HomeMy WebLinkAboutDEQ-CFW_00080148From: insider@ncinsider.com [insider@ncinsider.com]
Sent: 7/13/2017 4:00:38 AM
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(FYDIBOHF23SPDLT)/cn=Recipients/cn=cee93c49d01445a3b541bb327dcdc840-jbkritzer]
Subject: Insider for July 13, 2017
• Today's, lnside�- ( D )
NC1.NS1D.ER,.1--
STAGE GOVERNMENT NEWS S:E.
"I'm actually closer to four other state capitals
Sen. Jim Davis, R-Macon on his 315-mile commute to Raleigh during the session.
Session•
Former -• 3-ter, R-Mecklenburg, loved serving in the N.C. House,but in 3uly 2016 --
after
a to refocus.
"For me personally, . . g inothing short of tragic," said of how - commitmen
family impacted his life. He said he had to close his trucking business after 14 years and had put his financial ruin.
volunteered for the ii but • II recognize, • i - the impacton business, •
And to 3eter, the General Assembly is no longer the part-time citizen legislature it was intended
my not being there every day, and spending so much time away," he said.
•spending 0hours,•urs a week doing i• when we'renot o
3eter said. "To me we're already at full-time, and we don't get compensated." I
DEQ-CFW 00080148
DEQ-CFW 00080149
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Former Fletcher campaign- 400r0r in unpaid legal debts in th,z
wake r r it for r ri'campaign ref f according to. campaign finance report
filed this week. Hartsell,R-Cabarrus, left office last yearthe midst of f
spentr - 0 000 in campaign. pay forpersonal expenses . knowingly
reports- information.
DEQ-CFW 00080150
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Executive Actions
Gov. Roy Cooper. vetoed meant• legalize charitable casino nights,. • fears
he
the f • d open anotherdoor • video poker f the state has worked to stamp out i
Cooper . not against charities holding the occasional game night
to raise money, but • Bill 511"could cause unintended problems."
Cooper,"Legitimizing charitable gambling in this way could give video poker a new way to infiltrate our
. f in a short• statement emailed to media Wednesdayafternoon.
"Allowing the industry to masquerade as a charity could cause unintended permits to be issued,
. • without toughpenalties • -ment would be
Legislators from both sides of a own issuesbill,r • that it could be
abused. Sponsors said it was innocentintent,'1. i' events non-profitsalready
to raise money in the state. The bill was repeatedly debated and amended during session,
eventually passing the Houseand the Senate 27-15.
Republicans h• f a veto proof rchamber,but given bipartisan fp for i
against the bill,overturn • If prove difficult. It would take a vote - of r
enforcementpresent in both chambers to override Cooper's veto.
The governor signed a bill Wednesday that will add lessons on what to do when pulled over by law
drivers education '1 on, House Bill 21, passed
both chambers unanimously. The state will develop this curriculum in consultation with the State
Highway Patrol, N.C. Sheriff's Association and N.C. Association of Chiefs of Police, and information
will also be included in drivers license handbooks. Among other things, the lesson will include
appropriate interact• enforcement officers. bill signingsf by the
governor'soffice Thursday (with summaries provided by his • -
House• Bill An act to clarify when the registrationof a vehicle renewed by of
registration plate expires.
• • i to authorize permitted oversized or overweight vehicles to travel after
sunset when transporting and delivering cargo, containers,or other equipment to or from
internationalf•
• House Bill 159: An act to extend the amount of time a charter school has to elect to become
participating employer in the teachers an• state employees'retirement• •' Bill 90to reduce the numberof destitute firefighter
honorably with a certified fire department must serve in order to receive financial
assistance from • . • f and to simplify variousr fi. • reporting
requirements.
• House Bill 212: An act to reauthorize the division of motor vehicles to issue a special
registration plate for the Zeta Phi Beta sorority.
