Senator rips McCrory’s threat to veto ‘Sales Tax Fairness Act’ – WECT TV6-WECT … – WECT

RALEIGH, NC (WECT) –

One of the main sponsors of a bill proposing to redistribute sales tax revenue in North Carolina is responding to Governor Pat McCrory’s threat to veto the legislation. 

Sen. Harry Brown (R-Onslow) said in a statement that more than 100 local leaders from across North Carolina are in support of Senate Bill 369, which is designed to help rural counties by distributing sales tax revenue based on population instead of where the sale of goods occurs. He called McCrory’s response a “tone-deaf response to their overwhelming support is doubling down on a 2007 sales tax policy change that kicked rural North Carolina in the teeth.” 

“I can’t figure out if Pat thinks he is the Governor of Charlotte or the Mayor of North Carolina,” Brown said in an email news release. “Pat has spent 85 percent of our incentive money in the three richest urban counties and passed a transportation plan that diverts road money away from rural areas to urban areas, so it is hard to take his idea to help rural North Carolina by doing more of the same seriously. I have repeatedly asked the governor for a real plan to help the more than 80 counties across the state that benefit from the Sales Tax Fairness Act, and I am still waiting on his response.”

“This bill will result in a tax increase for millions of hard working middle-class families and small business owners throughout North Carolina,” Governor McCrory said in the email news release announcing the veto threat. “Redistribution and hidden tax increases are liberal tax and spend principles of the past that simply don’t work. More importantly, this bill will cripple the economic and trade centers of our state that power our economy.”

McCrory also plugged his proposed bond referendum, seeking nearly $3 billion for projects across North Carolina.

“The best thing the Senate and General Assembly can do for less the populated areas across our state is to pass and allow us to implement the NC Competes jobs strategy which will benefit travel and tourism, agriculture, manufacturing and nearly every economic sector in our state,” McCrory’s statement continued. “The General Assembly must also pass the Connect NC bond program so North Carolina voters can decide this November on projects that will build roads, improve our universities and community colleges, state parks and build the infrastructure North Carolina needs to grow jobs.”

Copyright 2015 WECT. All rights reserved.

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Following trails on Knoxville road trip – South Bend Tribune: Outdoor Adventures

A late-June road trip drew me to an outdoor writers conference in Knoxville, Tenn., where you’ll never chase all of its adventure trails. I brought back a few for you.

‘Urban wilderness’

Knoxville makes good use of the term “urban wilderness” when marketing more than 85 miles of trails and greenways through town and through 1,000 acres of wooded preserves. Dirt trails for hiking and mountain biking have grown quickly in recent years. It’s a particular treat to visit the 300-acre Ijam’s Nature Center, reclaimed after the land’s industrial days to be a lush area with a quarry lake where you can rent stand-up paddleboards and kayaks. Last week, Ijams opened an adventure in the trees with a zip line, “elevated tunnels,” bridges and other features.

A city of 100,000, Knoxville’s downtown stays groovy with the glass Sunsphere tower built for the 1982 World’s Fair, plus a dramatic, canvas-topped amphitheater, and a thriving Saturday farmers market that was revived 12 years ago in its Market Square and a walk-only plaza rimmed with restaurants, bars and eclectic sculptures.

Rafting as religion?

I went white-water rafting on the Pigeon River at the edge of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. It’s just over a two-hour trip on Class III and IV rapids, a nice experience for someone who’s never tried rafting. For reference, Class V is the most extreme white water that’s permitted for public rafting anywhere in the world. I went with Smoky Mountain Outdoors, but there are a lot of rafting outfitters in white-water hot spots like this one. Book ahead. Look for one that’s experienced and committed to safety.

Guides, like “Brother Nature,” who fired up our busload on the way to the launch site, do a great and often playful job of helping you understand the essentials of safety and paddling as a group. My raft’s guide told us to look for “no-legged friends” (snakes) in the trees. We didn’t see them. But we did see an occasional mimosa tree with pink, hairy blossoms that was imported from Asia in 1745.

After my trip, I chatted with a Tennessee man, who’s been guiding trips for more than 30 years: Dean Watts, known by the river nickname of “Rev. Dean the Dunkin’ Machine.” He may have “baptized” lots of rafters over the years but said he never “lost” anyone. He first went rafting at age 6. He later taught himself how to run a raft through the rapids and, in the 1980s, bailed out of a regular job to guide trips full time because he simply loved the sport and loved to be with people. Now he’s proud to see a granddaughter become a guide.

