News You Can Use (07.25.24)


Campaigns & Elections: How to craft the perfect fundraising message post-RNC

Campaigns & Elections: Deepfake detection effort aims to help campaigns authenticate digital content

Governing: Homeless camp cleanups aren’t a permanent solution

Governing: The escalating argument over historic preservation

The Advocate: New Louisiana laws could make it tougher to vote absentee

The Advocate: La. Supreme Court grants public access to Stanford Trust Ponzi trial

Illuminator: Fines might not deter abuse at La. facilities caring for the disabled

Fox 8: Louisiana to ban cell phone usage in school; some teachers question enforcement

The Advocate: Louisiana students still behind in math and science after COVID, 2024 LEAP scores show

Government Technology: Lack of broadband may be stifling rural Louisiana business

Field Notes (07.25.24)


— SPECIAL SESH DEATH KNELL? Speaker Phillip DeVillier has informed House members that a special session in August is off the table, though related oversight meetings are planned. So it appears the Article VII-focused special session that Revenue Secretary Richard Nelson had urged lawmakers to consider may suffer the same fate as Gov. Jeff Landry’s proposed constitutional convention. 

— PSC COMMISH BACKS CONTROVERSIAL TRANSMISSION RULE: Louisiana Public Service Commissioner Davante Lewis has co-authored an op-ed touting new federal rules about transmission planning, and is the only regulator from the Deep South to add his name to a letter to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission expressing support for the rule. Meanwhile, the PSC has asked the Fifth Circuit to review the rule; Lewis says staff and consultants for the commission made the filing without his prior knowledge, and he will object to ratifying the decision in August. The rule requires transmission companies to look at least 20 years ahead when planning projects and update those plans every five years, among other changes. Supporters say it facilitates better regional planning to meet the energy grid’s future needs, while detractors say it usurps state authority to benefit clean energy developers. 

— CAMERON BACKS JP: Senate President Cameron Henry has endorsed Sen. Jean-Paul Coussan’s bid to replace Craig Greene on the Public Service Commission. Coussan also announced the support of Jefferson Parish Sheriff Joe Lopinto. Republican Julie Quinn, a former state senator, and Democrat Nick Laborde also are in the race. 

— GREEN, HUGHES ATTEND SUMMIT FOR RISING LAWMAKERS: Rep. Kyle Green and Rep. Jason Hughes planned to attend this week’s Future Summit in Washington D.C., a conference hosted by Future Caucus “for the country’s most promising, effective young lawmakers” who have shown the ability to work across the aisle, the organization announced. Hughes and Sen. Thomas Pressly co-chair the Louisiana Future Caucus, the group says.

LaPolitics Q&A: Adam Knapp


LaPolitics: Why was the Louisiana Economic Development overhaul needed? How was the department falling short?

Adam Knapp, CEO of The Committee of 100 for Economic Development: Louisiana has had some really important economic development announcements recently but, overall, the state’s performance has not been as competitive as other southern states. LED’s strategy and structure hadn’t been evaluated in many years, and other states have incorporated more flexibility, economic strategic planning and private sector leadership into their efforts. Moreover, the state’s strategy and approach seem to change with every governor, and you don’t see that with some of the better-performing states. 

What are the most important changes you would like to see in LED’s new strategic plan?

First, I think the fact that there will be an economic development strategic plan will be an important change, one with a private sector advisory board looking at the details and holding the state accountable to its goals.  There’s a lot of discussion that the state should look more to the metropolitan regions’ plans and coordinate to support them rather than having a top-down direction. Also, the hope is that it won’t simply be LED’s strategic plan, but Louisiana’s plan, outlining a whole-of-government approach to economic growth. 

What is the most encouraging bright spot in Louisiana’s economy right now?

Investments and projects tied to the future of energy continue to be hot, and geographically spread out from north Louisiana and CENLA to the I-10 corridor. The climate tech/clean tech space also pops up as a big opportunity in entrepreneurship. In other areas of the tech sector like data centers, there are also some interesting advantages for parts of Louisiana.

What is the biggest cause for economic concern? 

We aren’t investing enough as a state in site development and site readiness, or in business development outreach.

Do you believe a tax-focused special session, or even a constitutional convention, is needed this year? 

The Committee of 100 has been calling for comprehensive tax reform since 2015’s major study of the state tax code that we funded, done by the Tax Foundation. It’s still available online if anyone wants to dig into its (still relevant) recommendations. Whether this year or next year, a tax-focused special session would be an incredible chance to make Louisiana’s tax code simpler and more competitive. In the same step, Louisiana could and should resolve the fiscal cliff responsibly without doing lasting damage to higher education and healthcare. 

These Louisiana cities will elect mayors this year


Nine Louisiana cities will choose a chief executive this fall, though in some cases, the race to be mayor is already over. In other instances, the action is just starting…

— In East Baton Rouge, which has a consolidated city-parish government, two former state lawmakers have been running for months now. Incumbent Sharon Weston Broome, who is seeking her third and final term as mayor-president, is facing a challenge from erstwhile ally Ted James, but the two Democrats will have to work to make the runoff in a crowded, nine-person field. Woody Jenkins, who chairs the East Baton Rouge GOP, is promoting Emile “Sid” Edwards, a longtime high school football coach and former athletics director, as an alternative to the high-profile Democrats, as is Scott McKay of The Hayride. Edwards is likely the best known Republican in the race, Jenkins says. The other Republicans running are Tambra “Tammy” Cook, Nathaniel Hearn and Steve Myers. Running as independents are Ryan “Badd Biddness” Carter, William “Champagne” Roundtree and Gregory Taylor

— Now that Gonzales Mayor Barney Arceneaux has stepped down to take a job with the Louisiana Municipal Association, four Black Democrats are vying for the open seat in a growing city that’s almost half white. Of the sitting City Council members running, Timothy Riley is considered somewhat of an outsider, while Harold Stewart is thought to be more aligned with the local establishment. Terance Irvin, a former council member who challenged Arcenaux in 2016, is pursuing the job again. Kemlyn Bailey Lomas, a fourth-generation city resident touting what she describes as “over 20 years experience in municipal, parish, and state government administrations,” rounds out the field. 

— In New Iberia, incumbent Mayor Freddie DeCourt did not draw a challenger. Morgan City Mayor Lee Dragna and Walker Mayor Jimmy Watson also have been reelected without a fight. All three men are Republicans. 

Leroy Sullivan is seeking his sixth term as mayor of Donaldsonville. He faces fellow Democrat Glenn Price, who also ran for the post in 2020. 

— Plaquemine Mayor Ed Reeves is retiring from public service. Democrat Timothy L. “Timmy” Martinez is seeking to replace him, along with John “JB” Barker, Tonya Harmason and Terry Higgins, who are all listed as “no party” or independent. 

— Port Allen Mayor Richard Lee also is retiring. Democrats Lance Joseph and Clyde Robertson Sr. are vying to replace him, as is independent Terecita Pollard Pattan

Paul Abrusley and Gwen Alsburry, both Democrats, and “no party” candidate David Vidrine are looking to succeed the retiring Gene Paul as mayor of Oakdale. 

Election Day is Nov. 5, with runoffs culminating on Dec. 7. 

THE KAMALA FACTOR: How the prez ballot will (or won’t) impact Louisiana elections


Just a week ago, President Joe Biden’s quest to hold the White House appeared to be, if not a lost cause, at least trending in that direction. Democrats were starting to panic. Many worried the lack of enthusiasm at the top of the ticket would lead to a bloodbath all over the ballot. 

Biden’s decision not to run for re-election, followed by Vice President Kamala Harris quickly taking his place, “injects rocket fuel on the Democratic side,” said Albert Samuels, who chairs the political science department at Southern University.

The party needs that enthusiasm, he said, particularly among young voters. “Some people just weren’t excited about a race between two old white guys,” Samuels said. “That can have a spillover effect on these down-ballot races.” 

Almost 40,000 Americans registered to vote in the 48 hours after Biden suspended his campaign and endorsed Harris, 83 percent of whom were people aged 18 to 34, according to Vote.org. That’s the most we’ve seen this cycle for a two-day period, and the timing suggests most of those voters lean Democrat. 

Will it matter in Louisiana? Samuels is doubtful, and most of the folks interviewed this week by LaPolitics agree. Nonetheless, elections are unique events capable of unscheduled surprises.