• House Bill to require the court to attempt • identify outstanding before
entering an order only defendant is in cust
recommended by the North• • • •'
House• to make technical correctionsto the general
recommended by o' • and to make other
conforming, • clarifying changes.
• House Bill 48s An act to make -changesto theadult- home nnursing home advisory
committees to conform to the administration fir community living rules and recent changes
to the State Long -Term` Ombudsman program ani to direct f. - of
and Human Services to study the HOPE act and related federal regulations and to make
recommendations to the joint1 oversight c• - • , health
• Senate Bill 8: An act to provide f' i • to building •de provisions allowing
construction of parking garage to extend across a loti-tween a city -owned lot and
privately owned lot without meeting certain requirements;to restrict the stormwater runoff
requirements• . government apply t• public airports;d to revise the
DEQ-CFW 00080152
composition of r rn- Lincoln AirportAuthority,to name the airport,and to name
airfieldthe within the airport.
Senate Bill 69: An act providing that the Local Government Commission shall notify a finance
officer or other employeewho performs the duties of officer when he or
required to participate • related to the powers, duties,and responsibilities of
finance officer and requiring the employing • . government or public • to notify
training.the Commission when the finance officer or other employee has completed the required
Senate Bill 74: An act implementing the recommendationsand guidelines of a
Association of - Public HealthVeterinarians -•. r • the management of dogs, cats,
• ferrets exposed to rabies.
specialSenate Bill 119: An act to authorize the Division of Motor Vehicles to produce a Pisgah
Conservancy -r • plate.
(Travis Fain, WRAL NEWS, 7/12/17).
Campaign.
It's still unclear what - N.C. Senatedistrict map will look- next year after court -ordered
redistricting, but one LI•.te has already raised about $82,000 to run for• e
Wiley Nickel, a former staffer in President•i. administration,opened a campaign
organization in M. • hopes to flip a Republican -held seat.
But with - uncertainty surrounding districts,••-sn't yet knowdistrict he'll
filed his first campaigni•Ishowing. r f start in the period that ended
brought in a t• of 0•• although $35,000 of am a contributio
majoritiesmade to his campaign on 3une 30. "We're working hard to help break the Republicans' super
! said in an email to The Insider.f - of support
receivedbodes very well forr- in Raleigh• pbell, THE INSIDER,
7/13/17). 1
Duke University's non -tenured faculty have reached a tentative agreement in their first union
contract, which includesf pay and • g • appointments.
negotiated contract would cover about 275 part-time and - contingentaccording r
Service Employees I- • • Duke faculty joined last year.
Average pay increases during the contract would be: 14 percent for faculty paid on a per -course
i percent for-• ' • percent forApplied -•
the lowest -paid Roughly . to two-thirds of • - categories would receive
higher -than -average raises, to SEIU. The agreement aes multi -year teaching
appointments,benefits as other Duke employees an• pay protections f• •
courses. ' new fund would be set up for professional development.
South,The deal makes history. It would be the first faculty union contract at a major private university in
the r other SouthernFlorida and Tennessee are currently
working to form unions.Duke officials declined to commentvote is ratified by the
month.union's bargaining unit. Members will continue to vote on ratification through the end of the
■ and non -tenured faculty at Duke voted in March 2016• unionize. + group
called Duke Teaching First led the effort to join the Servicer • - •Union
hopes of better pay and benefits.i election at a private university in the South
in decades. private universities around the country have seen an uptickr by
contract• who are an increasinglyf part of f force in higher
education.
challengedEarly this year, a unionization vote by Duke graduate students failed after many votes were
by the university and the union.(3ane OBSERVER,
DEQ-CFW 00080153
t Wake Countyif plans • draft frelease conditions for people arrested during
protest at the Legislative Building, saying Wednesday that banning them from the building goes
too
Thirty-two people, including NAACP president Rev. William Barber, were arrested during the May
30 protest over Republican lawmakers' refusal to expand the Medicaid program as allowed under
the Affordable Care Act to provide health coverage for more low-income people.
