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HomeMy WebLinkAboutDEQ-CFW_00084613From: Kritzer, Jamie [/O=EXCHANGELABS/OU=EXCHANGE ADMINISTRATIVE GROUP (FYDIBOHF23SPDLT)/CN=RECIPIENTS/CN=CEE93C49DO1445A3B541BB327DCDC840-JBKRITZER] Sent: 9/15/2017 4:00:47 AM To: Hobbs, Cindy E [/o=ExchangeLabs/ou=Exchange Administrative Group (FYDIBOHF23SPDLT)/cn=Recipients/cn=544dd4Od92414896864c689e6b8923c9-cehobbs] Subject: FW: Insider for September 15, 2017 From: insider@ncinsider.com Sent: Friday, September 15, 2017 12:00:36 AM (UTC-05:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada) To: Kritzer, Jamie Subject: Insider for September 15, 2017 * Tnday?s lnside�- (PDF) NC1..NS1DER,11.,- STATE GOVERNMENT NEWS SERVICE UNC System President Margaret Spellings, on the UNC Board of Governors discussion of reducing tuition and fees on the same day as talk of a funding request for N.C. Central University's planned student center. Table of Contents News Summary ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................ UNC Board Tom Fetzer had been on the UNC Board of Governors two months when he quoted former British Prime Minister and conservative icon Margaret Thatcher on her definition of consensus. "The process of abandoning all beliefs, principles, values and policies in search of something in which no DEQ-CFW-00084613 Spellings • shedoesn'tf • biased toward Chapel if Anotherpeople would perceive a bias toward N.C. State University if the system offices moved to Raleigh possibility I•. -r was moving the staff to Research- • • for sur is it's going to cost moneyto move a couple• -f people 25 miles away and sell property," Spellings said. "So the feasibility study is well worth doing." Beyond debate over the details of - resolutions,- • '• among board members. meeting followed a blistering Aug. 22 letter to Spellings and Board Chairman Lou Bissette signed by 15 board members. It took Spellings and Bissette to task for a lack of communication with th full board last month before they sent a letter to Gov. Roy Cooper about security and future plan for -Confederate - on - UNC-Chapel Hill campus.- drafted r but only a to some membersof - board. Others tooke with that, pointing out • f about poorr • - • from a significantportion• the board. Fetzer said others on ` board distributed Others were confounded that substantialproposals m• -f Sept.had not beenby some board members,who then - in the position of voting on - • iwe're going to have united board, have one group over e drafting • • f the other group not knowing anything about it," said Bissette, an Asheville lawyer and board chairman, who later sai he learned of the final details of the resolutions the day before the meeting. "It's going to exacerbate problems that we have."(3ane Stancill, THE NEWS & OBSERVER, 9/14/17). Superintendent Control State Superintendent Mark Johnson will have to wait at least a month before gaining more contr( over the running of North Carolina's public schools, a three -judge panel ruled Thursday. The judges agreed to continue delaying by 30 days its July ruling that upheld a state law that shifts more control over public education operations a Johnson. In requesting the stay, the State Boarof Education had argued that letting the ruling go into effect now "will generate enormous disruption f• our public rr charge denied by • • courtIn a board said • ^ the - 0 billion public •• en under the controlof a single individualfor •rth Carolina history."The bo. • .I • said the law empowered Johnson "to take drastic action," such as unilaterally firing more than 000 employees at the stat- Department of Public Instruction.affidavit,• • . • it would be false to say the law gives him sole• • of - public ••I system. He also called tV board's . -ment that he could fire more than 1,000r-•ile a "falsehood" ant"hysterical1 Hui and Lynn Bonner,: OBSERVER, conservativeCivitas Link The • criticism fore • to an article that says Attorney - * - -. . o stance on 1 . • • - to his Jewish faith.to the article appeared on Carolina Plott Hound, a Drudge Report -style news aggregation site that Civitas bought ago. The