News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Sunday News on WRAL – Sunday, February 16, 2025
SUMMARY: Laura LaVine from the WL Newsroom reports on today’s top stories, including a WL weather alert due to heavy rain and strong winds expected between 8 a.m. and noon. Localized wind damage and power outages may occur, with gusts over 30 mph throughout the day. In labor news, nearly 75% of Amazon’s rdu1 Facility employees voted against unionization. Following an armed robbery at Dick Sporting Goods, two suspects are in custody, while a third remains at large. Additionally, country artist Eric Church is progressing on his promise to build homes in Western North Carolina after securing land for 40 homes.

Sunday News on WRAL – Sunday, February 16, 2025
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
North Carolina celebrates 15,000 fortified roofs
SUMMARY: North Carolina has reached a milestone with 15,000 fortified roofs built along its coast to protect homes from hurricanes. This initiative, supported by grants and insurance incentives, aims to strengthen homes as storms intensify. Fortified roofs help homes withstand hurricane-force winds, offering protection and reducing insurance premiums. Wilmington resident Daryl Penny, who upgraded his roof using a grant, has already seen cost savings. State officials aim to reach 50,000 fortified roofs and are advocating for a bipartisan bill to remove taxes on mitigation grants, making the program more accessible and helping families prepare for future storms.

North Carolina reached a major milestone in coastal resilience Friday, celebrating the installation of its 15,000th fortified roof–an upgrade designed to protect homes from hurricane-force winds and heavy rain.
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Griffin, attorneys retread familiar ground in latest court hearing
As Griffin case drags on, some NC voters can’t help but feel ‘targeted’
RALEIGH — In less than 24 hours, Danielle Brown left an out-of-state bus tour, came home to North Carolina to cast a vote in the 2024 general election and then boarded a plane to rejoin the tour. Now, her vote is one of nearly 67,000 ballots contested by Republican Court of Appeals Judge Jefferson Griffin as part of his attempt to overturn his apparent loss to Democratic Judge Allison Riggs for a seat on the state Supreme Court.
On Election Night, Griffin appeared to be the victor. However, as provisional and absentee ballots were counted, he slowly lost his lead. By the time election staff tallied official results during their canvasses, Riggs was up by a mere 734 votes. Two recounts confirmed Riggs’ win.
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Griffin then filed a series of election protests attempting to discard tens of thousands of ballots from the count, on grounds that the State Board of Elections illegally allowed certain categories of voters to cast a ballot. In the past four months, Griffin’s election protests have journeyed through state and federal courts.
On Friday, a panel of N.C. Court of Appeals judges heard the latest arguments and will decide whether a lower state court was right to affirm the State Board of Elections’ dismissal of Griffin’s protests.
Attorneys for Griffin, Riggs and the State Board covered much of the same territory of the past few months. Their arguments centered on whether the election rules the board established for the 2024 general election were the correct ones, and if they weren’t, whether the law allows Griffin to retroactively remove votes from the count.
Whatever the appellate court decides will be subject to appeal. The case will most likely return to the state Supreme Court, which previously paused election certification until the case is resolved but declined to take it up early.
What Griffin is disputing
Griffin is challenging ballots cast by three categories of voters.
First, he contests the ballots of over 60,000 people Griffin alleges were improperly registered to vote because they didn’t provide either a driver’s license or social security number under a faulty voter registration form. The State Board argues that voters who don’t have these numbers have to prove their identity at the polls, so their votes are valid.
Second, Griffin seeks to remove votes of about 5,500 military and overseas voters who did not include a photo ID with their absentee ballots. He argues that the State Board misinterpreted state law by allowing this category of voters to skip voter ID requirements.
Third, Griffin identified about 500 voters, who he calls “Never Residents,” who don’t live in North Carolina but claim inherited residency through a special state law provision. He argues that the state law violates the North Carolina Constitution’s residency requirements, and therefore, those votes should not count.
‘Taking it very personally’
As the case continues, more voters and organizations are getting involved. Carolina Public Press spoke to several of them.
Brown, a national co-field director for Black Voters Matter, found out that she was on the list through a text from an organization called Democracy NC. Her county board of elections told her they didn’t have her driver’s license on file, but she knows she did everything right.
Black voters like Brown are twice as likely as white voters to be in the largest Griffin challenge. Other voters of color and younger voters also disproportionately appear on his protest lists, according to an analysis conducted by Western Carolina University political science professor Chris Cooper.
“I’m taking it very personally because I do feel as if I am being targeted as a Black woman that works for a Black organization that seeks to empower voting across the country,” Brown said. “You’re making voters feel as if their vote does not count or they have to fight for their vote to count when that’s not democracy.”
Latino voters faced hurdle after hurdle this election, said Veronica Aguilar of El Pueblo, an advocacy group for that community.
The new voter ID law presents more of an obstacle for Latino voters and other voters of color than their white counterparts. Voter education tends to be in English, which may hinder the Latino community from staying updated on election rules. Also, many naturalized immigrants come from countries with different voting laws and election processes which may present a learning curve.