We launched near Hartford, Tenn., off of Interstate 40 at the border with North Carolina. Afterward, I took a short drive farther along a backroad to the Big Creek Recreation Area in the Smokies, where I was rewarded with deep, lush woods and a creek rippling over a boulder-strewn bed where visitors like to wade. Hike a quiet trail six miles up to a ridge. Try the more popular, nearly two-mile trail to a waterfall and pond. Or find a campsite. Temperatures here tend to be at least 10 degrees cooler than in the city. Lots of native rhododendron trees were showing off their large white blossoms. The Appalachian Trail crosses nearby, too.

There’s zip lining (I saw it from the raft) with two-hour jaunts through the woods near the Pigeon. Cost is roughly $100.

Hoosiers in the Civil War

Many signs along busy Interstate 75 through Kentucky lure a park lover’s attention. I couldn’t pass up Exit 49 for both a Civil War battlefield and a “trail town” called Livingston, just north of London and in the midst of the Daniel Boone National Forest.

First, the Camp Wildcat battlefield. I drove up the narrow, snaking road to the site and found myself alone at an outdoor pavilion. I began absorbing the first of many good interpretive signs that would pepper the 0.75-mile gravel walking trail that leads to Hoosier Knob. Yep, Indiana men played a role in this battle on Oct. 21, 1861, the first Civil War battle in Kentucky, which yanked the state out of its desire to remain neutral. The trail wends through the hills. I paused by a cliff with rocky outcroppings. A hummingbird swooped by my head. A sign told me how these rocks helped Union soldiers to defend Hoosier Knob, funneling Confederate soldiers to a steep, narrow approach.

More than 4,750 Confederate men had marched to Camp Wildcat, vastly outnumbering the Union soldiers. Fighting began early that morning as Col. John Coburn and 350 men from the 33rd Indiana Infantry rushed to the hill now known as Hoosier Knob. A total of 15 men died, according to a preservation foundation for the site.

I reached the trail’s end, which crosses one of the soldiers’ trenches, maybe a couple of feet deep now. A sign warns visitors to avoid touching the relic to avoid promoting its erosion. There, near a replica canon at that peaceful hilltop, I tried to imagine what those boys must of have faced.

This is one of 11 Civil War battlefields in Kentucky. There will be a re-enactment of the Camp Wildcat battle in a field not far from the site on Oct. 16-18. Details are at wildcatreenactment.com.

From the same exit, I reached Livingston a few miles away. The sleepy burg’s most startling feature is the variety of signs that yelp “trail town” — especially at a small shed where you can hitch up your horse or mountain bike and view a map of the nine long-distance trails that come close.

Most significant is the roughly 300-mile Sheltowee Trace National Recreational Trail. Kentucky’s Department of Tourism started establishing trail towns in 2013 with Livingston, mirroring similar towns along the Appalachian Trail, to encourage the public to find the trails (kentuckytourism.com/outdoor-adventure).

Outdoor Adventures author Joseph Dits is at www.southbendtribune.com/outdooradventures, 574-235-6158, @SBToutdoors, jdits@sbtinfo.com and www.facebook.com/sbtoutdooradventures.

Joe on the GoPro: Go white-water rafting on the Pigeon River in the Smokies as you listen to a veteran guide known as “Rev. Dean the Dunkin’ Machine.” Visit southbendtribune.com/outdooradventures.

Everglades of the North: This Saturday brings back an awesome and easy paddle through the bayous of Indiana’s Kankakee River at the Illinois border, an example of what the Grand Kankakee Marsh had looked like before it was drained. Also, thousands of native hibiscus flowers, also called swamp mallows, could be in bloom. Bring your binoculars and cameras. The group will paddle for about 2.5 hours. But organizers at the Northwest Indiana Paddling Association are watching the high river levels. If it’s too high, they’ll reschedule it for Aug. 22 (find them on Facebook or nwipa.org). Registration will start at 10 a.m. Central time Saturday at the White Oak Bayou public access site in the LaSalle Fish and Wildlife Area. Take U.S. 30, west of Valparaiso, and go south on U.S. 41 into Newton County and look for the turnoff on the right, south of the town of Schneider.

