaurant’s kitchen at the start of dinner service on Tuesday, Jan. 18, 2019. Thomson and Greene have worked together for years at various restaurants including Devereaux’s. Juli Leonard jleonard@newsobserver.com

    Here are FTG’s Inspector’s Highlights from the restaurant:

    • The intimate 98-seat dining room features a full-view kitchen, original artwork and floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the wooded grounds.

    • You can choose a three- or four-course meal, or opt for the chef’s signature eight-course kaiseki dinner. Each course showcases Herons’ style of food in an intricate and artful form and creatively puts a regional spin on American cuisine.

    • There is generally a pleasant background murmur of voices from fellow diners, hotel guests and bar patrons. It allows for conversation without feeling stuffy. Plus, there’s piano music and live jazz on Friday and Saturday evenings.

    • The dining room is elegant and hushed with an open, soundproof kitchen that often mesmerizes guests as they watch Heron’s culinary masters in action.

    • A stellar wine list features more than 1,600 wines. Craft beer and signature cocktails are also available.

    In 2019, The News & Observer named Herons the top restaurant in the area for the second time.

    “[Executive chef Steven Devereaux] Greene, a James Beard Award semifinalist, returned to Herons as executive chef in 2014 and has never failed to deliver a memorable meal when I’ve eaten there,” wrote The N&O’s then-restaurant critic Greg Cox.

    “But the last one was an experience that rose to the level of transcendent. I indulged in an eight-course tasting menu called The Art Tour, with each course inspired by a work of art on the premises of the Umstead Hotel.”

    Herons is located at The Umstead Hotel and Spa in Cary. Photographed Dec. 18, 2009.
    Herons is located at The Umstead Hotel and Spa in Cary. Photographed Dec. 18, 2009. JULI LEONARD jleonard@newsobserver.com

    To contact Herons:

    To learn more about Forbes’ five-star review of Herons, visit forbestravelguide.com.

    Pittsboro’s Fearrington House Restaurant named 4-star restaurant

    Forbes declared The Fearrington House Restaurant — described as a charming dining room just a few miles south of Chapel Hill in Pittsboro — a four-star eatery.

    “Dinner lives up to the lovely surroundings. The upscale menu is American, with techniques borrowed from France and robust flavors taken from the surrounding region. The thoughtful, seasonal menu is complemented by a deep international wine list that features close to 500 selections with a focus on California varietals,” FTG wrote.

    Fearrington House Inn & Restaurant in Pittsboro announced this week that its longtime chef Colin Bedford would depart, and that sous chef Paul Gagne had been tapped to lead the famous kitchen.
    Fearrington House Inn & Restaurant in Pittsboro announced this week that its longtime chef Colin Bedford would depart, and that sous chef Paul Gagne had been tapped to lead the famous kitchen. Krystal Kast

    Here are FTG’s Inspector’s Highlights from the restaurant:

    • Removed from the city and sitting adjacent to grassy meadows, the restaurant and luxury inn exude peace and quiet. You’ll hear crickets and the trickling fountains when walking to the restaurant’s doorway at dusk.

    • The gardens surrounding the old 1927 farmhouse are worthy of a pre-dinner stroll. Take a seat in one of the Adirondack chairs under the ancient oak trees to watch the Belted Galloway cows make their evening migration from one meadow to the other.

    • Ingredients often hail from nearby farms, including eggs from Lu’s Farm, cheeses from Looking Glass Creamery and micro greens from Duckwood Farms — reminding you of the rural setting of this fine-dining locale. Some ingredients, like the honey, come straight from the Fearrington property itself.

    Head chef Paul Gagne told The N&O in 2022 he was drawn to Fearrington because he found the kitchen to be a rare blend of artistry and cutting-edge techniques, then seeing fine dining in a whole new way.

    “Building the plate, sure that’s artistry. But I always saw the cooking side as science,” he said.

    Fearrington House’s then-Executive Chef Colin Bedford, working in the kitchen with 9 other members of his staff in preparation for dinner.
    Fearrington House’s then-Executive Chef Colin Bedford, working in the kitchen with 9 other members of his staff in preparation for dinner. clowenst@newsobserver.com

    To contact The Fearrington House Restaurant:

    To learn more about Forbes’ four-star review of The Fearrington House, visit forbestravelguide.com.

    Durham’s Fairview Dining Room among best restaurants in the world

    Fairview Dining Room is located in the Washington Duke Inn & Golf Club, a premier hotel in Durham that Forbes says intertwines tradition with a high-end class.

    “Executive chef Troy Stauffer’s menu is one that’s filled with New American cuisine done with subtle preparatory winks to the old South. Parties of all shapes will enjoy the seasonal dishes — and while a few of them will tap their feet to the nightly piano tunes, all will certainly leave with a smile,” FTG wrote.

    Murray Healy photographed at Fairview Dining Room in 2014.
    Murray Healy photographed at Fairview Dining Room in 2014. COURTESY OF TORIANO FREDERICKS

    Here are FTG’s Inspector’s Highlights from the restaurant:

    • Fairview has a more refined feel. Servers’ uniforms are clean, conversations are muted and window adornments are classic. But it’s not to be taken too seriously.

