EPA proposes tougher mileage standards for trucks

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration on Friday proposed tough new standards to improve fuel efficiency and reduce carbon dioxide pollution from trucks and vans, the latest move by President Barack Obama to address global warming.

The new rules are designed to slash heat-trapping carbon emissions by 24 percent by 2027 while reducing oil consumption by up to 1.8 billion barrels over the lifetime of the vehicles sold under the rule.

Medium and heavy-duty vehicles account for about 20 percent of greenhouse gas emissions and oil use in the U.S. transportation sector, polluting the air and contributing to climate change. The trucks and vans comprise only 5 percent of vehicles on the road.

The proposal comes amid a flurry of recent actions by Obama on the environment, including a new federal rule regulating small streams and wetlands and a separate rule to restrict greenhouse gas emissions from airplanes.

The administration also is expected to move forward this summer on its plan to curb carbon pollution from coal-fired power plants, a rule Republicans in Congress have vowed to stop.

The long-expected trucks rule comes one day after Pope Francis issued a teaching document calling for the world to take action to slow climate change.

Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said the new rules would help the environment and the economy, as trucks use less fuel and shipping costs go down. Foxx called the rules “good news all around.”

Gina McCarthy, chief of the Environmental Protection Agency, said the plan would deliver “big time” on Obama’s call to cut carbon pollution.

“With emission reductions weighing in at 1 billion tons, this proposal will save consumers, businesses and truck owners money,” McCarthy said. At the same time, the rules will “spur technology innovation and job-growth, while protecting Americans’ health and our environment over the long haul,” she said.

Under the new rule, a best-in-class, long-haul truck carrying 68,000 pounds of cargo is expected to get at least 10 miles per gallon, up from a range of 5 to 7 miles per gallon today, the EPA said. Vehicle owners would recoup costs associated with the rule within two years because of reduced fuel consumption, officials said.

Partly because of those expected savings, the truck rule appeared to generate less controversy than some of the previous regulations the EPA has issued on climate change, although the industry was still reviewing the proposal.

The American Trucking Association said industry generally supports the new rules, but remains concerned that it may result in use of technologies on vehicles before they can be fully tested. Trucks carry goods from produce to timber and oil, as well as packages from major companies such as Amazon, on highways across the country.

“Fuel is an enormous expense for our industry – and carbon emissions carry an enormous cost for our planet,” said ATA President and CEO Bill Graves. “That’s why our industry supported the Obama administration’s historic first round of greenhouse gas and fuel efficiency standards for medium and large trucks and why we support the aims of this second round of standards.”

Still, Graves and other officials said truck and engine manufacturers need time to develop solutions to meet the new standards.

The proposed standards would cover model years 2021-2027 and apply to semi-trucks, large pickup trucks and vans, and all types and sizes of buses and work trucks, officials said.

The National Automobile Dealers Association and American Truck Dealers blasted the rule, saying it would add an average of nearly $12,000 to the cost of a new truck.

“Recent history has shown that mandates with underestimated compliance costs result in substantially higher prices for commercial vehicles, and force fleet owners and operators to seek out less-expensive and less fuel-efficient alternatives in the marketplace,” the groups said in a statement.

The Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association of Grain Valley, Missouri, which counts 150,000 members, said it was concerned that the rules would “push truckers to purchase technology that is not fully tested and may lead to costs such as increased maintenance and down time that will eclipse the potential savings estimated in the proposal.”

Once completed, the rules are expected to lower carbon dioxide emissions by about 1 billion metric tons.

The rule builds on fuel efficiency and carbon pollution standards already in place for model years 2014-2018. Those rules are expected to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 270 million metric tons and save vehicle owners more than $50 billion in fuel costs, compared to previous standards.

Environmental groups cheered the new rule.

“Anyone who’s ever been stuck behind a truck or bus knows how much they pollute,” said Travis Madsen of Environment America, an advocacy group. “Making trucks go farther on a gallon of fuel can curb pollution, help save the planet and save money,” he said.

The proposed rules will be open to public comment for at least two months and would be completed next year.

___

Associated Press writer Tom Krisher in Detroit contributed to this report.

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Charleston shooting suspect captured in Shelby

Charleston mass murder suspect Dylann Roof remained jailed in Shelby on Thursday afternoon even as the process begins to return him to South Carolina.

The 21-year-old Lexington, S.C., resident was arrested just before 11 a.m. Thursday on the western edge of Shelby. Earlier in the morning, authorities say Roof used his ATM card at a gas station at Providence Road and Ballantyne Commons Parkway in Charlotte.