website doesn't affiliationbut president Francis De Luca has said his organization owns the site and employs its editor. De Luca did not respond to requests forcomment on 1 The article Plott Hound promoted f headline says Stein joined a lawsuit challenging the Trumpadministration'sdecision • endDA A f f in awith the ccordance a • - r ethnic interestsof own particular group _ those within contemporary Judaism. Stein is a reform- • - from within his own ethnic group majority with roots in western countries to be numerically diluted." Rob Schofield of the liberal N.C. Policy Watch called on Civitas to condemn the comments about Stein, saying the linked article is "chock full of some of the most egregious examples of paranoid xenophobia and . one •' • imagine." "Let's hope, however, that all of the (Civitas funder Art) Pope organization leaders -- and Pope himself -- speak up quickly, publicly and forcefully to permanently disavow both the Plott Hound and the Triad Conservative as well as the scurrilous and anti-Semitic garbage they are shoveling," Schofield wrote on the Policy Watch website. DEQ-CFW 00084615 The Stein article isn't the first time that Plott Hound has linked to controversial flog posts reposted their headlines.banner headlineon -f a departing News & Observer editor • is Africa ' - ••• rag • - who was leaving the • it • As of Thursday afternoon, the headline about Stein was no longer on the Plott Hound `•Campbell, INSIDER, • ReplacementMillis Republicans •. to pick a successorfor `'i R-Pender, whose resignation is effective Friday. It's unclear, though, if any candidates have emerged so far to represent the 16th District, which currently covers Pender and a portion of Onslow counties, though if recently redrawn maps are approved by a judicial panel, the new district will remove Onslow County and include a part of Columbus County. Onslow County GOP Chairman Kevin Buffell said nobody fromOnslow Countystepped • d as a candidate.Reached earlier this Thursday.week, former Pender County GOP Chairman Bob Muller said: "people have expressed an interest" in the job, but that he was "not at liberty" to disclose names. Millis, who resigned to spend more time with his family, declined to comment about the process on - • • from - • Southeastern •rth Carolina regionhave met to choose a successorfor • • member. DEQ-CFW 00084616 February,In f !-. Butler, D-New Hanover,chosen out of . field of 1 candidates b Hamilton,executive committees from New Hanover and Brunswick counties. She replaced former Rep. Susi r was appointed by • Roy Cooperto serve as secretaryof Department of Natural and Cultural Resources. The Republican process has, so far, been somewhat different than the Democrats' process earlier this year. The New Hanover and Brunswick Democratic parties publicly announced the names of all candidates, held an open, public forum for candidates to introduce themselves to constituents about a week before the actual selection, and then held an open voice vote for Butler's ultimate Much of the actual selection for Millis's replacement will be the same as Butler's process was -- two voting members appointed by each county's GOP executive committee will receive weighted votes based on e population district from• oper then has seven days to officially appoint the new member.he doesn't appointment - days, is presumed i have made the appointment, to state law. In material outlining the process r selecting replacement, • • the Republicans i. "a secret f. Ir to select a new state representative. -STAR-NEWS, • ChemoursLobbyist The sole registered lobbyist for Chemours -- the company under fire for discharging the chemical GenX into the Cape Fear River -- has resigned that role as of Sept. 6. 3ohn Merritt of Dramtree Consulting was hired by ours in 3une as the water contamination issue became a hot topic the Wilmington area, according • filingsSecretary of State. Reached by phone, Merritt said he's still supportive of the company and could potentially work for them again in the but declined to comment further on . r of - filings don'tr any other lobbyists working for Chemours.