    • Many tables look directly onto the Duke University Golf Course.

    • At breakfast and lunch, the energy is quite bright. A lot of this is because the floor-to-ceiling windows overlook the greens.

    • At dinnertime, the mood is still easy, many thanks to the nightly piano tunes.

    To contact Fairview Dining Room:

    To learn more about Forbes’ review of Fairview, visit forbestravelguide.com.

    This story was originally published February 14, 2024, 1:57 PM.

    Related stories from Charlotte Observer

    Kimberly Cataudella (she/her) is a service journalism reporter for The News & Observer.

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  • Durham chef will compete on Bravo’s latest season of ‘Top Chef’

    Durham chef will compete on Bravo’s latest season of ‘Top Chef’

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    Season 21 of “Top Chef” starts March 20 on Bravo.

    Season 21 of “Top Chef” starts March 20 on Bravo.

    Bravo Media

    For the first time ever, someone from the Triangle will compete on “Top Chef.”

    Set in Milwaukee, Season 21 of the wildly popular Bravo cooking competition will premiere next month. Among the cast members will be Savannah Miller, the chef de cuisine of M Tempura in Durham.

    Miller is only the fourth North Carolina chef to compete on “Top Chef” in the show’s two decades, joining Jamie Lynch of Charlotte, Keith Rhodes of Wilmington and Ashleigh Shanti of Asheville.

    “Top Chef” is a coveted showcase for young and talented chefs and an appearance can catapult careers. The newest season will be the show’s first without longtime host Padma Lakshmi, who departed “Top Chef” after Season 20. Taking her place will be popular former winner Kristen Kish.

    M Tempura’s chef de cuisine Savannah Muller preps a dish before lunch service at M Tempura in Durham Wednesday, April 4, 2019. Miller will be the first Triangle chef to compete on Bravo’s cooking competition show Top Chef.
    M Tempura’s chef de cuisine Savannah Muller preps a dish before lunch service at M Tempura in Durham Wednesday, April 4, 2019. Miller will be the first Triangle chef to compete on Bravo’s cooking competition show Top Chef. Juli Leonard jleonard@newsobserver.com

    Miller has been among the Triangle’s most talented chefs since gaining notoriety in 2019 as the chef de cuisine of Michael Lee’s M Tempura. That restaurant earned raves from former News & Observer dining critic Greg Cox, who declared it Restaurant of the Year in 2020.

    During the pandemic, Miller was the opening chef at Glasshouse Kitchen in RTP.

    This season, Miller will be one of 15 chefs from across the country competing on the show.

    Savannah Miller, chef de cuisine of M Tempura in Durham, on Season 21 of “Top Chef” on Bravo.
    Savannah Miller, chef de cuisine of M Tempura in Durham, on Season 21 of “Top Chef” on Bravo. Stephanie Diani Bravo

    How to watch Season 21 of ‘Top Chef’

    The new season will premiere at 9 p.m. on Wednesday, March 20, on Bravo. The season will feature “supersized episodes” every Wednesday night from 9-10:15 p.m., says Bravo.

    Episodes are available to stream the next day on Peacock.

    Season 21 of “Top Chef” starts March 20 on Bravo.
    Season 21 of “Top Chef” starts March 20 on Bravo. Bravo Media Bravo Media

    This story was originally published February 7, 2024, 12:45 PM.

    Related stories from Charlotte Observer

    Drew Jackson writes about restaurants and dining for The News & Observer and The Herald-Sun, covering the food scene in the Triangle and North Carolina.

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  • California prison guards are dying too young. How Norway (yes, Norway) can help

    California prison guards are dying too young. How Norway (yes, Norway) can help

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    Inside Halden Fengsel, a high-security prison in Norway, inmates choose their own clothing. Knockoff track suits from designer brands such as Karl Lagerfeld are favored.

    They buy fresh produce from their well-stocked grocery store and chop onions with knives from their shared kitchens.

    They play in bands and walk in the woods and pray in a graceful holy room where clerestory windows beam sunlight down onto slate floors and a compass shows the direction of Mecca.

    But what surprised California corrections officer Steve “Bull” Durham most on a recent visit to Halden wasn’t the prisoners but the guards — how relaxed and happy his Norwegian counterparts were, and how casually they interacted with the inmates.

    Members of the California Correctional Peace Officers Assn. visited prisons in Norway in September to better understand the Scandinavian model of incarceration.

    (Javad Parsa / For The Times)

    “I am blown away by it,” he said.

    Durham has been a California corrections officer for 25 years, much of it in the remote reaches of Tehachapi, east of Bakersfield. He looks like the kind of guy you’d nickname Bull. Big and bald, he leans forward when he walks, like he’s battling the wind, or the world.

    I met him on the sidewalk in front of the elegant Grand Hotel in Oslo, just down the street from the stately Royal Palace of King Harald V.

    Durham was one of about a dozen members of the California Correctional Peace Officers Assn., or CCPOA, the union that represents the women and men who work in our prisons, who let me tag along with them to Norway recently.