Additionally, Aguilar claims that Latino voters experienced voter intimidation during the election, including a proliferation of “unnecessary” signs telling them that if they aren’t citizens, they can’t vote. U.S. citizenship is required to even register to vote, she said, so this was an effort to make naturalized citizens “question whether or not they could vote.”
The fact that Latino voters disproportionately appear on the protest lists aligns with political rhetoric that immigrants “don’t belong” in the U.S., Aguilar said.
“So even if it is not intentional, it is contributing to the narrative that Latino immigrants, naturalized citizens in this country aren’t allowed to participate in our processes and that their voices don’t count,” she said.
Voters of color aren’t the only ones feeling targeted.
Carrie Conley is a military spouse living in Italy. Last year, she requested her absentee ballot through the Guilford County Board of Elections just like she had done seven times before.
Nobody ever asked for her to attach a photo ID to her absentee ballot because under the State Board’s interpretation, North Carolina law doesn’t require voter identification for military and overseas voters.
Conley heard about the Griffin case on social media, found the list and discovered her name was on it. However, none of her fellow military spouses were on the list. She soon learned that ballots from only four Democratic-leaning counties — Durham, Forsyth, Buncombe and Guilford — were being challenged as part of the photo ID protest.
“Why these four counties? Why now?” Conley asked. “It just makes me very upset that this is happening in my state.”
From 1986 to 2013, Debra Blanton served as Cleveland County’s election director. She loved her job and what it meant to voters to know that their vote would be “sacred,” “safe” and “counted correctly.”
Griffin’s attempt to retroactively take away some North Carolinians’ votes “just really raised the hairs on the back of my neck,” Blanton said.
Blanton is one of 42 former election directors who filed an amicus brief, or “friend of the court” argument, meant to offer courts additional insight.
Election directors, current or former, rarely speak publicly on issues. They make a point of being professionally nonpartisan. But Blanton has never seen anyone try to retroactively remove voters from the rolls like this before.
“It is foreign to me that anybody thinks they could attempt to do that,” she said. “There are rules in place, and the rules in place were in effect for this election.”
By the rules?
What were the rules in place for the 2024 general election?
That’s the question lawyers from Griffin, Riggs and the State Board of Elections’ teams tried to answer Friday for a panel of three N.C. Court of Appeals judges.
Were they rules the State Board established for the election, based on their interpretation of state law and the North Carolina constitution? Or were their interpretations incorrect, deeming those rules invalid?
Griffin lawyer Craig Schaeur argued in favor of the latter. The State Board can’t decide to conduct elections based on rules that violate state law and the North Carolina Constitution, he said.
“To be clear, this case is not about changing laws after the election,” Schaeur said. “It’s a case about enforcing the laws that were already on the books before the election.”
State Board lawyer Nick Brod disagreed. If the State Board’s interpretations were incorrect, there was plenty of opportunity to challenge them before the election, he argued.
The state law allowing so-called “Never Residents” to inherit the residency of their parents in order to vote was passed unanimously in 2011 and has been enforced in over 40 elections since, he explained.
The photo ID exception for overseas and military voters has been in place for five elections, he added. And the voter registration form issue that may have led to missing drivers license and social security numbers on file is currently being litigated in a federal lawsuit to apply to future elections.
“From the voters’ perspective,” Brod said, “they did everything that they were asked to do in order to cast a ballot.”
Judges Fred Gore, Toby Hampson and John Tyson will decide the case. Gore and Tyson are Republicans and Hampson is a Democrat. If the panel spits 2-1, then the case may be appealed to the state Supreme Court.
This article first appeared on Carolina Public Press and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
The post Griffin, attorneys retread familiar ground in latest court hearing appeared first on carolinapublicpress.org
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Buncombe Democrats hold town hall to push back against ‘lightning speed’ cuts to federal programs • Asheville Watchdog
For the second time in two weeks Kai Ryon joined hundreds of Buncombe County Democrats at a town-hall gathering to protest the Trump administration’s blitzkrieg attacks on federal programs.
Last week, Ryon was among the overflow crowd of protesters who jammed and surrounded the Ferguson Auditorium on Asheville’s A-B Tech campus to rain fury on Republican Rep. Chuck Edwards, who hosted the town hall despite warnings from GOP leaders that such meetings could turn ugly.
It did exactly that, prompting the congressman to leave amid tight security as some in the crowd — the 32-year-old Ryon among them — shouted “save our democracy” and a chorus of f-bombs in his wake.
Ryon was back in the same auditorium Thursday night, this time in a much smaller and more restrained audience of Buncombe Democrats. There were no throngs of counter-protesters, no angry placards or banners, and mostly respectful silence as Democratic speakers detailed their efforts to mitigate the massive cuts in federal programs and staff through the state’s budget.
Although these legislative actions may be worthy, Ryon said, they aren’t enough.
“I know I am not alone when I say that I’m frustrated, angry, shocked about what’s happening right now,” the lanky construction worker said when he was called on to speak from his seat near the back of the packed auditorium.