He was pulled over about five hours later and 50 miles away on U.S. 74 and Plato-Lee Road in Shelby, not far from Gardner-Webb University.

Shortly before 4 p.m., the slender Roof, wearing a white T-shirt and a bullet-proof vest, was led handcuffed from the Shelby Police Department to a waiting police car.

The FBI has identified Roof as the suspect in the Wednesday night slaughter of nine people in perhaps Charleston’s most historic African American church. The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Columbia confirmed Thursday that “an active hate crime investigation” is underway.

“The most important point is that the subject is now in custody; the immediate threat to the community does not exist,” said John Strong of Charlotte, head of FBI operations in North Carolina.

Shelby Police Chief Jeff Ledford said his department received a tip from Kings Mountain police that a black sedan resembling Roof’s car was seen heading west on U.S. 74.

The tip had been called in from Frady Florists in Kings Mountain where Debbie Dills spotted both the car and Roof’s distinctive bowl-shaped haircut, then called police, the Shelby Star reported.

“Since it happened I was praying for them and the church,” she said through tears, according to the paper. “I was in the right place at the right time that the Lord puts you.”

Shelby police pulled over Roof at 10:45 a.m., Ledford said, adding that Charleston police and the FBI were in the town “to work through the process of getting Dylann Roof back to South Carolina.”

It’s unclear why Roof drove to Charlotte. Authorities say he stopped to use an ATM just after dawn. WSOC-TV identified the location as a gas station at Providence Road and Ballantyne Commons Parkway. A worker at a Shell convenience store on that site declined to confirm Roof’s stop, saying she did not want to get into trouble by talking.

In Shelby, the suspect’s black sedan was parked a few feet into the driveway of a white bungalow at a busy intersection on U.S. 74, the main road through the foothills city and a popular route to the North Carolina mountains.

Elaine Elmore, who lives across the highway, said she knew something was wrong when she noticed Shelby police cars. She did not see Roof’s arrest.

“It’s scary to know that could happen right here,” she said, resting in a swing in her yard. “That would scare anybody, to know somebody that cold was right here. He could have come across the street and shot me sitting here.”

Jackie Sibley, a vice president of tourism for the Cleveland County Chamber of Commerce, drove up on the scene shortly after Roof’s arrest. She described her hometown police as “heroes.”

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Columbia says attorneys they are are working with the FBI and the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Justice Department in an “active hate crime investigation,” First Assistant U.S. Attorney Beth Drake told the Observer.

According to Roof’s Facebook page, the suspect in one of the bloodiest hate crimes on record attended White Knoll High School in Lexington, S.C., a predominantly white suburb of Columbia.

Roof was charged with first-offense drug possession in Lexington County in March, according to court records. The case status is listed as pending.

Nine people died following a shooting at Emanuel AME Church in downtown Charleston on Wednesday night.

Among the dead are S.C. state Sen. Clementa Pinckney, a pastor at Emanuel AME, and Cynthia Hurd, the sister of Malcolm Graham, a former N.C. senator from Charlotte.

Reporting from The Charlotte Observer and The (Columbia) State.

Full coverage

▪ Charleston shooting suspect captured in Shelby

▪ Shooting suspect from Columbia area

▪ Malcolm Graham’s sister was one of the Charleston shooting victims

▪ Qcitymetro.com: Shelby residents react to capture of suspect

▪ Charlotte’s black churches react, look to assess security after Charleston shooting

▪ What is known about the Charleston shooting

▪ Charlotte reacts to Charleston shooting on social media

▪ Police: Charleston shooter spent nearly an hour inside church praying with victims before opening fire

▪ Sen. Clementa Pinckney killed at his church in mass shooting

▪ Our view: Now, with Charleston, we mourn again

▪ Guest book: Post thoughts and condolences for Charleston victims

▪ Gallery: Charleston, SC shocked by killings at church

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Reopening church doors after shooting ‘sends a message’

CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church opened its tall, wooden doors to the world Sunday, embracing strangers who walked in from the street or tuned in from home for the first worship service since a white gunman was accused of killing nine black church members.

It was that same hospitality that allowed the suspected gunman to be welcomed into a Bible study for about an hour before he allegedly stood up, made racially offensive remarks and opened fire in the church known as “Mother Emanuel” because it is one of the oldest black congregations in the South.

“I was so pleased when authorities told us you can go back into ‘Mother Emanuel’ to worship,” said the Rev. Norvel Goff, a presiding elder of the 7th District AME Church in South Carolina, before adding a note of defiance to a service sprinkled with themes of love, recovery and healing.