Paddling and archery lessons: Learn the basics of canoeing and kayaking from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Sunday at St. Patrick’s County Park in South Bend. Cost is $15. Learn basic archery (ages 12 and older) from 6 to 8 p.m. July 29. Cost is $10. Reservations are needed for both at 574-654-3155.

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County lobbies for sales tax act – Laurinburg Exchange – laurinburgexchange.com

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RALEIGH — The “Sales Tax Fairness Act” proposed by N.C. Senate Majority Leader Harry Brown as a way to direct revenue to rural counties was on the minds of community leaders across the state on Tuesday following a conference at the General Assembly.

Scotland was among the 40 counties represented, with Scotland County Board of Commissioners chairman Guy McCook stressing that the additional income could be a game changer for small, rural communities.

The state’s current distribution scheme for the two percent of sales taxes returned to counties was established in 2007, with 25 percent of taxes distributed based on population and 75 percent based on where goods were sold.

Proponents of the act, S.B. 369, maintain that the current distribution of sales taxes disproportionately benefits areas with a vibrant retail presence that attracts shoppers from other counties.

“If you go to Moore County and buy a television set or an appliance, 75 percent of that sales tax stays in Moore County at the point of sale,” McCook said.

As proposed, the act would shift the distribution to 40 percent based on population and 60 percent based on point of sale for the 2016-2017 fiscal year, gradually reversing that formula until 80 percent of sales taxes are distributed based on population in 2019-2020.

Under the act, Scotland County would stand to gain more than $1.5 million in additional sales tax revenues each year, which as McCook pointed out would significantly expand a revenue stream in an environment where the county has few options when it comes to raising cash for new projects.

“When you have the highest property tax in the state, raising property taxes is really not an option for us,” he said. “We really don’t have any way to raise additional revenue as a community outside of the limited fees and things like fire tax and the availability fee that we just did for the landfill … and we have huge needs just like every other community does.”

Opponents of the bill say that the 17 counties which would lose revenue would have to raise their taxes in order to compensate.

“Folks out there say it’s Robin Hood stealing from the rich to give to the poor, but the fact of the matter is that this has only been going on for 10 years or so,” said McCook.

Late on Tuesday, Gov. Pat McCrory issued a statement decrying S.B. 369 as one of many “liberal tax and spend principles of the past that simply don’t work.”

Among the counties that would lose revenue through the proposed sales tax redistribution are retail hubs and areas, such as Dare, Boone, and Blowing Rock, with a healthy tourism industry.

“This legislation will decimate our travel and tourism sector, particularly in our mountain and beach communities, shop owners and their employees who depend on tourism for their livelihood,” McCrory’s statement read.

But for Scotland County residents, that is unlikely to detract from the tangible results — such as the construction of new schools and property tax relief — that McCook suggests could come about should the bill be adopted.

“It gives us the opportunity to do a lot of things that we’re not doing and it takes a lot of pressure off our property tax,” he said. “If I could get my wish, it would be to get our property tax below a dollar.”

Mary Katherine Murphy can be reached at 910-506-3169.

By Mary Katherine Murphy

mmurphy@civitasmedia.com

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Alliance forms to oppose Duke transmission line from Asheville to Campobello

Some members of the recently formed Foothills Preservation Alliance will wear shirts to a public meeting that night with a message for Duke: “United to Save Our Foothills.”

Duke plans to spend $320 million to construct a 45-mile, 230-kilovolt transmission line from Asheville to South Carolina and a substation off Interstate 26 in Campobello. The transmission line’s proposed routes are available for viewing at http://dukeenergyfoothillsproject.power-viz.com.

It’s part of a larger project to convert the coal-burning Asheville plant to natural gas. The power company notified by letter 3,700 landowners in North and South Carolina who may be within 500 feet of the line.

Duke is hosting a series of public meetings to provide information about the project. The next one will be held 4 to 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Landrum Middle School gymnasium at 104 Redland Road in Landrum. The first public meeting was held last week in Fletcher, N.C., and it drew about 500 people, according to Duke Energy spokeswoman Megan Musgraves.

Another large crowd is expected to attend the meeting in Landrum.