“I’m trying to figure out a way to leverage my privilege to help those that are less privileged,” Ryon said. “I am through with civil-engagement protest and, frankly, I’m looking to see the Democratic Party show some teeth.”
The audience erupted in cheers and applause, quieting only when Ryon continued to detail recent reprisals by the Trump administration on its policy critics.
“My question to you guys,” he said, addressing the panel of state legislators, “is: How concerned are you moving forward as things get worse, and, what can we do in the meantime?”
The legislators — state Reps. Lindsey Prather, Brian Turner and Eric Ager, and state Sen. Julie Mayfield — each explained a variety of bills working their way through the Republican-controlled state General Assembly, and the work of the party’s legislative delegation in countering the federal cuts.
“Show some teeth”
But it was Ryon’s demand for the Democrats to “show some teeth” that appeared to encapsulate the audience’s mood and trigger the loudest responses.
Ager replied directly to Ryon’s appeal, though with a modest recommendation. “We are all in a place where we are really wondering how and what we can do,” he said. “This is a great start. Showing up at these things shows you pay attention and want to make a difference.”
Ager and his colleagues urged the audience to channel their anger into community networking by joining clubs, attending school board meetings, befriending “people who don’t hold the same political views,” or doing public-service volunteer work for nonprofits and other agencies experiencing or facing budget and staffing cuts under the Trump administration.
Ager, a farmer and U.S. Navy veteran who represents District 114 south and east of Asheville, also said that mass protests and individual outreach might persuade even incumbent Republicans to find “the courage to stand up” against the Trump administration and exercise the constitutional role of oversight and budgeting.
Mayfield, an attorney who represents District 49 in the state Senate, urged Democrats to be willing to work with Edwards and the state’s Republican U.S. senators, Thom Tillis and Ted Budd, who have been instrumental in steering federal money into the region to assist in the recovery from Tropical Storm Helene.

A self-described “practical progressive,” Mayfield said that while many residents may be angry with the Republican administration, if they phone these three GOP lawmakers, they would do well by starting the conversation by expressing gratitude for their efforts in sending federal dollars to the region.
“Then you can go ahead and fuss at them,” she said.
Prather also emphasized the value of direct involvement in countering the GOP’s policies. “Your Facebook screams and posting comments under [news media] articles doesn’t count,” she said. Among the actions people can take is to push back against bias and false information, to be willing to confront someone by saying, “that’s actually not true.”
“We all have to believe that truth still matters,” Prather, a former teacher who represents District 115 north and west of Asheville, continued. “If we don’t believe that, we’re absolutely lost.”
Change of mood
The Buncombe Democratic gathering was part of the party’s effort to build interest in advance of a protest rally planned for Pack Square in downtown Asheville on Sunday.
The mood at Thursday’s town hall suggested that local Democrats are shifting their posture from one of stunned shock to calls for action. Ager told The Watchdog in an interview that he sensed this change in mood.
“The Trump administration’s strategy has been to overwhelm their critics by throwing everything at them at once,” Ager said. “The Democratic Party has been pushed onto its back foot by these things. But I see that we’re getting off that back foot now and moving forward; we’re seeing things starting to change.”
One woman in the audience, identified only by her zip code, said she previously worked in programs supported by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) combating the spread of COVID-19.
“It was shocking to have an agency ended in 10 days, its website taken down and 13,100 projects cut with lighting speed,” she said. “The courts can’t even stay or keep up.”
Even if federal courts eventually rule against the Trump administration’s cuts, “the damage is done and the nonprofits doing the good, local work in the field for the poorest people, they’re gone.”
The woman placed the blame for this on billionaire Trump backer Elon Musk, who contributed $288 million to the president’s campaign and is orchestrating the federal cuts as the nominal leader of the unofficial Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE.
She asked the legislative panel if anything can be done to stop or reverse Musk’s activities. “This is the dismantling of the federal government,” she said.
Mayfield, the sole lawyer on the panel, offered a blunt reply: “Almost everything he is doing is illegal, is unconstitutional, and there will be consequences for that.”
“We’re going to go through a messy, horrible time,” Mayfield said. “And then judges, I hope, will start throwing some people in jail.”

In an interview after the program, Ryon had a more measured response. “The Democratic Party is at a crossroads,” he said, adding that this was his reason for attending the meeting and speaking up.
“Maybe it’s naive, but I would like to think that my being here maybe helps steer it in the right direction,” Ryon said.
Asheville Watchdog welcomes thoughtful reader comments on this story, which has been republished on our Facebook page. Please submit your comments there.
Asheville Watchdog is a nonprofit news team producing stories that matter to Asheville and Buncombe County. Tom Fiedler is a Pulitzer Prize-winning political reporter and dean emeritus from Boston University who lives in Asheville. Email him at tfiedler@avlwatchdog.org. 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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