“Some folks might need some more time in order to walk in. But for those of us who are here this morning … because the doors of Mother Emanuel are open on this Sunday, it sends a message to every demon in hell and on earth.”

The church’s air conditioning did little to fight the heat of extra bodies in the sanctuary. There was fervent singing and shouting, so much so that many congregants waved small fans in front of their faces.

Despite the heaviness in the air, many stood — some holding small children — to shout their praises or raise their hands toward the church’s vaulted ceiling. For added security, police officers stood watch over worshippers.

Some congregation members stood to applaud when Goff thanked law enforcement for their response to the shooting.

Goff was appointed to lead the historic Charleston church after Emanuel’s senior pastor, the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, was fatally shot during the massacre. A black sheet was draped over Pinckney’s usual chair, which sat empty. At least one parishioner kneeled down in front of it and prayed.

Pinckney was also a state senator and married father of two children. Goff acknowledged Father’s Day and said: “The only way evil can triumph is for good folks to sit down and do nothing.”

As Emanuel’s congregation belted out a gospel hymn, church bells rang throughout the “Holy City” —nicknamed because of the numerous churches here. Later Sunday, people were expected to gather on the Arthur Ravenel Bridge to join hands in solidarity.

The bridge is named after a former state lawmaker and vocal Confederate flag supporter. The slayings have renewed calls for the flag to be removed from the South Carolina Statehouse grounds, in part because photographs of Roof in a purported manifesto showed him holding Confederate flags. The 2,500-word manifesto also contained hate-filled writings.

Less than 2 miles from the church, someone vandalized a Confederate monument, spray-painting “Black Lives Matter” on the statue. City workers used a tarp to cover up the graffiti, police said.

Photos on local news websites from before the tarp was put up showed the graffiti in bright red paint, along with the message “This is the problem. # RACIST.”

Around the country, pastors asked people to pray for Charleston. In Atlanta’s 1st Iconium Baptist Church, a predominantly black church with a tradition of speaking out for social justice, the Rev. Timothy McDonald told his congregation Sunday that he had met Pinckney last April during a visit to Columbia, South Carolina, with a group of ministers.

“You talk about a promising young man,” he said, expressing shock at the manner of Pinckney’s death.

“How do you sit in a Bible Study next to a pastor for almost an hour and then you just stand up and shoot to kill? That kind of hate, that kind of evil – we need God y’all. We need Jesus,” McDonald said.

The tragedy resonated far beyond urban areas. Congregants at a small church in rural north-central Pennsylvania signed a condolence card to send to Emanuel. The Rev. Nancy Light Hardy of St. James United Church of Christ said she debated mailing the card, which seemed “pitiful and lame” when set against the “inconceivable” killings.

“But at least it lets the Charleston church know that Christians across the country are thinking about them,” she said.

The welcoming spirit Roof exploited before the shooting was still alive.

Gail Lincoln said she typically attends another AME church nearby, but felt compelled to visit Emanuel this week.

“Through all of this, God is still our refuge,” Lincoln said. “I’m still heartbroken, but it’s going to get better. I know it’s going to take time, day by day.”

As a further sign of resilience, the church’s Wednesday night Bible study is expected to continue as normal next week, said Emanuel member Harold Washington, 75.

“We didn’t change a thing,” he said.

___

Associated Press contributors include Mike Stewart, Don Schanche, David Goldman, Emily Masters, Allen Breed, Josh Replogle and John Mone.

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Latest on church shooting: Funeral set for Sen. Pinckney

9:45 p.m.

Funeral plans have been made for South Carolina state Sen. Clementa Pinckney, one of nine victims in the shooting massacre at a Charleston church.

A spokesman for Leevy’s Funeral Home in Columbia confirmed the details to The State newspaper (http://bit.ly/1Ckulu8).

Pinckney’s casket will be at the Statehouse for public viewing on Wednesday afternoon. Additional public viewings will be held Thursday at a Columbia church and at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, where Pinckney was shot.

The funeral is set for 11 a.m. Friday at TD Arena on the College of Charleston campus.

Dylann Roof is charged with nine counts of murder in the death of Pinckney and the other victims.

8:45 p.m.

Hundreds of protesters walked down the streets of Charleston, chanting “Black lives matter” and “We can’t take it no more.”

The peaceful march complied with police requests to reroute and ended as planned at the Daughters of the Confederacy building, where the group hung a banner with the names of the nine people shot to death in a massacre at a black church, Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal.