    They were there to see firsthand what all the hype is when it comes to the so-called Scandinavian model of incarceration, which California hopes to import in coming months.

    Gov. Gavin Newsom is in the process of converting San Quentin into an institution — via the “Scandinavian method”— that is focused on rehabilitation, not punishment.

    Tiny, rich, predominantly white and with a population roughly half that of Los Angeles County, Norway doesn’t seem like a good model for anything in California. But Newsom isn’t trying to replicate what Norway does, just adapt the basic premise to create a shift in how and why we incarcerate.

    The Scandinavian method acknowledges that people rarely go to prison for life. Instead, it focuses on the reality that most people who go into prison are going to come outagain, and it’s safer for all of us if they have a plan and the skills for a future that doesn’t include more crime. That credo demands that prison is made to be more humane, and more normalized, turning the guards into at least part-time social workers.

    “It’s radical,” Durham said, but he’s all for it.

    An inmate surrounded by shelves of books and DVDs

    An inmate at Halden prison in Norway visits the facility’s library, where books and DVDs are available to borrow.

    (Javad Parsa / For The Times)

    The CCPOA has long supported Newsom. But it is also one of the toughest and most powerful unions in the state and is not known for soft-on-crime stances. So it may surprise some that the union supports the Scandinavian model, even as fentanyl, homelessness and a misguided fear of rising crime have combined to swing the political pendulum back toward more incarceration.

    Durham, a CCPOA vice president, said corrections officers in California are literally sick and tired from being cogs in a machine that doesn’t work — for society, for those incarcerated or for guards who want a career that doesn’t kill them.

    “We are tired of seeing our partners in a casket,” Durham said. “The stuff that we see is not good.”

    Being a U.S. corrections officer is not a great gig, union benefits aside. It comes with levels of anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder that far outpace other professions, even in law enforcement.

    Corrections officers are quick to tell any listener that the psychological stress and constant threat of violence eat at their health, leaving them vulnerable to ailments including heart attacks, ulcers and fallen arches. They drink too much, get divorced often and die by suicide at a rate 39% higher than the rest of the working-age population, according to the Vera Institute of Justice. Their life expectancy is more than 15 years below the national average.

    Many people assume they are all abusive brutes, in dead-end jobs.

    “It comes down to the mental health and well-being of our staff,” Durham said. “We have to try to change.”

    Helge Valseth leads a group of U.S. visitors through Halden prison.

    Helge Valseth, center, the governor of Halden prison (comparable to a U.S. warden) leads a group of U.S. visitors through the facility, which houses about 250 inmates convicted of serious offenses including drug crimes and murder.

    (Javad Parsa / For The Times)

    Durham shared those depressing statistics as we rode in a bus to Halden, about two hours outside of Oslo, on an overcast day in September. The drive there took us through picturesque fields where cattle milled around sturdy barns, then up into hills covered in spruce and pine. It felt like traversing the back roads of Napa to Tahoe — all classy ruralism.

    Nothing about our arrival at Halden dispelled that, no armed guard towers or razor wire. The only clue this was a prison was the nearly milelong wall that surrounds it, 20 feet high and curving at the top with an elegance that Scandinavians seem able to put into everything they build, regardless of purpose. It was, as a certain former president might describe it, a big, beautiful wall.

    “Jeez, look at that wall,” one of the officers exclaimed as we stepped off the bus.

    Critics deride Halden as a luxury prison that coddles, but it is the star of the Norwegian system, opened in 2010 with a design and a mantra: Prison should not be defined by the agony of discomfort and fear. The punishment for those incarcerated at Halden is being removed from family and friends — being behind the wall. Not the experience inside it.

    Before Norway embraced this new model of incarceration in the 1990s, its prisons looked much like ours do today and recidivism rates were stubbornly high, hovering near 70% for some crimes. Now, though not as low as many had hoped, those rates have fallen to about 20% of people re-offending within five years of release — one of the lowest recidivism rates in the world.

    In California, about 45% of those released are convicted of a new crime within three years; about 20% return to prison.

    Helge Valseth shows off the prison grocery store.

    Helge Valseth, left, the governor of Halden prison, shows off the prison grocery store to visiting California correctional officers. The inmates at Halden largely live in dorm-like apartments with a shared kitchen where they cook meals.

    (Javad Parsa / For The Times)

    The prison population in Norway is vastly smaller than ours — Halden holds about 250 men, fewer than your average county jail — but there are similarities with the U.S., starting with racial diversity. Forty percent of prisoners in Norway are not citizens by birth — they come from more than 25 countries, many of them migrants from places including Sudan and Pakistan.

    Ninety percent of inmates have been diagnosed with a mental illness, and about 70% have a personality disorder. More than half have only a primary school education.

    Gangs, said Helge Valseth, the governor of Halden (our version of a warden), are a big problem, inside of prisons and out.

    What is different at Halden isn’t the prisoners but the guards, Valseth said.

    Two young prisoners at Halden Fengsel in Norway.

    People incarcerated in Norway wear their own clothes and have more freedoms than in U.S. prisons.

