Jeb Bush, Bernie Sanders to visit NC this week

RALEIGH, N.C. (WNCN) – The 2016 presidential election is still more than a year away, but the campaign is in full swing and North Carolina will have two of the top candidates from each party in the state this week.

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush is scheduled to be in Garner at Morris Associates Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. to discuss his economic plan.

AP Photo - Troy Wayrynen (Sanders)//AP Photo - Mark Wallheiser (Bush)
CLICK TO SEE THE MOST RECENT NBC/MARIST POLL

Vermont U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders will visit the Tar Heel state on Sunday evening at 7 p.m. when he holds a rally at the Greensboro Coliseum Complex.

Bush has been struggling in recent polling for the Republican presidential nomination. Bush is in third place in Iowa, 23 points behind frontrunner Donald Trump. Bush is polling in fourth place in New Hampshire where he’s 20 points behind top choice Trump.

In an Aug. 19 poll by Public Policy Polling, Trump led North Carolina at 24 percent, with 14 percent for Dr. Ben Carson and 13 percent for Bush.

As for the Democratic presidential polling, Sen. Bernie Sanders has jumped ahead to a 9-point lead over Hillary Clinton in polling out of New Hampshire and has reduced his deficit in Iowa from 24 points in July to just 11 points, according to a recent NBC/Marist poll.

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Latest North Carolina sports

BEARS-PANTHERS-ALLEN TRADE

Panthers acquire DE Jared Allen in trade with Bears

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) – The Carolina Panthers say they’ve acquired veteran defensive end Jared Allen from the Chicago Bears in exchange for a future late-round draft pick.

The trade will become official once Allen passes a physical, team spokesman Steven Drummond told The Associated Press.

FoxSports first reported the trade.

The Panthers felt the move was necessitated after their top pass rusher Charles Johnson went down with a hamstring injury in Sunday’s 27-22 win over the New Orleans Saints.

The Panthers lost their other top pass rusher Greg Hardy this past offseason when he signed with the Dallas Cowboys as a free agent.

Allen has 134 career sacks during his 12 seasons, but his sack production has slowed since joining the Chicago Bears and their 3-4 defense last season. He’ll play in a more familiar 4-3 scheme with Carolina.

PANTHERS-INJURIES

Panthers DE Johnson to miss Bucs game with hamstring injury

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) – Carolina Panthers coach Ron Rivera says defensive end Charles Johnson will not play Sunday against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, leaving the team without its top pass rusher.

Johnson re-injured his right hamstring in the fourth quarter of Carolina’s 27-22 win Sunday over the New Orleans Saints. Rivera said Monday he doesn’t know the full extent of the injury, but hopes Johnson can return after the Week 5 bye.

Middle linebacker Luke Kuechly has made solid progression in the concussion protocol could return to work this week after missing the last two games, according to Rivera.

The fifth-year coach also said wide receiver Jerricho Cotchery will “probably” miss his second straight game against the Bucs with a high ankle sprain, but that running back Jonathan Stewart (leg) is expected to play.

NORTH CAROLINA-WILLIAMS

Williams remains starting QB for UNC against Georgia Tech

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) – Marquise Williams is once again listed as the starting quarterback for North Carolina.

Mitch Trubisky remains his backup on the depth chart released Monday ahead of this week’s visit to Georgia Tech.

Coach Larry Fedora says, “I don’t want to start some type of controversy because there’s not” one.

Williams, a senior who set 18 school records last season, did not play during the second half of a 41-14 victory over Delaware last week.

Trubisky took over during the final possession of the first half for the Tar Heels (3-1) and finished 17 of 20 for 312 yards with four touchdowns.

Fedora says he switched quarterbacks because he “was looking for a spark offensively” and that as Trubisky “got rolling, he got hot.”

T25-FLORIDA ST-FISHER

Florida State coach: RB Pender out with collapsed lung

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) – Florida State running back Mario Pender will miss Saturday’s game at Wake Forest due to a collapsed lung suffered at practice last week.

