News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
6PM News on WRAL – Thursday, February 27, 2025

SUMMARY: It’s Thursday, February 27th, and today’s weather starts off warm and dry, but expect rain and storms from 5 to 9 p.m. with temperatures in the mid-70s. Duke University students and staff are protesting the federal government’s order to end DEI policies. Meanwhile, a North Carolina listeria outbreak linked to frozen supplemental shakes has led to one death and two confirmed cases in the state. In sports, eighth-ranked UNCC plays 16th-ranked Duke in a crucial women’s basketball game tonight. For more, visit wal.com. Have a great Thursday!

6PM News on WRAL – Thursday, February 27, 2025
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Trump says ‘Crimea will stay with Russia’ as he presses for deal to end war in Ukraine

SUMMARY: Trump declared that “Crimea will stay with Russia” while seeking negotiations to end the Ukraine war. His envoy, Steve Wickoff, is headed to Russia to meet President Putin amid escalating violence, including a drone strike that killed three people in Ukraine. Meanwhile, a senior Russian general was killed near Moscow in a bombing, although no one has claimed responsibility. Tensions rise as Ukraine’s President Zelensky refuses to accept the annexation of Crimea, emphasizing that it conflicts with Ukraine’s constitution. Both sides express the desire for peace, but differing views complicate potential compromises and ceasefire efforts.

Trump says ‘Crimea will stay with Russia’ as he presses for deal to end war in Ukraine.
Download the WRAL App: https://www.wral.com/download-wral-apps/5787234/
The Latest Weather: https://www.wral.com/weather/page/1010362/
News Tips:
Online – https://www.wral.com/report-it/
Email – assignmentdesk@wral.com
Subscribe to WRAL:
https://youtube.com/c/wral5
Follow WRAL:
Facebook: https://facebook.com/WRALTV
X: https://twitter.com/WRAL
IG: https://instagram.com/wral
About WRAL-TV:
WRAL is your Raleigh, North Carolina news source. Check out our videos for the latest news in Raleigh, local sports, Raleigh weather, and more at https://WRAL.com
#localnews #northcarolina
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Lesson learned: How the pandemic provided a teachable moment for NC lawmakers in latest Helene relief bill

There’s going to be a full house in Ashe County’s public schools this summer. After a mix of bad weather and severe storms closed schools there for 47 days, Superintendent Eisa Cox plans to take full advantage of a Helene learning loss summer school program. It’s funded by the legislature in its most recent recovery bill.
The $9 million School Extension Learning Recovery Program is open to schools in 13 impacted Western North Carolina counties: Ashe, Avery, Buncombe, Burke, Haywood, Henderson, Madison, McDowell, Mitchell, Rutherford, Transylvania, Watauga and Yancey.
It covers grades 4 through 8 and focuses on intensive recovery in math and reading. Each participating school will receive at least $20,000 for the program and possibly double that, depending on how much state money is left over after all schools get initial funding.
While one of the lower-dollar items in the $524 million recovery package, the summer school program could mean a lot for Ashe County students. The school system already uses grant funding to run summer programs for various grades. Still, without state funds, having a “robust” learning loss program serving multiple grades in different schools would have been impossible, Cox said.
“That’s a hefty price in order to be able to do that for kids,” she said. “You’re talking about feeding them, transportation, the cost of the teacher over the summer, and, of course, you don’t want to put 30 kids in a class. That’s not going to achieve what you want for students who are already struggling to be on grade level.”
Helene learning loss overlooked — at first
While Gov. Josh Stein’s Helene recovery request included a summer learning loss program, the first version of the General Assembly’s Helene recovery bill didn’t offer a penny for public schools.
State Rep. Marcia Morey, D-Durham, took note. She recalled a retreat where she spoke with public school leaders from Western North Carolina who told her how “dire” the need was to get back in the classroom. Four years out, students were still recovering from pandemic learning loss. Helene only exacerbated the issue.
“We have eight counties. We have at least four schools (where) kids couldn’t go back — they had to go to other facilities,” she said in February on the House floor. “We have two schools totally decimated. And so we’re not doing it today, but our public school kids need a place to go. They need a facility. I hope in the next bill we will address the children out west in these affected counties.”
Morey tried to file an amendment to the legislature’s initial bill, but was told she was too late.
The next version of the bill included a $9 million summer learning program.
Morey said she wasn’t directly involved.
“I think they just knew they had to respond to it,” she told Carolina Public Press. “It was astounding that nothing was included in the first relief bill.”
Lessons from the pandemic
Not all missed school days are created equal. Losing one day could take a few hours, a day or a week to recover, depending on the grade level and subject matter.
For example, earlier grades typically learn a “mile wide” and an “inch deep,” covering a broader range of subjects than later grades, which tend to focus on one or two concepts, explained Jeni Corn, the impact evaluation and strategy director for the North Carolina Collaboratory.
This can make it harder for younger students to make up for lost time. Additionally, math concepts typically take longer to recover than those involving social studies.
The legislature first partnered with the North Carolina Collaboratory, housed at UNC-Chapel Hill, to research the impacts of the pandemic on K-12 education. Among the various studies was one looking at the effect of a state-funded summer school program designed to address pandemic learning loss.

