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5:20 p.m. Hurricane Milton update

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www.youtube.com – WYFF News 4 – 2024-10-09 16:39:58


SUMMARY: A powerful Category 3 hurricane, with winds reaching 120 mph, is making landfall in Sarasota, Florida, triggering confirmed tornado warnings from Fort Pierce to Vero Beach. Significant storm surges of 6-9 feet are expected, affecting areas not usually flooded. In Central Florida, heavy winds and power outages are anticipated overnight. By tomorrow morning, the storm will have moved past Orlando, introducing clearer skies but cooler temperatures in the mid-40s to low 50s. A colder air mass is expected early next week, with temperatures dipping into the low 60s across the Upstate, with a high of 56 in Western North Carolina.

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WYFF News 4 Chief Meteorologist Chris Justus gives and update on Hurricane Milton at 5:20 p.m. on Wednesday.

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News from the South - South Carolina News Feed

Concerns over anti-DEI bill amp up at Statehouse

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www.abccolumbia.com – Lee Williams – 2025-03-26 17:14:00

SUMMARY: A bill in South Carolina, H.3927, seeks to limit diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) efforts across state agencies and universities. Opponents argue that it could harm the state’s academic and economic competitiveness by discouraging diverse student enrollment and faculty recruitment. Institutions like the University of South Carolina and Clemson University have warned of financial losses and strained business relationships. Supporters argue the bill would eliminate “special benefits” based on race, gender, or sexual orientation, emphasizing a merit-based system instead. Critics of this view argue that merit inherently includes diversity, equity, and inclusion principles.

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News from the South - South Carolina News Feed

Wednesday afternoon updates on Table Rock, Persimmon Ridge fires in South Carolina

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www.youtube.com – WYFF News 4 – 2025-03-26 15:48:49


SUMMARY: The Table Rock and Persimmon Ridge fires in South Carolina are growing rapidly, now burning over 3,000 acres. Officials are renewing evacuation orders in Pickens and Greenville counties. Strong winds have worsened fire conditions, with both fires currently 0% contained. Crews are working tirelessly to contain the fires, with air crews returning after a brief pause due to visibility issues. Evacuations have caused uncertainty for residents, many of whom are sheltering in places like Marietta First Baptist Church, where an overflow of donations is being received. The community faces anxious wait times, unsure of what they will return to after the fires are controlled.

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Wednesday afternoon updates on Table Rock, Persimmon Ridge fires in South Carolina

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Trump funding freeze has NC nonprofits worried about their future

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carolinapublicpress.org – Lucas Thomae – 2025-03-26 08:00:00

Pause and effect: Threat of Trump funding freeze is making the future tense for North Carolina nonprofits

As President Donald Trump and his appointees rifle through the country’s balance sheets looking for federal spending to slash, many North Carolina nonprofits are operating in a state of financial uncertainty, hoping they’re not the next target of the administration’s cost-cutting ambitions.

While state agencies haven’t reported any major problems accessing the federal funds that trickle down to the more than 3,000 nonprofits that receive government grants, those organizations are still behaving as if it is a possibility.

The strategy for many has been to stay quiet and avoid drawing attention to themselves.

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One week after Trump took office, he issued a memo ordering all federal agencies to temporarily freeze spending on loans and grants. This was necessary, the memo stated, so that officials could review whether the agencies’ payments were aligned with Trump’s previous orders aimed at “financial assistance for foreign aid, nongovernmental organizations, DEI, woke gender ideology and the green new deal.”

The vague memo sent shockwaves through Washington, confusing agencies and angering members of Congress across the political spectrum.

The memo directed that Medicare and Social Security benefits be unaffected by the freeze. But the White House later had to clarify that other programs such as Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, colloquially known as food stamps) would also remain untouched.

Two days later, the memo was rescinded altogether. 

Lawsuits over the legality of the freeze are ongoing. However, the message to organizations receiving federal money was clear:

Anyone not in lockstep with the Trump agenda risks having their government dollars taken away.

Nonprofit decisions made ‘difficult’

Since 2020, the federal government has funnelled $200 billion into North Carolina through grants and subgrants — funding awarded from an agency to a smaller agency or organization, which is then further distributed to more modest awardees.

The awardees who receive the bulk of federal grants typically fall into one of three categories: state government agencies, universities and hospitals.

None of those types of institutions are at acute risk of being crippled by the revocation of federal funding. 

Small nonprofits, however, are worried. Especially those whose values directly contradict the conservative cultural ideology of the Trump administration.