NAACP attorney Geeta Kapur said during a court hearing for several of the protesters that the
state constitution specifically grants people the right to "instruct" legislators. The General
Assembly is a public forum where lawmakers work, so protestors can't be banned from it, she
said.
CountyWake Attorney Vanessa Curtis argued common it people
charged with trespassing to be banned from the specificproperty i e• until the case is
resolved. The state has the power to impose reasonable restrictions on people's rights to avoid
disrupting ' f - work,
"Where the exercise of i 'i _ Amendment ri1 _ public purpose,
appropriate that the government can step in and set reasonable•• District
maintainedJudge Michael Denning. "The state has a significant governmental interest in seeing that the work
of its legislative branch may occur and that the individuals employed to work in this building feel
Curtis that the banned protesters c• • use other means to communicate
lawmakers, such as phone calls or emails. But Barber said the Legislative Building belongs to the
people o• should be open to
Denning agreed that banning protestors i is broad, but . f there will 1'
some omodified release conditionsplans toLeslie, WRAL
RulesLewis Tweets
House , . David Lewis called on . anonymous Twitt•reveal their
Tuesdaynames •I • one
of a
tired"Thanks for tweeting to nothing," he tweeted to a Twitter user, identified only as "Der Meshugeh."
"Feel good about screaming to the world? Good for you. Especially w/o pride in your real name.
So of
awaiting"Der Meshugeh" had criticized Lewis for not acting sooner to redraw legislative district maps.
Lawmakers are . federal courtorder i set a timeline forprocess. The anonymous
Twitter user used profanity • describe f • repeatedly e• on
the user to to fail in cowardice,"-f."Come on D_ - i-h
don't•^ Don'tbe • f
Lewis also responded to an account labeled "Groucho Marxist." "Ah. Once again a 'creative' but
fake and cowardly name," Lewis tweeted. "At least your description is accurate. Good effort at
leftist trick 2 change subject." In another tweet ' Lewis said "Free speech means a person w
courage 2 make their thoughts known. Ashamed of who you are? Prefer 2 throw poop in shadows?
Sad."(Colin Campbell,D■
BlastingSeismic
Shooting air guns into the ocean could•# be fair game in the search• oil and gas along
North Carolinacoast,
National• E f allowing the practice by f companies f
publicwants the ` f
communities"Seismic blasting" is a controversial technique using air guns to explore and map offshore oil a
gas reserves deep beneath the ocean floor. They are towed behind ships, shooting loud blasts
compressed air deep into the seabed. These blasts can be repeated every 10 seconds for days
weeks at a time. Coastal d environmental activists say the blasts • • harm
marine life -- including whales -- and disturb fishing and tourism.
not i Carolina. f and activists f Carolina, f and Georgia
galvanized by opposition t• offshore • also are opposed to air -gun blasting off their coastl
DEQ-CFW 00080154
The fisheries service, part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and also kno
as NOAA Fisheries, is accepting public comments through 3uly 21 on proposals to allow companii
"to incidentally, but not intentionally, harass marine mammalsaccording to a news release fro
the fisheries service.
In 3anuary, the Obama administration denied applications for seismic blasting along the East
Coast, but President Donald Trump's administration reversed that decision through an executive
order a few months later. Under the Trump administration, the fisheries service could issue as
many as five permits to oil and gas companies to allow them to use the air guns to search for
potential drilling sites.
Dozens of members of the U.S. House -- including Republican Rep. Walter 3ones, who represent
much of Eastern North Carolina -- sent a letter to Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke in "strong
opposition" to the use of air guns. In the letter, the members of Congress cited a 2014 study
conducted by researchers at UNC, Duke and the NOAA off the North Carolina coast that showed
seismic blasting resulted a decline in reef fish and that the seismic air guns can be heard more
than 2,500 miles from their source, about two-thirds of the way across the Atlantic Ocean.