Among the speakers was the Rev. Waltrina Middleton, a cousin of the Rev. Middleton-Doctor, who was slain.

“My ancestors were trotted through this market, their bodies on the ground of this Meeting Street, this marketplace,” she said. “To know the trail of blood flows from here, it flows straight to Mother Emmanuel, it breaks my heart.”

7:45 p.m.

A large crowd rallied against the presence of the Confederate flag on the grounds of the South Carolina Statehouse, calling it a symbol of hatred, not heritage.

Police wouldn’t give an estimate for attendance at Saturday’s rally at the Statehouse in Columbia, but there appeared to be hundreds, if not thousands, of people.

They chanted “take it down” and ended the rally by singing “We Shall Overcome.” The rally lasted more than an hour and had several speakers.

The rally comes three days after the shooting deaths of nine people in a massacre at a black church in Charleston. Police say 21-year-old Dylann Roof, who is white, went to the church and joined a Bible study group, then opened fire.

7:10 p.m.

Hundreds of demonstrators are marching through downtown Charleston, holding signs that read: “Still We Rise” and “Stop White Terrorism.”

It’s at least the second march Saturday night. Police are blocking off streets as the protesters move around the city.

The marches are happening after a police say a young white man opened fire earlier this week in a racially motivated attack on a black church, killing nine parishioners.

Dylann Roof is in jail on nine counts of murder and a weapons charge.

6:40 p.m.

About 150 people are marching on the streets of Charleston to remember the nine people who were gunned down in a historic black church.

The demonstrators had to walk through a group of about two dozen black men yelling at them. The black men wore shirts that said “Israel United in Christ,” which the Southern Poverty Law Center has called a black supremacist group.

No problems were reported.

Marchers went on to sing together in front of the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church and later they prayed together.

Authorities say 21-year-old Dylann Roof fatally shot nine people inside the church on Wednesday night in a racially motivated attack. Roof is white.

3 p.m.

A group of congregation members met Saturday in the church room where days earlier nine people were killed when a man who had joined their Bible study allegedly opened fire.

Harold Washington says it was an emotional meeting.

Of the room where fellow parishioners were killed, Washington said: “They did a good job cleaning it up. There were a few bullet holes around, but … they cut them out so you don’t see the actual holes.”

Washington says he expects a packed, emotional service Sunday when the church reopens.

He said: “I think it’s gonna be a touching moment — a lot of crying, hugging.”

He also expects newcomers. He said: “We’re gonna have people come by that we’ve never seen before and will probably never see again, and that’s OK.

“It’s a church of the Lord – you don’t turn nobody down.”

2:55 p.m.

Two federal law enforcement officials say the FBI is investigating a website that appears to have photos of the Charleston church shooting suspect holding a Confederate flag along with a racist rant.

The purported manifesto was found on a website called LastRhodesian.com and surfaced Saturday. It’s unclear whether it was written by Dylann Roof, the man arrested in the killing of nine people inside the church Wednesday night. The writings are in line with what Roof has told friends and what he said before allegedly opening fire in the historic black church Wednesday night.

Two federal law enforcement officials said the FBI is aware of the website and is reviewing it. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because one was not authorized to speak publicly on the case and the other because the investigation is ongoing.

– Associated Press writers Meg Kinnard in Asheville, North Carolina, and Eric Tucker in Washington

1:50 p.m.

People are crowding the sidewalk, wiping sweat from their brows and tears from their eyes, as they listen to pastors from across the country speak outside “Mother” Emmanuel AME Church.

Two pastors from Oregon and New York asked the crowd to join hands and pray. The men stood together on a long step stool and spoke about how their common religion is more important than their race.

The Rev. Kyle Kneen, who is white, is a retired pastor from Florence, Oregon. Pastor Dimas Salaberrios, who is black, came to Charleston from Astoria, New York.

“I’m a follower of Jesus Christ. I’m an African-American second,” Salaberrios said. “God did not welcome me into the church just to hang out with black people.”

The church was the site of a shooting rampage on Wednesday night, leaving nine people dead.

1:40 p.m.

Congregation members say the historic black church where nine people were killed is going to re-open for Sunday morning service.

Cassie Watson said Saturday that the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal church will open at 8:30 a.m. for Sunday school and 9 a.m. for a service.

Watson was one of more than a dozen people to enter the building after a cleaning crew had worked on it. Other congregation members also confirmed the church would open Sunday.

Authorities say 21-year-old Dylann Roof fatally shot nine people at the church on Wednesday night.

1:10 p.m.

About six to 10 people trickled into the historic black church that was the scene of a deadly shooting rampage earlier this week.