Among them is Walt Myers of Campobello. Myers moved from Chicago to Campobello 14 years ago. He was one of 250 people who gathered Saturday at Foothills Community Church in Landrum to begin organizing opposition to Duke’s substation and transmission line plan.

Myers said one of the proposed routes brings the transmission line over his property and over the property of his nine neighbors in the Golden Hill area of Campobello. Myers said he believed the line would hurt the region’s quality of life.

“People in our community come from many places,” Myers said. “They are all drawn here because this is horse country.”

Myers said he believed Duke’s plan could adversely impact the local economy and harm the environment. “It seems so nonsensical to do that kind of stuff,” Myers said.

Becky Barnes of Landrum said the Foothills Preservation Alliance formed Saturday at Foothills Community Church. The alliance’s mission is to provide a unified and effective message to Duke regarding the economic, environmental, cultural and aesthetic impact the proposed project will have on the community, according to Barnes.

Barnes said the alliance will work to provide data to Duke that can be used in finalizing the routing decision for the line. The alliance includes Greenspace of Fairview, Golden Hill, the North Pacolet Trail Association, the Ceta Trail Association and the Jackson Grove Property Owners. Barnes said more groups are likely to join the alliance in coming weeks.

“We are trying to build a network for all different groups,” Barnes said. “Right now we are getting organized for Tuesday’s meeting in Landrum.”

Suzanne Strickland, who owns Stone Soup restaurant in Landrum, said many people in her community are upset about Duke’s plan. Strickland said the community has worked had to preserve the region’s natural beauty and a transmission line would be detrimental to the economy and environment.

For Madelon Wallace of Campobello, the transmission line would “decimate the economy.” The area currently depends on wineries, agri-tourism, tourism and the equestrian industry to help drive the economy, Wallace said. Property values would also be adversely affected if the project were to move forward, Wallace said.

“This community is fired up, believe it,” Wallace said about opposition to Duke over the plan.

Duke unveiled maps last week detailing possible routes for the transmission line. Musgraves said construction could begin in November 2017 and be completed by August 2019.

According to Duke, electricity use is increasing in and around the Asheville area. Duke’s demand for electricity in the Western Carolinas service territory is expected to increase by more than 15 percent in the next decade.

The project to convert the Asheville power plant from coal-burning to natural gas still needs approval from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Musgraves said.

There are 44 potential route sections for the transmission line.

Following Tuesday’s meeting in Landrum, one will be 4 to 7 p.m. Thursday in Flat Rock, N.C. Residents can also leave comments on the Duke website, at www.duke-energy.com/WCTransmissionEnhancements, call 888-238-0373 or email WCTransmissionEnhancements@duke-energy.com.

Follow Chris Lavender on Twitter @LavenderSHJ

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NC Independent Colleges and Universities (NCICU) Endorses PayBack’s Innovative …



RALEIGH, N.C., July 20, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — PayBack, the leader in procure-through-pay financing and enablement and North Carolina Independent Colleges and Universities, NCICU, announced today that PayBack’s Procure-Through-Pay For A Greater Purpose program for Higher Education has been endorsed by NCICU as part of its Collaboration Initiative for its 36 colleges and universities.   After working closely with NCICU in the development of the program, PayBack’s Higher Education program is now available to all 36 NCICU campuses.  Institutions using PayBack’s programs are projected to achieve savings of more than 10% of annual spend through purchase price and funded early pay discounts, returning up to a million dollars a year to a university.



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“PayBack’s program offers colleges and universities access to competitively negotiated discounts, early pay and special term financing, and more streamlined procurement and payment processes.  The result is improved cash flow and substantial savings for participating NCICU institutions,” said NCICU President, Hope Williams.



“We’re excited to join NCICU’s Collaboration Initiative and to offer our innovative procure-through-pay programs to NCICU institutions,” said Bob Wood, Managing Partner of Payback.  “Our programs ensure our clients receive the best negotiated purchase prices, receive maximum funded early payment discount sharing, enjoy extended payment terms and experience lower processing and reconciliation costs, with all costs of the program funded from payment discounts suppliers already pay. We are passionate about bridging the ‘last mile’ of procure-through-pay excellence and helping our clients save time and money.”