Former Gov. Pat McCrory advocated for offshore energy surveying in 2014. Gov. Roy Cooper
hasn't taken a position on the practice; Cooper's office did not respond to a request for
comment.(Abbie Bennett, THE NEWS & OBSERVER,
FMI111111V IMMT
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DEQ-CFW-00080155
door mediationbetween N.C. Department of • Quality regulatorsand . trio of
environmentalgroups •r Civil Rights is helping represent.
rightsThe center's clients in 2014 filed a federal regulatory complaint alleging that DEQ is violating the
civil of i• neighbors by f to insist that farmers replace"grossly inadequateand
outdated" f hog on - air and water. The complaintonly
targeted - state government,f .r- f' • f and in essence
agreeargues DEQ isn't doing its job. Mediation conferences are open only to the parties to a complaint,
unless they all • • participate, • r • Agency officials
said after the center's clients objected to and blocked the Pork Council's attempt to join the talks.
Center for Rights -r Elizabeth Haddixsaid the Pork • •i' have any place in"
dr f whether or • 1 • is honoring its obligations,and had "sought to interrupt the r •
for r f the complaint.said the center'shad viewed the attempted intervention
Ifan act of •. • because the time, place and agenda for - mediation was supposed to
have been • •- and yet was leaked by DEQ to industrygroups.
The Pork r board includesr of professors. Their r• • • b
affected by the Board of Governors' pending decision about policy for law -school centers and
institutes.(Ray Gronberg, DURHAM HERALD -SUN,
Trawick, an editor • coordinated the • . • Pulitzer Prize-winning
coverage of the effects of strip mining in Appalachia, died Saturday at Forsyth Medical Center. He
was 80. Trawick died of complications of leukemia, said his son, Michael Trawick.
A native of Macon, Ga., 3ack Trawick graduated in 1957 from Davidson College with a bachelor's
degree f . • French,according i his obituary. - -f three years as a lieutenant
the U.S. Navy. Trawick joined the staff of - 3ournal as a reporter•.won several
awards for reporting government affairs and business news. He was promoted to assistant state
editor in April '.• and then to state editor in April 96r^ he coordinated much of
the coverage that earned the 3ournal's• Pulitzer Prize.
Trawick retired in 1999 as an assistantto the publisher, •n said.(3ohn Hinton,
■ a
11�al 111110717r I
'ems that bonus fromthe state that wentout • some pilot
program f.ve retentia bonuses • certain groups of • - of • - groups
third -grade - • - students had high test• - r' i But there was .
they had to be f third fl.r- in the same school district the next year to qualify.
In an interview this winter, • • County Schools Chiefof • said some who taug'
third grade in 2015-16 may have switched • ,•e for 2016-17before - - -r of bonus
for r.st year's stui- performance. That would mean losing out on .f• 111 or 11#
Without• f about the bonus and its conditions,• f have no way of knowing
they'd be penalized for switching grades. Nor would principals o were possibly i
teacher's bottom line in asking them to change.
r new law, ratified on provides what it calls a "fr fUnderr •rmer third -grade teachers are eligiblefor between $3,500 and $7,000 as a substitutefor
that bonus. They - taught third • .•- in 2015-16 and otherwise earned the bonus,but
missed out because they moved grades within the same schoolfor . • other than refusing r
thirdteach grade.
The new law • provides bonus substitutesfor • moved out of
advanced r ., . -. i long as they remained .. the same school and • f not refuse to teach
^.
advanced courses.no provision aimed at teachers of r certification •
The state legislature also voted to make a significantly expanded version of the bonus pilot
program permanent. (3essie Pounds, GREENSBORO NEWS & RECORD, 7/12/17).
