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Federal judge remands election dispute to state Supreme Court | North Carolina

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Alan Wooten | The Center Square – 2025-01-07 07:47:00

SUMMARY: The jurisdiction of Judge Jefferson Griffin’s election dispute with the North Carolina State Board of Elections and Judge Allison Riggs was remanded from federal to state court. The dispute centers around Griffin’s protests of over 60,000 ballots in his race against Riggs for Seat 6 on the state Supreme Court. Despite Griffin’s protests, the state board dismissed them, leaving Riggs with a 734-vote lead. Chief U.S. District Judge Richard Myers ruled to abstain from resolving the matter, citing state sovereignty. Griffin’s appeal, involving complex legal issues regarding state and federal authority, continues as the state board filed an immediate appeal.

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Magic of Storytelling | Thumper and the Egg

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Magic of Storytelling | Thumper and the Egg

www.youtube.com – ABC11 – 2025-04-18 09:23:51


SUMMARY: In Disney’s “Magic of Storytelling” podcast, Thumper discovers a robin’s egg after a storm. He and his four sisters—Trixie, Tessy, Daisy, and Ria—worry about the egg being cold and try to keep it warm with leaves. As they debate the best approach, they decide to find the mama robin for help. Meanwhile, Thumper and Daisy attempt to cheer the egg by singing and dancing. Eventually, the sisters return with a nest just as the mama robin arrives. The egg hatches, bringing joy to the bunnies as they celebrate their teamwork and caring efforts.

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Thumper the bunny is hopping along one day and finds a special egg! Soon, he and his family are set out on an adventure to find the egg’s Mama.

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices (https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices)

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Does UNC Asheville’s chancellor actually live in the house? What did it cost? Why are the I-26 speed limit signs mismatched? • Asheville Watchdog

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avlwatchdog.org – JOHN BOYLE – 2025-04-18 05:15:00

Today’s round of questions, my smart-aleck replies, and the real answers:

Question: I’ve never been inside the UNC Asheville chancellor’s residence, but I’m told that it’s quite large and cost a pretty penny to build. Could you provide some details about the home? How large is it? How much did it cost to build? How much to maintain? How much land razed to build? Could it house some essential workers or be sold or redeveloped? Could it maybe become a museum to forests from long ago? After all, don’t chancellors earn enough to afford their own homes? 

My answer: I’m pretty sure the 3,800-acre Joyce Kilmer Memorial Forest near Robbinsville is our area’s actual tree museum, or at least a great display of old growth forest that gives an idea of what the area looked like before European settlement. Unless of course it’s already been logged under the new administration’s policies.

Real answer: UNCA spokesperson Brian Hart confirmed that Chancellor Kimberly van Noort does use the official residence, also known as the Pisgah House, as a home, as is required by the University of North Carolina university system. Specifically, he referred me to a section of the UNC policy manual and code titled, “Occupation of Official Residences of the Chancellors and the President.” 

It states: “The Board of Governors reaffirms its expectation that the president of the university and the chancellors of each constituent institution will occupy their official residence and that these residences will be used for University business and functions.” 

The policy also states, “that it is the policy of the Board of Governors that the president and the chancellors are required to live in their official residences as a condition of employment, except in the case where such a requirement would present a serious hardship; in any such case the president or chancellor must obtain approval from the Board of Governors, except that such approval will not be necessary if the residence is being vacated temporarily while repairs or renovations are being made.”

In June 2024, Asheville Watchdog reported on van Noort’s $300,000 base salary and perks, which include housing in the chancellor’s residence, “membership in a golf club with access to 16 courses in the Southeast, including the Country Club of Asheville, and a $900 monthly car allowance,” according to the article. That story also noted that beginning in 2025, van Noort was  eligible for “incentive compensation” of up to 100 percent of her salary.

The university also pays for “utilities, maintenance, housekeeping, and groundskeeping services,” according to van Noort’s appointment letter. For the first four months of 2024, the utilities cost $3,193, then-UNCA spokesman Michael Strysick said. 

The university also paid $3,458 for a security system, $13,754 for a heat pump, and $1,991 for “private property signage,” Strysick said last year.

Mountain Xpress noted in a 2014 article that the then-new $2.9 million, 6,333-square-foot chancellor’s residence had just opened and would serve as a residence but also a public space for special events.

“The two-story house replaces UNCA’s former home for its chancellor on Macon Avenue, a house that served that purpose since 1966. The university sold the home in 2007 for $600,000 and used that money, as well as private donations from about 150 people, to build the new structure,” Xpress reported. 

Xpress also noted that the new home “sits on 2 acres of a 50-acre parcel of land across W.T. Weaver Boulevard from the main UNCA campus and close to the U.S. Forest Service Southern Research Station.

