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It's 5.05 and welcome in to a Monday edition of the Carolina Journal News Hour on Charlotte's FM News Talk, 107.9 FM, WBT. I'm Nick Craig. Good morning to you. We start off with some very interesting political news here in North Carolina as Representative Carla Cunningham, the Democrat out of Mecklenburg County, has switched her party affiliation from Democrat to unaffiliated. This is according to data with the North Carolina State Board of Elections coming out on Friday.
Cunningham was first elected to the North Carolina House back in 2012 and served seven straight terms before losing her Democrat primary in March of 2026. In that primary, she earned just 21.7% of the vote, while the challenger and the eventual winner of that contest, Rodney Sadler, secured nearly 70%. In a statement on Friday from Cunningham, she wrote, quote, I have been a Democrat all my life, but I came to realize that I want to serve the people, not a party. Being an independent thinker does not align with party politics, and I will never compromise the need of my constituents to satisfy a political agenda. This marks the second time in three years that a Democrat from Mecklenburg County has switched their party affiliations.
If you flip the calendars back to April of 2023, at the time, Representative Tricia Cotham, who was a Democrat elected from Mecklenburg County, made a switch to the GOP, giving Republicans a veto-proof supermajority in the North Carolina House. At the time, in 2023, Cotham said, As long as I have been a Democrat, the Democrats have tried to be a big tent, but where the modern-day Democrat Party is now has become unrecognizable to me and to so many others in this state and country. Cunningham had been at odds with Democrat officials since last year when she joined the Republican majority in overriding Governor Josh Stein's veto of a bill requiring sheriffs to cooperate with immigration and customs enforcement. That is ICE. That pushed the major Democrats across the state, including the Democrat governor in Josh Stein, to endorse her primary opponent in Rodney Sadler, who, as I just mentioned a minute ago, did end up winning that March 2026 primary here in North Carolina.
Senator Brad Overkash, the Republican from Gaston County, in an appearance with Brett Jensen on WBT Radio on Friday, said that he wasn't surprised about the decision based on the Democrat Party's treatment of Cunningham. With him saying in part, I am not surprised that she's gone unaffiliated, and we just so much appreciate her principled views. We're thankful for her, and North Carolina will benefit from her decision. I thought it was disrespectful to her for the Democrat Party to go after her as hard as they did because she voted her conscience on one bill. And that was enough for them to throw her overboard for a lifetime of service.
Some other reaction coming in as well, including from Representative Jake Johnson. He posted on X Friday, Representative Carla Cunningham has been a steadfast fighter and a strong voice for her constituents despite unthinkable outside pressures. She is a valued member of the North Carolina House and demands transparency and accountability regardless of party. Kyle Kirby, the chairman of the Mecklenburg County Republican Party, applauded the decision and thanked Cunningham for her continued service, saying in part in a lengthy statement, we commend Representative Cunningham for placing the people of Mecklenburg County above party labels and national political pressure. Her willingness to stand firm in her beliefs, even in the face of criticism from her former party, is a testament to her character and her clear, unwavering commitment to her community.
Cunningham will remain in her seat in House District 106 in Mecklenburg County until the end of her term in 2026. According to the official North Carolina General Assembly website, her party affiliation has officially changed, and this will be incredibly relevant as we take an eye and keep an eye on the North Carolina General Assembly this week. There are multiple, six, in fact, veto overrides that remain on the House calendar in Raleigh within the North Carolina General Assembly. Carla Cunningham voting with Republicans on those would give them, in fact, that veto-proof majority. I will note it is not clear whether her switch from Democrat to unaffiliated will cause her to vote on.
On these six pieces of legislation, three of them dealing with diversity, equity, and inclusion. Another piece of legislation, Senate Bill 153, the North Carolina Border Protection Act, a big one, Senate Bill 50, also known as the constitutional carry here in North Carolina, and the Education Choice for Children Act, the ECCA. That's House Bill 87. Lawmakers are expected back in Raleigh this week. We'll keep an eye on those details over on our website, CarolinaJournal.com, and of course, bring you the latest right here on the Carolina Journal News Hour.
