Weekly Roundup: What’d you miss? – Asheville Citizen

Here’s what you may have missed this week:

GLOBAL WARMING

NC debates impact of Obama’s plan on global warming

North Carolina could reduce greenhouse gas emissions to levels mandated in new federal rules to fight global warming without straying dramatically from current plans and would see cleaner air and lower electric rates in the process, environmentalists backing the rules say.

But they will have a tough sell as the issue plays out in coming weeks.

Gov. Pat McCrory’s administration and other critics say the rules will drive up the cost of electricity — by 7 to 9 percent, an industry study says — and the state has already made strides in cleaning its air, meaning additional health benefits will be small.

State legislators are debating what response state government should make to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Clean Power Plan rules announced Monday while McCrory’s administration is making plans for North Carolina to join other states in suing to block its enforcement.

Read the full story here.

GETTING OUTDOORS

Connecting urban kids to the great outdoors

Zamia Shands hugged her tiny inflatable raft like a teddy bear.

Heading bravely into the short bursts of rapids on Laurel Creek near Hot Springs, the 9-year-old was determined not to let go of her lifeline. She attempted several times to throw herself into the tiny waterfall, surrounded and encouraged by the helping hands of adult counselors.

Once Shands finally flung herself, there was no turning back. She couldn’t stop, and she couldn’t get enough of the thrill of being pushed down the cool, swirling rush of water.

That’s the magic that Lauren Tarantino, hike leader with the Trailblazers Outdoors Adventure Club, is looking for whenever she takes children like Shands into the woods.

“This is my first year,” Shands said of taking part in the 5-year-old Trailblazers Club. She was with a group of nine children from Hillcrest Apartments, an Asheville public housing complex, and four adults, including Tarantino and three volunteers, on a hike last week along the Laurel River Trail.

Read the full story here.

CRIME

Asheville man charged with stealing purse at gunpoint

An Asheville man was behind bars Saturday, charged with holding up a woman at gunpoint, according to warrants filed at the Buncombe County Magistrate’s Court.

Otis Anthony Edgerton, 19, of Atkinson St. faces a charge of robbery with a deadly weapon.

Read the full story here.

CRAGGY BRIDGE

Repair work closes Craggy Bridge in Woodfin

Old Leicester Highway will be closed at Riverside Drive until mid-September while workers repair Craggy Bridge across the French Broad River, the state Department of Transportation says.

A contractor will remove the bridge’s asphalt surface and replace it with concrete, said Mark Gibbs, division maintenance engineer for DOT.

The bridge surface had deteriorated and DOT had received many complaints about its rough condition, he said.

Traffic is being detoured 2.7 miles south to Pearson Bridge. Drivers can use Adams Hill, Riverview Church and Gorman Bridge roads to connect with Old Leicester Highway west of the French Broad River.

Buncombe County Schools will temporarily lengthen bus routes for students who live of the French Broad and go to one of four schools — West Buncombe Elementary, Eblen Intermediate, Erwin Middle and Erwin High — to the west of the river, said Transportation Director Joe Hough. Parents should contact their child’s school if they need more information before school begins Aug. 19, he said.

Read the full story here.

PLEADING GUILTY

Fairview man pleads guilty to child sex crimes

A Fairview man will spend at least 19 years in prison after pleading guilty Monday to multiple child sex crimes involving a young girl.

In Buncombe County Superior Court, Jorge Martinez, 26, pleaded guilty to one count of first-degree sexual offense and seven counts of indecent liberties with a child, District Attorney Todd Williams said.

Judge Marvin Pope sentenced Martinez to a minimum term of 228 months and maximum term of 334 months in state prison.

Read the full story here.

POLK COUNTY DUKE ENERGY

Polk may lose vistas, tax revenue in Duke transmission line plan

Polk County stands to lose scenic vistas and up to $200,000 in tax revenue annually should Duke Energy transmission lines cross the area, according to county commissioners who passed a resolution to keep the energy infrastructure out of the county.

The five-member board on Monday evening sided with increasingly vocal opposition, positioning itself against plans for 230-kilovolt transmission lines, which would bring power from a substation in Campobello, South Carolina to the Asheville power plant.

Putting the lines inside Polk County could “have a deleterious effect on the view shed of the entire county, thereby negatively affecting current homeowners, potential homeowners, tourism dollars and business revenue,” according to the resolution passed by commissioners.

Read the full story here.

FACEBOOK POST

Police review Asheville officer’s Facebook post after wreck

City police are reviewing a Facebook post made by an Asheville patrol officer following an on-duty wreck that she caused.

The three-vehicle wreck happened Aug. 5 on Fairview Road involving officer Krystale Jones, according to an Asheville Police Department accident report. According to the report, Jones caused the accident when she ran into the rear of a stopped vehicle. The vehicle she rear-ended was then pushed forward and hit another vehicle.

But in a subsequent post on her Facebook page in which she was explaining to a friend how she hurt her arm, Jones wrote, “Here’s the story. They didn’t get out of my way responding to an emergency call so I hit him. Lesson learned get out of my way. Lol. Thanks all … just making the best out of it.”

Read the full story here.

ASHEVILLE AIRPORT

Adding more routes remains priority for Asheville airport

Sometimes the wind blows in opposing directions at Asheville Regional Airport — not so much for the pilots but for the people behind the operation.

The airport is coming off its best year ever. More than 400,000 people boarded commercial flights at the airport during the fiscal year that ended June 30, a 9 percent increase over the prior year.