Motorists traveling Interstate 26 in southern Buncombe County and in Henderson County will notice new lanes open for driving, including this spot just east of Airport Road, which now features four driving lanes. // Watchdog photo by John Boyle

Question: I am wondering why the speed limit in the newly constructed area of I-26 in Henderson County changes frequently between 55 mph and 65 mph within a short period of space. It occurs more frequently going east than it does coming west. Did NCDOT fail to remove the 55 mph signs or have folks improperly uncovered the 65 mph signs too soon?

My answer: I’m pretty sure 55 mph really means 70 to 75 mph to most North Carolina drivers, so let’s not split hairs here.

Real answer: “We are currently addressing the signs,” NCDOT spokesperson David Uchiyama told me Thursday morning. “They may be updated by the time this answer is published!”

Uchiyama said the 55 mph signs in Henderson County “should have all been removed, but a few still remain.”

For the record, the speed limit is 65 mph from exits 44-49, 60 mph from exit 44-40 and 55 mph in the Buncombe County workzone.

As someone who drives I-26 just about every day, I’ve got to say these new lanes that are open are a little slice of heaven. Gives you a feel for how the interstate will flow when the whole project is finished.

NCDOT announced April 9 the opening of the new lanes on the Henderson County portion of the I-26 widening, a separate project from the widening on I-26 in Buncombe County. The news release noted that the Henderson County portion is “functionally complete and in its final pattern with final punch-list remaining.” 

The total project, which started in 2019 and includes sections in Buncombe and Henderson, should wrap up next year.

The NCDOT release noted that all of the new lanes on I-26 east heading to South Carolina were opened from Airport Road (Exit 40) to U.S. 64 (Exit 49) on April 5. The stretch includes four lanes of travel from Airport Road to U.S. 25 (Exit 44) and three lanes from there to U.S. 64 (Exit 49).

The punch list includes final grinding of the concrete surface, installation of permanent pavement markings, snow-plowable markers, the addition of rumble strips, finishing of signs and other tasks, according to the release. “Many of them will require overnight closures in certain sections to safely complete the tasks,” the release noted.

New lanes on I-26 west from Hendersonville opened April 10. This stretch has four lanes from U.S. 25 to Airport Road, three lanes from Airport Road to Long Shoals Road, and two lanes through the remaining construction zone up to Brevard Road.

In Buncombe County this week, work crews opened the eastbound stretch of I-26 from Long Shoals Road to Glenn Bridge Road to three lanes, and from the bridge over Glenn Bridge Road to four lanes, where it will connect with the recently opened four-lane section beyond Airport Road, according to the NCDOT release.

This stretch of road also has a punch list, including the installation of snow-plowable reflectors, fresh lane markings, and roadside signs. It also will require some night-time closures.

The NCDOT said opening this stretch “allows crews to concentrate on the northern half of I-26 widening in Buncombe County — the stretch from Long Shoals Road to Brevard Road. The northern stretch includes the creation of a new interchange, which was added to plans after the project started, that creates a new exit providing drivers with another route to Brevard Road by the North Carolina Arboretum.”

That exit largely is being built to accommodate the Pratt & Whitney jet engine fan blade plant. 

The NCDOT said other tasks on the northern section of the I-26 project “will include completion of new westbound lanes, completion of the new Blue Ridge Parkway bridge and removal of the old bridge. NCDOT officials anticipate completing final operations in late 2026.”

It’s been a long slog, folks, but it’s getting there!


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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K-12 cellphone policy, by one means or another, en route to North Carolina | North Carolina

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K-12 cellphone policy, by one means or another, en route to North Carolina | North Carolina

www.thecentersquare.com – By Alan Wooten | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-04-17 15:09:00

(The Center Square) – Restrictions on K-12 students’ use of cellphones is in the Senate’s state budget proposal and in legislation originating in the state House of Representatives that has reached the Senate’s rules committee.

The outcome of negotiations for a budget between the Senate, House of Representatives and Gov. Josh Stein will determine what language, if any, comes forward and from where. The House has yet to release its two-year spending proposal.

And the cellphones in schools issue, if the House vote is an indicator, is agreed upon in General Assembly chambers holding significant Republican majorities.

The Center Square was unsuccessful getting response this week from House Speaker Destin Hall, R-Caldwell, and Senate Rules Committee Chairman Bill Rabon, R-Brunswick. Cell-Phone Free Education, known also as House Bill 87, passed the House 114-3 a day prior to going into the Senate Rules Committee.

The one-page House legislation says in part, “At the beginning of each school year, governing bodies of public school units shall notify parents of all students enrolled in the public school unit of the Cell Phone-Free Education Policy adopted under subsection (a) of this section.”

That subsection says, “Governing bodies of public school units shall adopt a cell phone-free education policy to eliminate or severely restrict student access to cell phones during instructional time.”

In the public instruction section of the Senate budget proposal, the language in part says governing bodies shall establish wireless communication policy, and sans exceptions, shall “prohibit students from using, displaying, or having a wireless communication device turned on during instructional time.”

Exceptions include teachers’ instructing use; as required by a student’s individualized education program; or to manage a student’s health care per documented medical conditions.

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