In some other statewide news this morning, as Western North Carolina approaches the 19-month anniversary of Hurricane Helene, actually today, April the 27th, a new infusion of federal disaster funding is highlighting both the progress made and the long road still ahead. Emergency Management Agency, also known as FEMA, announced $255.8 million last week for 85 recovery projects across North Carolina, with a significant share directed towards mountain communities that are still working to rebuild infrastructure, clear massive amounts of debris, and stabilize local economies. The funding arrives at an important moment, more than a year and a half after Hurricane Helene caused widespread flooding, infrastructure damage, economic disruption, as much of the work now being funded reflects projects already completed, underscoring how local governments have carried the costs of paying contractors while waiting, and in some cases waiting a long time for federal reimbursements. The largest allocation of the more than $255 million announced by FEMA is $125.5 million to the North Carolina Emergency Management. That money will support debris removal and emergency protective measures that remain ongoing in parts of the region.
Downed timber, sediment, and storm debris continue to pose major flood risks in waterways across the western counties here in the state. In Cleveland County, more than $40 million is tied to debris removal. Removal, including large-scale cleaning of rivers and public areas. Additional funding will support continued cleanup along waterways such as the Broad River, where storm debris has complicated flood mitigation efforts. And as the time continues to go on and as crews continue to work, those costs only continue to go up.
Transportation projects also reflect the extended recovery timeline, with more than $57 million going to the North Carolina Department of Transportation for road repairs, culvert replacements, and emergency measures. In Rutherford County, that includes reimbursements for repairs to Cedar Creek Road, which is a key local route damaged during the storm on the north end of Lake Lur, which we just talked about a couple of weeks ago, has officially entered phase one of its soft reopening. In terms of tourism infrastructure, a critical economic driver in the western half of our state, that is also part of the recovery. Picture with federal funding reimbursing the cost of temporary access roads and bridger connections in places like the Chimney Rock State Park after Helene destroyed most of its main entrance. Smaller but significant allocations are heading to communities, including Old Fort and Brevard, for repairs to public buildings, roads, and culverts, projects that local officials continue to stress are essential to restoring basic services.
Representative Tim Moore, the Republican out of North Carolina's 14th congressional district, said that the funding is critical to reimbursing local governments that have been and continue to act quickly after the storm's aftermath, saying, quote, this funding helps make our communities whole by reimbursing local governments that stepped up immediately after Hurricane Helene to begin cleanup and recovery. In places like Cleveland County and across western North Carolina, crews cleared massive amounts of debris and reopened critical routes without waiting for Washington's bureaucrats to get their acts together. Under new leadership, DHS and FEMA are ensuring that these communities Communities are not left to carry those costs alone. Moore added that he plans to continue pushing for additional support as projects move through, in many cases, the very slow federal pipeline. At the same time, U.S.
Senator Ted Budd pointed to improved coordination between federal agencies and North Carolina's congressional delegation in moving some of that funding approval forward, saying, I'm grateful that he and his team have worked with me and congressional colleagues to get direct needed relief to Western North Carolina that ensures funding moves through FEMA's review process without unnecessary bureaucratic delays. Referring to the new DHS ahead in Mark Wayne Mullen. Our efforts will continue as new projects are completed every single week. My focus remains on ensuring that the federal government continues to do its part and make sure that funding reaches our communities as quickly as possible. Federal officials say that the funding comes as they work through a backlog of recovery projects amid prolonged strain within FEMA's disaster relief fund.
Caused by a lapse in federal appropriations. Additional project approvals are expected in the coming weeks. Important to note: the new DHS secretary and Mark Wayne Mullen did visit Western North Carolina just back a couple of weeks ago, his first official visit as the head of DHS, and said that new funding reflects continued federal commitment to long-term recovery in Western North Carolina. We will keep an eye on this as today marks 19 months, April the 27th, all the way back in 2024, that Hurricane Helene slammed and left so much devastation and destruction in Western North Carolina. We've had extensive coverage on this over the last 19 months.
The most recent detail this morning is available over on our website, CarolinaJournal.com. Life doesn't wait. The kids outgrow the old couch. The fridge stops working. And sometimes you just want to trish yourself to a bigger TV.