At the very least, Democratic activists here have cause for enthusiasm, for the first time in a while. That, in turn, could produce some ripple effects in contests well below the top of the ballot. 

Louisiana is solidly in the column of former President Donald Trump, and no one here thinks a Democrat from California will move that needle.

“If Louisiana had statewide elections… [Harris] could make a difference,” said Dillard University professor and Fox 8 political pundit Robert Collins, adding that running on the same ballot as Harris would have guaranteed former Transportation Secretary Shawn Wilson a spot in 2023 gubernatorial runoff. “But since our state elections are off-year elections, it won’t make a difference.” 

Harris’ candidacy could boost Democratic turnout in congressional races, noted Public Service Commissioner Davante Lewis. That may give extra comfort to supporters of Congressman Troy Carter and Sen. Cleo Fields.

“Though most Louisiana voters understand that their vote for Harris won’t secure Louisiana’s electoral votes for the presumptive Democratic nominee, it certainly provides incentive to vote, and to vote down ballot as well,” said consultant Mary-Patricia Wray of Top Drawer Strategies, who’s working for the Fields campaign. 

That turnout bump for congressional races could be important in certain local contests. For example, Lewis pointed to a seat on the Baton Rouge-based Court of Appeal, where Kelly Balfour, a white male Republican, is facing Eboni Johnson Rose, a Black female Democrat. 

Where things get really interesting is in the East Baton Rouge race for mayor-president, which could become the most closely-watched Louisiana election this cycle. Current Mayor Sharon Weston Broome is running in a crowded field that includes Ted James, a well-funded former state lawmaker who also happens to be a fellow Black Democrat.

So far, the conventional wisdom is that most Black voters in EBR are “sticking with Sharon,” Lewis said, which means higher Black turnout could benefit the incumbent. On the other hand, James has a personal relationship with Harris and served as Louisiana co-chair for her 2019 presidential campaign. 

“It’s exciting for me personally,” James said, adding he would have a line to the White House if she wins. “I consider her a friend. When I was in the hospital with COVID, she called me every single day.” 

Consultant Kristine Breithaupt predicted rising Democratic turnout will benefit Democrat incumbents, including Carter and Broome, who are her clients. “I’ve never seen Democrats fall in line so efficiently in my life,” she said. “The enthusiasm is electric, especially with Gen Z voters flooding social media with grassroots content.” 

All of this presupposes Democrats have the right to swap out their presidential candidate after the primaries are over. Speaker Mike Johnson has suggested Republicans will mount a long-shot effort to challenge the move, at least in certain jurisdictions. 

“Every state has its own system,” Johnson told ABC News, “and in some of these, it’s not possible to simply just switch out a candidate.”

Louisiana does not appear to be one of those states where the switch would be problematic. Joel Watson with Secretary of State Nancy Landry’s office said their team just needs the nominee’s name by 4:30 p.m. on Aug. 23 — the day after the Democratic National Convention concludes — to have it on the November ballot. 

Of course, presidential elections have the highest turnout. While 2020 was the overall high-water mark in Louisiana, Black turnout was higher for former President Barack Obama’s two wins. 

To participate in the November election in Louisiana, the deadline to register in person or by mail is Oct. 7, though you can register online through Oct. 15. Early voting is Oct. 18 through Oct. 29 (excluding Sundays) from 8:30 a.m. until 6 p.m.

Biting the hand that feeds? Cepicky in candidate forum calls governor’s voucher bill ‘terrible’

State Rep. Scott Cepicky in a candidate forum at a Maury County church this week described fellow Republican Gov. Bill Lee’s proposal to create a statewide school voucher program as “terrible.” The Culleoka Republican’s words came after the governor had publicly endorsed Cepicky in his efforts to fend off a primary challenge from County Commissioner Ray Jeter.

“The governor’s bill — and I’m not afraid to say this — was terrible,” Cepicky said at the forum. “It was wide open. It would have probably added a billion dollars to the budget. It would have put us in the same pitfall as Arizona is in. And so that bill never made it out of committee.”

“We said: ‘Absolutely not,’” Cepicky said. “The Senate had a version that really wasn’t much better.”

Scott Cepicky and Ray Jeter

Lee’s “Education Freedom Scholarships” proposal would have created a statewide school voucher program, with 10,000 vouchers reserved for families living at less than three times the federal poverty level and the same number going to anyone else who wanted to participate. Those caps would have been lifted in subsequent years. 

The House drew up its own version of the voucher bill that also would have made sweeping changes to testing requirements for students and added state funding teacher health care benefits and to cover school maintenance costs. 

Cepicky also described himself as “chairman of the education committee up there.” In fact, he heads a subcommittee of one of two education panels in the House, a distinction that might matter less to local voters than it does to his hierarchy-conscious colleagues. 

The House and Senate were never able to reconcile the competing versions of their voucher bills last session, dealing Lee an embarrassing defeat as the term-limited governor’s time in office winds to a close. Lee and outside groups like the Club for Growth and Americans for Prosperity have made backing school choice candidates — including Cepicky — a priority in this year’s elections.

Cepicky previously drew headlines for claiming that the House approach to the voucher bill involved “trying to throw the whole freaking system in the trash at one time and just blow it all back up.”

“He’s my friend and he’s a man who understands what matters to Tennesseans,” Lee said in an appearance with Cepicky in June. “He is a man who understands the importance of education and education freedom.” 

Jeter, Cepicky’s primary opponent, said at the forum that he supports school choice but wanted to do more to ensure the government didn’t intrude on students being educated in homes or private schools. But he worried that the bill introduced this year would have hurt public schools.

“No offense, but the bill that was presented or was just discussed would have defunded our public school system,” he said. “What [Cepicky] just described to you, to me sounds a whole lot like government and regulation in private schools. And I don’t want to see that.”

Early voting for the Aug. 1 primary ends on Saturday.

House District 64 with partisan leanings. (Credit: Dave’s Redistricting)

The month that rocked the presidential race

For almost six months into what was to be the most sensational presidential election in modern times, it seemed to be akin to Europe’s “Phony War” of 1940. 

Then came the debate President Joe Biden had wanted with Donald J. Trump on June 27, and suddenly Biden’s disastrous performance became the Democrats’ worst-case scenario. Biden’s national and battleground state polling didn’t collapse, but the trend lines were ominously heading south. The Trump campaign, with U.S. Sen. JD Vance on the ticket, began talking about an Electoral College landslide in November.

Trump survived an assassination attempt on July 13 in Pennsylvania, and three days later his Republican Party celebrated its seemingly good fortune at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee. Trump, sporting a bandage on his right ear, told delegates: “I stand before you this evening with a message of confidence, strength and hope. Four months from now, we will have an incredible victory, and we will begin the four greatest years in the history of our country.”

Then came the second shocking event of the year.

At 1:46 p.m. Sunday, President Biden shook it all up. He said in a post on X: “It has been the greatest honor of my life to serve as your President. And while it has been my intention to seek reelection, I believe it is in the best interest of my party and the country for me to stand down and to focus solely on fulfilling my duties as President for the remainder of my term.”

Biden’s decision to drop his reelection bid came as his support gradually eroded after a New York Times op-ed by actor George Clooney made the case that Biden couldn’t defeat Trump, and an opaque comment from Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi that the president still had a decision to make.

When Biden made that decision, he conjured the historic notions of President George Washington declining a third term in 1796 or President Lyndon B. Johnson’s bombshell to end his 1968 reelection bid. In doing so, these three sitting presidents did something exceedingly rare in the civilized human experience: They voluntarily ceded power. 

U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said on MSNBC Monday night: “Everyone was stunned by the news. As he’s done time and time again, he put his country first. It’s really important to note just how world-historically rare it is for the most powerful person in the world to set aside that power. That’s only happened a handful of times.”

Twenty minutes after his post announcing the end of his reelection bid, Biden said he was endorsing Harris for the nomination. “My very first decision as the party nominee in 2020 was to pick Kamala Harris as my Vice President. And it’s been the best decision I’ve made,” Biden wrote on X. “Today I want to offer my full support and endorsement for Kamala to be the nominee of our party this year. Democrats — it’s time to come together and beat Trump. Let’s do this.”