    (Javad Parsa / For The Times)

    In Norway, corrections is a profession that has pathways into other branches of law enforcement. Officers start off in a two-year college program, paid as they go, and must continue their education, Valseth said. The Norwegian guards union has a partnership with management that allows officers to have a say in how a facility is run, who is hired and what the policies are.

    In all, said Tor Erik Larsen, a leader of the Union of Norwegian Correctional Services Employees, it’s a good job — one that comes with respect and provides work that feels meaningful. Under the Scandinavian system, expectations of and from corrections officers extend far beyond maintaining control.

    “I need to know what makes a man tick,” Larsen said. “And he needs to know what makes me tick.”

    That philosophy is called dynamic security. In the United States, we use static security: lockdowns, body armor, mace. Rehabilitation is largely left up to inmates to figure out on their own through a hodgepodge of programs — some good, some questionable.

    The Norwegians depend on relationships to maintain control and highly trained corrections officers to be deeply involved in rehabilitation.

    An inmate uses a knife while working

    An inmate at Halden prison uses a knife while working in a shop. In Norway, incarcerated people are governed by “dynamic security,” which relies on relationships with guards to maintain order and safety.

    (Javad Parsa / For The Times)

    Therapy, job skills, addiction treatment — corrections officers in Norway are responsible for facilitating all of it, and for building the trust and mutual respect needed for inmates to feel like someone is on their side when it comes to changing, no matter what crime they committed.

    Durham knows there will be many California officers who are not just skeptical, but downright hostile to that idea — he’s cognizant that it sounds like telling officers, “Hey, from now on you have to hug every inmate on your unit.”

    But Durham believes the current system leaves inmates without enough autonomy to learn how to be different. Everything is done for them or to them. He uses the grocery store inside Halden as an example. In the U.S., meals come and go on a tray, no effort required. In Norway, many facilities only provide one pre-made meal a day. Prisoners are encouraged to buy groceries, make food for themselves, share meals with officers and fellow inmates and clean up afterward.

    U.S. prisons “are not teaching [inmates] any life lessons,” Durham said. In Norway, “they give them the ability to function in life.”

    The same goes for officers, Durham said. Right now, U.S. corrections officers have few opportunities to interact with inmates other than keeping order and imposing discipline in part because rules often forbid getting too close. U.S. officers, Durham said, have to be trusted to act as mentors — like their Norwegian counterparts.

    It’s that mutual respect that makes the Scandinavian model work. And it does work. Violence is rare at Halden.

    I met an inmate named Roger (I am not using his last name for privacy reasons) in a prison auto shop. Roger was incarcerated for sexually abusing his daughter, he said.

    A round-faced, bespectacled man, he was changing the oil on an Audi — largely unsupervised by officers — surrounded by tools that in the United States would be considered weapons: a hefty hammer, socket wrenches, saws, a drill. In the next room, other inmates were using power tools to cut wood.

    An inmate works under a car

    An inmate at Halden prison works in an auto shop, largely unsupervised by correctional officers.

    (Javad Parsa / For The Times)

    As a child molester, Roger is the type of prisoner who typically would not be safe in a U.S. prison — always under threat of attack from other inmates and often looked down on by officers.

    He’s the kind of guy that most of us have a hard time feeling empathy for. But one day in the not too distant future, Roger is getting out — as are most people who go to prison in the U.S.

    At Halden, Roger said, he is learning “how to not think about my child like an abuser” would.

    Norway, like much of Scandinavia, has a reputation for allowing the common good to frequently outweigh individual desires and demands. That philosophy presumably makes it easier to create a system that helps someone like Roger.

    But U.S. culture prizes vengeance. How many times has some variation of “I hope you rot in prison” been uttered with righteousness in film and television?

    Our culture wants wrongdoers to suffer, even at the expense of public safety. But as uncomfortable as it is to hear Roger talk about the help he is receiving, isn’t that what we should want? For criminals to stop seeing the rest of us as prey?

    “It’s been a real good program,” Roger said. “I am starting on the ground floor and building up.”

    Down a hallway I met David, who was from Lithuania and serving time for selling drugs. The lack of fear, of guards and other inmates, he said, took away much of the stress of being in prison. It allowed him the space to think about his future.

    A cell inside Halden prison in Norway includes a window and a private bathroom.

    A cell inside Halden prison includes a window and a private bathroom. Though the door locks, the Norwegian model of incarceration seeks to normalize life inside prisons so that inmates can focus on rehabilitation.

    (Javad Parsa / For The Times)

    “I don’t need to be afraid that something will happen,” he said. “I don’t think I will come out a worse person. I feel I could come out better.”

    Tiffanie Thomas, a San Quentin corrections officer who was on the tour, told me bringing this system to California “seems realistic.”

    As a female officer who is often alone and outnumbered at San Quentin, she has long depended on relationships with inmates for her safety and theirs.

    “We do a lot of this already,” Thomas said. “We just didn’t have the words to put to it.”

    But, she added, relationships take time. If the state brings the Scandinavian model to California, it is going to require something that will, even if they support the model, make both prison officials and reformers unhappy:

    More corrections officers.