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Approval not guaranteed, restrictions apply. See stores for details. It's 5:22. Welcome back to the Carolina Journal News Hour, Charlotte's FM News Talk, 107.9 FM, WBT, and some other statewide news. This morning, Democratic Governor Josh Steins recommended state budget would phase out North Carolina's opportunity scholarship program, a move that could remove an estimated 60,000 students from a school choice program that has served more than 100,000 children this year, according to state enrollment data.
Steins' budget, which we covered in great detail last week, was unveiled on April the 21st. He proposed a moratorium on new opportunity scholarships and a new income cap of 150% of the eligibility level for federal reduced price school lunch programs. For a family of four, that works out to roughly $90,000 a year for that family of four. Families already receiving the scholarship for the 25-26 school year could renew their awards only if their household income falls below the new cap. That threshold falls below the median household incomes in Wake County and just above it in Mecklenburg County for 2024, according to U.S.
Census Bureau data. Stein said or Stein's budget states, this returns income limits to 2021 levels and ensures that public funds are targeted to students in need and otherwise support public school students and teachers. The governor described the proposal as an effort to, quote, let the program wind down. The budget also includes a separate $12.5 million appropriated to an ADM contingency reserve to support projects, projected student increases for the 25-26 school year, specifically students who previously received vouchers but will now return to North Carolina's public schools.
So, the question would be: with this and his proposed budget, who would get cut? As of early April 2026, 106,000-plus students were enrolled in the Opportunity Scholarship Program. This is according to data from the North Carolina State Education Assistance Authority, which is the agency that administers the program across North Carolina. That group divides recipients into four income tiers based on household sizes for a family of four in the 25-26 school year. The first tier.
Covers households earning up to $59,000 a year and provides awards of up to $7,600 per student. The second tier runs from $59,000 to $118,000 again for a family of four with awards up to $6,900 a year. The third tier, $118,000 to $267,000 with awards up to $4,600 a year. And finally, the fourth tier covers households making above $267,000 a year with awards of more than $30,000 just around $3,400. Stein's proposed $90,000 cap for a family of four falls inside tier two.
That means that every student in tiers three and four would lose eligibility along with tier two families earning above $90,000. Applied to the program's more than 106,000 current recipients. That translates to roughly 60,000 students losing their scholarship.
Now, it is important to note that the precise number does depend on the income distribution of current Tier 2 families, which is not data that is currently yet publicly released for the 25-26 school year.
So that number could be a couple of thousand more or a couple of thousand less, potentially even 10,000 or more or less. Mike Long, the president of Parents for Education Freedom in North Carolina, criticized the governor's plan in a written statement, saying in part, Governor Stein's recommended budget is a direct attack on North Carolina families who rely on the Opportunity Scholarship Program. His proposal would rip scholarships away from moderate income families. A police officer and medical receptionist raising two children could be deemed too wealthy to qualify. He went on by saying, Thousands of families have made plans, sacrifices and life decisions based on the promise that North Carolina would stand with them.
Governor Stein proposes pulling the rug out from under them. We are counting on the North Carolina General Assembly to deliver a budget that protects educational freedoms and keeps opportunity within reach for every child. Stein has argued that the program would divert some $7.5 billion from public schools over the next decade if left unchanged, with State Representative Brandon Lofton, a Democrat from Mecklenburg County, framing the issue as a trade-off between voucher growth and teacher pay during a recent legislative press conference just in the last week. With Lofton saying in part, we came to Raleigh and we passed a budget that put more money into private school vouchers than it did into teacher raises. Every year since then, we've lost teachers in our classroom.
And instead of providing meaningful teacher raises, we've actually increased automatically the money going to private school vouchers. Dr. Bob Lupke, the director of the Center for Effective Education at the John Locke Foundation, pushed back on Stein's argument that vouchers drain money from the public school program, saying the opportunity scholarship program does not take money from public schools. The Opportunity Scholarship Program is about choice. It's about empowering parents with the ability to choose an education that best fits the needs and abilities of their child.
This program does remain incredibly popular across North Carolina. The most recent Carolina Journal poll that looked at this issue back in January found that 64% of likely voters supported the program compared to just 26% who opposed it. State lawmakers currently fund the Opportunity Scholarship Program at $625 million for the 25-26 school year, compared to more than $18 billion that goes to public education across the state each and every year. A report from the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction presented to the State Board of Education in June found that nearly 6,000 students who attended a public school during the 23-24 school year. Year switched to private schools with the Opportunity Scholarship Program in the school year that followed, with the scholarships awarded to those students totaling roughly $34 million, about $10 million less than the state would have spent on educating those same students in the public school system.