Presumably congregation members, they came to Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church on Saturday through a parking lot that’s still closed to the public. Some of them then embraced before entering the church through a side door on the street, where cleaning crews had been working earlier in the day.

Authorities say 21-year-old Dylann Roof also entered the church through a side door on the street level on Wednesday night and stayed at a Bible study for about an hour before opening fire, killing nine people.

1 p.m.

Mitt Romney says it’s time to take down the Confederate flag that’s flying near the South Carolina Capitol.

The 2012 Republican presidential nominee tweets that the flag “is a symbol of racial hatred” to many people. His view: “Remove it now to honor” the nine victims of the church shooting in Charleston.

President Barack Obama has said he thinks the flag belongs in a museum.

South Carolina was the last state to fly the Confederate battle flag from its Capitol dome. In 2000, it was moved to a 30-foot flagpole in front of the Statehouse.

12:40 p.m.

Photographs that appear to show the Charleston church shooting suspect holding a Confederate flag and burning an American flag appear with a racist rant on a newly uncovered website.

The purported manifesto was found on a website called LastRhodesian.com and surfaced Saturday. It’s unclear if he wrote it but the writings are in line with what Roof has told friends and what he said before allegedly opening fire in the black church Wednesday night.

Internet registry records show that the website was registered on Feb. 9 via a Russian registry service — a common tactic use by those to obscure personal details or hide who is behind any particular website.

The 60 pictures include Roof holding a Confederate flag and a close-up of a .45-calibar pistol. He is accused of using a similar handgun in the church shooting.

The nearly 2,500-word essay starts the author saying they were not raised in a racist home, but concluded they needed to become violent after typing “black on White crime” into Google. The author says they chose Charleston because at one time it had the highest ratio of blacks to whites and white supremacist groups were not doing enough.

Charleston Police didn’t immediately respond to a message.

10:15 p.m.

The memorial in front of the black church is growing with bouquets of flowers, balloons and teddy bears.

On Saturday morning, a couple dozen people stood in front of the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, where police say a young white man opened fire at the end of a Bible study group and killed nine people on Wednesday night.

Roses are intertwined in the black wrought-iron fence in front of the church and colorful bouquets of flowers are piled on top of each other.

Authorities say 21-year-old Dylann Roof opened fire inside the church. He has been arrested and charged with nine counts of murder. He is currently being held in jail on a $1 million bond.

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Polk County People & Changes (June 21)

DENNIS BREWER is handling all estimating and sales for the service division. EMILY SPRINGER has joined the service department full time and will assist in marketing. With the start of its new fiscal year on July 1, Visit Florida, the state’s official tourism marketing corporation, has ushered in new leadership to serve on its executive committee, board of directors and industry committees. More than 220 Visit Florida partners, including some of the industry’s foremost experts, have been selected to represent the tourism industry for the upcoming term. Among them are three Polk County residents: MARK JACKSON, director for Visit Central Florida and a member of the Advertising Internet Committee; JONI ALLEN, of tourism industry sales for Visit Central Florida and a member of the meetings travel trade committee; and JUSTIN LAFERRIERE, visitor services manager for Visit Central Florida and a member of the Visitor Services Committee. DANIEL MEDINA was a featured speaker on June 11 in Orlando and June 12 in Tampa, at the NBI seminar Planning for Long Term Care. His presentation was Tax Implications of Long Term Care Planning and Advance Planning.

Industrial Plastic Systems (IPS) announced the recent addition of KIRK KUIPERS to the company’s executive team to help meet the needs of their rapid expansion. Kuipers was appointed as general manager. “He will ensure IPS’s new and existing clients receive the highest quality service for their FRP needs. Kuiper’s expertise is key to growing our business,” a spokesman said. Kuipers has more than 23 years of experience in FRP management, customer satisfaction, and quality assurance management. Before joining IPS, he was the general manager at Ershigs in Grand Bay, Ala., as well as general manager with Ershigs in Sarnia, Ontario, Canada. Oakley Transportation Group has announced the openings of new terminal locations in Savannah, Ga., Charlotte, N.C. and the Chicago area. The locations are in partnership with national chain Quala, which serves as the largest wash station in the United States serving the tanker industry. The expansion and new terminal locations are designed to support both customers and bulk tank professionals. In each location, Oakley staff will include a customer service manager, driver manager and serve as the hub for approximately 30 bulk tank professionals, and is hiring for all positions. Those interested in applying should visit OakleyLovesDrivers.com. Quala’s recent acquisition of PSC Container Services has positioned the company to better support its clients, including Oakley.