But even with the wind at their backs on that key yardstick, airport officials face perception and logistical challenges, as do smaller markets nationwide.

Potential Asheville passengers are still driving to Greenville, South Carolina, Charlotte and even Greensboro in search of better deals.

Read the full story here.

BED BUGS

Battling bed bugs in Asheville

Tim Meade with Dodson Brothers Exterminating calls bed bugs “the new termite.”

Meade, who is district manager for the company, gets calls every week about the pesky insects.

“It started out with a call here and there and then it’s just gradually grown to where we’re getting five or six calls a week now within a three-year period,” Meade said. “They’re on the rise big time.”

It’s tough to know how common the problem is in the Asheville area because Buncombe County’s Environmental Health Division doesn’t track the number of residential complaints about bed bugs.

Read the full story here.

TEEN CHARGED

Cullowhee teen, 18, charged with killing mother

Jackson County Sheriff’s Office investigators have charged a teenager with murder in the death of his mother Wednesday.

According to court documents, investigators also believe Daniel Aaron Sellers, 18, a senior at Smoky Mountain High School, sexually assaulted his mother, Jennifer Sellers.

Jennifer Sellers, 46, had worked for Jackson County Schools since 2011, said Superintendent Michael Murray. She most recently was a full-time teacher’s assistant working with exceptional children at Cullowhee Valley Elementary School.

Read the full story here.

ALLEGED ASSAULT

Alleged assault on Asheville busker raises questions

How safe are the buskers who are part of the colorful scene in downtown Asheville from becoming the victims of theft or violent crime, and how seriously do police take crimes against these street performers?

After an incident Wednesday night on Battery Park Avenue, mime Dade Murphy might say Asheville’s streets are pretty rough. Other buskers, however, say overall the downtown is a safe place to play their instruments or perform, but communications with police officers who are stationed downtown could stand some improvement.

Murphy says he was assaulted, threatened and the money in his tip jar stolen in an incident Wednesday night on Battery Park Avenue. According to Murphy, one of the suspects threatened to cut him with a knife, while another swung at him, and a third suspect kicked over a performance statue he had set up for his act and took about $15 of his tips.

Read the full story here.

FOOD FEARS

Experts: Health ‘gurus’ spread food fears

With a cacophony of food gurus and self-appointed experts advocating for often contradictory quick-fix diet plans, navigating the basic task of eating can be daunting.

One of the most popular health crusaders, Vani Hari, also known online as the “Food Babe,” leads her army of followers in uprisings against so-called toxins in everything from Subway sandwich bread to Starbucks Pumpkin Spice Latte.

But Hari, a former consultant who studied computer science, has consistently come under fire for her lack of credentials. For example, her case against Starbucks PSL singled out the drink’s caramel color, which she said is in carcinogen class 2B. That sounds worrying until you consider the additive has rather innocuous neighbors in its carcinogen class: coffee, pickled vegetables, carbon paper and talcum powder.

Read the full story here.

MAN INDICTED

Asheville man indicted on child sex charges

A Buncombe County grand jury has indicted a city man on multiple child sex charges involving a girl who was 12 and 13 years old at the time of the alleged offenses.

Michael Harlon Donati, 34, of School Road, was served with the indictments and taken into custody Thursday, charged with three counts of taking indecent liberties with a child, two counts of statutory rape and one count of first-degree sexual offense, according to warrants at the Buncombe County magistrate’s office.

Read the full story here.

Check back on Sunday for next week’s Weekly Roundup.

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DRIVE TO DRILL: North Carolina Gov. McCrory Goes To Bat For Big Energy




This article was originally published by the Institute for Southern Studies HERE. It’s the second part in a series, the first of which Blue Nation Review discussed HERE.

By Sue Sturgis

When Pat McCrory was elected governor of North Carolina in 2012, the Outer Continental Shelf Governors Coalition wasted no time in recruiting him to join its crusade to expand offshore oil and gas drilling.

The Coalition was formed in May 2011 by four Republican governors in coastal states. As a Facing South investigation found, by early 2012 the Coalition had turned over its day-to-day management to the Consumer Energy Alliance, a “dark money” nonprofit whose members include leading energy companies and which is closely tied to HBW Resources, a corporate lobbying and public relations firm that represents energy interests.

The Governors Coalition was eager to bring McCrory on board as a spokesman for its pro-drilling agenda. As the governor of North Carolina, he represents the state with the second-longest coastline on the U.S. eastern seaboard — second only to Florida, where state leaders have opposed offshore drilling as a threat to tourism. McCrory’s voice would be especially valuable given that, under federal law, the views of coastal governors carry significant weight in deciding the future of oil and gas leases in Atlantic waters.

For his part, McCrory was equally enthusiastic about joining the Governors Coalition and promoting the cause of offshore drilling. According to internal Coalition emails obtained by Facing South through public records requests, on Jan. 23, 2013 — three weeks after McCrory took office — energy lobbyists and state officials corresponded about North Carolina’s possible involvement in the group.

The next day, McCrory’s economic advisor at the time, Tony Almeida, emailed contacts of the Governors Coalition, which was then chaired by Alaska Gov. Sean Parnell and based in his office: “Thanks to all. North Carolina is in!”

Two weeks later, the North Carolina governor’s staffer emailed the Governors Coalition again to confirm that McCrory would be joining the group and attending an upcoming Coalition meeting. Kip Knudson, a staffer for Parnell and former lobbyist for the Texas-based oil and gas company Tesoro, could hardly contain his delight, quickly emailing back: “You made my month!”