That study now forms the basis of the Helene summer school program, Corn said.
Researchers found that higher summer school attendance correlated with better attendance the following academic year for students in grades 4 through 8 and seventh and eighth graders. They also discovered modest gains in math test scores among students who had high summer attendance, but no impact on reading scores.
Summer school programs can’t cure all learning loss, but they can improve student engagement through continued connection with their fellow peers and teachers, the researchers concluded.
Cox, the Ashe County superintendent, came to the same determination. A dozen days of summer school is never going to be enough time to recover from weeks of learning loss, but it can still help.
“When kids aren’t in school, they may not have a meal,” Cox said. “When kids are not in school, they may not have an adult around them during most of the day that can help them provide the structure to be able to read to them, to be able to provide them with direction.”
This article first appeared on Carolina Public Press and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
The post Lesson learned: How the pandemic provided a teachable moment for NC lawmakers in latest Helene relief bill appeared first on carolinapublicpress.org
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Left
The content presents information regarding a summer learning program in Western North Carolina aimed at addressing the educational impact of the pandemic, specifically referring to "Helene learning loss." The mention of lawmakers and educators collaborating to implement a state-supported program suggests a mildly progressive viewpoint, as it emphasizes government involvement in addressing educational challenges. Additionally, the sourcing from Carolina Public Press, described as an "independent newsroom" committed to uncovering overlooked issues, aligns with narratives often found in Center-Left media that advocate for social responsibility and public welfare initiatives. Overall, while the content is informative and not overtly biased, the context indicates a leaning towards Center-Left perspectives related to governance and education policy.
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
BBB study explains how scammers are using AI tools

SUMMARY: A Better Business Bureau (BBB) report highlights how scammers utilize AI and the dark web to steal personal information, resulting in over $125 million lost to identity theft in 2023. Scammers are selling sensitive data like Social Security numbers for as low as $7, with forums like Breach Forums housing about 14 billion stolen data pieces before its shutdown. AI tools help fraudsters efficiently sift through massive amounts of data, amplifying the threat. Cybersecurity expert Kimberly Simon advises using multi-factor authentication, strong password managers, and minimizing personal details on social media to enhance protection against such scams.

Scammers sell stolen personal data on the dark web, using AI to target victims. Identity theft cost $125M in 2023, as hacker forums advertise stolen data.
-
News from the South - Florida News Feed5 days ago
Jim talks with Rep. Robert Andrade about his investigation into the Hope Florida Foundation
-
News from the South - Alabama News Feed7 days ago
Op-Ed: Colleges shouldn’t need remedial algebra classes: Five K-8 policy solutions to address math proficiency | Maryland
-
News from the South - Virginia News Feed6 days ago
Highs in the upper 80s Saturday, backdoor cold front will cool us down a bit on Easter Sunday
-
News from the South - West Virginia News Feed7 days ago
Morrisey’s line-item budget vetoes slash funds for vulnerable children during foster care crisis
-
News from the South - Alabama News Feed7 days ago
Auburn says 15 international students, campus personnel had visas revoked
-
News from the South - Arkansas News Feed6 days ago
Valerie Storm Tracker
-
News from the South - Arkansas News Feed7 days ago
Arkansas governor appeals FEMA denial of disaster declaration from March tornadoes
-
News from the South - Kentucky News Feed7 days ago
Trump administration revokes Murray State international student’s visa