Coach Jimbo Fisher said on Monday that Pender remained hospitalized and could be released later in the day.

In three games for the 11th-ranked Seminoles (3-0 overall, 1-0 Atlantic Coast Conference), Pender has 140 yards on 30 carries and a touchdown. Dalvin Cook is Florida State’s primary back and leads the ACC in rushing with 476 yards and is averaging 7.4 yards per carry.

Jacques Patrick or Johnathan Vickers will get carries with Pender out.

Pender, a junior, has struggled with injuries. He missed the 2012 season due to a groin injury and missed five games last year due to a concussion and ankle injury.

GLF-HARBOUR TOWN-RE-OPEN

Harbour Town re-opens after renovation

HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. (AP) – The home of the PGA Tour’s RBC Heritage tournament has reopened after $3.5 million of improvements this summer.

Harbour Town Golf Links closed in early May and re-opened to the public Monday. The course underwent several enhancements, including re-grassing of the tee boxes, fairways and rough with Celebration Bermuda turf. The greens at Harbour Town were also resurfaced with Tif-Eagle Bermuda, which been used since 2001.

There was also a new irrigation system installed.

Sea Pines vice president of sports and operations Cary Corbitt said the changes mean faster, firmer surfaces for patrons and PGA Tour members.

The RBC Heritage takes place April 14-17.

Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Thunder Road Wine Trail brings wine tourism to Union County



A wine trail in Union County will bring a new side of tourism to the area.


MAYNARDVILLE, Tenn. (WVLT) — It’s been a decade in the making, and Union County is finally seeing its first winery.

It’s just a small part of an even bigger plan to bring some major tourism dollars into rural East Tennessee.

Nikki Riddle owns the Winery at Seven Springs Farm.

“My aunt and uncle planted a vineyard out in Blaine. We used to make wine in the garage and it was so much fun,” said Riddle.

Now, she’s running a brand new winery with five acres of vineyards in Maynardville.

“You know, you just come out at the crack of dawn and just pick until it’s done,” she said.

Her brother James grows other crops on the farm.

“There’s four of us. My mom, dad my sister and me. My sister owns the winery, my dad does the crafting and my mom helps me with the farmer’s market.”

Together they have Seven Springs Farm. Bought by the Riddles 10 years ago they make wine, raise cattle and grow several different fruits and vegetables.

“The property came up and it was a dream come true,” said James.

Every building on the property is built from wood found on the farm.

Now, they’re opening the winery for the first time and along with it a wine trail called the Thunder Road Wine Trail.

“Since we’re on Thunder Road we thought that would be a good idea,” said Rick Riddle, founder of the trail.

Just like the Thunder Road movie, this trail is stacked around where the movie took place. It features 6 different wineries starting in Knoxville and going all the way to the North Carolina border.

“Tourism is a very important industry to Tennessee, but we see a lot of that focused on Nashville, focused on Gatlinburg and Sevierville. What we want to do is focus some of that in rural Appalachia,” said Rick.

“It’s a good ways. It’s take about three days to complete the trail,” he said.

For these winemakers, they’re out in their vineyards working every day of the year and each vintner has a unique style.

This hard work is for more than just wine. They’re hoping to change tourism in Tennessee.

“It exposes you to some of what we think is the best rural Tennessee and rural Appalachia,” said Rick.

“You do something different everyday so it’s really fun,” said Nikki.

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PGAV Hired to Evaluate American Indian Cultural Center and Museum Zone

As the State of Oklahoma and Oklahoma City negotiate the future of the under-construction American Indian Cultural Center and Museum and its land, the City has retained St. Louis consulting and design firm PGAV to evaluate options for the future of the property.

 

“We enjoyed working with the City officials and City staff on the Bricktown assignment and are pleased to see the successful development that occurred as a result of that work and the City’s vision,” said John Brancaglione, vice president at PGAV and consulting team lead. “This project presents an array of challenges in assisting the City with the critical decisions it must make, and we’re eager to help the City take on those challenges.”

