A week of awareness of challenges farmworkers face
Public News Service - March 25, 2025
As today begins National Farmworker Awareness Week, North Carolina boasts the sixth-largest number of farmworkers of any state.
More than 150,000 people in the Tar Heel State are farmworkers or dependents of them.
Quirina Vallejos, executive director of the North Carolina Farmworkers Project, said the issues facing farmworkers include exposure to pesticides, inadequate housing and wage theft. ...(Read More)
Analysis: Earned time prison programs improve outcomes
Public News Service - March 7, 2025
Programs allowing incarcerated people to receive reductions in their sentences help lower chances of reoffending, according to a recent analysis.
North Carolina has earned time policies, enabling people to reduce their sentences by up to 30%.
Sarah Anderson, associate director of criminal justice and civil liberties at the conservative public policy think tank R Street Institute, said needs-based assessments when someone enters incarceration typically determine the programs to help a person improve themselves and succeed outside of incarceration.
...(Read More)
Industrial farming in NC, US becomes breeding ground for bird flu
Public News Service - March 6, 2025
Industrial farming practices could be boosting the spread of bird flu.
Avian influenza has been detected in poultry across the country, including in North Carolina, where 3.3 million birds had to be culled because of the disease at one farm alone in January.
Rania Masri, co-director of the North Carolina Environmental Justice Network, said concentrated animal feeding operations used for poultry are a breeding ground for disease.
...(Read More)
With ozone season, bad air days to increase in NC
Public News Service - March 5, 2025
Bad air quality days are a heightened concern as ozone season begins in North Carolina.
Ozone season in the state lasts from March through October, when hot weather increases the prevalence of ground-level ozone.
Rafaella Vaca, education manager for the advocacy group CleanAIRE NC, said there are health effects from poor ozone days.
...(Read More)
NC moving away from police transporting people in mental health crisis
Public News Service - March 3, 2025
North Carolina is investing $20 million to move the transportation of people experiencing mental health crisis away from the responsibility of law enforcement.
Currently, when a person is deemed a potential danger to themselves or those around them, law enforcement provides transportation from hospitals to residential treatment facilities in the event of involuntary commitment.
Kelly Crosbie - the director of the division of mental health, developmental disabilities, and substance use services at the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services - said transportation by the police is degrading and sends the message that these people are criminals.
...(Read More)
Low marks for NC Congress members in 2024 conservation scorecard
Public News Service - February 28, 2025
North Carolina lawmakers in Congress received mixed marks in the new League of Conservation Voters scorecard.
The scorecard ranks members of Congress on their 2024 votes. North Carolina's senators received zero grades. ...(Read More)
NC dentist has advice before Children's Dental Health Month ends
Public News Service - February 27, 2025
Children's Dental Health Month is wrapping up but tips for parents and guardians could help their child's health beyond their teeth.
Oral health is a keystone of overall health for people in all kinds of ways.
Dr. ...(Read More)
U.S. Ed Department cuts would be costly to NC schools
Public News Service - February 26, 2025
The fate of the U.S. Department of Education could have big effects for North Carolina schools.
While the Trump administration has discussed eliminating the agency, Congress has the final say. ...(Read More)
NC taxpayers: Get your stuff together
Public News Service - February 25, 2025
Tax season is here and North Carolinians should find the relevant financial documents to ensure filing their returns is as smooth as possible.
Important documents include W2s from employers or 1099s for independent contractors. People should track deductions like property taxes, charitable donations and mortgage interest as well.
...(Read More)
NC organization applies COVID-era lessons to Helene relief
Public News Service - February 24, 2025
Lessons learned during the COVID pandemic have proven crucial to one organization responding to Hurricane Helene.
Centro Unido - which serves the Spanish-speaking population in McDowell County - stepped up its services during the pandemic to provide testing, vaccine clinics, and easy-to-understand information.
It also offered financial assistance to help western North Carolina families avoid evictions and utility disconnections. ...(Read More)
Organización de CN aplica lecciones de la era de COVID para ayudar con Helene
Public News Service - February 24, 2025
Las lecciones aprendidas durante la pandemia de COVID han resultado cruciales para una organización que respondió al huracán Helene.
Centro Unido, que atiende a la población hispanohablante del condado de McDowell, intensificó sus servicios durante la pandemia para ofrecer pruebas, clínicas de vacunación e información fácil de entender.
También ofreció asistencia financiera para ayudar a las familias del oeste de Carolina del Norte a evitar desalojos y acceso a servicios públicos. ...(Read More)
NC farmer's market, hike mark Black History Month
Public News Service - February 21, 2025
An urban farm in North Carolina is celebrating Black History Month this weekend with a farmers market and historic group hike.
Urban Community AgriNomics in Durham is holding its farmers market at Catawba Trail Farm and is inviting people on a hike through an old plantation where the organization has reclaimed an old farmstead.
Delphine Sellars, executive director of the nonprofit, said the legacy of agriculture is important for people of color.
...(Read More)
Free book project continues long tradition by delivering to Helene-damaged NC
Public News Service - February 19, 2025
By Anya Petrone Slepyan for The Daily Yonder.
Broadcast version by Eric Tegethoff for North Carolina News Service Service for the Public News Service/Daily Yonder Collaboration
In the 1930s, women employed by the Works Progress Administration rode pack horses through the mountains of eastern Kentucky, bringing books to rural residents in hard-to-reach places. Nearly a century later, Kirsten Crawford Turner is carrying on that tradition, with the help of a truck and a U-haul rather than a horse and saddle bags.
Turner grew up in Shelby, North Carolina in the Appalachian foothills, an area pummeled by Hurricane Helene in September 2024. ...(Read More)
Tips for NC to fend off winter blues
Public News Service - February 17, 2025
People's moods can slip during the colder, darker winter months - but there are ways for North Carolinians to push back against the winter blues.
A poll from the American Psychiatric Association found 40% of people report declines in mood during the winter.
Amy Brundle - the marketing and communications manager with the National Alliance on Mental Illness, North Carolina - said there are coping skills people can practice to keep the blues of gloomier months at bay.
...(Read More)
NC higher education combats costs with free tuition
Public News Service - February 14, 2025
With cost at the forefront of prospective students' minds, higher education institutions in North Carolina are rethinking how to overcome one of the biggest barriers to enrollment.
William Peace University in Raleigh has launched its "Peace Pledge," a program offering 100% tuition coverage for qualifying students.
Damon Wade, vice president for enrollment management and marketing at the university, said school officials took a hard look at the enrollment challenges students faced.
...(Read More)