Month: February 2025

4. Landslide detectives: Mapping Haywood’s slides one holler at a time

Andrew Marshall/The (Waynesville) Mountaineer Standing near the top of a 4,000-foot ridge above Chambers Cove, geologist Jennifer Bauer turns away from the 30-degree slope we’re climbing and looks out over the valley peeking through the trees that surround us. “It really is a nice view,” she says, smiling the smile of a person utterly in […]

Written by on February 10, 2025

5. Kansas-based association requests SBI investigation of the Summerfield investigators

Scott D. Yost/Rhino Times Everyone knows the ancient Chinese curse, “May you live in interesting times.” Well, the residents in Summerfield are living in extremely interesting times and, now, after the Summerfield Town Council recently called for an investigation of the actions of former Town Manager Scott Whitaker and other former town staff, a professional […]

Written by on February 10, 2025

6. Upon further review: Commission finds that NC elections suffer from deficits and distrust

Sarah Michels/Carolina Public Press James Hardaway spent Election Night counting ballots in Wake County. With another poll worker standing behind him as a second pair of eyes, Hardaway physically checked each paper ballot, ensuring that the numbers matched those the precinct’s tabulators had been tracking all day and night. In other elections across North Carolina, […]

Written by on February 10, 2025

7. Fired by Trump, EEOC official fears what the anti-discrimination agency will become

Andrea Hsu/WUNC Radio When Jocelyn Samuels learned through an email late on the evening of Jan. 27 that she was being removed from her seat on the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, she was shocked. She had heard rumblings that President Trump might try to oust commissioners of independent agencies, but she didn’t think it […]

Written by on February 10, 2025

8. States should invest in postsecondary child care grants

Stephanie Baker/New America Like so many parents in the United States, college students with kids are in dire need of child care options. Unlike those of us who aren’t in college, parenting students are grappling with the costs of tuition and fees on top of trying to find and pay for child care options that […]

Written by on February 10, 2025

9. Here comes fertility politics

Steve Harrison/WFAE Radio The Republican Party has long been against abortion. But in the last few years, some conservatives have supplemented that message with another: The country’s dropping fertility rate is a national crisis. A nation needs 2.1 births per woman to keep its population steady, assuming there’s no immigration. (The reason it’s slightly more […]

Written by on February 10, 2025

1. NIH slashes overhead payments for research, sparking outrage

David Malakoff/Science  In a Friday night move that quickly drew howls of protest from the U.S. biomedical research community, President Donald Trump’s administration today announced it is immediately reducing by at least half the so-called indirect cost payments that the National Institutes of Health (NIH) makes to universities, hospitals, and research institutes to help cover […]

Written by on February 10, 2025

2. Whitewater outfitters say a hurricane made this river more fun, but they can’t get permits to run it

Travis Loller/The Associated Press  After 24 years of guiding whitewater trips on the Nolichucky River Gorge for other companies, Patrick Mannion finally received a permit last year to operate his own outfitter business. But following the devastation of Hurricane Helene, he doesn’t know if Osprey Whitewater will be around for a second year. Flooding driven […]

Written by on February 10, 2025

3. Midway tries to stay rural while growing as a town

Colin Campbell/WUNC Radio Midway, about 15 minutes south of Winston-Salem, wasn’t even a town for most of its history. The Davidson County community became a municipality in 2006 in an effort to avoid getting annexed into the nearby city. Local leaders didn’t want to pay higher city property taxes, and they wanted to prevent high-density […]

Written by on February 10, 2025

4. 4,000 Garner Amazon workers part of upstart union, want $30 an hour

Chris Isidore/CNN  North Carolina is a state that is generally hostile to unions. Amazon is a company that is, historically, extremely hostile to unions. Now an upstart union is attempting to represent more than 4,000 Amazon workers at one of the online retailer’s facilities there. More than 100 workers on Saturday were outside the Garner […]

Written by on February 10, 2025

5. Board of State Health Plan moves to set premiums based on salary tiers

Hannah Vinueza McClellan/EducationNC During a year in which lawmakers are saying there may not be funding for raises, the State Health Plan’s Board of Trustees took the first step on Friday to set premiums for active members based on a salary scale. Increases in premiums are likely for all educators, according to the discussion by […]

Written by on February 10, 2025

7. Forsyth County property valuations up by 55% on average

April Laissle/WFDD Radio Forsyth County homeowners received notices in the mail this week about big increases in their property valuations. But officials say the changes may not translate to significantly higher tax bills. Nearly all Forsyth County properties have increased in appraised value since the last assessment in 2021. On average, they’ve risen by about […]

Written by on February 10, 2025

8. Pless and Maggie Valley still at odds: Pless wants to address town board, while mayor wants him to return calls

Paul Nielsen/The (Waynesville) Mountaineer Maggie Valley aldermen are perplexed by N.C. House Rep. Mark Pless’ request to speak at the next town board meeting — lamenting what they describe as Pless’ refusal to communicate with the mayor and most of the board for the past two years. Alderman John Hinton expressed concern about a lack […]

Written by on February 10, 2025