Aquifer Draining
Cape Fear Public Utility Authority has contracted with Wilmington -based Catlin Engineering t
pump almost 50 million gallons of - -i by out of aquifer
DEQ-CFW 00080158
stored for later use. Since early June, residents and officials have expressed great concern that
GenX, about which very little is known, was found in their drinking water. A StarNews special
report last month revealed that Chemours -- and before that DuPont -- has been releasing GenX
into the Cape Fear River on -and- off since 1980 as a discharge from a vinyl ether process being
conducted at its FayettevilleWorks
CFPUA's aquifer storage and recovery (ASR) is designed to take treated water from the Sweeney
Water Treatment Plant and let it drain into the Upper Peedee Aquifer, where it is stored to be
pumped out • drinking
Executive Director . Wednesday during CFPUA's.. d of Directors
Catlin Engineers and Scientists will remove 49 million gallons of water injected into the Upper
Peedee Aquifer and test it for GenX. The contract is not to exceed $50,000, officials said.(Kevin
Maurer, WILMINGTON A.
New Trustees
State lawmakers have appointed two new members to the N.C. A&T Board of Trustees and
reappointed two current members to UNCG's governing board. All four appointees will serve four-
year terms ending in June 2021.
The new A&T board members are:
Calvin Brodie, owner of a Raleigh general contracting company, Brodie Contractors, that has
done workon • public schools• • Moses Cone
Hospital, among others. A Zebulon resident, Brodie is the father of current A&T trustee
Toby Brodie, who was appointed in 2015.
Paul L. Jones,retired senior residentr- • a •.' who served in Lenoirand Greene
Jonescounties. A Kinston resident, Jones is an A&T graduate who got his law degree at N.C.
Central University. - E colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve.
They replace . . served two full termsandwasn'teligible • . f and
Bullock,
Both Bullock and Carroll were appointed to the UNCG board in 2013 by former Gov. Pat McCrory.
These four appointments were made for the first time by _• - governor formerly
picked four of the 12 members of each UNC school's board of trustees. (The UNC Board of
Governors makes the other eight selections.) However, a new state law split these four seats
• . the two houses of '1
This year, Senate President Phil Berger (R-Rockingham) nominated Brodie (A&T) and Bullock
House Speaker Tim Moore • - •, nominated Jones ► 1 Carroll
(UNCG). (John Newsom, GREENSBORO NEWS & RECORD, 7/12/17).
Kerfuffle
Allegations ma.' last week by i- of the Haywood Republican Alliance••.
"partyCounty Republican Party recently passed a resolution charging five local Republicans with political
disloyalty" • and angered fss the region and the state. The along
Northwith the •li Republican • had remained silent on the issue, until now.
"At this point there is no story because no charges have been d But that d• nothe
t stop
consummate purveyors of fact -free statements from trying to create a story," said HCGOP Precincl
Chair f Carr in a letterto The Smoky Mountainon 1'
On July 2, HRAi' .. ..- alleged in an email that he and fellow• aA members
Davis, Richard West and Paul Yeagerhad, during the closed session of ie '• meeting,
been charged with disloyalty and banned from party activity. Cabe's claim hinged solely on the
DEQ-CFW 00080159
r • of local conservativeand HRA member Monroewho is also paradoxically
member of •' and was also branded "disloyal" alleged
resolution.
askedWhen for commenton .I• it would be "inappropriate"
executive committee member to reveal such closed-doorproceedings;
lamented that one unnamed executive committee member -- presumably Miller "violated" that
The ability of s private organization tr remove its own membersnot question,•
service and due process requirements laid out in the NCGOP's governing documents. Haywood
County Democratic Party Chair Myrna Campbell said that such a process exists within the North
Carolina Democratic Party as well, but she'd never heard of it being used in her 12 years of party
work.
The NCGOP documents cited by NCGOP Executive Director Dallas Woodhouse say that formal
one-
third of the committee, and then presented to the accused two weeks prior to any i-Formal
charges_ limited I • gross inefficiency,f.rty disloyalty or • comply with organizational
plans. Woodhouse said that the process would also "require/allow all sides to present their case
foriudgment."
Miller f on e f obviously voted • on - i Ii f himself and others
'disloyal' Republicans, but the measure passed anyway, 12 to 2.(Cory Vaillancourt, THE SMOKY
MOUNTAIN NEWS, 7/12/17).