Within two days, Vice President Harris would raise more than $100 million, mostly from small donors, and accumulate enough endorsements and delegate support to win the Democratic presidential nomination. She was endorsed by the Indiana delegation and Chairman Mike Schmuhl. 

There would be no challengers. And during an extraordinary Monday presser at what had been the Biden-Harris campaign headquarters in Wilmington, now rebranded “Kamala,” Harris drew a contrast between herself — a former district attorney, prosecutor and attorney general — and the first presidential nominee with a criminal record.

“In those roles, I took on perpetrators of all kinds,” she said. “Predators who abused women, fraudsters who ripped off consumers, cheaters who broke the rules for their own gain. So hear me when I say: I know Donald Trump’s type.” 

Secretary Buttigieg, who ran strongly in the 2020 Democratic presidential race until he dropped out in March of that year and endorsed Biden, said on X: “Joe Biden has earned his place among the best and most consequential presidents in American history. I am so proud to serve under his leadership, and thankful for his unwavering focus on what is best for our country.”

And like other potential contenders, Buttigieg quickly threw his support behind Harris. “Kamala Harris is now the right person to take up the torch, defeat Donald Trump and succeed Joe Biden as president,” the former South Bend mayor said in a statement. “I have seen her extraordinary leadership firsthand, working closely with her during the 2020 campaign and then in the historically effective Biden-Harris administration. I will do all that I can to help her win this election to lead America forward as our next president.”

Chairman Schmuhl, who managed Buttigieg’s presidential campaign, said in a statement Sunday: “We want to thank President Biden for his long service to our country and the exceptional job he has done as president. President Biden led our country out of the worst pandemic in 100 years, reignited American manufacturing and infrastructure growth, brought unemployment to a 40-year low, and oversaw record job growth in Indiana and across the country.”

Schmuhl also endorsed Harris: “Now is the time to unite behind Vice President Kamala Harris to defeat Donald Trump and continue the progress of the last three-plus years. Vice President Harris has already shown leadership on the issues that impact everyday Americans, from gun violence prevention to protecting abortion rights and fighting for reproductive justice in all 50 states.”

Democratic gubernatorial nominee Jennifer McCormick reacted, saying in a statement: “Respecting and appreciating the legacy of President Biden’s service, I support his decision to not seek reelection to another term. As governor, I will be committed to working with the president — whoever is elected in November.”

Republican nominee Mike Braun said on X: “If President Biden is incapable of serving as his party’s nominee, he’s incapable of serving as our Commander-in-Chief for the next six months. He should resign effective immediately as a matter of national security.” 

U.S. Rep. Jim Banks, the GOP nominee for U.S. Senate, accused Democrats of “hijacking democracy.”

Banks wrote on X: “Every Democrat knew Joe Biden couldn’t run for office. They set him up to embarrass himself at the debate with Trump. Now they’re robbing their voters of a choice in the nominee so their party elites can choose! Hijacking democracy!”

But Republican U.S. Rep. Larry Bucshon said on X: “President Biden has made the correct decision to end his bid for a second term. It has been clear for a long time that he does not have the mental or physical capacity to serve another term. I want to thank the President for his decades of public service.”

Worst to best scenarios

Changing the presidential standard bearer this late in the process is unprecedented.

As FiveThirtyEight’s Geoffrey Skelley and G. Elliott Morris analyzed: “The past nine days have featured some of the wildest twists and turns in the history of U.S. presidential elections. And it seems that Harris’s stronger showing in these later polls is more about her having made up distance on Trump than Biden losing ground.”

Based on an average of 26 national polls conducted over the past month, Harris trailed Trump by 4.5 points nationally compared with a smaller 3-point deficit for Biden, according to Skelley and Morris.

“Based on the state-level polls we do have, things don’t look any more rosy for Harris there, as she lags behind Biden’s margin against Trump in the key battleground states for which we have data,” Skelley and Morris wrote. “In our aggregate of this limited set of polls, Harris trailed Trump by around 3 points in Wisconsin (Biden trailed by about 2 points), by almost 5 in Pennsylvania (Biden was down around 4) and by 5 in Michigan (Biden was behind by about 2). This raises the possibility that she could have a harder time than Biden winning the Electoral College and thus the election.”

In the RealClearPolitics polling composite on Tuesday, Trump led Harris 48.5% to 46.6% nationally. Trump had an Electoral College lead of 219 to 198, with 121 listed as toss-ups. RealClearPolitics betting odds gave Trump a 58.4% chance of winning. RealClearPolitics co-founder and President Tom Bevan said the picture will be clearer by the end of the week and that will be a better time to make a judgment about where the race stands. 

According to a Monday polling average by The Hill/DDHQ, Harris trailed Trump by 2.5% in a head-to-head national race and by 5.3% when independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was included. In battleground states, Trump led Harris by about 9% in Nevada, 7% in Arizona, 6% in Georgia, 5% in Pennsylvania and 2% in Wisconsin and Michigan. Her favorability rating stood at 38%, compared with 44% for Trump.

But in a Reuters/Ipsos poll published Tuesday, Harris led Trump 44% to 42% in the national poll, a difference within the 3-percentage-point margin of error. When Kennedy was included, Harris led Trump 42% to 38%, with Kennedy favored by 8%. 

Trump pollster Tony Fabrizio said in a memo released Tuesday that he expects a “Harris honeymoon,” which he added “will be the manifestation of the wall-to-wall coverage Harris receives from the mainstream media. The coverage will be largely positive and will certainly energize Democrats … at least in the short term. That means we will start seeing public polling — particularly national public polls — where Harris is gaining on or even leading President Trump.

“Obviously,” Fabrizio continued, “the situation we find ourselves in today is totally uncharted territory and has no modern historical parallel. Given what has happened over the past couple of days and her impending VP choice, there is no question that Harris will get her bump earlier than the Democrat convention. And that bump is likely to start showing itself over the next few days and will last a while until the race settles back down again.”

Fabrizio cited Harris’ “dangerously liberal record” before becoming vice president and noted she has been “Biden’s border czar.” He added, “Harris can’t change who she is or what she’s done. Stay tuned.”

“We see her as a candidate now, and we’re holding the bucket of paint to define her at a time of our choosing,” Chris LaCivita, the Trump campaign’s co-manager, told The Bulwark. “She owns the Biden record. We’ve got everything ready for what she did as [district attorney in San Francisco]. And she was part of the coverup with Biden’s fitness to serve.”

So this Democratic switch is a risky gambit, right?

Six months ago, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley said in her primary challenge to Trump: “Most Americans do not want a rematch between Biden and Trump. The first party to retire its 80-year-old candidate is going to be the one who wins this election.” While fiercely critical of Trump during the primary campaign, Haley has since endorsed him and spoke at the RNC last week. 

Jonathan V. Last, writing for the conservative Bulwark, observed: “Kamala Harris can run as an insurgent, but with the advantages of an incumbent. The largest advantage of incumbency is that a candidate does not have to take base-pleasing positions during a primary campaign that can hurt him during a general election. Because of the extraordinary nature of her ascendence, Harris possesses this advantage. She will carry nearly every advantage of incumbency and yet she can credibly position herself as this election’s change agent.”

Last also wrote, “The Trump campaign spent two years creating a political bomb concerning old age. They assumed that they could plant this bomb at the feet of Joe Biden. Trump is now the one holding the age bomb. He is not only a full generation older than Harris — everything about him looks geriatric by comparison. From his gait to his bronzed-over pallor; from the way he rambles and gets lost in sentences to his inability to keep facts straight. Every split screen now makes Trump look old and decrepit by comparison.”

Finally, Last observed, “When the first real Harris-vs.-Trump polling comes out next week we’ll see how big of a hole she’s in. But unlike Biden, Harris has the ability to spend the next three months on offense, all day, every day. If she can deliver the goods, she has a puncher’s chance.”

Anne Applebaum, writing for The Atlantic, said, “Suddenly Trump looks older and more deranged. Campaigns, moreover, are about contrast. Trump is a candidate of chaos, unpredictability, and instability. Democrats can win by providing an alternative of calmness and confidence.”

And Stuart Stevens, the Republican operative who has worked on the presidential campaigns of George W. Bush and Mitt Romney, added in an analysis for The Atlantic: “The Democrats’ best-case scenario is for the Biden-Harris campaign to transition as smoothly as possible into the Harris campaign. The best way to heal is to create a campaign environment of predictability and stability. I get the argument that a contested nominating process would strengthen the eventual winner, but three weeks of uncertainty can destroy the morale of a campaign, if not the entire party. The faster the Democrats embrace Harris, the more likely she will emerge from the convention with a lead in the polls and an organization excited to make history.”