State agencies, such as the N.C. Department of Public Safety, haven’t reported any major problems accessing the federal funds that trickle down to the more than 3,000 nonprofits that receive government grants. Lucas Thomae / Carolina Public Press

Carolina Public Press reached out to a plethora of state-based nonprofits to ask how they were dealing with financial uncertainty in the wake of the funding freeze. The missions of those organizations ranged from providing affordable childcare to advancing creative arts education to supporting victims of violent crime.

Not many organizations were willing to speak openly — or even anonymously.

“With the climate being rather delicate currently, we are not comfortable commenting on the federal funding and grants situation,” said the communications director of a nonprofit that provides services to the children of migrant workers in North Carolina and several other states.

Other nonprofits who declined to be interviewed or did not respond to CPP’s inquiry at all included the North Carolina Victim Assistance Network, the LGBTQ Center of Durham and Help, Incorporated: Center Against Violence.

Each of those organizations received federal funding last year that originated from the U.S. Department of Justice and was intended to fund programs to support victims of domestic violence and other violent crime.

The strategy for many nonprofits has been to not attract attention in the hopes that they can continue to operate without much trouble.

Other organizations, such as the United Arts Council of Raleigh and Wake County (United Arts), have already seen their federal grants become threatened.

United Arts works closely with Wake County Public Schools to provide students with creative arts experiences, and the organization also awards annual subgrants to local artists to support their projects.

The National Endowment for the Arts recently awarded United Arts a $50,000 grant for distribution to local artists, but that award is now “under review,” United Arts CEO Jenn McEwen announced in February.

“The odds of our NEA grant being rejected in the review process is high,” McEwen said.

In order to offset that potential loss, United Arts urged its supporters for donations.

“Beyond our organization, many of our grantees — small nonprofit arts organizations — are already facing difficult financial decisions,” United Arts public relations manager John Craven told CPP in an email. “Some are scaling back on programs that support their mission but are not central to their signature or flagship offerings as they navigate the uncertainty around federal, state and local funding. 

“The combined pressures of this funding uncertainty and economic instability are making it increasingly difficult for these organizations to plan for the future.”

Counting the costs for nonprofits

There are around 10,000 nonprofit organizations in North Carolina. A recent analysis from the nonprofit research center Candid found that 9,946 organizations filed a full 990 tax form at least once between 2021 and 2023.

Of those organizations, just over one third reported receiving at least one government grant in their most recent tax filing. 

All in all, North Carolina nonprofits received more than $7 billion from the government through grants.

The Urban Institute, a think tank based in Washington, D.C., further analyzed nonprofit grant data and broke it down at the county level. Researchers found that the organizations in rural regions of the state benefit most from government funding.

The analysis further indicated that nonprofits in rural counties such as Anson, Jones and Northampton would have the biggest financial gap to fill if the Trump administration cost them government grants.

All of the nonprofits in eight North Carolina counties — Anson, Gates, Martin, Montgomery, Perquimans, Person, Sampson and Stokes — would have operating deficits if their government grants were taken away. That’s 46 nonprofits in all.

In 98 of North Carolina’s 100 counties, at least half of the nonprofits would experience an operating deficit if not for their government funding.

As far as subsectors go, the financial uncertainty that comes with the potential loss of government funding is indiscriminate. The Urban Institute found that 75% of education nonprofits, 73% of human services nonprofits and 64% of arts nonprofits in the state would operate in the red without their government grants.

Hospitals and nonprofits related to religion and the environment had the smallest share of organizations reliant on government funding, although that number was still north of 40%.

A ‘fluid’ situation

Although nonprofits are preparing to potentially lose grant money from the Trump funding freeze, that hasn’t been the reality yet.

Two of North Carolina’s most important pass-through funding agencies — the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Public Safety — told CPP they’ve made all scheduled payments to subgrant recipients this year.

Both award millions of dollars worth of subgrants to nonprofits across the state each year.

A spokeswoman for the Department of Health and Human Services said that the agency had experienced unexpected delays to some federal payouts, although they were eventually received.

“There have been instances when payments were unexpectedly delayed as well as isolated payments that were under review by federal counterparts for a short period of time,” the spokeswoman said.

The Health and Human Services grants that were put under federal review included money intended to support mental health services and substance-abuse treatments.

At the same time, neither agency denied that they experienced complications related to the federal funding freeze.

“Presently, (the Department of Public Safety) is not having difficulty accessing funding,” a spokeswoman told CPP in an email last week. “The situation is fluid, and we will continue to monitor our ability to drawdown our federal reimbursements and adjust or modify our operations as necessary.”

This article first appeared on Carolina Public Press and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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