 

PGAV serves as a powerful and unique ally in analyzing the future of the property, both in terms of its regional economic influence as well as potential future uses for the facility and grounds. The firm brings five decades of successful experience in economic development strategy for communities around the world and regionally, such as the Missouri DREAM project and the City of Chicago. In addition, PGAV has designed and consulted for hundreds of individual museums, zoos, aquariums, resorts, and theme parks across the globe, such as Space Shuttle Atlantis at the Kennedy Space Center, Table Rock Welcome Center at Niagara Falls, and the Georgia Aquarium.

 

Over the course of the next three months, PGAV will be meeting with key City officials and evaluating the existing facility and surrounding area to develop specific recommendations relative to the viability of its future commercial development. The team will be analyzing the ability of future development to support required infrastructure and site preparation work, contribute to operations of the Center, and to generate additional capital costs necessary to complete the Center.

 

PGAV will be developing recommendations that can help the area succeed commercially given either of two potential outcomes: the completion and opening of the fully operational museum and cultural center, or the adaptive reuse of the existing structure and grounds.

 

“Over the course of our five decades of practice, PGAV has addressed numerous regional economic development opportunities across the country,” said Brancaglione. “In Oklahoma City, we previously helped analyze and recommend strategies for 25 acres of Bricktown located in Downtown.” PGAV has additionally conducted similar studies for Patriot’s Point near Charleston, South Carolina; the Buncombe Tourism Development Authority in Asheville, NC; and St. Johns County in Florida. PGAV has conducted development strategy and economic analysis assignments throughout the country including more than 20 separate locations throughout the City of Chicago and in Australia and New Zealand.

 

PGAV will be presenting its study and recommendations to Oklahoma City this December.

 

About PGAV
PGAV is a global leader in the planning and design of unique destinations, celebrating success in creating and renewing beautiful, memorable, and sustainable places. Now in its fifth decade, the practice has evolved to become the ideal destination-consulting partner, skilled at developing growth-oriented master plans and translating those plans into successful projects. No other firm offers such an integrated approach to destination planning. 

 

PGAV Planners has performed analyses of historic trends and projections of sales taxes, real property taxes and taxes associated with various types of tax increment financing districts and other special taxing districts in support of bond financings and refundings throughout the country. Recent locations where PGAV has been involved with financial feasibility analyses include Wichita, Kansas; St. Louis, Missouri; Columbus, Ohio; Chicago, Illinois; Memphis, Tennessee; Omaha, Nebraska; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; Naples, Florida; and Champaign County, Illinois. PGAV Destination’s key clients include industry leaders such as Delaware North Companies, SeaWorld Parks and Entertainment, the Biltmore Companies, Bass Pro Shops, Ameristar Casinos, Universal Studios, The Gettysburg Foundation, the Saint Louis Zoo, and many others. Recent assignments include planning and design at many of the world’s “must see” destinations, including the Grand Canyon, Biltmore Estate, Space Shuttle Atlantis, Chimelong Ocean Kingdom, the Georgia Aquarium, the Hoover Dam, and SeaWorld Adventure Parks.  www.PGAVDestinations.com

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Local government restrictions added to sex ed bill

— House members upset with a late addition to a sex education bill that would pre-empt local ordinances on everything from minimum wage to requiring businesses to serve same-sex couples on Tuesday beat back an effort for quick approval of the revised legislation.

The House voted 66-47 to send Senate Bill 279 back to the House Rules Committee, but it could return to the House floor before lawmakers wrap up their 2015 session.

The House overwhelmingly passed the bill two weeks ago, but the Senate didn’t go along with the sex ed language the House inserted into the bill at the time. The House version of the bill would have allowed more types of experts to design and approve sex ed materials for North Carolina schools and added sex trafficking to the sex ed curriculum in middle schools.

A group of House members and senators then created a compromise bill that included both sex ed provisions as well as the local pre-emption sections, which haven’t been part of any bills filed in either the House or the Senate this session. The General Assembly usually requires that such compromise legislation include only material that was passed by either the House or the Senate.