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Kannapolis considers municipal service district

Kannapolis buys more property

Kannapolis buys more property

The vacant K-Town Furniture building in Kannapolis. The City of Kannapolis is buying the property in a move to gain more control over the development of the downtown area.



Posted: Saturday, June 20, 2015 1:25 pm

Kannapolis considers municipal service district

By Michael Knox | mknox@independenttribune.com

The Independent Tribune

KANNAPOLIS, N.C. — In an effort to revitalize downtown and attract private investment, Kannapolis City Council is discussing the creation of a municipal service district.

Also known as a business improvement district, the effort would allow officials to pursue special obligation bonds for revitalization efforts and could eventually allow the city to generate additional tax revenue.

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Saturday, June 20, 2015 1:25 pm.

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BOC approves budget, lashes out at Senate’s sales tax plan

The
Dare County Board of Commissioners passed a $102 million budget for the
next fiscal year that requires no increase in property taxes at its
meeting on Wednesday, July 17.

And then the board members turned around and denounced  the N.C.
Senate’s budget plan, which would take $10 to $12 million in sales tax
revenue from future county budgets and cause the county to raise taxes
by as much as 8 cents or to drastically slash employees and programs.
 
The board instructed county manager Bobby Outten to craft a budget for
the fiscal year that begins July 1 that maintains but doesn’t expand
the current service level and works within existing revenue sources.

Under the proposal, Dare County’s property tax rate of 43 cents per $100 dollars of valuation remains the same.

The 2016 budget includes $3 million for the creation of  a new
special revenue fund that would provide the local match for state and
federal funds for inlet maintenance. Under the budget plan,  $1.25
million of that will come from anticipated surplus from the current
budget year, $1 million will be transferred from the beach nourishment
fund, and $750,000 will come from the anticipated sale of the old EMS
helicopter.

Under pressure from the county Board of Education and citizens who
spoke at a June 1 public hearing, the commissioners found another
$400,000 in the budget — without increasing it — to partially fund an
anticipated $514,000 increase in salaries for starting teachers
mandated by the General Assembly.

With the budget out of the way, board Chairman Bob Woodard turned the
conversation to the effort in Raleigh, led by Sen. Harry Brown, a
Republican from Onslow County, to change the way the state distributes
sales taxes to the counties.

The current formula distributes sales tax based 75 percent on point of
sale and 25 percent on population.  Under the changes, a new
formula would be phased in over four years based 80 percent on
population and 20 percent on point of sale.

Brown has said that the plan will benefit poor, rural counties whose residents travel to larger urban centers to shop.

However, it would hurt Dare County, which has a relatively small
year-round population of 35,000 but whose population swells during the
tourist season. Visitors spend money in the county, and a portion of
the money is returned to the county — as the point of sale — in order
to fund the additional services and infrastructure needed to
accommodate tourists.

Woodard read a letter that he had drafted on behalf of the board to
Sen. Phil Berger, Senate President Pro Tempore, in which he condemned
the attempt to redistribute the sales tax revenue.

“Our Board is vehemently opposed to the proposals that are being
discussed by the Legislature,” the letter says. “These misguided
efforts have been incorrectly titled as ‘Tax Fairness Acts’ and ‘Simple
and Fair’ plans, when in fact they are neither simple nor fair.”

The plan, he wrote, would have a “disastrous” and “debilitating” effect
on Dare County by taking away $10 to $12 million from the general fund
— more than 10 percent. This, Woodward writes, would cause a major
reduction of essential services or a “walloping” ad valorem tax
increase.

“Let there be no doubt, either of these would create a budgetary
tsunami that would ripple throughout North Carolina’s Outer Banks
ruining our families, small businesses, and
communities,” the letter reads.

Woodard notes that over the last 10 years, county officials calculate
that Dare has contributed more than $80 million in sales tax revenue
and has been able to do so because of tourism, which brings about
300,000 visitors in the summer months.

“It is these out-of-state visitors that generate the sales taxes
collected by Dare County, which have been generously shared with other
counties and municipalities,” the letter says.

“As one of America’s premier tourism destinations, Dare County has been
able to attract millions of people to North Carolina each year,” the
letter continues. “While North Carolina benefits from the dollars these
visitors bring, it is Dare County that is left with the responsibility
to fund water plants and provide law enforcement, fire protection,
emergency medical services, and other visitor driven needs.”

The proposal would “unfairly punish counties” such as Dare that depend
on tourism and threaten “core conservative values that are needed to
promote and sustain a business-friendly, free market economy throughout
North Carolina.”