(Colin Campbell, THE INSIDER, 9/15/17). i 1 .,..,.. • it . 1'. - '.r •: - f.'' .".: .:..# . r.1 � i . .:'. • .11 - r r i. f f. r . • .I. . - - • • .� • i r f •. a-■ �-- f 1 f. f-iri- • - - ri. • • - - . • . • f • i f-rf- • i.' a. - r . •. i' f . . - . � fr -- i 101 VMA IJ 9014, . • DEQ-CFW 00084617 campaign had .f• , 1 1/1 on . i through the end of August, • f 1 to finance reports filed with the Board of Elections. McFarlane had about $62,000. Fitts had $97.50 and said this week that he'd raised upwards of $2,000 since then.(Henry Gargan, THE NEWS & OBSERVER, Political • d.f - shows in North• - ongoing f-r.I- on f overhaul, recentt' the University of • • - Board of • - •rs, human trafficking • class size mandates.to look for: • DEQ-CFW 00084618 State, U.S. Senate candidate and CNN contributor Jason Kander will host a fundraiser on Nov. 16 at Hall's Raleigh law office. Kander came close to unseating Republican Sen. Roy Blunt but didn't win. A recent Politico article said Kander is "doing presidential-ish travel and generating presidential-ish buzz," but won't say if he intends to run for the Democratic nomination in 2020. Tickets to the event range from $100 to $5,200.(THE INSIDER, 9/15/17). Pesticide Disposal For most people in farming with a bulging to-do list, rain is a disruptor. Not for Walter Adams this week in Lenoir County, where he hosted a pesticide drop-off event. Farmers and others were urged to bring unneeded pesticides, herbicides and fungicides to a spot in South Kinston. People expert at safely disposing of the chemicals took them off their hands for free, no questions asked. Rain it turns out is good for such business. Adams and his team collected 8,629 lbs of unwanted chemicals, beating a 2005 record of 6,014 pounds in the same county. "In the rain, farmers can't get out to the fields," said Adams, an agriculture and natural resources technician with North Carolina Cooperative Extension. "It's a good day to clean out the farm Federal figures published in 2014 are dated, but they show that U.S. farmers used 516 million pounds of pesticides in 2008, a decrease from 632 million pounds in 1981. The decline is attributed to the more efficient use of chemical agents, integrated pest management practices that deploy more than chemicals against insects, and expanded use of genetically engineered crops resistant to some pests. Nonetheless, farmers often find themselves with potentially toxic products they will never use shelved and stacked in storage sheds. In 1980, North Carolina was first to launch a statewide pesticide disposal assistance program to divert such compounds from where they are not permitted, including sanitary landfills, private land or waterways. The Pesticide Disposal Assistance Program has disposed of close to three million pounds of pesticides since it started, said J. Derrick Bell, who leads the program within the state Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services program. This diversion is vital because some pesticides, in the right concentrations, can be harmful to people and wildlife when released into the environment. (Catherine Clabby, NC HEALTH NEWS, 9/14/17). NC Poverty New Census Bureau figures show that despite national improvements, many people across the state still face barriers to getting ahead, such as lack of access to good -paying jobs, unaffordable childcare and little access to public transportation to get to work, according to the Budget and Tax Center, a project of the N.C. Justice Center. The organization, which monitors economic conditions in the state, points out that although there were small improvements between 2015 and 2016, the number of people struggling to pay the bills remains high. According to the analysis, 15.4 percent of North Carolinians lived in poverty in 2016, living on less than $24,600 a year for a family of four. One in 4 North Carolina kids are growing up in families that can't give them a good start to in life because they are paid wages too low to afford the basics. "For too many families in North Carolina, economic opportunity is out of reach," said Alexandra Sirota, director of the Budget and