    A correctional officer checks out the ice cream freezer in the grocery store inside the prison.

    A correctional officer checks out the ice cream freezer in the grocery store at Halden prison. The inmates are able to purchase their own groceries, including ice cream.

    (Javad Parsa / For The Times)

    Right now, there are too few officers on duty to spend any meaningful time with their charges. The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation has 21,220 correctional officers and a statewide prison population of 93,649 — though that is expected to drop by nearly 10,000 in coming years. At San Quentin, there are 833 rank-and-file corrections officers and 3,504 incarcerated people, according to CDCR.

    Often, there are two officers assigned to more than 120 inmates, Durham said, and that can jump to 160 depending on the facility and the time of day.

    Thomas said she has been in charge of up to 200 inmates at once. In Norway, each guard is responsible for a few dozen inmates at most — a number that has increased because of budget cuts, much to the consternation of both guards and management.

    But to the officers I was traveling with, it was still unimaginably low.

    Durham never dreamed of spending his life inside prisons. Who does?

    A Central Valley kid, he joined the Navy to escape the expectation that he would follow his father into construction. At 18, he found himself married, with a son and getting ready to deploy. But his wife at the time was diagnosed with a mental illness — bipolar disorder, he said — in an era when such things were barely understood, much less talked about.

    One day, she took too many muscle relaxers. While he was trying to help her, his baby son, crawling around their waterbed, swallowed a penny. Durham scooped everyone up and made it to the hospital, but it was a breaking point.

    California correctional officers at Halden prison

    California correctional officers visit Halden prison. Gov. Gavin Newsom is planning to turn San Quentin prison into a model facility using Scandinavian principles.

    (Javad Parsa / For The Times)

    He left the military and moved back home and soon found himself a single father. He needed help and stability and a job in a place without many options. So he became a prison guard.

    No regrets, he said. But “if it was me, alone, I probably wouldn’t do it. But I had to support him.”

    The job has taken its toll. His first week, he witnessed a stabbing. His old-school partner barely said a word about it, he said. But then, that partner rarely said anything useful at all. He was left to figure out a foreign and brutal world largely on his own.

    Over the years, there has been an endless flow of trauma. The first time Durham had to help lower a hanged man, he remembers the legs in his face, and being grateful for the strength to hold the man up, even though it was too late. More than 20 years later, he remembers that inmate’s name. Beale.

    An inmate sits at a table at Halden prison.

    An inmate sits at a table at Halden prison.

    (Javad Parsa / For The Times)

    He knows there are “bad apples” in the profession and there are certainly too many instances of officers committing crimes and abusing their power. He’s also heard the criticism that it doesn’t matter if corrections officers like their job or not, because unlike inmates, they can leave whenever they want.

    Even as we rightfully shrink our prison population and rethink policies that turned incarceration into an industry, the reality remains that prisons will continue to exist because society does demand accountability for committing crimes.

    The Scandinavian model doesn’t promise to end crime or fix society’s problems. But it has answered an obvious if ignored question: If guards have no hope, how can prisoners?

    Walking out of Halden down a gravel path at the edge of the forest, Durham told me it was “weird” to see corrections officers smiling and laughing at work. The visit gave him hope, though he knows that as it did in Norway, change will take decades in California.

    Rain started to fall and the air took on the vibrant scent of moisture hitting earth.

    Ahead of us, a man with a scooter walked with a man pushing a wheelchair, oblivious to our approach. I couldn’t tell if either or neither were inmates, but it didn’t seem to matter, to us or them.

    For the first time, maybe in his life, Durham was relaxed inside a prison wall.

    Two people walk down a path at Halden prison

    Inmates walk down a path. The natural setting of Halden prison, located outside of Oslo, is part of its rehabilitative ethos.

    (Javad Parsa / For The Times)

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  • Tauranga CBD: Grey St building used by The Importer being bought by council for laneway – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Tauranga CBD: Grey St building used by The Importer being bought by council for laneway – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    The Importer store in Grey St is relocating. Photo / Sandra Conchie

    A CBD building is set to be knocked down to create a proposed laneway between Grey and Durham Sts.

    Furniture and homewares store The Importer, formerly at 79 Grey St, has moved to Mount Maunganui and Tauranga City Council intends to demolish the building to improve pedestrian and cycle connections and accessibility within the city centre’s retail precinct.

    The Importer is consolidating its business to its Tawa St store. Its owner has been approached for comment.

    Commission chairwoman Anne Tolley told the Bay of Plenty Times the council has an agreement to buy 79 Grey St.

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    Building the laneway was a “priority action” for the Knowledge and Retail Precincts, as defined in the City Centre Action and Investment Plan, Tolley said.

    “The laneway will support pedestrian connections between the retail precinct of Grey St, the University of Waikato and the future public transport spine. Apart from providing better connections between these key city centre assets, it’s also intended that in the short-term, this area would serve as a pop-up green space or carpark.”

    “We’re in the early stages of planning for this site, and we’ll share more details with the community once settlement is complete.”