Since those heady first weeks, McCrory’s leadership and visibility in the Governors Coalition has steadily grown. In January 2014, after being a member for less than a year, the North Carolina Republican took over as chair of the group. McCrory has also emerged as a leading national voice for the Coalition, which has enjoyed a string of successes under his leadership. In February 2014, the Interior Department endorsed opening the Atlantic to seismic testing for oil and gas reserves, the first step toward offshore drilling. In January 2015, the Governors Coalition scored again when the department released a drilling lease plan for 2017-2022 that included a stretch of Atlantic waters from Virginia to Georgia outside of a 50-mile protective coastal buffer zone.

McCrory’s use of his state office to lead the Governors Coalition, which is largely run by oil and gas lobbyists, has raised concerns among government ethics watchdogs about transparency and conflicts of interest. The revelations by Facing South and other media outlets about McCrory’s role in the Governors Coalition also comes in the wake of growing scrutiny over the governor’s close personal and political ties to some of the nation’s most powerful energy concerns.

‘The voice of Americans for Prosperity’

When McCrory got involved with the pro-drilling Governors Coalition, he was no stranger to the energy industry. In fact, he spent much of his life working in it.

While a college student in the 1970s, McCrory took a job digging ditches for the Charlotte, North Carolina-based electric utility giant Duke Power. McCrory stayed employed with the company now known as Duke Energy for the next 28 years, including during his time as a city council member and mayor of Charlotte, where he held office until 2009. He retired as a senior adviser with Duke Energy’s economic development group in 2007 to focus on his first run for governor the following year.

With oil and gas money flooding into national politics in 2008 and Republicans mobilizing under the slogan “Drill, baby, drill!,” McCrory ran as an outspoken proponent of offshore drilling as well as inland fracking. Unfortunately for McCrory, 2008 was a banner year for Democrats in North Carolina: Barack Obama became the first Democratic presidential candidate to win the state since 1976, and McCrory lost to Democrat Beverly Perdue, who took a more cautious approach to offshore oil and gas exploration.

In 2010, McCrory went to work as an energy and economic development consultant for the Charlotte-based business law and lobbying firm Moore Van Allen, which represents energy interests. Among its efforts on behalf of energy clients, Moore Van Allen’s website reportsthat the company has led a “targeted educational effort in the Carolinas to build broad support for outer continental shelf drilling,” as well “worked with clients to secure appointments to legislative study committees to help advance their position.”

Reporters and good-government advocates have raised questions about McCrory’s role at the lobbying and PR firm, since he isn’t an attorney and wasn’t a registered lobbyist. However, McCrory has declined to talk specifically about what he did there on a typical workday, sayingonly that he did “client development work” and offered the firm’s lawyers “strategic planning on policy issues.”

From 2009 to 2011, McCrory also worked with Americans for Prosperity, a conservative advocacy group established in 2004 with backing from David and Charles Koch of Kansas-based Koch Industries, a sprawling conglomerate involved in the refining and distribution of petroleum products.

With annual revenues of $115 billion, Koch Industries is by far the top political contributornationally among oil and gas interests. In addition to receiving financial support from the founding Koch brothers, Americans for Prosperity has also received substantial financial contributions from other oil and gas interests including the American Petroleum Institute, a leading industry advocacy group.

Americans for Prosperity’s energy agenda has closely aligned with those of its financial backers: In 2011, for example, the group held rallies in North Carolina (in photo) and across the nation to press for expanded offshore drilling.

In 2010, McCrory headlined an Americans for Prosperity bus tour that crisscrossed North Carolina. He also recorded advocacy videos and automated phone calls for the group, which went on to travel around the state with a giant inflatable drill rig to promote its pro-oil and gas message. Later as governor, McCrory named Americans for Prosperity board chair and leading conservative benefactor Art Pope as his budget director.

“He became the voice of Americans for Prosperity,” Bob Hall, executive director of Democracy North Carolina, a campaign finance watchdog group, said of McCrory.

Although not classified as campaigning for the governor’s office, McCrory’s tour stops with Americans for Prosperity offered a valuable public platform and boosted his visibility among conservatives in the state’s burgeoning tea party movement. It also coincided with a surge in financial support from oil and gas interests for McCrory’s campaign: They contributed over $172,000 to McCrory’s 2012 gubernatorial effort — more than double the industry’s $57,000 in contributions to his 2008 campaign and almost four times the $45,544 donated to his Democratic opponent, then-Lt. Gov. Walter Dalton, according to the National Institute on Money in State Politics’ FollowTheMoney.org database.

The industry’s increased political support for McCrory came even as its overall giving at the state level declined 45 percent from $57.3 million in 2010 to $31.3 million in 2012, according to FollowTheMoney.org. Leading oil and gas interests contributing to McCrory’s campaign were BP and Marathon Oil, a Houston-based exploration and production company.

When McCrory ran again for governor in 2012, this time successfully, he again benefited from his relationship with Americans for Prosperity: The group spent $130,000 on mailers to benefit McCrory’s campaign.

Click to enlarge

Lingering industry ties, heightened public scrutiny

The ethics and transparency questions raised by Gov. McCrory’s ties to the energy lobbyists in the pro-drilling Governors Coalition echo criticisms that have hounded the governor about his relationship with his former employer, the utility giant Duke Energy.