Harris often uses the phrase “What can be, unburdened by what has been,” which has been memed into a collage by the RNC and the Trump campaign. 

It will be fascinating to see if she can unburden herself from Biden’s unpopular legacy and forge an opportunity for American Democrats.

Buttigieg and veepstakes

The Democratic Party announced that the roll call vote for the presidential and vice presidential nominees will take place virtually on Aug. 7, some 12 days before the DNC convenes in Chicago. That is to ensure the Democratic ticket appears on the Ohio ballot as well as 49 other states.

It is expected that Harris will have picked her running mate by then.

Buttigieg, asked about whether he would accept a vice presidential nomination, said Monday on MSNBC: “She’s going to make that decision based on what’s best for the country. I will do everything in my power to make sure she’s the next president. We’re on the second day since the President made his decision. I very much trust her to make that choice as it makes sense for her.”

Other shortlist contenders include Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro (Howey Politics Indiana’s suspected selection because it could result in carrying 19 essential Electoral College votes), North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear and Arizona U.S. Sen. Mark Kelly. Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer has said she is not interested.

United Automobile Workers President Shawn Fain, who is from Kokomo, was asked on MSNBC Monday night about a potential endorsement of Harris. “We have a process we follow,” Fain said. “It’s been a very emotional few weeks, seeing President Biden make a sacrifice for this nation. With Vice President Harris, we have a process we follow. We’re going to be discussing things over the next few days. President Biden was the first to join a picket line. Kamala Harris was with us in 2019. You know where Donald Trump was in 2019? He sure as hell wasn’t on a picket line.”

Ron Klain, Biden’s first chief of staff and an Indianapolis native, said Monday on MSNBC: “We’re very excited about the vice president’s campaign. [President Biden] is very fired up about her race. The president is a fighter. He wanted to win this election. He had been on the trail since the debate very effectively. He wanted to fight, but he came to the conclusion that it wasn’t possible. He has a high amount of confidence in Vice President Harris. She will be a great president. She’s ready to do this job.”

Indiana impacts

The impending presidential nomination of Harris sets up an interesting ticket gender contrast in Indiana. Harris will head a mostly female Democratic ticket (with the exception of lieutenant governor nominee Terry Goodin), compared with the all-male GOP ticket that supports abortion restrictions and Trump’s agenda.

Trump’s selection of Sen. Vance appears aimed at gathering more rural white male voters, a crucial constituency, while the senator’s views on no-fault divorce, contraception and abortion restrictions will do little to appeal to the moderate suburban woman.

So that is an opening for Hoosier Democrats, but they don’t appear to be adequately armed financially to exploit this dynamic, given Jennifer McCormick’s anemic $700,000 cash on hand that she reported on her mid-year finance report. McCormick has held about a half-dozen “reproductive rights town halls” that have been moderately to well attended and have resulted in a light dose of media coverage, but whether that voter energy translates to voters remains to be seen.

Hoosier Democrats had hoped to make General Assembly gains in 2022 after the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision. While congressional Democrats did much better than expected nationally that cycle, they made no gains in Indiana. Democrats hope to pick up four seats to end the House GOP supermajority, but the track record thus far has been underwhelming.

In 2016, Hoosiers witnessed a 107-day campaign when Lt. Gov. Eric Holcomb was chosen by the Indiana Republican Central Committee to replace Gov. Mike Pence at the top of the ticket after he joined Trump’s presidential campaign. Holcomb won that toss-up race against Democrat John Gregg.

Now, Vice President Harris faces almost exactly the same time frame in a toss-up race against former President Donald Trump.

Biden addresses the nation

President Biden addressed the nation from the Oval Office Wednesday night, his first public address since announcing on Sunday he would not seek a second term. 

“I revere this office, but I love my country more. It’s been the honor of my life to serve as your president. But in the defense of democracy, which is at stake, I think it’s more important than any title,” Biden said. “I draw strength and find joy in working for the American people. But this sacred task of perfecting our union is not about me. It’s about you, your families, your futures. 

“It’s about we the people. … America is going to have to choose between moving forward or backward,” Biden said, “between hope and hate, between unity and division.”

Brian A. Howey is senior writer and columnist for Howey Politics Indiana/State Affairs. Find Howey on Facebook and X @hwypol.

Kansas Daily News Wire July 25, 2024

Welcome to the Kansas Daily News Wire, your daily roundup of top state and political stories from newsrooms across Kansas. — Hawver’s Capitol Report/State Affairs

STATE

State Democratic chief: Excitement palpable on heels of Harris’ ascension to top of presidential ticket: Kansas Democratic Party chair Jeanna Repass sensed a sea change after a check was hand-delivered to the state’s Democratic headquarters as a donation to Kamala Harris’ upstart presidential campaign. That level of enthusiasm, Repass said, is not something she personally witnessed during President Joe Biden’s reelection bid.  (Resnick, State Affairs)

Congressional hearing spotlights Haskell’s alleged failure to support sexual assault survivors: Some members of the U.S. Congress during a hearing Tuesday focused on Haskell Indian Nations University’s alleged failures to respond to reports of sexual violence and support student survivors appropriately. (The Lawrence Times)

Trump-Vance ticket officially on Kansas ballot: Former President Donald Trump and his recently selected running mate JD Vance are officially on the ballot in Kansas. (Stover, State Affairs)

Kansas driver’s license offices still impacted by CrowdStrike outage: Kansas driver’s license offices are still impacted by the issues with the CrowdStrike. (KSN)

Renowned Kansas artist creates large portrait of Kamala Harris in field after Biden announces exit from race: A Kansas man is sending a political message using agriculture-inspired art in a tribute to Vice President Kamala Harris. (Fox News)

LOCAL

Two 8-pound black bear cubs are at Sedgwick County Zoo: When a mother black bear was shot and killed in Oregon earlier this year, her two cubs were left on their own, unable to hunt or fend for themselves. Those cubs, a male and a female believed to be between three and four months old, have found a new home at the Sedgwick County Zoo. (The Wichita Eagle)

These 7 Kansas towns have much to offer for vacation: Summer vacation is almost over, with Topeka-area schools resuming classes in mid-August. (Topeka Capital-Journal

Sporting KC soccer stars team up to open new Overland Park padel club: Thanks to six Kansas City soccer stars, an increasingly popular racket sport will soon mark its Johnson County debut. (Johnson County Post)

Boys and Girls Club opens early learning center: A new early learning center in Manhattan will be able to serve 156 area children. (Manhattan Mercury)

‘Super rare’ Kansas  species found in toad’s mouth: A group of biologists searching for a rarely-seen species in Kansas’ outdoor spaces made a surprising discovery. (KSNT)

Insider for July 25, 2024

YOU DON’T SAY

It’s unfortunate that some of the work that we know needs to be done is so politicized.

Incoming Durham Public Schools Superintendent Anthony Lewis, on negotiating the political climate. (State Affairs Pro, 7/24/24)


Robinson Nonprofit

Colin Campbell, WUNC Radio, 7/24/24

A nonprofit led by Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson’s wife was found “seriously deficient” following an N.C. Department of Health and Services review, according to documents released Wednesday. The agency found a long list of missing documents required to administer a federally funded food program for childcare centers, as well as claims filed for payment for centers that apparently hadn’t requested or received money.

Yolanda Hill has led a nonprofit called Balanced Nutrition that helps childcare facilities apply for and receive federal funding for kids’ meals. Mark Robinson and the couple’s son and daughter have worked as employees of the Greensboro nonprofit; he wrote in his book that Hill’s success with the nonprofit allowed him to quit his job and move into politics. Hill abruptly closed the nonprofit in April after the state agency launched its review.

Documents released Wednesday show that both Hill and her lawyer did not respond to multiple requests to meet with DHHS officials about the probe over the past month, and they failed to provide a long list of documents requested by the agency.

“Balanced Nutrition, Inc. has not retained all records to support its claim for reimbursement for three years,” the report said. It said the nonprofit filed reimbursement claims for a childcare center called Gingerbread Learning Center eight times in 2023 and early 2024, even though that facility didn’t file a claim through Balanced Nutrition.