Applications for the 26-27 school year did close last month, and the state agency that is required to handle the program is currently in the process of awarding scholarships for this upcoming school year. Lawmakers are expected to continue the debate over a long-term state budget. We'll keep an eye on Raleigh this week over on our website, CarolinaJournal.com, and right here on the Carolina Journal NewsHour. It's 537. Welcome back to the Carolina Journal News Hour, Charlotte's FM News Talk, 107.9 FM, WBT.
I'm Nick Craig. Good Monday morning to you. We cover a lot of interesting and important political stories taking place across the state of North Carolina and even sometimes the nation right here on the Carolina Journal news hour. We'll continue that thread this morning, albeit in a very different vantage point. We're going to be talking about mailboxes.
Yes, this is an interesting discussion taking place across the state of North Carolina. If you've been into any new housing developments or neighborhoods, you've likely noticed a cluster of mailboxes in certain areas of the development. But what you probably haven't realized is that there's a lot of frustration behind the scenes on that. It's a fascinating discussion to walk us through some of those details this morning. Katie Zender, CarolinaJournal.com, joins us on the news hour.
Katie, mailboxes of all things that we're talking about this morning.
Well, you had the chance to talk to a couple of different people on different sides of this. What's the latest that you're following? Ray, good morning, Nick. Happy Monday. Thanks for having me on.
Yeah, so what's been happening is the U.S. Postal Service has implemented some guidelines regarding CBUs or these cluster box units, which refers to these collections of mailboxes that we see in housing developments. But what's been happening is a lot of additional regulation is being tacked on by growth managers at USPS, and that's causing delays for housing developers, which is bringing up the price tag of houses, which we can't, you know, most people can't afford in an already in a housing market that's already under pressure. We're continuing to add prices because of this unnecessary red tape because these cluster mailbox units are being tied up in the red tape.
Well, Katie, that's a phenomenal point to make. I mean, the old adage here of a time equals money is very accurate, whether you're talking about single-family housing projects, multifamily dwellings, apartment complexes, whatever, the more and more time that a developer has to sit on that land, get approval from the state, county, local governments for all of the other bureaucracy that exists in putting these housing developments online. You then tack on some of this frustration with these mailbox units. As I understand it, reading through your piece over at CarolinaJournal.com, part of the issue is that it's kind of like a bouncing ball. Things continue to keep kind of moving on this, and it's leaving these developers in a very precarious spot where they're not exactly sure what they can and can't do.
Right, that's exactly right Nick and you're right delays cost money. That's exactly what Kim Phillips who's the regulatory regulatory affairs director for the Triad Real Estate and Building Industry Coalition or Tribe told me when I spoke with her regarding this issue. She's been kind of working for Tribe to fight fight really on behalf of these developers with Senator Ted Budd's office and just really fighting with USPS to kind of get some clarification on some of these regulations.
So what happened basically Nick to give you some background and to give the audience some background is back in 2012 USPS began mandating that all new housing developments utilize these cluster box units rather than individual mailboxes.
Now according to Kim Phillips she said that wasn't really enforced in the triad area until 2014. And USPS does have an online guide for developers that kind of explains exactly what the guidelines are for implementing these cluster box units. But what's been happening Is that USPS growth managers or district managers in different states are implementing additional guidelines that they don't necessarily have the authority to implement?
So they might be telling developers that they have to have, you know, these cluster box units have to have lighting or awnings or additional parking. And that is actually not true.
So there's been some back and forth, but in 2025, fall of 2025, actually on September 29th. USPS issued a clarification that said that basically single-family home developments do not require lightings or awnings. They should be sited safely so that they can be accessed by both customers and carriers. And there's no additional parking required. And so that was initiated when Kim Phillips reached out to Senator Ted Budd's office earlier in 2025 to try and get some help with this issue because she's really been fighting USPS on this for quite a while to try and get some clarity for developers.