    Neighbouring Paw and Partners canine innovative fashion store owner Scott Brownsaid he was disappointed to see any business move from the city centre.

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    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

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  • American Airlines flight diverted to Raleigh-Durham airport due to disruptive passenger | CNN

    American Airlines flight diverted to Raleigh-Durham airport due to disruptive passenger | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    American Airlines flight 3444 was diverted to Raleigh-Durham International Airport Wednesday due to a disruptive passenger, according to the North Carolina airport.

    “At approximately 3:41 p.m., flight AA 3444 departing Jacksonville to Washington, DC, diverted to RDU due to a disruptive passenger,” the airport said in a statement. “Upon landing, the plane was directed to gate C9 where law enforcement boarded the aircraft and took the suspect into custody.”

    The Federal Aviation Administration said, “The Embraer E170 was flying from Jacksonville International Airport in Florida to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.”

    The airline said in a statement that the diversion was “due to a security concern involving an unruly customer.”

    According to the airport, the plane was cleared to resume its flight to Washington, DC, and RDU has returned to normal operations.

    The FAA said it will investigate the incident.

    The FBI said its Charlotte, North Carolina, office is investigating and “will consult with the US Attorney’s Office of the Eastern District of North Carolina to determine if federal charges will be filed.”

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  • Mid-Carolina OB/GYN in Raleigh to Offer 3D and 4D Ultrasounds

    Mid-Carolina OB/GYN in Raleigh to Offer 3D and 4D Ultrasounds

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    OB/GYN office in the Triangle introduces keepsake 3D and 4D ultrasounds for pregnancies.

    Press Release


    Jan 10, 2023

    Mid-Carolina OB/GYN is proud to soon offer 3D and 4D elective ultrasound technology for expecting parents in 2023. 

    Beginning Jan. 10, 2023, patients can book 3D or 4D ultrasounds in the Raleigh-Durham area. Patients from or near the Triangle can enjoy the experience of a private 3D or 4D ultrasound. Once an expensive and inaccessible service, each 3D/4D package offers reasonable prices for priceless first looks and moments as a parent. Select services also allow patients to take home keepsake black-and-white 2D photographs. 

    3D and 4D technology emerged 10 years ago and continues to gain traction among patients as a safe way to gain insight into their baby. 3D ultrasounds offer three-dimensional images of a patient’s baby with more detail than a typical 2D photo. 4D scans and ultrasounds show “live” shots of a developing baby’s movements, like opening and closing their eyes or kicking. Both services allow parents to sneak a unique look at their baby prior to the due date and promote a bonding experience unlike any other. 

    Whether patients want to throw a gender reveal or are just curious about their baby’s growth, Mid-Carolina OB/GYN happily offers several 3D and 4D ultrasound services, including the following packages:  

    • “Precious Baby Peek” (7 to 14 weeks): Includes up to 10 minutes of a 3D or 4D peek of movement and heartbeat. $50 for a single child, $75 for twins.
    • “Gender Reveal” (15-21 weeks): Includes up to 15 minutes of 3D or 4D for a gender reveal as well as black and white photos in 2D. $80 for a single child, $120 for twins.
    • “Who Do I Look Like” (22-36 weeks): Includes up to 20 minutes of detailed 3D or 4D glimpses of the baby with five 2D black-and-white photos to take home. $100 for a single child, $150 for twins.

    Appointments for 3D or 4D ultrasounds are available Tuesdays between 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Patients can book by calling the office or using the Patient Portal.

    Call 919-781-5510 for more information.

    Standard medically necessary and diagnostic ultrasound appointments, such as Anatomy and Nuchal Translucency screenings, can be scheduled during normal operating hours. 

    About Mid-Carolina OB/GYN

    Mid-Carolina OB/GYN offers a variety of services with 10 board-certified and experienced OB/GYN providers. Their services range from standard gynecological check-ups to robotic surgery with the innovative da Vinci surgical system. 

    Mid-Carolina also offers aesthetic services such as Botox, fillers, and laser hair removal with trained medical professionals as opposed to day spas or parties where uncertified technicians perform the procedures. 

    New and existing patients can book appointments up to three months in advance with the Patient Portal.

    For more information about Mid-Carolina OB/GYN and their ultrasound and other services, visit www.midcarolinaobgyn. Or call 919-781-5510.

    Source: Mid-Carolina OB/GYN

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  • Special counsel Durham has spent at least $6.5 million on inquiry into Trump-Russia probe | CNN Politics

    Special counsel Durham has spent at least $6.5 million on inquiry into Trump-Russia probe | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    John Durham, the special counsel investigating potential misconduct in the Trump-Russia probe, has spent at least $6.5 million on his inquiry, including $2 million this year, according to financial documents released Friday by the Justice Department.

    The topline $6.5 million figure captures Durham’s spending between October 2020 and September 2022. However, Durham started his inquiry in early 2019, and the cost of his first year and half of work has not been disclosed. That’s because he was working at that time as a US attorney and was only appointed as a special counsel in October 2020.