“Ms. Hill confirmed with the compliance team that Gingerbread Learning Center had not filed a claim since November 2022,” the report said.

DHHS also found that Balanced Nutrition “failed to file valid claims” for nine of the facilities it was working with.

The review found that Balanced Nutrition didn’t maintain required enrollment documentation for the childcare facilities it worked with, as well as documentation related to required trainings, free and reduced lunch eligibility, and the meals served at centers. Many of the findings in the report were listed as “repeat findings.”

And while organizations like Balanced Nutrition are required to make in-person monitoring visits to childcare centers to make sure the food funding is being spent correctly, it “failed to accurately monitor facilities under its sponsorship.”

Previous financial documents for Balanced Nutrition show that Mark Robinson was at one point, prior to running for lieutenant governor, employed as a monitor for the nonprofit.

DHHS also said Balanced Nutrition didn’t get permission to hire family members, such as the Robinsons’ daughter, Kimberly Cephas.

“Balanced Nutrition, Inc. did not report expenses accurately and unallowable expenses were claimed” for four different centers, the report said.

DHHS’ letters give the nonprofit two weeks to take corrective action, and if it doesn’t fix the problems, Hill and her employees will be banned from any future participation in the childcare center food program.

Hill and her attorney could not be immediately reached for comment on Wednesday, but in March, Hill criticized the DHHS review actions taken at that point.

“As an organization, there are numerous things that have happened and been documented that makes us feel as if we are the target of some type of vendetta, be it personal or political,” Hill wrote on March 11 after she was informed of the April review. [Source]

 

Durham Superintendent

Matthew Sasser, State Affairs Pro, 7/24/24

Incoming Durham Public Schools Superintendent Anthony Lewis will begin his new role next month, bringing with him 22 years of education experience. 

He’s leaving Kansas, where he served as superintendent of Lawrence Public Schools for the past six years. Lewis sees many political parallels as he prepares for his new post. 

Similar to Durham, Lawrence was a “blue dot in a red state,” Lewis said. Kansas has conservative supermajorities in its House and Senate, along with a Democratic governor, mirroring North Carolina. 

Lewis said he has seen the positive strides put forward by diversity, equity and inclusion offices, especially in the aftermath of the murder of George Floyd, that are now being dismantled in Kansas. He is aware of the recent UNC System decision to eliminate positions related to diversity, equity and inclusion efforts. 

Lewis has been praised for his work within the Kansas African American Affairs Commission and the Commission on Racial Equity and Justice, but he acknowledged the progress from those efforts was “minimal.” 

“It’s unfortunate that some of the work that we know needs to be done is so politicized,” Lewis said, crediting the efforts of Gov. Laura Kelly in Kansas but citing the reluctance of conservative supermajorities in the Legislature to act on issues important to the African American community. 

Lewis said he looks forward to building relationships with North Carolina legislators and inviting them to visit Durham schools to get a firsthand look at policies impacting the education system, both positive and negative. 

“Schools can’t do this work alone,” Lewis said, adding he wants to educate others while recognizing that he will need some education as well. 

“We never want any student in their classroom to feel less than or that they caused harm,” he said. “It’s important for us to really understand, teach accurate history, so that we won’t repeat it.”

Lewis, who looks forward to being much closer to his family in Alabama, will begin his position as Durham superintendent Aug. 12. 

“That’s the work I’ve been doing pretty much my entire educational career and that’s why I do believe Durham Public Schools is a great fit for my experiences,” Lewis said, adding that questions regarding racial equity were at “every step” of his hiring process. “I just want to come in and continue and even excel at some of the work that is already taking place there.”

 

Chancellor Search

Emmy Martin, The News & Observer, 7/24/24

UNC-Chapel Hill students, faculty, staff and alumni will not have the chance to offer input this fall on the ongoing search for the university’s 13th chancellor — marking a clear reversal from a previous promise.

Original plans for a second round of public listening sessions were nixed, chancellor search committee chair Cristy Page told reporters last week after a committee meeting. The committee received enough public input from the forums it held in the spring and its online survey, she said.

“Based on the number of people who participated in the survey and the listening sessions, and the quality of the information that we got from those sessions, and then the quality of what we got from this last round of surveys, we don’t think there’s necessarily added value to do that again,” Page said.

The switch comes a few months after UNC System President Peter Hans’ chief of staff Norma Houston said during the committee’s first meeting on March 21 that plans were in the works to hold more listening sessions during the fall semester.

“What Anita and I have discussed is setting up a second round of listening sessions in the fall semester that the search firm would facilitate so that we really get input in two phases,” Houston said in that meeting, referring to Anita Brown-Graham, who serves as a special adviser to the committee.

In addition to gathering input via survey, the committee held five listening sessions in the spring, one for each stakeholder group: faculty, staff, graduate students, undergraduate students and alumni. Most were held in April, with the alumni forum taking place in June.

Alexander Denza, a senior at UNC and organizer with student groups Southern Student Action Coalition and TransparUNCy, said he thinks the decision is an excuse to avoid rising tensions in the fall after a spring semester marked by protests. He also thinks there’s a deeper reason the committee cut the second round of public feedback sessions.

To Denza, the committee has already selected interim Chancellor Lee Roberts to remain in the post permanently. He is confident the resources and time allocated for the search for UNC’s next chancellor are to “make it look fair.”

More than 500 students signed a letter published in The Daily Tar Heel, UNC’s independent student newspaper, that expressed outrage that there were only one or two committee members present at the forums for undergraduate and graduate students. The student authors, including Denza, called the listening sessions “a gross disregard to our right to voice our considerations to the search advisory committee” in the spring.

At a meeting of the Faculty Executive Committee this month, Sue Estroff, a social medicine professor at UNC, expressed a similar concern. “I fear that the chancellor search is already over, and I don’t have a lot of confidence in the process,” she said. [Source]

 

Program Cuts

Brianna Atkinson, WUNC Radio, 7/24/24

The UNC Board of Governors has officially approved program cuts at UNC Asheville and UNC Greensboro. The unanimous vote is the final step in a months-long process and means that four departments and two language concentrations at UNCA and a combination of 20 programs, majors and minors and UNCG are no longer available to new students. Cuts at UNC Asheville include drama, philosophy, religious studies and ancient Mediterranean studies departments, as well as French and German language concentrations. Cuts at UNC Greensboro include anthropology, physics and religious studies majors, as well as minors in Chinese, Russian and Korean language courses. Several graduate programs are also included.

Both chancellors, Kimberly van Noort and Franklin Gilliam, spoke at the board meeting. They stressed that reductions were needed at their institutions to address years of revenue losses.

Over the past five years, UNC Asheville’s student body has dropped by 25%. That left van Noort with a $6 million budget shortfall this year. She told the board that she believes the school will have “strong news” for the fall semester. “However, it is my responsibility as chancellor and the responsibility of my academic team to ensure that we correct the budget difficulties that we’ve had,” van Noort said. “And to position the university for future success, so that we will not deal with this ever again.”

In about the same time frame, UNC Greensboro has lost over $22 million in tuition and fee revenue with a 10% decline in enrollment. “We’ve lost 2,500 students in four years — that’s a whole class,” Gilliam said. “Institutions must evolve, (we) can’t remain static. Given the disruption in higher education, it would be neglectful to not respond in a meaningful way.”

Both chancellors said that although they will be eliminating departments, programs and majors, their universities will still offer courses in some of the affected programs. Van Noort said her team is working on whether to offer the courses in another department or as their own minor. She said one department, religious studies, will be transitioned into a minor and will have “robust offerings.”

It’s unclear how many faculty members will be laid off as a result of the cuts or how much money eliminating programs will save either UNC Asheville or UNC Greensboro. In the coming months, both universities will start a “teach-out” process to finish graduating the remaining students in affected departments.

Students, faculty and community members at both universities have spent months protesting and advocating against the cuts.
Faculty from UNC Asheville sent a 25-page letter to the Board of Governors ahead of the meeting. The letter was included in the board’s prepared materials but wasn’t discussed in the committee or full board meetings.

At the meeting, the UNC System also announced it was piloting a guaranteed admissions program at UNC Asheville, UNC Greensboro, Elizabeth City State, Fayetteville State, UNC Pembroke and Winston-Salem State. Any North Carolina high school student with a minimum GPA of 2.8 will be automatically admitted to those institutions.