Research by Democracy North Carolina found that McCrory’s 2008 and 2012 gubernatorial campaigns benefited from Duke Energy contributions totaling $1.1 million through the end of 2012. That includes more than $332,000 in direct campaign donations linked to the company and more than $761,000 that the company and its Progress Energy subsidiary contributed to the Republican Governors Association super PAC, which in turn spent more than $10 million on McCrory’s two campaigns.

Duke Energy has enjoyed significant influence in the McCrory administration. Almeida, McCrory’s former economic adviser who signaled North Carolina’s interest in joining the pro-drilling lobbying efforts of the Governors Coalition, worked for Duke Energy for more than 30 years. McCrory’s former Commerce Secretary, Sharon Decker, worked for the company for 17 years. C. Neal Alexander Jr., the head of the Office of State Human Resources, was employed by Duke Energy for more than 40 years.

Government watchdog groups raised concerns about McCrory’s unusually close ties to Duke Energy even before he took office. The day before he was sworn in as governor, for example, the clean energy advocacy group NC WARN and consumer advocate AARP North Carolinawrote a letter to McCrory urging him to recuse himself from making appointments to the N.C. Utilities Commission because of his long employment with the company.

NC WARN also raised concerns about the governor’s continued stock holdings in Duke Energy. The statement of economic interest McCrory filed as a candidate in 2012 disclosed that he held Duke stock with a value of at least $10,000. North Carolina ethics rules don’t require candidates and elected officials to report the exact value of holdings, but NC WARN urged him to do so because of the clear potential for a conflict of interest.

“Since you worked at Duke Energy for 28 years, it seems likely that your stock ownership could reach into six figures, if not into the millions,” NC WARN wrote in a February 2013 letterto McCrory.

McCrory declined to recuse himself from making Utilities Commission appointments. But the issue of his holdings in Duke came roaring back in February 2014, after a pipe broke beneath one of the company’s North Carolina coal ash ponds, sending tens of thousands of tons of toxic coal ash into the Dan River.

McCrory’s administration was already under fire for a 2013 settlement with Duke over contamination of drinking water from the company’s coal ash which proposed a fine of only $99,111 for the $50 billion company and didn’t require Duke to clean up leaking coal ash pits. Democracy North Carolina blasted that settlement as “piddling” and a “remarkable sweetheart deal.” The McCrory administration withdrew the settlement offer in early 2014 amid renewed criticism following the Dan River disaster.

The Dan River spill also revived scrutiny of McCrory’s financial interests in Duke Energy, with reporters eventually revealing that the governor had failed in early 2014 to properly report his continued holdings in the company. McCrory was later forced to submit new filings, which disclosed he owned at least $10,000 in the company’s stock at the end of the previous year.

A spokesperson for McCrory said the incorrect report was an innocent mistake, although the form clearly asked for all information as of Dec. 31, 2013.

“I’m sorry my legal counsel misread it and I thought we were following the instructions,” McCrory said at the time.

Although Duke Energy is not directly engaged in offshore drilling, its business model increasingly depends on petroleum products. In the past several years, the company has closed half of its 14 coal-fired power plants in North Carolina while opening five natural gas-fired facilities in the state. It also plans to open a natural gas power plant in South Carolina in 2017.

In addition, the arrival of offshore drilling in North Carolina would benefit Duke through the creation of new industrial customers such as refineries, which are heavy electricity users.

Stonewalling the press, shutting out the public

McCrory isn’t the first Republican governor of North Carolina to face the question of offshore drilling. In the late 1980s, GOP Gov. Jim Martin grappled with the issue after a consortium of oil companies led by Mobil applied for permits to drill an exploratory well off the state’s Outer Banks.

A college chemistry professor before getting involved in politics, Martin consulted with fellow scientists before ultimately deciding against drilling off North Carolina’s coast, concluding that the potential drawbacks outweighed the benefits. At the time, images of the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill disaster in Alaska — the worst oil spill in U.S. history before the 2010 BP Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf — were fresh in the public’s mind, serving as a dramatic reminder of what was at stake.

While Martin positioned himself as a public leader facilitating a policy discussion with key stakeholders, McCrory has served as a full-throated advocate for offshore drilling and energy-backed groups like the Governors Coalition — despite signs of growing opposition in coastal communities from diverse groups including fishing industry associations, local tourism boards, and chambers of commerce.

Furthermore, after McCrory took the helm of the pro-drilling Governors Coalition, information about the group’s activities became harder to access.

Facing South first submitted information requests for correspondence related to offshore drilling from the offices of McCrory, as well as his counterparts Gov. Nikki Haley in South Carolina and then-Gov. Bob McDonnell in Virginia, in October 2013, when the Governors Coalition was still chaired by Gov. Parnell in Alaska. McDonnell’s office promptly responded that it had none.

Two months later, Haley’s office sent a box with thousands of pages of paper documents, including many of the materials used for Facing South’s investigative series. McCrory’s office was slow to respond, initially claiming that it hadn’t received the request, but eventually emailed a cache of electronic records in March 2014.

Facing South submitted a second records request to McCrory’s office in June 2014, after he had become chair of the Governors Coalition, picking up where the first request had left off. To date, McCrory’s office has not produced any materials in response to our request.

McCrory’s office has also failed to fulfill public records requests from other reporters seeking information about the Governors Coalition’s work. The Center for Public Integrity, which looked at the group’s ties to the energy industry last year, told Facing South that it also submitted a records request with McCrory’s office that went unanswered until after its storywas published.