    More than $1 million of this year’s spending was for employee salaries and benefits. The documents show that Durham’s office also spent more than $220,000 on travel, more than $600,000 on contractual services such as IT support, and more than $100,000 on rent.

    Durham’s yearslong investigation has fallen short of expectations. Though he has detailed some embarrassing faux pas in the origins of the investigation into ties between Russia and former President Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign, the special counsel has not charged any current government officials with any crime.

    The probe has resulted in just one conviction: a low-level FBI lawyer named Kevin Clinesmith, who avoided jail by pleading guilty to doctoring an email in 2017 that the FBI used to justify the surveillance of a former Trump campaign aide. The two other prosecutions Durham pursued – against Trump-Russia dossier source Igor Danchenko and Hillary Clinton campaign lawyer Michael Sussmann – ended in acquittals.

    CNN has reported that Durham’s investigation is now in its final stages as his team finishes up its written report, which will be sent to Attorney General Merrick Garland. The attorney general and other top Justice Department officials will decide how much of the report to make public. Garland has previously said he wants to release “as much as possible.”

    In comparison, special counsel Robert Mueller spent nearly $32 million during the two-year Russia investigation.

    This story and headline have been updated.

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  • NC power grid attack stokes fear in rural LGBTQ community

    NC power grid attack stokes fear in rural LGBTQ community

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    DURHAM, N.C. — As shootings at two electrical substations cut power to thousands of central North Carolina homes last weekend, they also sparked widespread speculation that the days-long blackout might be the latest of several attempts to shut down a local drag show meant to celebrate the LGBTQ community in rural Moore County.

    Moore County Sheriff Ronnie Fields said earlier this week that police have not found evidence connecting the attacks to the drag performance that began shortly before the power went out, nor have they released a motive. However, authorities are considering the timing overlap and recent attacks on similar events nationwide as they proceed with their investigation.

    Police have said the outages began shortly after 7 p.m. last Saturday after one or more people drove up to two electrical substations, breached the gates and opened fire on them. Whoever was responsible, Fields said, “knew exactly what they were doing to … cause the outage that they did.”

    Duke Energy officials said power was fully restored to the county Wednesday evening. A peak of more than 45,000 customers lost power over the weekend. Many residents said they struggled to stay warm as temperatures dropped below freezing overnight.

    Regardless of whether investigators connect the two events, Sandhills Pride Director Lauren Mathers said repeated efforts to shut down what was billed as a family friendly drag performance have left the county’s LGBTQ community feeling vulnerable.

    She is especially worried for the safety of local queer and trans youth, who she said rarely see themselves represented in rural and right-leaning places like Moore County.

    “This is my first time having this level of hate thrown at something that we love so much,” said Mathers, a Southern Pines resident and producer of the drag event. “Kids in rural communities don’t necessarily always have the same level of support, and what I hear from my kids is that there’s constant bullying.”

    Naomi Dix, headliner of the Dec. 3 show at the Sunrise Theater in Southern Pines, said she and fellow organizers were brutally harassed in the weeks leading up to the show. Conservative community leaders led a protest outside the theater, spread the false narrative that it was a sex show and demanded it be shut it down, she said.

    Their concerns are shared by federal officials who have been on high alert in the weeks after a gunman opened fire in a gay nightclub in Colorado, killing five people and wounding 17 others.

    In a national terrorism advisory bulletin issued last week, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security warned that the LGBTQ community and critical infrastructure may be targets of violence as domestic extremists and foreign terrorist organizations encourage online supporters to carry out attacks.

    The FBI posted a notice seeking information related to the North Carolina investigation, and Gov. Roy Cooper announced a reward Wednesday of up to $75,000 for information leading to an arrest and conviction.

    For Dix, a Durham-based drag queen, the threats she faced leading up to the event were not isolated incidents but rather the “unfortunate reality for those working to increase LGBTQ visibility” in rural and conservative communities. Despite the backlash, she said, this will not be her last performance in Moore County.

    The night of the show, private security and local police monitored the venue, Dix said. When the power went out about 30 minutes into the show, she asked the crowd of 370 people to illuminate the room with their cell phone lights as she serenaded them with Beyonce’s “Halo.”

    “Our job as drag performers is to facilitate and create safe spaces,” Dix said. ”Specifically when it comes to Moore County, and dealing with this situation here in Southern Pines, it’s to find these areas in which there isn’t great representation of the queer community and to provide them with art and a space in which they can feel safe to express themselves.”

    A recent study of threats, protests and violence against drag events from the LGBTQ advocacy organization GLAAD placed North Carolina and Texas atop the list of states with the highest number of drag events targeted this year. Of the 124 incidents documented across 47 states as of late November, at least 10 occurred in North Carolina. That tally does not include the latest demonstration in Moore County.

    Such attacks on the performance art with strong historical ties to the LGBTQ community are the latest examples of “an ongoing, increasingly violent pattern” of right-wing activists and politicians using false rhetoric to stoke fear and fuel LGBTQ opposition, said Barbara Simon, head of news and campaigns for GLAAD.