After about a half-hour of debate on the House floor Tuesday afternoon, Rep. Darren Jackson, D-Wake, asked that the bill be sent back to the House Rules Committee because the new provisions hadn’t gone through any legislative review.

Rep. John Blust, R-Guilford, wholeheartedly backed Jackson’s request, saying any policy questions on pre-empting local ordinances was overshadowed by the way in which they were inserted into an unrelated bill to bypass committee approval.

“Why do we have committees? Why do we even go through the charade … when it can be bypassed so easily?” Blust asked.

As written, the compromise bill would preclude cities or counties from adopting ordinances related to wage levels, leave or other benefits, which would outlaw the push for “living wage” rules in cities such as Durham, Chapel Hill and Asheville.

It also would prohibit local ordinances or resolutions regarding “housing practices” and landlord and tenant rights, which could endanger efforts in various cities to require developers to include affordable housing in new projects. Rep. Paul Stam, R-Wake, said it wouldn’t affect federal housing non-discrimination regulations.

Another provision of the conference report would prevent cities or counties from “mandat(ing) or prohibit(ing) the provision of goods, services, or accommodation to any member of the public by nongovernmental businesses.”

Similar restrictions elsewhere have come as “religious freedom” rules giving businesses where the owners or employees object to same-sex marriage the right to refuse service to gay couples. Although such bills were filed in North Carolina this spring, they have sat untouched in committees since April, when legislative leaders said they wouldn’t push such restrictions.

Stam, who was the lead House negotiator for the conference report, said that the Senate wanted the pre-emptive sections added and that he agreed to it because the state has an interest in having “a common market and not hav(ing) 635 different ways of doing business.”

He cited as an example that some towns have been trying to require developers to commit to certain design standards to gain zoning approval to get around a state law passed in June that precludes local officials from setting aesthetic standards on new houses.

“We are having too many local government trying to get around the intent of the General Assembly,” he said.

But Julie White, executive director of the North Carolina Metropolitan Mayors Coalition, said the provisions need more review and shouldn’t come out of nowhere in the closing days of the legislative session.

“We have faith that the General Assembly will remember that these new provisions have not had the opportunity to be vetted, nor has local government had the opportunity to weigh in, good or bad,” White said in an email to WRAL News. “Adding new provisions to a conference report in the late hours of an eight-month session doesn’t allow for a full vetting of the ideas and possible unintended consequences.”

Raleigh Mayor Nancy McFarlane also criticized the process, saying city leaders didn’t get their usual “seat at the table” to discuss the bill with lawmakers.

“There was really no process for this,” McFarlane said. “As mayors and municipal government, we’re just now reading (the bill) and trying to figure out the real impacts are on us.”

Chris Sgro, executive director of Equality NC, said the legislation would wipe out ordinances in Wake, Durham, Orange, Buncombe and Mecklenburg counties and in Chapel Hill, Carrboro, Asheville and Boone that protect LBGT residents.

“Once again, this General Assembly is taking on local governments for making strides to improve the lives of North Carolinians,” Sgro said in a statement.

Sen. Chad Barefoot, R-Wake, who was the Senate’s chief negotiator on the conference report, said the new provisions are “really straightforward” and not “all that sweeping.” He said he doesn’t believe the bill would invite businesses to discriminate against same-sex couples.

“It deals specifically with what cities can tell businesses they have to do,” Barefoot said.

Governments can adopt rules and regulations with regard to their own property and employees, he said, but can’t impose greater restrictions on businesses. He said the provisions would create “a uniform system of commerce” statewide.

Sarah Preston, acting executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of North Carolina, said local ordinances usually have popular support and are seen by cities and counties as a way to demonstrate that they are inclusive in order to compete for new business and jobs.

“The General Assembly has no business interfering in local decisions to protect residents from discrimination,” Preston said in a statement. “This shameful bill would remove that local control and hurt our state’s reputation by sending a message that North Carolina sanctions intolerance and discrimination.”