Katie, I don't think most of our audience or maybe any single member of our audience this morning is going to be surprised to learn that there's some nonsensical or some ridiculous regulation as it relates to the federal government, which is what the United States Postal Service is. I will say, though, it does seem unique in this case that we're not just talking about overburdensome regulation. We're talking about almost a lack thereof some of these restrictions and regulations, not only from state to state, but I think as you're kind of noting here with this conversation in the triad, literally from region to region, where in certain areas you have to, in previous years, had to add certain amenities, in other areas you didn't. That to me is not very common when it comes to the federal government, that kind of lack of control. Right, that's exactly right, Nick.
And so that's kind of the lack of clarity here is what's almost causing the holdups and the issues is because the regulations aren't very specific. It's allowing these growth managers and these district managers to kind of implement more stringent regulations at will when they actually have no authority to do so. Yes, no question about this.
So you mentioned U. S. Senator Ted Budd and some conversations he's been having. He's apparently gone back and forth with UPS on this for quite some time. What are we learning from the Senator's office?
Right, yeah, so they've been going back and forth with USPS for quite some time. Phillips had originally reached out to Bud's office sometime in 2025, and then that's when the September 29th clarification was issued by the USPS. And then the issue kept ongoing, at least here in the triad region. And so Phillips reached out again to Bud's office. I'm not sure exactly when, but it was sometime in early 2026.
And Bud's office put in an inquiry on behalf of Phillips on March 16th. And then Scott Slusher, who's a government liaison for USPS, responded to Bud's office in a letter that was dated April 9th, indicating that Phillips or other representatives of Tribex should, if they wanted to issue an appeal or a request for further guidance, they could reach out to the district manager for the state of North Carolina, who is Scott Manier. And then they also followed up on that again.
Well, the issue that seems to be happening, which is Jennifer Way, who is the growth manager for North Carolina, Phillips has reached out to her. Bud's office has reached out to her. A couple of times regarding the lack of response from herself and Menier concerning the concerns that developers have had and have reached out to Tribec for. And then, according to what Phillips told me, Jennifer Way, who again is the growth manager for North Carolina, said there's no USPS rulebook and that North Carolina has, quote, too much development.
Well, we know that's not true. Wow. Interesting statement there from the feds. Kitty, I want to go back and just make sure I heard what you said clearly. Essentially, it sounds like what USPS said was follow the guide and if there's questions or you don't really understand, just do it anyway and then file an appeal.
I mean, that doesn't seem like that could be possibly a beneficial process for these developers going forward. Yeah, and then, you know, they keep basically what Phillips has told me is they keep getting referred back to the guide, but that's not helping because these growth managers and these district managers are adding on all these additional regulations that are not in the guide and they're not really have the authority to implement. And so Phillips also reached out to Virginia Fox's office regarding this issue as well because apparently Jennifer Way has not been very cooperative with them. And they were also, Phillips was also told to reach out to Postmaster General, Postmaster Blake Denny on district matters if they extend beyond, you know, kind of the triad area. As far as I know, they haven't really received a response from the postmaster.
But, you know, despite their repeated attempts to reach out to Jennifer Way and Scott Mainier, you know, they haven't really received a solid response, according to what Phillips has told Bud's office in an email. And she said, she told us that, you know, despite following the instructions. to reach out with an appeal. Scott Manier has not yet responded to them. And I believe what's happened the way that she explains it to me is Scott Manier referred her request to Jennifer Way.
So it just kind of keeps circling this issue. And the request just kind of keeps getting pushed to the person that's either ignoring the request, not wanting to deal with the request, or just referring them back to the builder's guide. Katie, let's go back to kind of what we talked about at the onset of this discussion.
Some folks might be wondering: why are we talking about mailboxes? What is the relevance here? What exactly are we doing here on the Carolina Journal News Hour? But you mentioned something very important at the start of this. And we've got some quotes in the article from Phillips about this as well.
Every single time that a process is slowed down, or a home has to just sit in a neighborhood, or an apartment has to sit vacant while they're waiting for final approval, every time you add $1,000 to the price of a home, that is boxing hundreds of people out of that house. And you tack on all of the various red tape from the state, federal, all throughout government. You're talking about houses that cost thousands of dollars more, boxing tens of thousands of families out of the ability to purchase. That's exactly right, Nick. Like I said at the beginning, delays cost money.