About NCICU
NCICU is the statewide office for North Carolina’s 36 independent, nonprofit institutions of higher education. Formed in 1969, NCICU develops scholarship support, engages in state and federal policy work, and partners with the state’s other education sectors. NCICU develops research and information, supports staff development, and coordinates collaboration among NCICU institutions. Those institutions generate over $14.2 billion a year for the state’s economy. NCICU institutions employ over 66,000 people and together represent the state’s largest private employer.  For more information, visit www.ncicu.org.



About PayBack



PayBack delivers innovative procure-through-pay financing and enablement programs that ensure university buyers receive the best negotiated prices, maximum early payment discount sharing, extended payment terms, and lower software processing and reconciliation costs while creating a powerful sales channel for suppliers that carries lower marketing, selling and transactions costs. PayBack places a premium on the relationship between our buyers and suppliers, offering a unique opportunity to maximize value through the utilization of existing discount contracts and funded early-pay discounts. Finally, PayBack’s data analytics provide educational institutions insight into internal purchasing habits and trends, as well as supply chain analysis to buy smarter with less adverse social and environmental impact. All of this results in achieving the greater purpose of providing resources to the greater benefit of their campus, constituents and community. For more information, visit www.payback123.com.



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John Payne
Marketing Relationship Management
PayBack
(919) 280-2564
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Woman believed to be missing pregnant NC woman found, deputies say

SALISBURY, N.C. — Carrie Bradshaw-Crowther, the missing pregnant woman from Salisbury who was scheduled to have a caesarean section, has been found in Boone, WSOC reported, citing the Watauga County Sheriff’s Office. Family members — who are heading to Boone — also confirmed to WSOC that she has been found.

Deputies said a woman used an ATM card Monday at a CVS in Boone. Officials found her at a gas station a short time later, her van matching the description of Bradshaw-Crowther’s.

According to a release from the Watauga County Sheriff, the 49-year-old exited the vehicle and said, “I am Carrie.”

The identification card in the woman’s possession matched that of Crowther. She was taken to the hospital for medical evaluation.

Police had obtained surveillance images showing Bradshaw-Crowther the last time she was spotted at a Shell gas station in Statesville on Wednesday.

They hoped the photos would draw more leads as to her whereabouts.

The images show the 5-foot-7-inch woman wearing a blue jacket with her brown hair braided.

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City Council to vote on their stance for offshore drilling – WECT TV6-WECT.com … – WECT

WILMINGTON, NC (WECT) –

Since the Obama Administration has proposed opening up the southern Atlantic coasts to offshore drilling, many environmental groups are speaking out and want city leaders to stand behind them.

The Cape Fear Chapter of the Surfrider Foundation has been very vocal in their opposition to seismic testing and offshore drilling that could be coming to our coast. The organizations, along with other residents of the City of Wilmington, are asking city leaders to join them alongside other coastal communities on their stance.

They are concerned about the damaging effects seismic testing could have on marine life. Seismic testing sends air-gun blasts of compressed air through the water every 10 seconds. The blasts are said to be the loudest man-made sounds in the ocean, but they are not short lived. The seismic blasts can continue for weeks or even months at a time, damaging the hearing of many marine mammals that rely on it to survive.

Having theses potential negative impacts on our marine life has Ethan Crouch, our local Surfrider Foundation Chairman, worried for the other negative effects that could follow.

“We as citizens really need to stand up and be a voice for those environmental resources that we have, and protect our economy as well as the natural resources that brought so many of us to this wonderful community,” Crouch said.

Crouch alongside with other environmentalist are planning to wear blue shirts during Tuesday night’s meeting to show support for the environment.

Additionally, many coastal communities are also concerned with impacts it could have on the tourism economy and fishing industry.

According to a letter sent by the city manager to his fellow council members, coastal tourism brings over $4 billion to North Carolina’s economy with thousands of jobs tied to commercial and recreational fishing.

The letter also states, “The National Resource Defense Council said the Obama Administration’s proposal to drill for oil in the Atlantic exposes the Eastern Seaboard to the hazards of drilling and puts oceans, beaches and wetlands at risk.”

Mayor Bill Saffo said Tuesday night’s council meeting will give the public a look at both sides of the discussion and hopefully answer some of their questions as well. 

“If it was to take place, and that’s a big if, will there be any protected revenue sources for the local communities that if there was a spill? How do we take care of our community?” Saffo questioned.

