News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
1 dead, 3 people out of home in Holly Springs fire
SUMMARY: A fire broke out in Holly Springs around 3:45 AM, leaving one person dead. Four people were inside the home, and three managed to escape. Fire crews are still investigating the cause of the fire, with multiple agencies involved, including fire marshals and forensic teams. The victim was located during a search, and authorities are working to determine the relationship of the occupants. The home was severely damaged, with the roof and walls destroyed. The investigation continues, and updates will follow as more information becomes available.
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A fire tore through a Holly Springs home around 3:45 AM this morning. Fire investigators say one occupant died. There were four people inside the home at the time of the fire and everyone escaped except for one. The cause of fire is under investigation.
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News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Musk waves a chainsaw and charms conservatives talking up Trump’s cost-cutting efforts
SUMMARY: Elon Musk appeared at a conservative conference outside Washington, brandishing a chainsaw to symbolize his efforts to reduce the size of the federal government. He touted his role in government efficiency, particularly with cuts at the IRS, which has laid off 6,000 workers. Although officials claim tax return processing is unaffected, concerns about delays remain. Musk proposed a $5,000 taxpayer dividend funded by the cuts and claimed support from President Biden. He also faced accusations of ties to Russia, amid tensions over Ukraine and Trump’s strained relations with President Zelensky. Musk dismissed these claims and continued advocating for budget cuts.
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Billionaire Elon Musk appeared at a conservative gathering outside Washington waving a chainsaw in the air, showing openness to auditing the Federal Reserve and accusing Democrats of “treason.”
More: https://abc11.com/post/elon-musk-waves-chainsaw-charms-conservatives-talking-trumps-cost-cutting-efforts/15941280/
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News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Bills from NC lawmakers expand gun rights, limit cellphone use
What we’re watching: These bills from NC lawmakers could go the distance
Less than a month into the 2025 legislative session, lawmakers have filed nearly 300 bills. Before the filing deadline next month, there will likely be another couple hundred bills presented.
Not all will survive the grueling legislative process, particularly considering North Carolina’s divided government.
After the 2024 election barred GOP legislators from a supermajority by one seat, Democratic Gov. Josh Stein may be able to deny many Republicans’ wishes with his veto pen.
Several bills will probably attract more attention than others.
Here are a few whose progress Carolina Public Press is tracking.
Gun bills hit their target audience
Expanding Second Amendment rights has emerged as an early theme of the 2025 General Assembly.
Chief among several gun-related bills is House Bill 5, the North Carolina Constitutional Carry Act.
Current law bars North Carolinians from carrying concealed deadly weapons, including handguns, without a permit outside of one’s property. House Bill 5 removes that restriction for adults 18 and older.
It also abolishes firearms from the statutory list of deadly weapons — a list that includes daggers and stun guns.
The bill loosens some additional concealed-carry restrictions. If passed, state residents could carry a concealed weapon at a public event where admission is charged and at parades and funeral processions. Elected officials would be allowed to have a concealed firearm while performing official duties if they have a permit.
Anyone who carries a hidden weapon must have their ID with them and present it to law enforcement if approached.
Those convicted or charged with certain crimes, dishonorably discharged from the military, ruled by a court to be mentally ill or addicted to a controlled substance are not allowed to have a concealed firearm without a permit under this proposed legislation.
Senate Bill 50 is a twin bill in the other chamber, which suggests a higher priority level for this legislation.
Other gun-related bills this session:
- House Bill 38, also known as the Second Amendment Financial Privacy Act, bans gun dealers from creating a record of people in the state who own firearms.
- House Bill 9 bans local governments from regulating firearm use on private property as long as it is “conducted with reasonable care.”
- House Bill 28 creates a new crime to be treated as a separate offense under the law: possessing a firearm or weapon of mass destruction while attempting or committing a felony.
Helene on the horizon
As Helene recovery continues, the legislature begins work on its next funding package.
Thus far, lawmakers have passed three relief packages that collectively dedicate $1.1 billion to the recovery effort, though not all of the funds have been specifically allocated.
As it stands, the fourth package draws $275 million from the State Emergency Response and Disaster Relief Fund.
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While the bill is continually being amended, some of the current allocations include:
- $140 million for home reconstruction and repair
- $75 million for farmers to resume production and protect against future flood damage
- $100 million for repair of private roads and bridges
- $55 million for small business infrastructure grants
- $20 million to local governments for outstanding debris removal
- $10 million to supplement rental assistance payments
- $5 million for targeted media campaigns to get tourists back in Western North Carolina
The bill is set to be heard on the House floor as early as Tuesday.
‘Breathtaking legislation’
Last year, Republican legislators told future Democratic Attorney General Jeff Jackson he couldn’t make an argument in court that would invalidate any law passed by the General Assembly.
Now, with House Bill 72 and Senate Bill 58, they’re extending that limitation to presidential executive orders.
One of the most common actions of attorneys general is joining their counterparts in other states in opposition to presidential actions like executive orders.
Some North Carolina Republicans would end the practice as the second Trump administration settles into power.
Democratic state Sen. Graig Meyer, who represents Caswell, Orange and Person counties, said he’s been very critical of the bill, which he called “breathtaking legislation.”