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Conterra Broadband to Provide Judson Independent School District 10 Gigabit …



CHARLOTTE, N.C. and SAN ANTONIO, Sept. 29, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Conterra Broadband Services, a national provider of optical fiber-based Ethernet solutions, has been awarded a multi-year contract to deploy a private optical fiber based WAN network infrastructure to support Internet access, data, video and Voice over IP (VoIP) transport services for the Judson Independent School District (“JISD”). The all fiber network will connect the district’s schools and administrative facilities with multiple network hub sites.



When completed, the fiber optical network will provide 10 gigabit symmetrical connectivity to each school location and is scalable to 100 gigabits per location with no supplementary construction. 


According to Steve Young the JISD Chief Technology Officer, “With our accelerated video program applications including our cloud-based environment to support our one-to-one tablet initiative and other emerging technologies, a fast, secure and reliable wide area network is essential for our curriculum.” Mr. Young added, “Conterra Broadband will provide us with a highly-reliable, scalable, private WAN that will deliver dedicated 10 Gbps to every JISD location. In our current cloud-based environment this is essential for student learning.” 



Conterra’s EVP of Sales and Marketing, Greg Spraetz, cited, “We are very excited about this award to support the JISD and appreciate their confidence in our ability to execute and deliver a world class fiber based network.  It underscores our continued commitment to offer school districts custom network solutions based on their individual technical requirements and long term planning that support the exponential surge of bandwidth demand in the education sector.”



Conterra’s fiber broadband networks support the convergence of integrated data, video and voice services, from potentially multiple providers, onto a single network platform resulting in an overall enhancement to network and applications performance.  Conterra monitors, maintains and supports its networks on a 24x7x365 basis and guarantees network performance and reliability.



About Conterra Broadband Services



Conterra Broadband Services, headquartered in Charlotte, NC, is a national provider of fiber-based, carrier grade, telecommunications solutions for schools, healthcare, telecom carriers, Wireless service providers, municipalities, and select enterprises that require bandwidth intensive carrier-grade services.  Conterra, and its subsidiaries, currently provide these services to over 3,000 locations throughout the United States. For more information about Conterra, visit www.conterra.com or call: 800-634-1374.



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SOURCE Conterra Broadband Services

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North Carolina Hawaii Club celebrates 10 years with annual lu’au

Pat Anderson doubted a potluck dinner could soothe her heart’s longing for Hawaii, but her daughter was ready to try anything to help her mother adjust to life half a world away from paradise.

So her daughter bought a ticket to see international ukulele sensation Jake Shimabukuro in downtown Raleigh and set up a table outside the show with a sign-up sheet for a potluck. Anyone who missed Hawaii was invited to put their name down and bring a dish.

That first event drew 45 homesick island lovers, and the group has grown steadily ever since. Earlier this month, The Hawaii Club of North Carolina, Ka Pu’uwai ‘O Hawai’i, hosted its 10th annual luau, complete with a whole pig cooked in traditional Hawaiian style – wrapped in banana leaves and damp burlap and buried overnight in an imu, a shallow pit oven, atop glowing coals and lava rocks. The unearthing and unwrapping of the steaming hog anchored a day of feasting, hula dancing and aloha for a crowd of about 150 gathered in the spacious Garner backyard of long-time Hawaii club members Brian and Carolyn McKay.

Two long rows of tables bore the pulled pig along with an array of traditional Hawaiian favorites. The pork was as tender as any North Carolina pit-cooked barbecue, but wore a sprinkling of sea salt in place of sauce. The meat, infused with the smoky flavor of the banana leaves, was well accompanied by the mild pudding-like Hawaiian favorite poi.

Side dishes included noodle salads; laulau, which is chicken, fish, pork fat and spinach wrapped in banana leaves then steamed; lomi salmon, a combination of finely chopped fish and vegetables reminiscent of ceviche; as well as Spam sushi, Spam kebabs and a lush coconut cake. Interspersed among those dishes were the usual potluck suspects – baked beans, meatballs, taco dip, pasta salad, baked macaroni-and-cheese and apple pie.