Tuesday’s city council meeting is set to take place at 6:30 p.m.

Copyright 2015 WECT. All rights reserved.

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Could Alabama be the next craft beer destination?

Only a few hours northeast of Alabama, Asheville, N.C. boasts more craft breweries per capita than any other city in the country.

And it’s not just hipsters – Asheville’s attracted major beer makers like New Belgium and Sierra Nevada, bringing production jobs to a region that once thrived on textile manufacturing.

Alabama’s tourists may visit local breweries when in town, but Asheville’s breweries draw tourists for its beer alone.

Tony Kiss has covered the craft beer industry for the Asheville Citizen-Times since the first brewery opened 21 years ago. Now, with 42 breweries in western North Carolina – 19 in Buncombe County alone – craft beer enthusiasts flock to the city.

It’s enough to attract two companies that lead tourists on beer-tasting events, the first of which opened when there were only five breweries in Asheville. Birmingham has four and at least two in the works; Huntsville has seven and at least two in the works. So could Alabama have the next beer city?

AL.com talked to Kiss about the essential ingredients for beer tourism in Asheville – and what Alabama and its two biggest beer cities, Birmingham and Huntsville, could learn from the south’s beer capital.

A creative population

Asheville’s got a reputation for being full of hippies. There’s some truth to it, but it’s also earned its reputation for a city where art thrives, Kiss said. And it’s a population that supported beer as its own art.

“Asheville has a long tradition of writers and artists – food and drink is just part of that,” Kiss said. “Places like Asheville support local endeavors, and are going to want to drink what their neighbors are drinking.”

Huntsville’s got that, said Dan Perry, co-founder of Straight to Ale. It’s exactly why he had at one point tried to move the brewery into the Lowe Mill ARTS Entertainment, a former mill that now houses more than 120 artists, small businesses and restaurants.

Straight to Ale kegs. (Lucy Berry/lberry@al.com) 

“We tried to put our brewery in there because we thought that we were artists,” Perry said.

Birmingham may not have the same arts focus that Asheville has – but it has a population that’s benefiting from the momentum of a downtown renaissance, said Good People Brewing Co.’s co-founder Michael Sellers.

“It’s emerging,” Sellers said. “It’s having an active community of people who are trying to improve the community – and Birmingham has that.”

Events

Nothing brings people in from out of town like a party.

Asheville has several beer festivals throughout the year, including a week-long celebration in the spring culminating in the Beer City Fest. But smaller festivals run throughout the year, focusing on specific types of beers or combining brewing with music at the annual Brewgrass Festival.

“Some of these people have drawn people from all over the country,” Kiss said.

Scenes from the closing day of the 9th annual Magic City Brewfest at Sloss Furnaces in Birmingham, Ala., Saturday, June 6, 2015. (Mark Almond/ malmond@al.com) 

Birmingham and Huntsville each have their annual festivals – Magic City Brewfest and Rocket City Brewfest.

But good beer’s creeping into the everyday fabric of Birmingham, said Sellers of Good People – or else, would you be able to get his beer at Railroad Park?

The smaller events are starting in Alabama, like Wild South’s second annual brewfest. The nonprofit protects wild lands throughout the southeast, with offices in Alabama and Asheville. The festival, held in Birmingham for the second year, brought Alabama and Asheville brewers together for a beer festival.

“That came together because of Asheville’s love of craft beer, and love of community, and love of nature, and Birmingham’s love of breweries, love of communities, love of nature, and the respect that both areas have for each other,” said Eric Meyer, a partner at Cahaba Brewing in Birmingham.

More than just beer

People now come to Asheville for the beer. But it helps that people have been coming to Asheville for ages for the Great Smoky Mountains National Park and other tourist attractions, like the Biltmore Estate.

So the city was already on people’s minds.

Birmingham and Huntsville aren’t. But both cities on the way to the beach – and that’s definitely on people’s minds.

Good People founders Jason Malone and Michael Sellers (Photo: Cary Norton) 

“We have people coming in here every day from Indiana, Illinois, Chicago, whatever, wanting to take a tour and have a pint – maybe buy some beer in a growler to take to the beach, which we can’t do right now,” Sellers said. “This is a great base camp before you hit the beach city.