When Facing South contacted McCrory’s office in April 2015 for comment about our unanswered records request  — 10 months after the second request was filed — Communications Director Josh Ellis responded with a terse email that read: “We are currently processing this request.”

The paucity of information flowing from McCrory’s office has not meant the governor has slowed his pro-drilling efforts, however. In fact, what little information has been made available for public view shows the McCrory’s administration has ramped up its lobbying activities — often behind closed doors.

Last November, for example, McCrory hosted the Mid-Atlantic Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Five-Year Program meeting at the N.C. Museum of Natural Sciences in Raleigh. Among those attending were officials from Virginia, South Carolina and the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, the Department of Interior agency that oversees offshore oil and gas leasing.

The meeting was closed to the public and mostly closed to the press, with reporters allowed in to hear only McCrory’s closing remarks after a police officer stationed outside the door checked their credentials.

Prior to the meeting, environmental groups wrote a letter to state officials protesting their exclusion from the discussion about Atlantic oil and gas leases. In response, Donald van der Vaart — then McCrory’s energy policy adviser for the N.C. Department of Environment and Natural Resources and now its secretary, who previously worked for Shell Oil and an electric utilitysent a letter stating the meeting was kept invitation-only due to concerns raised by federal officials that inviting “special interest groups and industry” could “allow for the potential of the appearance of influence” on the offshore permits being reviewed by the Obama administration.

A spokesperson for the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, however, later denied that it was their agency that had asked for reporters and other members of the public to be kept from the meeting.

What’s more, it was later disclosed that groups representing the energy industry were not only allowed into the meeting hosted by Gov. McCrory but were also featured speakers. WRAL News obtained a list of attendees showing that speakers included representatives from the Center for Offshore Safety, an industry-sponsored organization affiliated with the American Petroleum Institute, and the Institute for Energy Research, a pro-drilling nonprofit partly funded by the Koch brothers and their donor network.

Another speaker came from the Consumer Energy Alliance — the same industry front group that runs the Outer Continental Shelf Governors Coalition, which Gov. McCrory leads and which is enmeshed with the energy lobbying firm HBW Resources. Speaking on behalf of the Alliance was its federal policy adviser Michael Zehr, who is also vice president of federal affairsfor HBW Resources.

“We can’t recall any other administration convening a meeting of public officials to talk about a public process for developing a public resource, held in a public location, that is closed to the public,” Dustin Chicurel-Bayard, spokesperson for the North Carolina Sierra Club, said at the time. “It’s hard to understand why the McCrory administration is being so secretive and shutting the public out of the conversation about the future of our coast.”

(Additional research and reporting by Chris Kromm. Photo of Americans for Prosperity’s inflatable drill rig outside the North Carolina legislature by Sue Sturgis. This story was produced in part with support from the Fund for Investigative Journalism.)

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Booming Business: Visitor spending hits record high in Burke County in 2014

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Tourism spending in 2014 surpassed the $90 million mark for the first time ever in Burke County’s history.



Posted: Friday, August 14, 2015 11:07 am
|


Updated: 11:15 am, Fri Aug 14, 2015.

Booming Business: Visitor spending hits record high in Burke County in 2014

by Glen Luke Flanagan
Staff Writer

The News Herald

Visitors to Burke County spent $91.34 million in 2014, surpassing the $90 million mark for the first time ever in the county’s history.

That represents a 5.48 percent increase from 2013 spending, according to a release from the Burke County Tourism Development Authority. Local business owner Sabrina Hurt has been operating Treat — a gift shop and restaurant — in downtown Morganton for less than a year, but has already seen the benefit of the boom.

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Kerry calls for democracy as US flag rises in Cuba – WBTV 3 News, Weather …

By BRADLEY KLAPPER and MICHAEL WEISSENSTEIN
Associated Press

HAVANA (AP) – Jubilant crowds waved American flags and chanted “Long live the United States!” as the Stars and Stripes rose over the newly reopened U.S. Embassy in Cuba on Friday after a half-century of often-hostile relations. Secretary of State John Kerry celebrated the day but also made an extraordinary, nationally broadcast call for democratic change on the island.

Hundreds of Cubans mixed with American tourists outside the former U.S. Interests Section, newly emblazoned with the letters “Embassy of the United States of America.” They cheered as Kerry spoke, the United States Army Brass Quintet played “The Star-Spangled Banner” and U.S. Marines raised the flag alongside the building overlooking the famous Malecon seaside promenade.

Meeting more than 54 years after the severing of diplomatic relations, Kerry and Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez set an early September date for the start of talks on full normalization of a relationship so long frozen in enmity.

Not all the talk was as warm as the sunny summer day. Kerry and Rodriguez said their nations would continue to disagree over issues such as democracy and human rights. But they also said they hoped to make progress on issues ranging from maritime security and public health to the billions of dollars in dueling claims over confiscation of U.S. property and the U.S. economic embargo on the island.

It seemed that virtually all of Cuba was glued to television or listening by cellphone as Kerry directly addressed the island’s people on political reform. That’s a subject that has remained off-limits in Cuba even as the single-party government has implemented a series of economic reforms and re-established diplomatic ties with the U.S.

“We remain convinced the people of Cuba would be best served by a genuine democracy, where people are free to choose their leaders, express their ideas, practice their faith,” Kerry said. He spoke before an audience of Cuban and U.S. diplomats on the embassy grounds and hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, of islanders watching and listening live.