“If you don’t want your attorney general to be able to sue the federal government over things that may be unconstitutional … then you actually want a king,” he said. “But even in just blunt political terms, it’s a very short-sighted bill. Because what if, in four years from now, we’re in the reverse situation, and they have a Republican attorney general and a Democratic president?”
Hold the phone
Lawmakers have had it with technology in classrooms.
Or, at least, that’s what they appear to be saying with bills in the House and Senate requiring school boards to create cellphone or wireless communication-free educational environments.
Enter House Bill 87, which aims to eliminate or severely restrict student access to cellphones during class.
Senate Bill 55 goes a step further, including tablet computers, laptops, paging devices, two-way radios and gaming devices as banned technologies.
Election bills in abundance
Coming off an intense election cycle, lawmakers are looking to make a few changes.
House Bill 31 would establish Election Day as a North Carolina holiday for general statewide elections.
House Bill 66 would reduce the number of early voting days in North Carolina. Current law requires early voting to begin 20 days before the election. The proposed bill would allow for nine days.
Several local bills align odd-year municipal elections with even-year state and federal elections. Others extend mayoral terms from two to four years.
Finally, House Bill 85 would ban staffers found to not have exercised “due care and diligence” from future election work.
This article first appeared on Carolina Public Press and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
The post Bills from NC lawmakers expand gun rights, limit cellphone use appeared first on carolinapublicpress.org
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Is Publix possibly coming to the Leicester area? Are rolling recycling bins actually recyclable? • Asheville Watchdog
Today’s round of questions, my smart-aleck replies, and the real answers:
Question: Is it true that Publix plans to build a new store on New Leicester Highway? Or is that just a rumor and wishful thinking? It would be great if that was true. Also, Publix has had a sign up in Mills River that a store is coming there near the Amazon building. When will that be built?
My answer: Wishful thinking? Not at all. Now hoping for a second Trader Joe’s somewhere in the greater Asheville area? That’s crazy talk, which is one step beyond wishful thinking!
Real answer: The property in question is about 10 acres at 14 Hitching Post Lane, which has considerable frontage on New Leicester Highway. The Buncombe County Board of Commissioners addressed the site at its Jan. 21 meeting.
“The Board of Commissioners recently approved a rezoning request for this property, but we are unsure if it will eventually house a Publix,” Buncombe County Planning Director Nathan Pennington said via email. “Developers/grocers/retailers typically keep these matters guarded until they are ready to announce.”
That is certainly the truth.
“We are always looking to bring the Publix experience to new areas across North Carolina, however, we do not have any plans to share for a new store at that location,” Publix Super Markets spokesperson Jared Glover told me via email. “As for Mills River, we do not have any update to share other than we are still moving forward with the project.”
I will note that the applicant for the Leicester rezoning request was Florida-based Equity
Development Group LLC, which has been involved in past Publix developments, according to a quick Google search. I reached out to the company contact listed on Buncombe County planning documents but didn’t hear back by deadline.
The commissioners agreed to rezone the Hitching Post Lane property from R-2 residential to Commercial Service. The Commercial Service designation allows an array of uses, including “commercial planned unit developments, veterinary clinics, banks, cargo and freight terminals, commercial greenhouses, hotels and motels, kennels, manufacturing operations, medical clinics, vehicle impoundment, repair, and sales lots, gas stations, fitness centers, business offices, restaurants, retail, business schools, warehousing and mini-storage, vacation rental complexes, and more,” according to the planning documents.
The planning documents also note that the commercial service district is “primarily intended
to provide suitable locations for clustered commercial development to encourage the concentration of commercial activity in those specified areas with access to major traffic arteries, to discourage strip commercial development, and to allow for suitable noncommercial land uses.”
Headquartered in Lakeland, Florida, Publix has 1,390 stores nationwide and 55 in North Carolina, including ones in south Asheville, Weaverville, Waynesville and Hendersonville, according to the company website.
All in all, I’d say the wishful thinking looks fairly positive, but stay tuned.
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Question: Both our previous and current trash collectors use containers that look identical and are made out of the same type of plastic. The containers are used to pick up both garbage and recyclables. From previous articles I’ve read, only number one and number two plastics have the highest level of recyclability. What number of plastic are these containers, and are they recyclable?
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My answer: I’d say to just toss them in the recycling bin, but they are the recycling bin.
Real answer: So this really comes down to whether the local recycling handler, Curbside Management in Woodfin, can handle them. And company President Abe Lawson has good news on that front.
“Curbie can and does recycle them,” Lawson said via email. “The rolling recycling bins/carts are made of #2 HDPE plastic, however, they are not the same grade as the #2 HDPE bottles that would typically be put into the recycling bins.”
As you can imagine, the bins’ large size poses some problems.
“Due to their overall size, thickness and chemical properties — a result of the manufacturing process — these bins have to be treated differently and go to different end users with the proper equipment,” Lawson said. “We receive these cans regularly — daily to weekly — from various municipalities, haulers, and through collecting our own worn-out cans.”
The metals on the cans have to be removed, “but then they are all baled and recycled,” Lawson added.
Asheville Watchdog is a nonprofit news team producing stories that matter to Asheville and Buncombe County. Got a question? Send it to John Boyle at jboyle@avlwatchdog.org or 828-337-0941. His Answer Man columns appear each Tuesday and Friday. The Watchdog’s reporting is made possible by donations from the community. To show your support for this vital public service go to avlwatchdog.org/support-our-publication/.
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