“That’s something we could capture, from a tourism perspective.”

‘Craft beer cluster’

Asheville has seven breweries within easy walking distance of each other. The unofficial craft beer cluster makes it easy for tourists to spend an entire day on breweries.

Huntsville’s in the beginning stages of its own craft beer cluster, Perry hopes. Straight to Ale is in the process of expanding into a new building, a former middle school now known as Campus No. 805. On the other side, Yellowhammer Brewing will open a brewery, tasting room and bier garten.

Hopefully, once the space is up and running, new breweries will launch nearby, Perry said.

When the now-defunct Beer Engineers announced it was planning to move next to Good People in Birmingham, there were some people who found it – to say the least – tacky, said Danner Kline, craft beer manager at Birmingham Budweiser.

“Before Beer Engineers folded, there was so much hell raised among the inner circle of craft beer in Birmingham,” Kline said. “I thought it was all really bizarre, because it makes perfect sense for everybody. It’s a win-win to have several breweries within walking distance of each other.”

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The Pancreatic Cancer Action Network Welcomes New Members To Its Prestigious …








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    The Pancreatic Cancer Action Network, the national organization working to advance research, support patients and create hope for those affected by pancreatic cancer. To learn more, please visit www.pancan.org.
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    The Pancreatic Cancer Action Network, the national organization working to advance research, support patients and create hope for those affected by pancreatic cancer. To learn more, please visit www.pancan.org.
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    The Pancreatic Cancer Action Network, the national organization working to advance research, support patients and create hope for those affected by pancreatic cancer. To learn more, please visit www.pancan.org.









MANHATTAN BEACH, Calif., July 21, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The Pancreatic Cancer Action Network is pleased to announce Steven Leach, MD, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, as the newly appointed chair of the organization’s prestigious Scientific and Medical Advisory Board.  The organization also welcomes four new members to the board: Howard Crawford, PhD, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI; Channing Der, PhD, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC; Hedy Kindler, MD, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL; and Nipun Merchant, MD, Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Miami, Miami, FL.

“I am thrilled to welcome Drs. Crawford, Der, Kindler and Merchant to our Scientific and Medical Advisory Board, and we congratulate Dr. Leach on his new role as chair,” stated Lynn Matrisian, PhD, MBA, vice president of scientific and medical affairs for the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network.  “We look forward to working with each of them in this new capacity and utilizing their broad experience and knowledge as we work towards our goal to double pancreatic cancer survival by 2020.”

The Pancreatic Cancer Action Network’s Scientific and Medical Advisory Board provides scientific and clinical expertise to guide the organization in planning and implementing our research initiatives and our information and education services for patients, their families and caregivers, and healthcare professionals. It is composed of leading cancer scientists, clinicians and healthcare professionals from institutions across the United States who specialize in pancreatic cancer.

About the New Scientific and Medical Advisory Board Members: 
Howard Crawford, PhD, is a Professor in the Departments of Molecular Integrative Physiology and Internal Medicine at the University of Michigan. Dr. Crawford began his pancreas cancer research as a Research Assistant Professor in 2000 at Vanderbilt University where he studied the functions of proteinases in the formation of the putative pancreas cancer cell of origin, the metaplastic duct cell, which is found in both pancreas cancer and chronic pancreatitis, a risk factor for pancreas cancer.  He continued this line of research as an Assistant Professor at Stony Brook University beginning in 2003, broadening his studies to the various signal transduction pathways that are critical for the formation and expansion of metaplastic ducts, especially those that surround KRAS oncogene activity.  After relocation to the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, FL in 2011, Dr. Crawford was recruited to the University of Michigan in 2015 where he serves as the Director of the Pancreas Research Program, charged with fostering collaborations among the many basic and clinical pancreas researchers at the University of Michigan who collectively investigate pancreas development, pancreatitis and pancreas cancer.

Channing J. Der, PhD, is the Sarah Graham Kenan Professor of Pharmacology at the Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.  He received his PhD from the University of California, Irvine and completed his postdoctoral studies at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School.  Dr. Der was part of the first team in the discovery of the RAS family of oncogenes in human cancers that are now known to be the most commonly mutated oncogenes in human cancer.  The author of more than 300 scientific publications, he is internationally recognized for his contributions to the understanding of RAS regulation of cellular growth and differentiation in normal and cancerous cells.  The Der Lab has the long-term goal of developing anti-RAS drugs for cancer treatment and was recently awarded several grants, including a Pancreatic Cancer Action Network – AACR Research Acceleration Network Grant, to support this effort.  Dr. Der is an active supporter of the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network, and members of the Der Lab recently participated in Purple Stride Raleigh-Durham under the team name of the Research RAScals.