Addressing reporters with Kerry after the ceremony, Rodriguez responded by indignantly opening his remarks with complaints of U.S. human rights transgressions – from police shootings of black men to mistreatment of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, the U.S. naval base that Cuba says must be returned.

“Cuba isn’t a place where there’s racial discrimination, police brutality or deaths resulting from those problems,” Rodriguez said. “The territory where torture occurs and people are held in legal limbo isn’t under Cuban jurisdiction.”

Many Cubans disagree with that assessment, including Afro-Cubans who say discrimination is still rampant despite the revolution’s egalitarian ideals, and human rights groups who say regular, short-term arrests of government opponents aim to intimidate dissent and include beatings.

In New York, Republican presidential contender Marco Rubio, a Cuban-American senator from Florida, said he would reverse the Obama administration’s new Cuba policy on his first day in office, arguing it gives the Castro government international legitimacy and more resources to repress its people.

Kerry acknowledged that the Obama administration would have a difficult fight in Congress to end the U.S. trade embargo of Cuba so that normal business ties between the two countries could resume.

“There is no way Congress will lift the embargo if we are not making progress on issues of conscience,” Kerry said.

President Barack Obama also called for change in Cuba when he announced the new U.S. policy of engagement in December, but his words were less pointed than Kerry’s in Havana.

Cuba formally reopened its Washington embassy last month. The U.S. raised its flag in Havana then, too, though saving the formal ceremony for Kerry’s visit. Three Marines who took part in the flag-lowering in 1961 handed over the new flag to Marines who raised it on Friday.

Kerry was the first secretary of state to visit since 1945, and his speech was remarkable for its bluntness and the national spotlight in which it came.

Many Cubans lauded Kerry’s call for reform, including greater access to technology on an island with one of the world’s lowest rates of internet penetration. They paired their praise with calls for the United States to lift the 53-year-old trade embargo and allow easier travel between the two countries.

“More democracy, elections, we hope for that to come with this diplomatic opening,” said Julio Garcia, a 51-year-old mechanic.

Self-employed graphic designers Danay Lopez, 28, and her husband Yosvel Martinez, 32, watched the ceremony with their 3-year-old son, singing both countries’ national anthems and shouting “Long live Cuba!” and “Long live the United States!” as the event drew to a close.

“Kerry spoke about democracy, freedom, Wi-Fi, and he’s right,” Lopez said. “We want all that to be freed up, but (also) for the U.S. to free up travel, and I don’t want my son to live under the embargo.”

Like Obama, Kerry said a longtime U.S. strategy of trying to isolate Cuba and provoke regime change by choking off trade and fomenting grass-roots agitation had failed.

“It would be equally unrealistic to expect normalizing relations to have a transformative impact in the short term,” he said. “After all, Cuba’s future is for Cubans to shape.”

After speaking to reporters with Rodriguez, Kerry briefly walked Old Havana’s historic Plaza de San Francisco with Havana City Historian Eusebio Leal, stopping to look in shops and greet local residents and store owners before heading to an afternoon flag-raising at the home of the embassy’s chief of mission.

He addressed a group of diplomats, Cuban-Americans and advocates of diplomacy with Cuba before a trio of Marines raised the Stars and Stripes in the stately home’s back garden. The event was attended by dissidents including Jose Daniel Ferrer, Miriam Leiva and Yoani Sanchez, who tweeted a selfie with Kerry and a photo of the secretary of state meeting privately with a group of dissidents.

The dissidents were not invited to the embassy ceremony, avoiding tensions with Cuban officials who typically boycott events attended by the country’s small political opposition.

Soon after Kerry was heading home Friday evening, diplomats who negotiated the July 20 embassy reopening will launch full-time into discussing how to bring about measures such as re-establishing direct flights and mail service.

Associated Press writers Anne-Marie Garcia and Andrea Rodriguez in Havana contributed to this report.

Michael Weissenstein on Twitter: https://twitter.com/mweissenstein

Bradley Klapper on Twitter: https://twitter.com/bklapperAP

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

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Job Creation Coming for a Historic North Carolina Town on the Inner Banks

The opening of Capital Resorts Group’s Waterside Resort in Edenton is set to create new jobs for local residents while also helping to improve the travel and tourism industry in the area.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. –

(PRWEB) August 15, 2015 — Construction of a new property, named Waterside Resort near Edenton, North Carolina on the Albemarle Sound, promises to bring new jobs and vacationers to the area, resulting in a positive impact to the local economy. The property, owned by Capital Resorts Group, a leader in the vacation ownership industry, is set to open Phase One of the resort in 2016. The opening of Waterside Resort will initially provide jobs in the areas of hospitality, construction, housekeeping, sales, maintenance and security with potential for future growth as the property develops.

“Capital Resorts Group is excited to become a part of the Edenton community as a growing employer and good corporate citizen,” said Vice President of Resort Operations Barney Barber. “From Edenton’s historic charm and distinct culture to its endless water activities, scenic beauty and family attractions, the area has become an established vacation destination for families over the last few years and we look forward to the opportunity for our Capital Club owners to experience this great town. It is our hope that Capital Resorts Group’s presence in Edenton will only further define the area as a thriving tourist destination.”