DEQ-CFW 00080160
Turner • he has had some success in moving legislation by f • issues he and some
Republican • -.1 - g - on, • fh none of bills forf sponsor
•- it throughboth the House and Senate this year.The House r • approve a Turnerbill to limit
hazardhunting from the roadside in Buncombe County, which Turner says would reduce poaching and
ease a safety in rural areas,- has yet to Barrett,
CITIZEN -TIMES, 7/12/17).
Ocracoke
HistoricThe National Park Service has approved a plan submitted by the North Carolina Department of
Transportation to build a system to support the Hatteras-Ocra coke Passenger Ferry, which is
scheduled to start running in 2018.
A Finding of No Significant Impact was recently signed by Stan Austin, director of the Southeast
Region of the National Park Service, completing the National Environmental Policy Act and Nationa'.
Preservation Act processes that began to a news release.
NCDOT requested a special use permit from the Park Service to construct several facilities within
the boundaries of .re Hatteras National Seashore to support the operation.
passenger f- project is aimef at easing long waits forcrosses
existingThe Hatteras ferry- r. - will be • - -f into two additional parkingareas to
waitingaccommodate passenger vehicles and NCDOT ferry division employees, and an open air passenger
facility will -r • of -• •' •Walker,OUTER
BANKS VOICE,
i;ffr! -
10 a.m. I The North Carolina General Statutes Commission, Partition Task Force, 510 W.
Williams St., Apex.
Government
Hearings
Environmental.•- - Commission - Ground Floor
Archdale Building, 512 N. Salisbury St., Raleigh.
9 a.m. I The N.C. Board of Architecture hold public hearing on proposed rule changes, 127
Raleigh.
DEQ-CFW 00080161
03 i . <'Mw
Committee11 a.m. I The Executive of The North•I Partnership for Children
1100 Wake Forest Road, Raleigh. Contact: Yvonne Huntley, 919-821-9573.
• • • • • . - see- - •
•- • f ••f •ice •f.• •
changes,* 9 a.m. I The N.C. Code Officials Qualification Board holds public hearing on proposed rule
i• • Room,••• (Albemarle Building), f
Raleigh.
* 1 p.m. I The Board Development Committee of The North Carolina Partnership for Children
meets, 1100 Wake Forest Road, Raleigh. Contact: Yvonne Huntley, 919-821-9573.
9 a.m. I The NC Wildlife Resources Commission meets, WRC Centennial Campus, 1751
Varsity Dr., Raleigh.
IMIJIUMIM1119M
12 • •. • of • • • public • on proposed •'
State Board of Elections Office, 441 N. Harrington St., Raleigh.
12 • •. • of • •rs' Committee on • • : Planning, Policies,•
Programs, Board Room of the Center for School Leadership Development, 140 Friday
Center Dr., Chapel Hill. Contact: 3osh Ellis, 919-962-4629.
TBD I The Golden LEAF Foundation's board meets, TBD. Contact: 3enny Tinklepaugh, 888-
•-41,'
Education and Training Standards Commission•'• public
hearing on proposed rule changes, Wake Technical Community College -Public Safety
Training Center, 321 Chapanoke Road, Raleigh.
DEQ-CFW 00080162
10 a.m. I The N.C. Rules Review Commission meets, Administrative Hearings office, Rules
Review Commission Room, 1711 New Hope Church Road, Raleigh.
9 a.m. I Environmental Management Commission meets, Ground Floor Hearing Room,
Archdale Building, 512 N. Salisbury St., Raleigh.
9 a.m. I Environmental Management Commission meets, Ground Floor Hearing Room,
Archdale Building, 512 N. Salisbury St., Raleigh.
10:30 a.m. I The Standard Commercial Fishing License Eligibility Board to the N.C. Division
of Marine Fisheries meets, N.C. Division of Marine Fisheries' Wilmington District Office, 127
North Cardinal Dr. Extension, Wilmington.