The point of the feast wasn’t to flawlessly re-create a Hawaiian luau, but to cultivate aloha – the spirit of Hawaii – for those who miss it, many of them as much as Pat Anderson did.

Longing for home

Anderson relocated to Raleigh in 2004 after 32 years in Hawaii. As a 26-year-old newlywed from Los Angeles, she moved to Kaua’i and later to Honolulu. Over the decades of raising their family there, Pat and her husband saw the number of Hawaii’s pineapple and sugar farms dwindle as more and more land was sold for resort and residential development. Meanwhile, middle-class job numbers shrank and the cost of island living rose. By the time her own children were old enough to settle down, Hawaii was no longer an affordable option for their family. So, they found their way to Raleigh, and Pat did, too.

“At first, I was just so homesick I was going to get on a plane and go home,” she said.

Nothing felt familiar. The problem was more than getting used to North Carolina’s subtly charming terrain after experiencing Hawaii’s spectacular beauty. Pat missed the people, too.

“Hawaii is a very multicultural place,” she said. “You have a much broader range of cultural activities.”

In the middle of the Pacific Ocean, some 2,400 miles from San Francisco, Hawaii is the most isolated patch of thriving civilization on Earth. Japan is 3,800 miles away and the Philippines more than 5,000. But cultural forces from these and many other locales converge on the tiny archipelago to create a unique melting pot. Hawaiian cultural history is so much more than the popular shorthand references of Spam and hula familiar to most Americans.

That’s not to discount the importance of Spam or hula. Among the most popular dishes at the lu’au was the Spam sushi or musubi. At the heart of each piece is a hunk of Spam that has been fried in a glaze of soy sauce and sugar. It’s then sprinkled with furikake, a Japanese spice rub, wrapped in sushi rice and held together with nori. Every Spam lover seems to have a recipe for it, and every incarnation I tried was extremely satisfying – meaty, salty, chewy. All good.

Even more diverse than the Spam sushi recipes were the hulas. Women of every age – and a couple of men – danced the hula at the Hawaii Club’s lu’au, beginning with a quartet who swayed a memorial to two of the club’s recently deceased members just after the blowing of a conch shell began the feast. Their willowy arm motions and the smooth shifting of their hips combined to convey a gentle tribute far different than the frantic shimmying one most often imagines hula to be.

The tastes of home

The lu’au was weeks in the making, and a group had gathered in the McKays’ home on the eve of the event to make sure it all came together. In the kitchen, a group stood around an island chopping gallons of lomi salmon ingredients – raw diced salmon, green onions and tomatoes. After chopping, they massaged the ingredients together by hand, which is why it’s called lomi (Hawaiian for massage).

Afterward, the group moved to the dining table, where they wrapped the laulau. One piece each of raw chicken, fish and pork fat and a bit of spinach went into the center of a long ti leaf that had been soaked in water. The bundles were tied and steamed the day of the lu’au, with the meat flavored by the fat and the vegetal taste of the leaves.

Meanwhile, Brian McKay and a few others ignited the fire in the imu, a rock-lined hole about 18 inches deep that McKay had loaded with hardwood. The orange flames stretched 8 feet into the air before settling down. After three hours, the coals were ready, and the pig, a couple of turkeys and a mess of sweet potatoes were loaded on top to roast.

A pile of lava rocks rested in the middle of the pile, a few of which would go inside the pig. A family heirloom, the lava rocks came to the states with Brian’s grandfather when he left the islands for the U.S. mainland.

These days, Pat Anderson tells the story of the Hawaii Club with a mix of wonder and delight. When her daughter saw the depths of her homesickness, she told her, “Mom, I’m going to find the Hawaiians.” After that first potluck, the group grew steadily. Today, it is a 501(c)(3), whose mission is to promote education of Hawaiian culture. Members perform hula for seniors in long-term care facilities and visit schools and prisons.

Some members are of Hawaiian ancestry, some spent years living on the islands, a few have never seen that corner of paradise, but found kinship with those who love it.

“We’ve had people meet and get married and have kids, even move back to Hawaii,” she said. “We felt like when we got it started we didn’t realize it but we answered a need that somebody had.”