David English, the System’s vice president for Academic Affairs, said the pilot is being launched in part to “help address and stabilize campus enrollments.” [Source]

Trump Rally

Meg Kinnard and Adriana Gomez Licon, The Associated Press, 7/24/24

Donald Trump unleashed a barrage of attack lines Wednesday against his likely new opponent, Vice President Kamala Harris, whom he called his “new victim to defeat” and accused of deceiving the public about President Joe Biden ‘s ability to run for a second term.

The rally in Charlotte, North Carolina marked his first public campaign event since Biden dropped out of the 2024 matchup and Harris became the Democrats’ likely nominee. The rally concluded minutes before Biden addressed the nation to explain he dropped his reelection bid to “pass the torch” to Harris, who is 22 years younger than him.

“So now we have a new victim to defeat: Lyin’ Kamala Harris,” Trump said, labeling her “the most incompetent and far-left vice president in American history.” Trump mispronounced her first name repeatedly.

Trump’s speech signaled the next stage for the campaign may be especially brutal and personal, even as some GOP leaders warned Republican allies not to use overtly racist and sexist attacks against Harris.

On Wednesday, the speakers who appeared on stage before the Republican nominee attacked Harris’ record on the border, highlighting she was tasked with leading a White House effort to tackle migration issues. Harris’ name was met with boos several times during the speeches.

Trump also accused Harris of being just as responsible for Biden’s policies at the U.S.-Mexico border, which saw illegal crossing arrests reach record highs at the end of 2023 and repeated his pledge to conduct mass deportations with the help of local police.

Harris, meanwhile, spent Wednesday in Indiana, telling members of the historically Black sorority Zeta Phi Beta that “we are not playing around” and asked for their help in electing her president in November, an election she characterized as “a choice between two different visions for our nation, one focused on the future, the other focused on the past.”

Harris’ campaign released a statement after Trump’s speech describing it as “unhinged, weird and rambling.”

Trump’s stop in North Carolina shows he’s concerned about keeping the state in his column this November, even as his team reaches for wins in traditionally Democratic-leaning states like Minnesota, which Trump is set to visit on Saturday.

North Carolina is a state Trump carried in both his previous campaigns but by less than 1.5 percentage points over Biden in 2020, the closest margin of any state Trump won. Trump stumped heavily in North Carolina even as the COVID-19 pandemic wore on, while Biden largely kept off the physical campaign trail and did not personally visit the state in the last 16 days of the election.

This year, Trump had planned to hold his first rally since the start of his hush money trial in Fayetteville, but that event was called off due to inclement weather. Trump called in from his private plane instead. [Source]

Cooper Boosters

Tom George, WTVD News, 7/24/24

Gov. Roy Cooper is now officially being vetted as part of Kamala Harris’ search for a Vice Presidential running mate. Cooper joins several other Democrats, including Governor Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania, Senator Mark Kelly of Arizona, and Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear as top contenders.

As the Governor of a key battleground state Democrats believe they can flip, someone who won twice on the same ballot as Donald Trump, and someone who has a long history working with Kamala Harris from their days as Attorneys General.

Cooper himself has remained quiet about the process and whether he wants the job, but now some prominent local leaders are working to hype him up and make the case for him.

“I’ve been a big Roy Cooper fan for decades,” said Congresswoman Deborah Ross. “I knew him back in the legislature we did a lot of work together.”

Ross started a trend on X, of Democrats posting pictures of themselves with Cooper with the caption, “I know who I’d pick for VP.” Dozens of others, including Rep. Wiley Nickel, Democratic Party Chair Anderson Clayton, and multiple state lawmakers and local leaders joined in.

Party chair Anderson Clayton said it’s getting a lot of buzz in the political world. “The legacy that he’s had throughout the state and coming from a place in the state eastern North Carolina, Rocky Mount, Nash County, he’s representing in every way.”

“I think anyone who the Vice President picks to be her choice is going to be the strongest choice possible and we trust her judgment full force, but you know we’re battling it out for the hometown ground,” Clayton said. “I think it’s important for us, especially in North Carolina, we’re a state that we protect our own and also support our own in a lot of ways, and even the conversations I’ve seen my hometown in Person County in Facebook it would be nice to see one of ours in a position like that.”

Clayton believes there is enthusiasm on the ground for Harris’ candidacy, but that Cooper on the ticket would make it easier to win the state, and also give North Carolina more national recognition and an ear to the White House.

Nickel, who represents a swing district, said Cooper is the most strategic choice. “He’s a moderate. He’s someone who’s a governor for Democrats, Republicans and independents. I think anybody who’s watching knows he’s somebody that is working for everybody. And I think that’s important to focus on that message of bipartisan accomplishments,” Nickel said.

The last time a North Carolinian was on the ticket was Senator John Edwards in 2004. The Kerry-Edwards ticket lost North Carolina and the election to George W. Bush. [Source]

 

GenX Ruling

Peter Castagno, Port City Daily, 7/23/24

Local environmentalists applauded an appeals court decision to reject Chemours’ lawsuit alleging the Environment Protection Agency acted unlawfully by issuing a drinking water health advisory for GenX. Chemours sued the EPA shortly after the agency announced its lifetime health advisory level for GenX at 10 parts per trillion in June 2022.

Although EPA’s advisories are non-enforceable, Chemours argued the advisory was “extreme” and would serve as a “de-facto regulation” that states would use to inform tangible regulation. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce filed a brief in support of the chemical manufacturer.

The EPA countered its health advisories are supposed to serve as informational guidelines using the best available science to identify the concentration of contaminants that can cause adverse health effects.

The Third Circuit of Appeals dismissed the case Tuesday. It found no parties’ rights were infringed by the advisory and regulation is not determined by the agency’s health guidelines.
Environmentalist groups, including Cape Fear River Watch, Clean Cape Fear, the Natural Resources Defense Council, and the Center for Environmental Health, filed briefs as interveners in the case and celebrated the decision Tuesday.

“Through the years, our community has learned that when companies like Chemours are not actively hiding the science, they are usually attacking it,” Clean Cape Fear founder Emily Donovan said in a press release. “This is a win for public health and every resident harmed by GenX exposures. The court got it right this time.”

The EPA reached a voluntary agreement with DuPont to use GenX as a replacement for PFOA — a toxic PFAS compound recognized by the agency — two decades ago. The EPA later found GenX to be potentially even more toxic than its predecessor, after years of allowing DuPont and its spinoff company Chemours to disseminate GenX, in addition to at least 53 other PFAS substances, in the Cape Fear River. [Source]

 

Netanyahu Speech

Will Doran, WRAL News, 7/24/24

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke to a joint meeting of the United States Congress on Wednesday, seeking to maintain American political and financial support for his country’s military actions in the Gaza Strip that have killed an estimated 40,000 people — including 15,000 children.

He used the speech to dismiss protests across America in support of Palestinian rights as being secretly promoted by the Iranian government. And he singled out the fraternity brothers at UNC-Chapel Hill who made headlines for tussling with protesters on campus who had taken down an American flag and replaced it with a Palestinian flag.

“I wish to salute the fraternity brothers at the University of North Carolina who protected the American flag,” Netanyahu said Wednesday. “Protected the American flag, against these anti-Israel protesters.” Congress erupted in a standing ovation, chanting “U-S-A! U-S-A!” at Netanyahu’s remarks praising the students.

The Chapel Hill fraternity brothers have since become minor celebrities in conservative circles. They were invited to speak at the Republican National Convention, and a fundraiser to throw them an “epic rager” called Flagstock has raised more than half a million dollars.

Netanyahu also had harsh words for the pro-Palestinian protesters in Chapel Hill and the rest of the country, calling them hypocrites since many of the protesters are liberals. “When the tyrants of Tehran — who hang gays from cranes, and murder women for not covering their hair — are praising, promoting and funding you, you have officially become Iran’s useful idiots.”

Most Americans oppose Israel’s actions in Gaza, according to a Gallup Poll released earlier this month that also found Americans have an overall unfavorable view of Netanyahu, a far-right politician who has been in power at various points since the 1990s.