Hedy Lee Kindler, MD, is Professor of Medicine, Medical Director of Gastrointestinal Oncology, and Director of the Mesothelioma Program at the University of Chicago. She is an internationally recognized cancer expert who specializes in the medical treatment of pancreatic cancer and malignant mesothelioma. Her research focuses on the investigation of novel agents for the treatment of these cancers, and she designs and leads many innovative clinical trials for patients with these diseases. She is widely published and has been invited to lecture at hundreds of scientific meetings around the world.  She directs pancreatic cancer research for the Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology, and is a member of the NCI Pancreatic Cancer Task Force.

Nipun Merchant, MD is currently the Alan S. Livingstone Endowed Professor of Surgery at the University of Miami Medical Center where he is the Vice Chair of Surgical Oncology Services and the Chief of the Division of Surgical Oncology in the Department of Surgery. He also serves as the Chief Surgical Officer and is the Director of Surgical Oncology Research of the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center. He is a recognized leader in the clinical management of hepato-pancreatico-biliary and neuroendocrine malignancies. Dr. Merchant has an active basic science and translational research laboratory investigating signal transduction and tumor-stromal interactions in pancreas cancer.  He is actively involved in clinical and translational research and serves as the principal investigator of several clinical trials in pancreas cancer. He is a member of the Pancreas Task Force of the National Cancer Institute, the Commission on Cancer and the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma Panel.  

To learn more about the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network, visit http://www.pancan.org. Follow the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network on TwitterInstagram or on Facebook.

About the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network
The Pancreatic Cancer Action Network is the national organization creating hope in a comprehensive way through research, patient support, community outreach and advocacy for a cure. The organization is leading the way to increase survival for people diagnosed with this devastating disease through a bold initiative — The Vision of Progress: Double Pancreatic Cancer Survival by 2020. Together, we can Wage Hope in the fight against pancreatic cancer by intensifying our efforts to heighten awareness, raise funds for comprehensive private research, and advocate for dedicated federal research to advance early diagnostics and better treatments and increase chances of survival.

Contact:
Jennifer Rosen
Senior Manager, Public Relations 
Pancreatic Cancer Action Network
Direct: 310-706-3362
Email: jrosen@pancan.org

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SOURCE Pancreatic Cancer Action Network

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CHARLOTTE, N.C., July 16, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — LendingTree, Inc. (NASDAQ: TREE) today announced that it will release its second quarter 2015 financial results after market-close on Monday, August 3, 2015.  The conference call will be held at 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time on the same day.  The company had previously planned to release earnings the following day on Tuesday, August 4. 

Those interested in participating in the conference call may dial in five minutes prior to the start. The call will be simultaneously webcast via the company’s website at http://investors.lendingtree.com/

Conference call                                                                      
Toll free #:  (877) 606-1416
(707) 287-9313 outside the United States/Canada

To listen to a replay of the call
Toll free #: (855) 859-2056
(404) 537-3406 outside the United States/Canada
Replay Passcode: 72680126

Replay will be available beginning at 8:00 p.m. Eastern Time on Monday, August 3 until 11:59 p.m. on Saturday, August 8, 2015.

About LendingTree, Inc.

LendingTree, Inc. (NASDAQ: TREE) operates the nation’s leading online loan marketplace and provides consumers with an array of online tools and information to help them find the best loan for their needs.  LendingTree’s online marketplace connects consumers with multiple lenders that compete for their business, empowering consumers as they comparison-shop across a full suite of loans and credit-based offerings.  Since inception, LendingTree has facilitated more than 55 million loan requests.  LendingTree provides consumers with access to lenders offering home loans, home equity loans/lines of credit, personal loans, auto loans, student loans and more.

LendingTree, Inc. is headquartered in Charlotte, NC and maintains operations solely in the United States. For more information, please visit www.lendingtree.com.

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SOURCE LendingTree, Inc.

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