The board unanimously passed a motion to send the letter to Berger.

However, this morning, the Senate passed its budget, which includes the sales tax redistribution plan.

“It’s not too late to stop this destructive plan for Dare County,” Woodard said this morning in a statement.

The Senate budget now moves to a conference committee and then must be
approved by the House of Representatives. Woodard urged all who are
concerned to contact state leaders to object to the sales tax
redistribution plan. Dare County is represented by Sen. Bill Cook and
Rep. Paul Tine. Contact information for every legislator can be found
at www.ncleg.net.

In other action, the commissioners:

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Leonard Pitts Jr.: Charleston’s tragedy is not a surprise

Local News

City of Anna Maria hopes new enforcement officers alleviate parking violations

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Charleston deaths renew calls to take down Confederate flag

Some lawmakers have renewed calls to remove the Confederate flag from the Statehouse grounds after the U.S. and South Carolina flags were lowered at the dome this week out of respect for the Charleston shooting victims – while the battle flag remained in place.

“My sentiment would be that it be lowered and never put back up,” said Rep. Todd Rutherford, leader of House Democrats. “We can’t continue to hang symbols in front of our Statehouse and act like nobody is looking.”

The state cannot pretend symbols and words don’t mean anything, Rutherford said, because people like the man charged with shooting the nine in Charleston “don’t seem to know the difference.”

The battle flag has flown at the Confederate Soldier Monument on the north side of the Statehouse just steps from Main Street in Columbia since a compromise by lawmakers removed it from atop the Statehouse dome in 2000.

Because of the compromise, the Confederate flag does not operate as other flags at the Statehouse, said Sen. Larry Martin, a Pickens Republican and chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. The battle flag is considered a monument and not governed by the law dealing with other flags.

“The flag that was placed at the Confederate soldier’s monument is not included because it is not part of the officially recognized display of flags, which reflect the sovereignty of the state,” he said Friday.

“In that respect, it is to be treated no differently than the flags at another monument, such as the U.S. veterans monument on the Statehouse grounds where the flags of the different branches of services are located,” Martin said. “At this monument, the service flags are flying full, and only the U.S. flag is at half-mast.”

Mechanically, it would be difficult to fly the battle flag at half-staff because there is no rope and pulley system as is the case with most flags.

The NAACP, which has long called for the flag’s removal from the Statehouse grounds, has urged a tourism boycott of the state since the 2000 compromise moved the flag’s location.

“The flag must come down,” William Cornell Brooks, president and CEO of the NAACP, said on Friday during a visit to Charleston. He said the shootings at the Emanuel AME Church were “the act of a racial terrorist and must be treated as such.”

The 21-year-old charged in connection with the shootings, Dylann Storm Roof, is depicted in a photo on his Facebook page wearing a jacket adorned with white supremacy and apartheid-era patches. He also had a Confederate flag license plate.

Rutherford plans to file legislation to remove the flag from the Statehouse grounds, something that according to the compromise legislation would take a two-thirds vote in each body.

Rep. Leon Howard, a Columbia Democrat and former chairman of the Legislative Black Caucus, said the flag issue isn’t as important as helping family members of the victims, including Sen. Clementa Pinckney.

“When all of this is over, nobody will remember whether the battle flag was raised or lowered,” he said.

Rep. Leola Robinson-Simpson, a Greenville Democrat, says it is time to remove the flag from the Statehouse grounds.

“This recent event presents a wonderful opportunity for us to present a more positive image of the state, one that would endear all of our young people to this state, instead of sending a mixed message to some of our young people who may be somewhat vulnerable,” she said.

She said the flag means “many things to many people.”

“To some it’s a part of their proud heritage. But to others it may be a symbol of shame and degradation,” she said. “So while some may have ancestors who fought for the Confederacy and they may have good reasons to keep it there, if it’s presence on the site of government sends a mixed message to our youth, then I think it’s incumbent on us to revisit the issue and remove it.”

Other states, including Mississippi, have removed the Confederate flag, she said, and doing so “moves us from the past to a present that will send a message to our young people that will be respectful and tolerant of all South Carolinians.”

“If that had been present in the first place,” Robinson-Simpson said, “a lot of our young people who might be leaning toward that type of bigotry would not be drawn to that direction.”

A petition has gathered 83,235 signatures on MoveOn.org calling for the flag to come down from “all government places.”