    Opponents of drag events catered toward families often falsely claim they “groom” children, implying attempts to sexually abuse them or somehow influence their sexual orientation or gender identity.

    Lawmakers in seven states have proposed legislation this year banning minors from drag shows and prohibiting public drag performances. A bill filed last month in Texas seeks to classify drag as a “sexually oriented business” on par with strip clubs.

    Serena Sebring, executive director of Blueprint NC, a coalition of progressive advocacy organizations in the Tar Heel state, said even though authorities are urging people not to jump to conclusions about the motive, she cannot ignore the persistent threats to LGBTQ communities and critical infrastructure nationwide.

    “Every member of our community bears the cost of homophobia and transphobia unchecked,” Sebring said. “Moore County is an example and ought to be a cautionary tale about what happens when we allow bigotry to flourish.”

    ———

    Hannah Schoenbaum is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

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  • Durham interviewed Hillary Clinton on alleged plan to tie Trump to Russia, found no ‘provable criminal offense’ | CNN Politics

    Durham interviewed Hillary Clinton on alleged plan to tie Trump to Russia, found no ‘provable criminal offense’ | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    Special counsel John Durham’s report released Monday details his investigation of a purported effort by Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign to tie Donald Trump to Russia but which Durham concludes “did not, all things considered, amount to a provable criminal offense.”

    Durham reveals in a footnote that he interviewed the former secretary of State in May 2022 as part of his investigation.

    The special counsel was looking into whether any crimes occurred in the handling of an uncorroborated piece of US intelligence indicating Russia knew of a Clinton campaign plan to vilify her opponent, Trump, by tying him to the country.

    The 2016 intelligence got the attention of then-CIA Director John Brennan, who briefed the Obama White House and referred the issue to the FBI. During the Trump administration, Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe released some of Brennan’s notes about the intelligence used in his briefing of former President Barack Obama.

    Ratcliffe publicly said that the intelligence community never corroborated the Russian claims of a “Clinton Plan” to frame Trump, and didn’t know whether it was fabricated.

    In her interview with Durham’s investigators, Clinton expressed sympathy for Durham’s hunt. She calls it, “really sad,” adding, “I get it, you have to go down every rabbit hole.”

    Honig unsurprised by Durham findings because of this ‘revealing moment’

    But Durham believes the uncorroborated intelligence should have at least made the FBI question whether it was being used by a political opponent to pursue allegations against the Trump campaign, the report shows.

    Clinton called the intelligence that was consuming Durham’s time bogus, saying it “looked like Russian disinformation to me.”

    A spokesman for Clinton didn’t respond to a request for comment Monday.

    Durham concludes that it would be impossible to prosecute anyone for their handling of the intelligence. He said it “amounted to a significant intelligence failure,” but not a crime.

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  • DOJ has spent over $9 million investigating Trump since special counsel was appointed | CNN Politics

    DOJ has spent over $9 million investigating Trump since special counsel was appointed | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    The Justice Department has spent over $9.2 million investigating former President Donald Trump since the appointment of special counsel Jack Smith in November, according to the first public accounting of his expenses.

    Smith’s office, leading the high-profile investigations into Trump, has spent more than $5.4 million between November and March 31, the Justice Department said. Other DOJ entities have spent an additional $3.8 million to support Smith.

    Smith is investigating efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election and prosecuting former Trump for allegedly retaining classified information after he left the White House.

    More than $2 million of that cost went to employee salaries, the report released Friday says. Another $1 million dollars paid for investigative support and more than $80,000 went to helping employees relocate while they worked for the special counsel. The reports run through March 31, 2023.

    The additional $3.8 million DOJ has spent includes payment for “hours worked by agents and investigative support analysts, as well as the cost of protective details for the Special Counsel when warranted.”

    While Smith’s topline number dramatically tops the amount that special counsels Robert Hur and John Durham spent in the same timeframe, about $600,000 and $1 million respectively, his spending on investigations into the Trump and his allies still pales in comparison to the nearly $32 million that Robert Mueller and other DOJ offices spent during his years-long prove into whether Russia swayed the 2016 election for Trump.

    Hur, who is leading the investigation into the handling of classified documents found at Joe Biden’s home and former private office, also spent a significant amount of his expenses on employee compensation. Hur was appointed just a few months after Smith and has not made any major public moves. DOJ spent an additional $572,000 in support of Hur, the report says.

    Durham, the special counsel appointed to investigate potential misconduct in the Trump-Russia probe, spent more than $7 million from the time he started his investigation as a special counsel, according to Friday’s filing. Additional DOJ expenditures related to it amount to $1.73 million.

    Durham’s work as a special counsel concluded in May after the release of a 300-page report, which strongly rebuked the FBI’s investigation into Trump, highlighting multiple errors in the origins of the bureau’s investigation into ties between Russia and Trump’s 2016 campaign.

    The investigation, however, resulted in one guilty plea of an FBI lawyer who admitted to doctoring an email regarding a surveillance warrant. Durham’s other two prosecutions against a campaign lawyer for Hillary Clinton and a source for the Trump-Russia dossier both ended in acquittals.

    This story has been updated with additional details.

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