Capital Resorts Group’s construction of Waterside Resort is planned to be developed in phases, each one offering accommodations for different vacation styles. Phase One will provide vacationers with access to 12 deluxe two and three bedroom condominium-style residences. Each will feature separate living and dining room areas, a luxury kitchen with modern appliances and balcony overlooking the sound. All of the suites will be designed to reflect the coastal style of the area. In addition to the condos, newly constructed two and three bedroom coastal cottages will be added. Plans for more coastal cottages in Phase Two are in the design process and are expected to be finalized soon.

Designers of Waterside visualize the completed project as a low country, luxury resort. Amenities will include a clubhouse, indoor and outdoor pool, boat ramp, fishing dock, walking/bike paths, fire pits, outdoor grills, sports court and children’s play areas. The land around the resort will be populated with native plants that do not require irrigation, in order to create a natural landscape setting and habitat for native and migratory birds.

Waterside Resort is located just across the bay from Edenton along 42 acres of land directly on the shores of the Albemarle Sound, the largest freshwater sound in North America. The almost 300 year old town of Edenton was named by Forbes as one of “America’s Prettiest Towns.” One of the largest draws about the area, is that it acts as a gateway to the Outer Banks, a major tourist destination in North Carolina.

About Capital Resorts Group: Capital Resorts Group is a full-service sales and marketing company offering a collection of services across the vacation ownership industry to support HOA’s and management companies. Owners with Capital Resort enjoy flexible, points-based travel to a variety of sought-after vacation destinations, with each resort featuring luxury accommodations and “Distinctly Different” amenities and benefits.

Copyright 2015 Capital Resorts Group, LLC. All rights reserved.    

All marks are registered trademarks of the respective owners.

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For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2015/08/prweb12907164.htm

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THE BREWHOLDER: Craft beer bounty boosts beer tourism

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In a mid-year report, the Brewers Association announced that approximately 12.2 million barrels of beer were sold by U.S. craft brewers through the end of June 2015, up from 10.6 million barrels during the first half of 2014. Bart Watson, chief economist at the Brewers Association, explained in a press release, “The continued growth of small and independent brewers illustrates that additional market opportunities and demand are prevalent, although competition in the sector is certainly growing and the need for brewers to differentiate and produce world class high quality beer is more important than ever.”

This increase in production is also a result of the steady increase in the number of professional craft brewers in the U.S. In 2014, 555 new craft breweries opened, in addition to the 462 that opened in 2013, according to statistics from the Brewers Association. With so many new craft breweries opening, there has also been an

increase in “beer tourism.” More and more people every year are either taking specific beer focused trips, or incorporating brewery visits into their summer vacations.

Philadelphia has a new brew tour which also operates in several other cities including Boston, Washington DC, Burlington, Vt. and New Hampshire’s sea coast. Check www.phillybrewtours.com for more information. But within just a few hours of Philadelphia there are a number of cities that have exploding beer scenes — and organized beer tours to help you find the newest and the best breweries they have to offer:

Portland, Maine: With more than 10 craft breweries within city limits that vary in all sizes, Portland’s beer scene should definitely be on your beer tour list. From larger craft brewers like Allagash Brewing Company (celebrating its 20th anniversary this year) and Shipyard Brewing, to smaller ones such as Bissell Brothers, Bunker Brewing and Rising Tide, you can visit them on tours provided by the Maine Beer Bus (themainebrewbus.com) and Maine Beer Tours (mainebeertours.com).

Asheville, North Carolina: Home to local breweries like Wicked Weed and Highland Brewing Company, Asheville attracted California brewery Sierra Nevada to open a facility there as well. Brewery tours can be booked through BREW-ed (http://www.brew-ed.com), Asheville Brews Cruise http://ashevillebrewscruise.com) or Asheville Brewery Tours (http://ashevillebrewerytours.com).

Tampa, Florida: If your vacation happens to be in Orlando, you may want to consider stepping away from amusement parks for one day and taking a beer tour of Tampa, the home of Cigar City Brewing, and of course, the additional facility of Pennsylvania’s own D.G. Yuengling Brewery. The very popular Brew Bus (http://www.brewbususa.com) can help you in your journey.

New York Finger Lakes: More well-known for its wine, the New York Finger Lakes Region also has grown a vibrant beer scene. Recommendations for tour companies and breweries can be found on the Finger Lakes Beer Trail website – http://fingerlakesbeertrail.com/content/tours. And for those who are fans of both beer and wine, several companies offer combined tours so you can experience the best of both worlds.

Beer tourism is a great way to “drink local” — but in another locality. As the craft beer industry continues to expand, so does the complexity and diversity of American beer. When you plan your next vacation, take a few moments to do an internet search for breweries in your destination and then visit one of them. You never know when you might find the best beer you’ve ever had — unless you get out and try!

Cheers! Continued…

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Duke to pick line route quicker; Mills River crowd irate – Asheville Citizen

MILLS RIVER — Citing stresses to property owners who are uncertain if they will be impacted by a high-voltage transmission line plan, Duke Energy officials announced Friday that they are hastening a decision to choose a single route.

Duke officials had initially planned to name a route in January; the company will now select a line in early October.

That announcement came as the Mills River Town Council on Friday adopted a resolution opposing transmission lines in that municipality. Polk County commissioners had taken a similar stance earlier in the week.

Duke Energy recently extended a public comment period to Aug. 31, and has already received more than 3,000 comments on the line placement. Those comments are being thoroughly reviewed, said Robert Sipes, Duke Energy’s Western North Carolina regional general manager.