Tax Center, in a press release. "The fact that more than 15 percent of our residents in lack basic economic security is a drag on our state's overall economy and quality of life." The new Census data, according to the organization, show that North Carolina's families are still dealing with high rates of poverty, stagnant incomes, and widespread income inequality. The agency's analysis: North Carolina's poverty rate is 1.4 percentage points higher than the U.S. poverty rate and has the 13th highest poverty rate in the nation. The state's median income ($50,584) increased by a little over $2,000 from 2015, but is stil' $1,130 less than 2007. 6.7 percent of North Carolinians live in extreme poverty, which means they live below less than half of the poverty line --or about $12,300 a year for a family of four. OEQ-CFVV_00084619 NorthIn . • : . 23.5 percent of African Americans live below official poverty Children($24,600 for a family of 4) compared with 10.8% of whites. Also, 27.3 percent of Latinx, 25.5 of American Indians, and 11.9 percent of Asian Americans live in poverty. r -• experience higherof poverty than adults. In 2016,percent, or • - -• in poverty compared to • percent of adults .f • 65 and older. Women• poverty rates than men,• percent compared to 14.1 percent, respectively. Triangle NBC affiliate WRAL-TV. • Fox affiliate WRAZ are off the air for• - of AT&T because of • dispute- a Capitol Broadcasting, parent companyof stations.the - outage also affects.r I• independent •Wilmington.During the outage, the TV screens of AT&T U-verse customers carry this message: "The owner of this channel has • ef it fromthe U-verse lineup despite our -r to keep it availableto you. Visit att.com/fightingforyoufor • information on • -turn." A statement from Gelinas, an AT&T Uverse spokesman, lays the blame on WRAL's parent company, saying, "Capitol is deliberately rrr: • WRAL • WRAZ from it their homesCapitol receives■ - The FAQ on • a - i'- you to watch our - we are allowed to share in that revenue because theyare using our programming." f Shoreline Early Voting Sites municipalWith a - • two months•. County Board of • • •n't come to the unanimous• t-- needed to approve an early voting plan • the 2017 statemunicipal election on Tuesday night at the Watauga County Administrative Building. "I believe it's in the board's r •now,"fr. • member Stella Anderson s.i• not .f The lack of a vote on an early voting plan for Watauga County came after Anderson rejected Board Chairman Bill A -to idea to separate voteson • • sites, saying the board had to vote on votes.the entire early -voting plan together. "We can't do that Bill," Anderson protested about separating the your way of cutting out DEQ-CFW 00084620 p�.n naganne ��=i i Named namedUNC-TV has Raleigh native Travis E. Mitchell as its newi director of r • starts his new position on 'i be f• f - for the content broadcast on publii media•rk's four channels and its online properties. channel; UNC-EX, which offers travel, culture, science, nature, history and outdoor adventure programming; programming - • North Carolina;'•• channel devoted to •: f • programming i '• as a memberof advisory board and was at • - time the chief operating officer and executive vice president of the MBC Network (aka The Black Family Channel). More recently, Mitchell was the president of Communitiesi• of i In a press release from• -• the importance of programming growing schoolup: "UNC-TV was there for me and my grandmother when I would return to my home in Southeast Raleigh from pre-school and elementary school while my mother headed to graduate r obtain twomaster'sdegrees in education. I le. d to spell by . 1 'Sesame Street."' He added, "I want to make sure that UNC-TV is there for them, too, just like it was for i• a' OBSERVER, • 1 l Needing . voice over • campaign .• • ad, at -large Charlotteo- b-Fallon turned to an old • .1ue: Former Mayor• • o spent 22 months federalprison after pleading guilty to' 1 bribes •r, read the voicei over, praised Fallon. Whetherenlisting Cannon'sassistance - pe or . icampaign. But it enough forto keep her job.