Many Democratic leaders were absent from Netanyahu’s address Wednesday, including President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders called Netanyahu a “war criminal” who should never have been allowed inside the Capitol building. [Source]

Opioid Settlement

Hannah McLeod, Smoky Mountain News, 7/23/24

Macon and Jackson County commissions signed resolutions this month enabling the governments to receive funding from the Kroger opioid settlement, the third settlement of its kind for both counties. The national grocery store chain agreed to pay $1.2 billion to states, local governments and Native American tribes in September of last year to settle claims that its pharmacies played a role in fueling the opioid crisis. Approximately $40 million is expected for North Carolina.

The resolution signed by both counties to receive the settlement funds notes that the “opioid overdose epidemic has taken the lives of more than 37,000 North Carolinians since 2000.” 

In 2021 alone, 22 people died from an overdose in Jackson County and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates the total economic burden of prescription opioid misuse in the United States is $78.5 billion a year. The first round of settlement funds provided the most significant amount to local governments with both Jackson and Macon counties receiving approximately $3 million over the course of 18 installments in as many years.

This latest round of funding from the Kroger settlement will provide far less, with Macon County set to receive just under $160,000 over the next 11 years.

Because the money provided through the settlements is not enough for individual counties to take on large-scale projects, municipalities in Western Carolina have discussed a collaborative effort to construct a regional treatment facility.

At the Jackson Commission’s July 9 work session, Tanya Snyder presented information about the opioid settlement planning process on behalf of the Southwestern Commission. Together, the seven western counties and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians that make up Region A are set to receive about $18 million in settlement funding. “All seven counties collectively decided to go through some regional planning because while $18 million sounds like a lot of money, we felt like there’s an opportunity to leverage that fund if we are working together with other communities and other counties,” said Snyder.

So far, the project managers hired to work on the opioid settlement planning contracted with Omni Institute out of Denver, Colorado to complete a strengths and needs assessment. [Source]

 

Jail Lawsuit

Deana Harley, WNCN News, 7/24/24

Right now in North Carolina, hundreds of people are being detained for months on end before they’ve ever been convicted of a crime, as they await a mental health evaluation. Now, the ACLU of North Carolina and Disability Rights North Carolina are suing the Department of Health and Human Services, saying what’s happening is unconstitutional.

In North Carolina, the Department of Health and Human Services is in charge of facilitating those evaluations at one of the facilities they operate across the state. If a defendant is deemed ITP, or incapable of proceeding, it’s then up to DHHS to place them in a treatment center rather than a jail.

“What we’re seeing is that ITP detainees are waiting on average 68 days just to be assessed, and on average, 145 days just to be admitted to the state psychiatric hospital,” Michele Delgado, a staff attorney with the ACLU of North Carolina said.

Now the ACLU and Disability Rights North Carolina are suing over those delays. No statute exists in North Carolina mandating a time frame for the evaluations to be done, but Delgado points to the landmark Jackson court decision, saying detainees can’t be held for unreasonably long periods of time in situations like these. “People are in these jails decompensating, so waiting 30-plus days is egregious and harmful to them,” she said.

When asked for an interview, a DHHS representative said they don’t comment on pending litigation. But in a 23-page motion to dismiss, the agency says the delays are simply out of their control. In another motion, the agency said rushing the evaluations would have what they call “catastrophic effects on ITP detainees,” and the behavioral health system statewide because of staffing shortages.

Delgado, though, says neighboring states like Virginia are facing the same staffing shortages and not facing these same delays. “If our neighboring state, who has a comparable size of state as us, can be ordered to do it in seven days, why can’t we do that here?” she said. [Source]

Kitty Hawk Leadership

David Mildenberg, Business NC, 7/23/24

Andrew Kelly, who has been the chief strategic officer at the UNC System for the past eight years, will become the permanent director of the Project Kitty Hawk educational technology nonprofit on Aug. 1.

UNC officials named Kelly to the post on an interim basis in May after former CEO Will Zemp departed, two years after joining the enterprise. Project Kitty Hawk’s mission is to help UNC campuses expand online degree programs for working adults, most of whom now opt for programs offered by non-UNC institutions.

Kelly “has led countless big and bold initiatives at the System, from financial aid simplification to student success innovation to new accountability and performance funding models,” UNC President Peter Hans said in a July 11 email to Project Kitty Hawk’s 50 staff members. “And he was one of the primary drivers behind the development and launch of PKH.”

Project Kitty Hawk received $97 million in pandemic relief funding, which is slated to be spent through 2028. Enrollment is projected to reach nearly 15,000 students and achieve annual revenue of $78 million by then, half the initial projections.

Hans called the effort “possibly the biggest and boldest step a university system has ever taken to better reach, educate and graduate adult learners.” He added that he is “amazed and enthusiastic about the pace” of Project Kitty Hawk’s progress, noting it has enrolled more than 200 students into its programs, re-enrolled about 1,800 students in the system and brought 11 programs to market.”

Kelly worked at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C. before joining UNC as senior vice president for strategy and policy. He has master’s and doctoral degrees in political science from the University of California, Berkeley. [Source]

Agricultural Grants

Olivia Wolfson and Mekaela Muck, WNCT News, 7/24/24

North Carolina’s General Assembly is looking to help veterinarians that work on large animals to relieve the stress that comes with the job. They’re doing this by offering up to $25,000 in a grant for those who help cows, pigs and other animals that most vets don’t typically see. Any vet that sees large animals for at least thirty percent of their time and who practices in a county with under 100,000 people is welcome to apply.

Robert Hosford from the Agriculture Finance Authority said that they’re looking to select people who are trying to relieve student debt, are looking to upgrade their facilities or for anything that might be helpful for their rural community.

“We hope that it keeps them in business. We hope that it alleviates some financial stress. And we hope that the General Assembly we carry out their mission, and that is to give a little bit of relief to a very difficult lifestyle. It’s hard being a large animal veterinarian.” said Hosford.

Some of those challenges include getting injured on the job and being on call 24/7. People have until August 16, to apply on the North Carolina Department of Agriculture website. [Source]

Gaston Resignation

Kara Fohner, The Gaston Gazette, 7/24/24

The Gaston County attorney and a deputy county attorney who worked under him both resigned last week, according to county officials. County Attorney John Joye, who began working for Gaston County on Jan. 29, 2024, quit on Tuesday, said Chad Brown, chair of the Gaston County Board of Commissioners. Attorney Al Andrews also resigned.

“On Tuesday, Mr. Joye had tendered his resignation. He did a wonderful job for Gaston County,” Brown said. Brown said that he doesn’t know where Joye is going next. 

Joye replaced former county attorney Bill Stetzer, who resigned Dec. 31, to serve an eight-year term as a Superior Court judge for the Fifth Judicial Division, which includes Gaston County. Previously, Joye worked as a senior assistant city attorney for aviation for the city of Charlotte. He also spent five years before that working as the city attorney for the city of Wilmington.

Attorney Al Andrews had worked for Gaston County since March 2024, according to his LinkedIn account. Joye hired Andrews shortly after he himself started, said county spokesman Adam Gaub. Andrews and Joye quit on the same day. Andrews was previously the county attorney for Durham County, North Carolina, according to his LinkedIn.

In a meeting Tuesday evening, attorney Charles Moore was appointed interim county attorney. Moore was county attorney from 1984 until he retired in 2020, and he was one of Gaston County’s longest-serving high-level employees at the time of his retirement. [Source]

 

Pitt President

Kevin Ellis, Business NC, 7/24/24

The State Board of Community Colleges has named Maria A. Pharr to serve as president of Pitt Community College. Pharr has been president of South Piedmont Community College since January 2017, but was assistant vice president for academic affairs at Pitt Community College from July 2011 to January 2014.

When Pharr begins her duties Aug. 13, she will become only the sixth president of Pitt Community College in its 63-year history and the first woman to serve as the college’s top administrator. She replaces Lawrence Rouse, who retired in June after six years.

“I am grateful for the opportunity to serve as next president of Pitt Community College and look forward to contributing to the college’s legacy of leadership excellence,” Pharr said in a statement. [Source]

 

Airport Grant

Sherry Jones, Wilmington StarNews, 7/24/24

Wilmington International Airport is getting a $4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation for improvements, according to a news release Wednesday from U.S. Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C.