Amber Nimocks is a former News Observer food editor. Reach her at ambernim@yahoo.com.

Learn about the club

For more information about the The Hawaii Club of North Carolina, visit hawaiiclubnc.org.

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Cadwalader Adds Leading Fund Finance Partners Michael C. Mascia and Wesley A …








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    Wesley A. Misson















CHARLOTTE, N.C., Sept. 28, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Cadwalader, Wickersham Taft LLP, a leading counselor to global financial institutions and corporations, today announced that fund finance practitioners Michael C. Mascia and Wesley A. Misson have joined the partnership. The addition continues the firm’s global expansion, with nine lateral partners and their teams joining the firm to date in 2015, and builds on the firm’s significant presence in Charlotte, NC.

Mascia and Misson have a globally recognized practice in subscription credit facilities (SCFs) and fund finance, representing lenders in facilities to many of the world’s preeminent real estate and private equity funds. Mascia, previously Co-Head of Mayer Brown’s Global Lending Practice, is the founder of the annual Subscription Credit Facility and Fund Finance Symposium and is a founding member and the Secretary of the Funds Finance Association. Misson, who also joins Cadwalader from Mayer Brown, has represented financial institutions as lenders and lead agents in hundreds of SCFs and other fund financings during the course of his career, including serving as lead counsel on many of the largest, most sophisticated SCFs. Both are frequent speakers and authors on fund finance.

“Cadwalader has a long track record of anticipating client needs and evolving through financial industry changes; the addition of Mike and Wes is representative of this mindset,” said Pat Quinn, Managing Partner. “The team will help us meet growing market demand as funds continue to increase their need for cost-effective financing, thereby further diversifying our practice globally.”

“Cadwalader is excited to acquire the preeminent fund finance practice in our industry, and we welcome the team to our Charlotte office from which we serve so many of our global financial clients,” said Stuart Goldstein, head of Cadwalader’s Charlotte office and Co-Chair of the Capital Markets practice with Michael Gambro. “Mike and Wes add yet another dimension to our finance practice as we increase our capabilities in asset-backed securities to complement our original, core practices of securitization, warehouse finance, and real estate and asset-based lending. With a top fund finance practice that can meet increasing interest in specialized products, we not only expand our work with bank clients, we also deepen our relationships with private equity funds.”

“Cadwalader offers our team the best platform to support and continue expanding our fund finance practice,” Mascia said. “We believe the combination of our business with the firm’s leading capabilities in securitization, real estate and private investment funds will be very beneficial to our clients.”

“This is a perfect synergy and win for our clients,” Misson added. “Mike and I combine our 21 years of collective experience in the field with Cadwalader’s top-notch platform.”

With Mascia and Misson, Cadwalader’s Charlotte office now has more than 50 attorneys. Earlier this year, Anne Tompkins, former U.S. Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina in Charlotte, joined the firm as a partner in the White Collar Defense and Investigations practice.

The addition of Mascia and Misson to Cadwalader’s Capital Markets practice reunites them with former Mayer Brown partners Bruce Bloomingdale, Stephen Day and Jeremiah Wagner. Cadwalader is focused on further expansion of its Capital Markets practice globally and into additional areas of asset-backed securities and lending.

About Cadwalader, Wickersham Taft LLP

Cadwalader, Wickersham Taft LLP, established in 1792, serves a diverse client base, including many of the world’s leading financial institutions and corporations in more than 50 countries. With offices in New York, London, Charlotte, Washington, Houston, Beijing, Hong Kong and Brussels, Cadwalader offers legal expertise in antitrust, banking, corporate finance, corporate governance, energy, environmental, executive compensation, financial restructuring, health care, intellectual property, litigation, mergers and acquisitions, private equity, private wealth, real estate, regulation, securitization, structured finance, tax and white collar defense. For more information, visit www.cadwalader.com.