`• sixth out of eightcandidates Tuesday's spotsDemocratic primary. The top four finishers -- James Mitchell, Braxton Winston, Julie Eiselt and Dimple Ajmera - advanced to the November general election. "He did a voice over for one of my • i' f Fallon said.the big f'.I about f. • his dues. didn't whine, he didn't cry. He didn't turn anyone else in. He paid his dues like a gentleman. "(Steve Harrison, THE CHARLOTTE OBSERVER, 9/14/17). Poverty Winston-Salemr a new.d- if• from examinegrant from the Thurgood Marshall College Fund. The Center for the Study of Economic Mobility w why it is • difficult forsome people •rsyth County to lift themselvesout • f poverty. The center's direi economist • Richardson,•- i the center began with data from an article in the New ork Times. "It looked at the entire country,a by looked at what was the probability of • . up the economic l• born r•i Richardson.i I was pretty stunned to see that our i r from the very bottom countryentire of economic m♦f Richardson says there are pockets of Forsyth County where the poverty rate is 60 percent. And while there are cities that are worse off economically than Winston-Salem, most of them seem tc be doing . better •Ii of • people out of "Our poverty getting worse,we ii quite • 1 people that are struggling to get up the ladder• more than ever for • uncrack this f The Thurgood Marshall College Fund is supporting the center with donations from the Koch Foundation. Winsr e State to get moneyfrom billionaire Kr Charlesbrothers, who many say use their financial clout to support causes aligned with their libertarian political leanings. Western Carolina University, for example, received money two years ago from the ich Foundation in sufp of . free enterprise center.r did, however,it to . faculty backlash. Even the original donation i the Thurgood Marshall fund sparked some controversy. (Paul- • y DEQ-CFW 00084622 Hurricane 3ose, . f.l- follow-up to Category• f churn up North Carolina'scoast barelytropical-force winds and dangerous surf by this weekend, forecasters said. 3ose is a Category 1 storm in the Atlantic generating 75 mph sustained winds, hurricanestrength.445 s east of i.hamas anf moving slowly west at 3 mph.r - Center expects 3ose to veer northeast later Thursdaykeeps •. The hurricane center shows tropical storm -force winds affecting the central and northern North Carolina coast by Sunday morning. It places 3ose's expected path off the Carolina coast by Tuesday morning. The entire East coast should keep an eye on 3ose as it meanders through the Atlantic over the next week, according to AccuWeather. "The strength and frequency of rip currents will increase at a time when many lifeguards are no longer on duty and people may he.. 1 to the beach r take advantage of building • aforecasters•, winds"Beach erosion that was inflicted by Irma along the southern Atlantic seaboard and persistent om non -tropical systems in the miI' . o' f be exacerbated. - Henderson, CHARLOTTE OBSERVER, 9/14/17). Leaf Peepers . recent economic imf, f from r Economics • f that in 2016, Buncombe County attracted 1.9 million visitors,including a overnight guests. Visitorsf- • billion, generating $2.9 billion in economic impact and supporting 26,700 jobs. Marla Tambellini, deputy director of the Asheville Convention and Visitors Bureau, said the fall foliage season is estimated to be responsible for about 12 percent of -1 room occupancyfor • other throughout the mountains,have economies based almost completelyon • •••• fall color can be essential. Wilmot,Karen - director of - Bryson • f_ of r - said October provide • biggest receipts. had the government shutdownOctober i happened at a really r.f' time. Fall is very importantto the economic well-f- • of . • she said. The county of 00 people is a gateway hotelscommunity to Great Smoky Mountains National Park, the most visited national park in the country -- last year the park had 11 million visitors. On peak fall foliage weekends and most weekdays, • cabins in the county are completely filled,• f The county seesi to 40,000 visitorsOctober. Actual fall color -induced dollar am• for • • to come by, but • - m' seniorhis -1 hospitality and tourism class worked on . project in 2i' • hotel room data gathered from Smith Travel Research in 26 WNC counties. "Unlike the movies and NASCAR, we don't . turnstile to count economic f. but • f number is hoteldata," Morse said. "We found that October1 • for b of • ' Occupancy rates can reach upward of 85 percent with weekend rates upward of 90 percent. It brings a tremendousr of dollars t• the region." Based on ob for • percent a year, he said.Some of - drivers are repeat customers,• f- -.i season and more thingsto f• besides •• i at Hired The board odirectors of - r Foundation announced =fThursday that 3onathan Kapplerthe new executive director of - organization on Oct.IKappler was the research director at NCFEF from119'• 2013,1 that position • work in the Office of dent within UNC General Administration. He is currently serving as interim vice president of d-ral relations and director of state government • for - UNC system. Kappler replaces outgoing Executive Director 3oe Stewart, who is leaving NCFEF at the end of September • become president • government affairs at the Independent- Agents of . RELEASE, • 1 New Play Bekah Brunstetter's new play "The Cake," tells the timely story about a baker's refusal to make a wedding cake for . same -sex wedding.same-se. - 1 between personal beliefs . • politics hits very close to home. Brunstetter's father is former N.C. Sen. Pete Brunstetter, who supported the 2011 DEQ-CFW 00084623 Defense of Marriage Act, also known as Amendment One, that defines marriage as only between one man and one woman. Pete Brunstetter, a Republican, was a leading lawmaker and chairman of one of the Senate's judiciary committees when the legislature voted to put the constitutional amendment on marriage to a public vote, which it passed. Her father's role in the controversial North Carolina law -- which subsequently was overturned by the courts -- is a partial inspiration for his daughter's play. "My parents were heavily involved in (Amendment One), and I have a lot of complicated feelings about it," Bekah Brunstetter said Wednesday, hours before her play was set to open its run at UNC- Chapel Hill's PlayMakers Repertory Company. "That event sort of forced me for the first time as an adult to really confront our different belief systems." Bekah Brunstetter, a graduate of UNC and a Winston-Salem native, is a writer on the popular NBC series "This Is Us." She said she and her father often have talked about the roots of their beliefs, but added, "although not that law in detail." Meanwhile, Pete Brunstetter, who left the legislature in 2013, said he and his daughter continue ti#: disagree on gay marriage. "We don't talk about it a lot," he said. "She's got her set of views on it, I've got my set. We work through our differences." Neither expects to change each other's minds, but they remain respectful of each other's views.(David Menconi and Lynn Bonner, THE NEWS & OBSERVER, 9/14/17). Aired Alex 3ohnson has been hired as the new associate state director for advocacy for AARP in North Carolina. 3ohnson most recently served as the director of strategic operations for Sen. Richard Burr's successful re-election campaign and has worked all over the country on Republican campaigns. 3ohnson has also worked for advocacy organizations which include serving as the NC State director for the Koch -backed Generation Opportunity during the 2014 campaign cycle.(Press Release, 9/14/17). Legislative Studies and Meetings ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. FMIMP 1197111, =- =q * 12 p.m. I Session Convenes (House) * 12 p.m. I Session Convenes (Senate) N.C. Government Meetinas and Hearin DEQ-CFW-00084624 ■ _ ■ • a.m. I The State Board of •mmunity Colleges full board meets,• • -• System Office, 00 W. 3onesRaleigh. ■ - c 0 f a.m. I The Board of Directors Committee i.::. - North Carolina •.II . Partnership for Children -^Homewood Suites by i n Greensboro, 201 Centreport Yvonne Huntley, 919-821-9573. 