The grant funding, which comes from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL), which Tillis helped negotiate, write, and pass into law, will be used to construct a new terminal access road and curb expansion.
“This funding will be used to replace the existing terminal access road and realign the curb outside the terminal, making access to the airport facilities easier and more convenient for passengers,” Tillis said in a statement. “I am proud to have helped author and pass the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which made this project and other critical infrastructure projects like it possible.”

In a letter to Michael Whitaker, the administrator for the Federal Aviation Administration, Tillis and U.S. Sen. Ted Budd, R-N.C., said the airport “is an economic engine for North Carolina’s southeastern region.”

The letter also cites a recent study that showed the airport generates roughly $2.5 billion in annual economic impact.

“In the last two years, ILM had record passenger numbers and passenger enplanements increased by 25%,” the letter says. “Based on seat capacity, from January through September of this year, ILM is one if the fastest-growing airports in the country. We have been told that ILM’s aging terminal infrastructure is no longer able to meet current passenger demands and safety needs.” [Source]

 

Hospital CEO

News Release, 7/24/24

After a five-month search, UNC Health Blue Ridge announced Wednesday that Gary William Paxson, from Batesville, Arkansas, will be the new president and CEO starting Sept. 3. Paxson starts his career with UNC Health Blue Ridge following the retirement of Kathy C. Bailey, who has been in leadership for nearly 19 years.

Since 2018, Paxson has served as president and CEO of the independently owned White River Health System in Batesville, a 224-bed licensed medical center located in North Central Arkansas, which employs 1,700.

“I am honored to join UNC Health Blue Ridge and excited to work with such a dedicated team,” Paxson said.

“We are thrilled to welcome Gary Paxson to our team,” said Mac McCrary, chairman of the UNC Health Blue Ridge Board of Directors. “His proven track record of leadership and dedication to outstanding patient care aligns perfectly with our mission and values. We are confident that he will continue moving health care forward for our community.” [Source]

 

Auto Dealers

News Release, 7/25/24

The North Carolina Automobile Dealers Association (NCADA) has announced the election of Randy Hunter, with Hunter Corporation in Hendersonville, NC, as the association’s 2024-2025 Chairman of the Board.

Hunter is the former Chairman of the Hunter Corporation’s Board of Directors and is currently the company’s Chief People Officer and Vice President. Hunter is also the immediate past Chairman of the Henderson County Chamber of  Commerce and currently serves on the Boys and Girls Club of Henderson County  Executive Board and the Pardee Hospital Foundation Board.

NCADA also announced the election of the following additional NCADA officers  for 2024-2025:

  • Rob King, Bob King Automotive, Winston-Salem, NC – Vice Chairman
  • Mark Fisher, LaFayette Ford, Fayetteville, NC – Treasurer 
  • Brad Tyson, Cloninger Ford, Hickory, NC – Secretary 

Legislative Sessions, Studies and Meetings

LB: LEGISLATIVE BUILDING. LOB: LEGISLATIVE OFFICE BUILDING

HOUSE CALENDAR

Monday, July 29, 2024

  • House Convenes at 12:00 P.M.

SENATE CALENDAR

Monday, July 29, 2024

  • House Convenes at 12:00 P.M.

HOUSE & SENATE: Reconvening allowed under provisions of SB 916, if no sine die adjournment previously adopted.

  • Monday, July 29 to Thursday Aug. 1
  • Monday, Sept. 9 to Wednesday, Sept. 11
  • Wednesday, Oct. 9
  • Tuesday, Nov. 19 to Friday Nov. 22
  • Wednesday, Dec. 11 to Friday Dec. 13

N.C. Government Meetings and Hearings

BOLD ITEMS ARE NEW LISTINGS

Thursday, July 25

  • 9 a.m. | N.C. Teachers’ and State Employees’ Retirement System & Local Governmental Employees’ Retirement System  – TSERS and LGERS Boards of Trustees Meeting, 3200 Atlantic Ave, Raleigh.
  • 9 a.m. | North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission  –  Commission Business Meeting, 1751 Varsity Drive, Raleigh.
  • 1:30 p.m. | NC State Health Plan for Teachers and State Employees  – State Health Plan Board of Trustees, 3200 Atlantic Ave, Raleigh.

Wednesday, July 31

  • 10 a.m. | North Carolina State Board of Education meets, 1 South Wilmington St, Raleigh.

Thursday, Aug. 1

  • 6 p.m. | The North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality’s Division of Air Quality Public Hearing on Moriah Energy Center Draft Air Quality Permit, Vance-Granville Community College, 200 Community College Road, Henderson.

Monday, Aug. 5

  • 9 a.m. | The Board Development Committee of The North Carolina Partnership for Children meets, The meeting will be held via Zoom. You may contact Yvonne Huntley at 984.221.1242 or email at [email protected] for additional information.

Tuesday, Aug. 6

  • 9 a.m. | The Council of State meets. 1 South Wilmington St, Raleigh.

Monday, Aug. 19

  • 2 p.m. | The Executive Committee of The North Carolina Partnership for Children meets, The meeting will be held via Zoom. You may contact Yvonne Huntley at 984.221.1242 or email at [email protected] for additional information.

UNC Board of Governors

23 S. WEST STREET, SUITE 1800, RALEIGH

Wednesday, Sept. 11

  • Meeting of the Board of Governors, TBA.

Thursday, Sept. 12

  • Meeting of the Board of Governors, TBA.

Thursday, Oct. 17

  • Meeting of the Board of Governors, TBA.

Wednesday, Nov. 13

  • Meeting of the Board of Governors, TBA.

Thursday, Nov. 14

  • Meeting of the Board of Governors, TBA.

N.C. Utilities Commission Hearing Schedule

DOBBS BUILDING, 430 NORTH SALISBURY STREET, RALEIGH

Tuesday, Aug. 13

  • 10 a.m. | Public Hearing – Annual Review of Gas Costs | G-5 Sub 675

Wednesday, Aug. 14

  • 7 p.m. | Public Witness Hearing – Application for General Rate Increase for Piedmont Natural Gas Company, Inc. | G-9 Sub 837

Tuesday, Aug. 20

  • 6 p.m. | Public Witness Hearing – Application for Transfer of Public Utility Franchise and Approval of Rates of HISCO East, LLC in Carteret County to HISCO I in Carteret County | W-1297 Sub 17W-1344 Sub 0
  • 6 p.m. | Public Witness Hearing – Application for Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity and for Approval of Rates to Provide Sewer Utility Service to Currently Served Cape Ponte Village Subdivision, Additional Phases for the National Park Service, Harkers Island RV Park and a Fe | W-1344 Sub 1

Wednesday, Aug. 21

  • 7 p.m. | Public Witness Hearing – Application for General Rate Increase for Piedmont Natural Gas Company, Inc. | G-9 Sub 837

Thursday, Aug. 22

  • 7 p.m. | Public Witness Hearing – Application for General Rate Increase for Piedmont Natural Gas Company, Inc. | G-9 Sub 837

Other Meetings and Events of Interest

BOLD ITEMS ARE NEW LISTINGS

Thursday, July 25

  • 2:30 p.m. | Gov. Roy Cooper to join leaders from the North Carolina National Guard and the Republics of Malawi and Zambia for a flag exchange ceremony commemorating a new state partnershipNorth Carolina Museum of History, Raleigh.

Saturday, July 27

9 a.m. | North Carolina Federation of Young Republicans Convention, The Farm at 95, Selma.

Students, teachers, lawmakers blast decision to end AP African American history classes

ATLANTA — A coalition of lawmakers, civil rights leaders, clergy, educators and students Wednesday called on the state’s education czar to rescind his decision to drop an advanced placement African American studies class from the state’s curriculum for the upcoming school year.

“This decision is the latest attack in a long-running GOP assault on Georgia’s public education,” state Senate Minority Leader Gloria Butler, D-Stone Mountain, said at a news conference at the state Capitol, flanked by other legislators, teachers and students. “I urge the superintendent to reconsider his decision … and get to the table with these teachers and students, and make a different decision.” 

State School Superintendent Richard Woods’ decision not to add the class to the state’s list of course offerings or provide state funds for it comes a little over a week before Georgia students start school on Aug. 1.  

Gov. Brian Kemp weighed in late Wednesday afternoon after receiving “multiple questions from various stakeholders.” Kemp sent a letter to Woods questioning the reasoning behind his decision. 

Continue reading “Students, teachers, lawmakers blast decision to end AP African American history classes”

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