° TBC> | The Golden LEAF Foundation's board DleetS,TB[}. [OOta[1: ]eOOyT|Ok|epaUgh, 888-
684-8404.
^ TBD | The NC Wildlife Resources Commission meets, VVRC C8Ot8QDia| CdDlpU5, 1751Vdr5itv
Dr., Raleigh.
9 a.m. I Environmental Management Commission meets, Ground Floor Hearing Room,
Archdale Building, 512 N. Salisbury St., Raleigh.
9 a.m. I Environmental Management Commission meets, Ground Floor Hearing Room,
Archdale Building, 512 N. Salisbury St., Raleigh.
10 a.m. I The N.C. Rules Review Commission meets, Administrative Hearings office, Rules
Review Commission Room, 1711 New Hope Church Road, Raleigh.
OEQ-CFVV_00080163
TBD I The Golden LEAF Foundation's board meets, TBD. Contact: 3enny Tinklepaugh, 888-
684-8404.
C! I The NC Wildlife Resources C• • -- Dr., Raleigh.
Reviewa a meets,Administrative Hearings
Review Commission Room, 1711 New Hope Church Road, Raleigh.
9 a.m. I Environmental Management Commission meets, Ground Floor Hearing Room,
Archdale I1 i 512 N. SalisburyRaleigh.
9 a.m. I Environmental Management Commission meets, Ground Floor Hearing Room,
Archdale d • 512 N. SalisburyRaleigh.
6 p.m. I The N.C. Division of Water Resources hold public meeting on Atlantic Coas)
Pipeline Water Quality •n, Fayetteville Technical Community College
Cumberland Hall Auditoriumi•
., Fayetteville.
09nU7T!nWM I
6 p.m. I The N.C. Division of Water Resources hold public meeting on Atlantic Coas)
Pipeline Water Quality Certification, Nash Community College Brown Auditorium
at 522 N. EiCarriageRoad, Rocky Mount.
• •
p.m. I The state Department on Quality holdspublic hearing concerning
incorporation of i15 Ozone Ambient•. • and Readoption,
Charlotte.
pil
• Staff Conference
DEQ-CFW 00080164
* Staff Conference
* Staff Conference
Wra
3:30 p.m. I The UNC Board of Governors, Mountain View Conference Room of the
Sherrill Center, University of North Carolina at Asheville, Asheville.
9 a.m. I The UNC Board of Governors meets, Room 102, in the Reuter Center of the
University of North Carolina at Asheville, Asheville.
12 p.m. I The Board of Governors' Committee on Educational Planning, Policies, and
Programs, Board Room of the Center for School Leadership Development, 140 Friday
Center Dr., Chapel Hill.
MMUNUMMOTOW
OEQ-CFVV_00080165
lZ-?M1Te
4 p.m. I Gov. Roy Cooper participates in a panel on the opioid crisis, Curbing the
Opioid Epidemic: A Discussion with Governors on the Front Lines, Providence,
Rhode Island. National Governors Association's summer meeting.
BD I The NC Bankers Association host 81st Annual NC School of Banking, William & Ida
Friday Center, UNC-Chapel Hill. The conference concludes on Aug. 4.
No Time Given I The 77th Annual National Folk Festival opens in Downtown Greensboro for
its third year in the state. Contact: Kaitlin Smith, 336-373-7523, ext 246.
RIM •
TBD I The NC Bankers Association hold Young Bankers Conference, Crowne Plaza Asheville
Resort, Asheville.
=- =q MTA M M N M
10 a.m. I The Carolinas Air Pollution Control Association hold Technical Workshop and Forum,
Hilton Myrtle Beach Resort, 10000 Beach Club Dr., Myrtle Beach.
TBD I The NC Bankers Association hold Women in Banking Conference, Renaissan
Charlotte Southpark, 5501 Carnegie Blvd., Charlotte. i
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DEQ-CFW-00080166