Month: April 2025

3. North Carolina wins lawsuit to stop landlords from overpricing rentals

WRAL News In August 2024, the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) filed a civil lawsuit against the real estate company RealPage, because the company was using artificial intelligence to inflate rents across America. The DOJ found that landlords who used the software caused rents to skyrocket and compete with ‘ghost’ rent prices. At the […]

Written by on April 15, 2025

4. IRS can now share undocumented immigrants’ tax records with ICE

Julian Berger/WFAE Radio The IRS can now share some undocumented immigrants’ tax records with immigration enforcement — a policy shift raising concerns in immigrant communities. The IRS is now allowed to share the personal tax information of undocumented immigrants who are under criminal investigation with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement — including those who already […]

Written by on April 15, 2025

5. Attorney General, regional LEOs band together to fight fraud

Cory Vaillancourt/Smoky Mountain News  Nearly two dozen law enforcement professionals from across Western North Carolina stood behind Attorney General Jeff Jackson — literally and figuratively — at the Historic Haywood Courthouse April 14 to warn grifters who might be looking to take advantage of Hurricane Helene’s victims. “What we want to do is send a […]

Written by on April 15, 2025

6. Section of I-74 named for High Point businessman

The High Point Enterprise A section of Interstate 74 has been named in honor of the late Dave Phillips of High Point, a businessman and government leader who died in December 2022. The State Board of Transportation passed a resolution April 3 renaming I-74 in High Point between N. Main Street and U.S. 29/Interstate 85 […]

Written by on April 15, 2025

7. Older and disabled Medicaid recipients, advocates ‘extraordinarily worried’ about potential Medicaid cuts

Grace Vitaglione/NC Health News Julie Crockett’s 8-year-old granddaughter, Sophia McConkey, relies on Medicaid every day. She has a rare genetic disorder called TBCK syndrome that causes low muscle tone, seizures and fragile bones. McConkey requires 24-hour nursing care, which allowed her to qualify for a Medicaid waiver called Community Alternatives Program for Children, which pays […]

Written by on April 15, 2025

8. Robbins approves demolition of former water plant

Jonathan Bym/The (Southern Pines) Pilot Overlooking Bear Creek high atop its banks, the large structure that is the former Robbins water plant nearly blends in with the wooded landscape, with weeds and smaller trees sprouting around it. The water plant is an eyesore located at the start of the gravel road leading into one of […]

Written by on April 15, 2025

1. Fayetteville utility warns of rising rates after PFAS funds frozen

Liz McLaughlin/WRAL News More than a month after the Fayetteville Public Works Commission reported that $60 million in federal funding for a PFAS filtration system was under review, the money remains in limbo. The project is intended to remove harmful “forever chemicals” from the city’s drinking water and help the utility meet new federal safety […]

Written by on April 14, 2025

2. Feeling the burn: Exodus of staff — for years — has made it hard for NC Forest Service to fight wildfires

Jane Winik Sartwell/Carolina Public Press Extensive personnel shortages at the NC Forest Service hampered the agency’s ability to manage the wildfires that raged in Western North Carolina this spring, state and county officials say. According to Agriculture Commissioner Steve Troxler, 100 positions are vacant at the agency. Fast forward to late March and early April […]

Written by on April 14, 2025

3. Trump mulls semiconductor levies after lifting reciprocal tariffs on electronics

Luke Garrett/WFAE Radio The Trump administration is considering new semiconductor tariffs, after the White House exempted certain electronics from reciprocal tariffs. “We are taking a look at Semiconductors and the WHOLE ELECTRONICS SUPPLY CHAIN in the upcoming National Security Tariff Investigation,” Trump posted on social media. Kevin Hassett, director of the National Economic Council, echoed […]

Written by on April 14, 2025

4. The hunt for rock to repair I-40: test drilling underway in national forest

Becky Johnson/The (Waynesville) Mountaineer A triumphant victory in mining rock for Interstate 40 slide repairs from the nearby national forest was announced by the U.S. Federal Highway Administration two weeks ago — but the reality isn’t quite what was telegraphed by the agency. A press release declared that the federal highway department “successfully cleared a […]

Written by on April 14, 2025

5. Trump tariffs could have chilling effect on school purchases from bananas to laptops

Erica Meltzer/Education NC After this story published, President Donald Trump announced a 90-day pause on most tariffs but said tariffs on China would increase to 125% in retaliation for the China’s response to American tariffs. Faced with rising food costs and delivery fees approaching $400,000 a year, Lauren Weyand decided this spring that it was […]

Written by on April 14, 2025

6. Commissioners table latest effort to outlaw city annexations

Bill Moss/The Hendersonville Lightning Henderson County and the city of Hendersonville are either edging toward a new escalation in their decades-long war over water and sewer service or tilting instead toward settlement negotiations. The Board of Commissioners appeared to be deadlocked 2-2 on a resolution in support of a bill in the state Legislature that […]

Written by on April 14, 2025

7. School-based telehealth expands further in North Carolina

Jennifer Fernandez/NC Health News In a small room at Hillcrest Elementary School in Burlington, students can now meet with a doctor during the school day — virtually. The school joins a growing network across North Carolina where students don’t have to leave school to be seen for physical or behavioral health needs. Kristy Davis, chief […]

Written by on April 14, 2025