“The Confederate flag is not a symbol of Southern pride but rather a symbol of rebellion and racism,” the petition states. “On the heels of the brutal killing of nine black people in a South Carolina church by a racist terrorist, it’s time to put that symbol of rebellion and racism behind us and move toward healing and a better United States of America!”

The petition is seeking a goal of 100,000 signatures.

Rutherford also plans to file legislation “to tell the truth” about Statehouse monuments, such as the monument for former Gov. Ben Tillman, an unapologetic racist politician and founding trustee of Clemson University who served as South Carolina governor when the school was chartered.

Students and faculty at Clemson have called for the renaming of Tillman Hall because of Tillman’s past.

“On his statue it says simply, a great American,” Rutherford said. “It’s time for South Carolina to tell the truth and stop living in the past.”

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Mayfaire Acquired by One of America’s Largest Mall REITs








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WILMINGTON, N.C., June 18, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — The Mayfaire Town Center and Mayfaire Community Center have been acquired by CBL Associates Properties, Inc., a publicly traded real estate investment trust (REIT) based in Chattanooga, TN.

The sale, which closed June 18, is not expected to result in immediate changes that will be noticed by consumers. However, Hyman Brody, CEO of BrodyCo, Inc., who co-manages, along with Jeff Zimmer, the eastern N.C. investor group that developed Mayfaire, said that CBL is a well-known operator of upscale town centers and properties, and has the experience, contacts and capital to take Mayfaire to a new level.

Once a horse farm, Mayfaire Town Center and Mayfaire Community Center have become one of North Carolina’s premier shopping and leisure destinations. “We’ve completed all but one phase in the development of Mayfaire and have accomplished what we set out to achieve,” Brody said. “As successful as Mayfaire has been, we think it would benefit from fresh thinking and new ownership to take it to the next level. CBL was the right buyer at the right time. We believe the future of Mayfaire is bright.”

“We are excited to add Mayfaire Town Center to the CBL portfolio,” said Stephen D. Lebovitz, CBL’s president and chief executive officer.  “The Brody and Zimmer families have done a tremendous job of building Mayfaire into the preeminent retail destination in the three-county area. The mixed use complex has become a central part of the growing and dynamic Wilmington community.  Customers visit for the great stores, restaurants, entertainment options and for the enjoyable experience.  With our strong network of retail relationships, we see numerous opportunities to elevate this experience even further, delivering more of the premier brands and restaurants that residents and tourists have come to expect from the center.  Mayfaire will also enjoy a synergistic relationship with our other assets in the Carolinas, primarily Friendly Center in Greensboro, NC, one of our most successful properties generating strong growth and consistent demand from high quality retailers, including the recently opened Lululemon store.  We expect similar success from Mayfaire Town Center and are pleased to join the Wilmington community.”

CBL is one of the largest shopping mall real estate investment trusts in the country, with more than 140 properties, including 90 malls and open-air centers. In addition to Friendly Center, N.C. developments include: Cross Creek Mall in Fayetteville, Cary Towne Center and Triangle Town Center in Raleigh. CBL knows the Southeast and has extensive contacts in the retail industry, Brody said.

The original Mayfaire ownership continues to believe in the Wilmington market and will focus on the existing Mayfaire office park and the 40 acres it recently purchased adjacent to Mayfaire. “We are extremely proud of Mayfaire, which has brought a new level of retail choice to the Wilmington market,” Brody said. “We have a special team of associates that has helped make this project successful. Mayfaire has enjoyed good relationships with the city and county governments, and it has positively added to the tax and employment base without requesting any special incentives.”

Mayfaire, the 400-acre mixed-use development, has been referred to as “the new downtown” and “the rising star of commerce” as this property continues to flourish after more than a decade since its inception.   The property includes approximately one million square feet of retail including Belk’s, Regal Cinemas, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Barnes Noble, J. Crew, Pottery Barn and Williams-Sonoma.  The development also partnered with several leading developers to attract two hotels (Hilton Garden Inn and Homewood Suites), an office complex and over 700 residential units to the project.

Savills Studley, a New York-based investment capital markets group that specializes in real estate, represented the Seller on the transaction.  Jerome R. Eatman of Lynch Eatman of Raleigh, N.C. completed the legal closing on behalf of the Seller. 

Mayfaire Town Center is a result of the partnership of Hyman Brody and Robert Beller of BrodyCo, Inc., based in Greenville, NC, and Herbert, Alan, Arlene (Schreiber) and Jeffery Zimmer of the Wilmington, NC-based Zimmer Development Company.

CONTACT:  Hyman Brody
252-353-2141 x 17 

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SOURCE BrodyCo, Inc.



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