Contacts:

Kara Fitzsimmons +1 212 504 6708
kara.fitzsimmons@cwt.com
Kimberly Brooks +1 212 504 5652
kimberly.brooks@cwt.com


 


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SOURCE Cadwalader, Wickersham Taft LLP

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Greenville to host tourism conference

Greenville has been selected to host the annual Visit NC 365 Conference on Tourism, scheduled for March 12-14, 2017, at the recentlty expanded Greenville Convention Center.

“Our entire hospitality community is incredibly excited to host the Visit NC 365 Conference in 2017,” Andrew Schmidt, executive director of the Greenville-Pitt County Convention Visitors Bureau, said in a news release. “We have a real opportunity within our statewide tourism industry to make a statement about what Greenville and Pitt County are all about and where our destination is headed in the near future.”

The Visit NC 365 Conference, billed as North Carolina’s premier travel industry event, will bring more than 500 of the state’s tourism industry leaders together for opportunities to learn about new travel trends and issues, hear from industry experts, network with other travel professionals and media partners, preview Visit North Carolina strategic marketing initiatives, and experience the culture and hospitality of various parts of the state.

“Tourism in North Carolina is a $21 billion industry and we are thrilled to be working with Greenville to host our annu al tourism conference,” Wit Tuttle, executive director of Visit North Carolina. “Greenville has an outstanding convention facility that will be a perfect fit for the educational and marketing seminars offered at the conference. And of course, our attendees will get to experience some Eastern North Carolina hospitality.”

The Greenville-Pitt County Convention Visitors Bureau will host the closing luncheon of Visit NC 365 2016 on March 15 in Cherokee to give attendees a preview of Greenville as the host conference destination the following year.

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Heritage Trail signs come to Buncombe – Asheville Citizen

ASHEVILLE — Buncombe County will see its first interpretive signs installed Tuesday on the new Blue Ridge Heritage Trail  atThe North Carolina Arboretum, Biltmore Estate, Thomas Wolfe Memorial and in Pack Square Park. On Wednesday, a fifth sign will be installed in front of the Black Mountain Visitor Center.

The trail will be marked by 69 signs at special places throughout Western North Carolina, which embody the remarkable history and culture of the region. Words and photographs tell an illuminating story about each site and illustrate many aspects of the region’s natural and cultural heritage, including that of the Cherokee, traditional music, agriculture, and craft.

Signs will be located along main walkways at historic, natural and scenic sites, attractions, towns and cities, in some state parks, along the Blue Ridge Parkway, in Great Smoky Mountains National Park and at five NC Welcome Centers within the Blue Ridge National Heritage Area.

The trail doesn’t run from “Point A to Point B,” but rather many stops throughout the region, explained Jill Jones, a spokeswoman for the Blue Ridge National Heritage Area. People can enjoy a single stop or piece together several sites by theme or region. QR codes on each sign will let people with smart phones locate other nearby sites.

The goal is to encourage visitors and residents to discover places they may not know about. For example, most travelers know about Cherokee, but may not know how extensive the Cherokee nation’s land once was. They can learn more on signs being installed in the far western part of the region, in places like Robbinsville, Andrews and Hayesville.

The trail will be enhanced by five interactive kiosks in NC Welcome Centers at entry points to the BRNHA. The kiosks will help visitors to WNC or people passing through the state discover someplace interesting to explore along the way, encouraging a nearby stop or adding a scenic route.

An accompanying map brochure and website will also help visitors get around the region and learn more about each site.

The $450,000 project is an initiative of the Blue Ridge National Heritage Area Partnership  and was made possible by Federal Highway Transportation Enhancement funding administered through the North Carolina Department of Transportation and Haywood County.

“We are very grateful to the NCDOT and Haywood County for helping us develop this signage program,” said Angie Chandler, Executive Director of the Blue Ridge National Heritage Area Partnership.  “We believe the Blue Ridge Heritage Trail will be yet another cultural tourism product created by the BRNHA to encourage the traveling public to learn more about our region. By visiting these and other heritage sites, we hope they will extend their stay or plan to return, and thus stimulate the regional economy.”

Installation of all signs and the kiosks is expected to be complete by early November.

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