12:30 p.m. I The Executive Committee of the Board of Directors of The North Carolina Partnership for Children meets, Homewood Suites by Hilton Greensboro, 201 Centreport Dr., Greensboro. • f Division of - Fisheries holds. public i - f • ' proposed shellfishleases in • '• •unty, North Topsail• -nter, 2008 Loggerhead Court,North Topsail Beach. 3:30 p.m. I The Finance and Audit Committee of the North Carolina State Ports Authority will meet via teleconference, the Board Room of the North Carolina Maritime Building, 2202 B Boulevard, Wilmington. ■ - ;■ Rules- -w Commission meets,Administrative Hearingsoffice, Review Commission Room, 1711 New Hope Church Road, Raleigh. 6 p.m. I N.C. DMV holds public hearing on assessing fees for administrative review request 3ohn Chavis Media Center, 505 Martin Luther King 3r. Blvd., Raleigh. Written comments w be accepted at the public hearing and online at ncdot.gov/about/regulations/rules/ throug nITP10UW ■ * 9 a.m. I Board of Directors of the North Carolina State Ports Authority meeting, North Carolina Maritime Building, 113 Arendell St., Morehead City. Standard • - • License EligibilityBoard to the N.C. Division meets,of Marine Fisheries • of -Fisheries'f • CardinalNorth • ■. i TBD I The Golden LEAF Foundation's board meets, TBD. Contact: 3enny Tinklepaugh, 888- 8 8i 9 a.m. I North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission meets, Wildlife Resources Commission -.f• . -rs Conference Room,. Drive, NCSU Centennial i' - f •252-726-7021. DEQ-CFW 00084625 8:30 The Fund Development and Communications Committeei - North Carolini Partnership for Children, Inc. meet, 1100 Wake Forest Road, Raleigh. Contact: Yvonne 919-821-9573. Committee11 a.m. I The Executive of The Northi Partnership for Children 1100 Wake Forest Road, Raleigh. Contact: Yvonne Huntley, 919-821-9573. I! The Accountability Committeei . r Partnership for Children meets, 1100 Wake Forest Road, Raleigh. Contact: Yvonne Huntley, 919-821-9573. Rules Review Commissionf 1 office,Rules Review Commission Room, die Church Road, Raleigh. •' ..m. I Environmental Managementi •n meets, Ground Floor Archdale Building, 512 N. Salisbury- ■ •' ..m. I Environmental Managementi •n meets, Ground Floor Archdale Building, 512 N. Salisbury- ■ FMITIMME • r The NC Pesticide Board meets,i . -s Martin Building State Fairgrounds,Raleigh. Rules Review Commissionf 1 office,Rules Review Commission Room, 1711 New Hope Church Road, Raleigh. • TBD I The Golden LEAF Foundation's board meets, TBD. Contact: Jenny Tinklepaugh, 888- •' •i0. • TBD I The NC Wildlife Resources Commission meets, 1751 Varsity Dr., Raleigh. W. ` -.1 i ' q t< •' ..m. I Environmental Managementi •n meets, Ground Floor Archdale Building, 512 N. Salisbury- ■ DEQ-CFW 00084626 9 a.m. I Environmental Management Commission meets, Ground Floor Hearing Room, Archdale Building, 512 N. Salisbury St., Raleigh. N.C. Utilities Commission Hearing Schedule 16 rel I I ej��p e Staff Conference RMAPMMINIA * Staff Conference * Staff Conference * Staff Conference * Staff Conference 1 0 . 0 * Staff Conference -J:g # 1 -1 UWANN9 e Staff Conference =03 4! sgmsm M.P. Mq- KqI DEQ-CFW-00084627 =r- rffm���1 • 9 a.m. I The State Consumer and Family Advisory Committee (SCFAC) meets, Dix Grill, 1101 Cafeteria Dr., Raleigh. Other Meetings and Events of Interest R=. w_T4 TBD I The NC Bankers Association hold Young Bankers Conference, Crowne Plaza Asheville Resort, Asheville. 0 g ffffZT! Cancer Research Breakfast ACS CAN, Conference Rooms B and C, Comprehensive Cancer Center at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in Winston -Sale Contact Ray Riordan at ray. riordan@cancer.org. I 57��KAWFI 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. l6relaror.mo TBD I The NC Bankers Association hold Women in Banking Conference, Renaissanc-V Charlotte Southpark, 5501 Carnegie Blvd., Charlotte. 1 1, h, N 0 9 1 0 vvv��v n. d nsi de :-. ro m DEQ-CFW-00084628 WE Cmwobet Edlor Wuren HaM (219) 06-210:� mamov; Bm" "lanager (xmet&q?ndnsclot xonq - (919) 656-2207 G-aharn Hoppe, "(91t 829-8951 Manager Rdme0ndnW.;wcono (919) 016-280"", NO Copyhghz 2017 The InAder. Any ruproduchm or d The InskOr N,-,,�th ''a� or in �s a WAsion 5 Wool Jaw and sURUI onohloved w4hout permisnan Ak r1hus rev,ved, DEQ-CFVW-00084629