“We’ve been listening closely to potentially impacted communities and landowners along the study routes and have heard overwhelmingly from them the need to expedite the review process to reduce the period of uncertainty for selecting the final route,” Sipes said in a statement. “We’ve expanded our team, accelerated the schedule and are committing to complete our comprehensive process for route selection by early October.”

The 230-kilovolt transmission line project would bring power from Campobello, South Carolina to Asheville to keep pace with expected growth in that city, Duke officials have said. Last month, the power company released a map showing several potential routes, sparking a contentious process that has drawn concern — and sometimes rage — throughout the five counties that may be impacted by latticed towers averaging 140-feet in height.

On Friday, about 100 people gathered for a special session of the Mills River Town Council, where that board passed a resolution opposing lines for a host of reasons: They would endanger the water supply, harm homes and businesses and, in a particular point of pride for the rural community, would damage agricultural land.

Jeff Chandler, director of the Mountain Horticultural Crops Research Center of North Carolina State University, pointed to one tract of land that his institution may lose should a transmission line come through and said the group opposes the project.

“We have a large presence here because of our geography from Raleigh. We were established to help agriculture in Western North Carolina,” he said, adding that their work has focused on research like developing a late-season blight resistant tomato, but has expanded into a burgeoning ornamentals industry of late.

Before the council adopted the resolution, others cited environmental concerns — one line would cross Mills River three times — or tourism in Henderson County, dependent on mountain views.

Some fought tears, like Dottie Davis, who remembered leading an effort to incorporate Mills River.

“We wanted at that time to maintain our rural, mountain way of life for our children and the only way to do that was to control your own destiny,” she remembered.

She remains proud that her town has kept its identity, and said she is prepared to once again fight for Mills River. “I’ll be damned if I am going to let Duke Power ruin it,” she told the crowd.

Several residents said they were concerned Duke Energy was using a “divide and conquer” strategy, with grassroots groups taking up for their own home base, but neglecting the bigger picture.

The way the lines are currently drawn, leading to a planned natural gas-fired plant at Lake Julian, one route must either pass through Fletcher or neighboring Mills River, where Jim Sexton lives.

“Nobody wants to be thrown under the bus, but when Fletcher says, ‘Don’t put it here,’ what they are saying is, ‘Put it in Mills River,'” Sexton said. “We all need to come together in this. The best solution is no transmission lines. Period.”

In rural regions, opponents are particularly vexed that view sheds will be scarred, and fear a transmission line will run up mountains and mar views critical to the region.

That is an issue Duke is taking into consideration in its decision, said Duke spokesman Tom Williams in an email.

“Regarding vistas, we do consider view shed meaning visual impact as opposed to direct impact on a property,” he wrote. “I would also say that, based on public input, we will weight certain factors such as view shed more heavily than others. The Shuler Line through Panthertown Valley is an example of this. This was built in the early 1990 and is a major line connecting (then-named) Duke Power the Tennessee Valley Authority.”

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Cabarrus tourism spending tops $400 million

Mustang 50th anniversary

Mustang 50th anniversary

Last year’s Mustang 50th Birthday Celebration generated over $8 million in economic impact in Cabarrus County.



Posted: Thursday, August 13, 2015 3:15 pm

Cabarrus tourism spending tops $400 million

Staff reports

The Independent Tribune

CONCORD, N.C. — Visitors spent a record $400.3 million in Cabarrus County in 2014, up 7.6 percent over 2013 — the second-highest increase in North Carolina, according to a new survey.

Lodging saw a 12 percent increase in room demand for the year. The statistics are from the 2014 Economic Impact of Travel on North Carolina Counties. The study was prepared for Visit North Carolina by the U.S. Travel Association.

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21st NC community on record against offshore drilling

Southport is the latest community in North Carolina to go on record against offshore drilling in the Atlantic.

The town council passed a resolution opposing drilling on Thursday, becoming the 21st community in North Carolina to do so.

The advocacy group Oceana says that 20 communities in South Carolina have also passed similar resolutions.

Two more communities — one in each state — consider the issue Monday. That’s when Brunswick County in North Carolina and North Myrtle Beach in South Carolina are scheduled to consider resolutions opposing offshore drilling.

Opponents say drilling could threaten the environment and the tourism industry of the Carolinas. Supporters say offshore drilling for oil and natural gas can be done safely and will bring jobs and tax revenues to both states.

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Asheville Airport Considers Expansion

c 2014, WLOS ABC 13 | Portions are Copyright 2014 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or distributed.

WLOS News 13 provides local news, weather forecasts, traffic updates, notices of events and items of interest in the community, sports and entertainment programming for Asheville, NC and nearby towns and communities in Western North Carolina and the Upstate of South Carolina, including the counties of Buncombe, Henderson, Rutherford, Haywood, Polk, Transylvania, McDowell, Mitchell, Madison, Yancey, Jackson, Swain, Macon, Graham, Spartanburg, Greenville, Anderson, Union, Pickens, Oconee, Laurens, Greenwood, Abbeville and also Biltmore Forest, Woodfin, Leicester, Black Mountain, Montreat, Arden, Weaverville, Hendersonville, Etowah, Flat Rock, Mills River, Waynesville, Maggie Valley, Canton, Clyde, Franklin, Cullowhee, Sylva, Cherokee, Marion, Old Fort, Forest City, Lake Lure, Bat Cave, Spindale, Spruce Pine, Bakersville, Burnsville, Tryon, Columbus, Marshall, Mars Hill, Brevard, Bryson City, Cashiers, Greer, Landrum, Clemson, Gaffney, and Easley.

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