And I also got to speak with a developer here in the Triad region. He said, you know, these delays, they add hundreds of dollars to the final price tag. And in the housing market and the economy that we're in right now, that's a really significant amount. If it's $800 or $900, that might not seem like a lot when you're buying a home, but that's a significant amount when people are already having a hard time buying a home. And Phillips told us, she said, every time you add $1,000 to the price of a home, that prices 300 people out of being able to buy that home.
Yeah, so some very real-world implications there. Katie, you've got some additional quotes from the various individuals that you spoke to that you're walking us through. Where can folks go and get those details this morning? Right. They can read the whole story with everything laid out at CarolinaJournal dot com.
We appreciate the information and the insight this morning. Katie Zender joins us on the Carolina Journal News Hour. Uh It's 5:53. Welcome back to the Carolina Journal News Hour, Charlotte's FM News Talk 107.9 FM, WBT. I'm Nick Craig.
Good morning to you. Some interesting congressional news we are following this morning. U.S. Representative Alma Adams, the Democrat of North Carolina's 12th congressional district, was recently investigated by House Ethics Committee regarding an alleged inappropriate relationship with a female staffer. Despite high turnover and complaints from her staff, Adams was in fact cleared of any wrongdoing.
A little backstory as to how we got here. In the summer of 2022, a high-ranking staffer filed a complaint against Adams after colleagues told the staffer that the congresswoman was in a relationship with an aide. This is according to a report from Notice, N-O-T-U-S. Beginning in January of 2023 and continuing through at least September of the same year. Year, at least half a dozen former aides were interviewed about Adams' relationship with Sandra Brown, who is now the chief deputy of staff and district director.
Originally reported by a WCNC according to a statement from Adams's office, it reads, Congresswoman Adams cooperated fully with the House Ethics Committee review, which was thorough and detailed. The committee closed the matter after finding no violations of any House rules and most importantly, no inappropriate or improper relationship. All of the interviews conducted, all of the interviews concurred rather that the closer relationship between Brown and Adams did create a, quote, hostile work environment at best, and that Adams's office repeatedly led North Carolina's delegation in terms of staff turnover. One former staffer told notice that they were investigated in a hotel in North Carolina. Staffers were questioned about their time at the Congresswoman's office and about another staffer under investigation for financial mismanagement.
But the questioning quickly focused on Adams' relationship with Brown. According to Adams' statement, ultimately the committee advised that Congresswoman Adams should work to ensure that no staff received preferential treatment, actual or perceived, and that all staff were aware that they couldn't raise any concerns without the fear of retaliation. Because the committee's comprehensive review found no violations of any House rules, no penalties were recommended to the full House, and the committee's review remained confidential. Adams, however, was not included on the list of 28 congressional members investigated by the Ethics Committee since 1976 concerning allegations of sexual misconduct. That list was released late last week, according to the Charlotte Observer.
While Adams was not on the list, former Representative Madison Cawthorne, a Republican representing North Carolina's 11th congressional district, did appear on the list. At the same time, sexual misconduct was not found in Cawthorne's investigations, but ethics issues regarding cryptocurrency were undercovered. This is a very interesting political story taking place here across the state of North Carolina. We've got continued coverage of that over on our website, CarolinaJournal.com. Look for the story with the headline, Adams Investigated by House Ethics Committee.
We are expecting another busy week in Raleigh, recapping just briefly our top story this morning. Representative Carla Cunningham, the Democrat out of Mecklenburg County, has officially switched her party affiliation from Democrat to unaffiliated with six veto overrides remaining in the North Carolina House. It is going to be fascinating to keep an eye on that this week. We'll do that each and every morning right here on the Carolina Journal News Hour. That's going to do it for a Monday edition.
WBT News is next, followed by Good Morning BT. We're back with you tomorrow morning, 5 to 6, right here on Charlotte's FM News Talk, 107.9 WBT. Introducing Home Care Plus, a new subscription service from Lowe's that helps make life easier by giving members a hand with home maintenance. Let Lowe's tackle the tasks you keep meaning to do, like electric dryer vent cleaning, replacing hard-to-reach light bulbs, and more. Subscribe to Home Care Plus for just $99 a year and consider your to-do list done.
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