Tag Archives: Carolinas

East Carolina’s HC calls Jim Harbaugh’s three-game suspension ‘silly’ – Maize n Brew

  1. East Carolina’s HC calls Jim Harbaugh’s three-game suspension ‘silly’ Maize n Brew
  2. Four Michigan assistants to split duties during Harbaugh suspension – ESPN ESPN
  3. College Football Fans Couldn’t Stop Laughing at Jim Harbaugh’s Decision to Hire His Dad During Suspension Sports Illustrated
  4. Michigan announces Jim Harbaugh will be replaced by 4 head coaches, including his son, during 3-game suspension Yahoo Sports
  5. ‘Hail Yes!’ Michigan football’s Jim Harbaugh gets 3-game suspension Detroit Free Press
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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South Carolina’s Aliyah Boston, Maryland’s Diamond Miller And Villanova’s Maddy Siegrist Headline Prospects To Attend WNBA Draft 2023 Presented By State Farm® – WNBA.com – Official Site of the WNBA – WNBA.com

  1. South Carolina’s Aliyah Boston, Maryland’s Diamond Miller And Villanova’s Maddy Siegrist Headline Prospects To Attend WNBA Draft 2023 Presented By State Farm® – WNBA.com – Official Site of the WNBA WNBA.com
  2. Projected No. 1 pick Aliyah Boston among 15 players to attend WNBA draft ESPN
  3. 2023 WNBA Mock Draft: Aliyah Boston goes No. 1 to Fever, Lynx get Diamond Miller & MORE | CBS Sports CBS Sports
  4. SI’s 2023 WNBA Mock Draft Sports Illustrated
  5. WNBA Draft: Where South Carolina women’s basketball seniors could land Greenville News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Supreme Court considers Harvard and University of North Carolina’s use of affirmative action in admissions. What you need to know



CNN
 — 

The conservative Supreme Court will meet Monday to consider whether colleges and universities can continue to take race into consideration as a factor in admissions, a case that could diminish the number of Black and Hispanic students in higher education.

Hanging in the balance is the future of admissions plans at hundreds of schools that have relied on court precedent for decades in order to achieve the educational benefits they say flow from student body diversity on campus.

Challengers in the case are targeting Harvard and the University of North Carolina arguing that their programs violate equal protection principles, dash the promise of a colorblind society, and discriminate against Asian Americans. They are urging the court to overturn precedent and they say that the schools should explore and further develop race-neutral alternatives to achieve diversity.

At least nine states have already chosen to end consideration of race in university admissions, including Arizona, California, Florida, Idaho, Michigan, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Washington, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Supreme Court precedent allows the consideration of race, but the court’s new composition of conservative justices did not hesitate last term to overturn decades old precedent in a case that curtailed a federal right to abortion.

A Washington Post poll found that 63% of US adults support the Supreme Court banning colleges and universities from considering a student’s race and ethnicity when making decisions about student admissions. At the same time, 64% also say that in general, programs designed to increase the racial diversity of students on college campuses are a good thing.

A conservative group, Students for Fair Admissions (SFFA) is behind both challenges.

Edward Blum, the President of SFFA, has hired a conservative boutique law firm, Consovoy McCarthy, to challenge the policies at the country’s oldest private university, Harvard and the country’s first public university, University of North Carolina. The firm is composed of several former clerks of Justice Clarence Thomas who has been a critic of affirmative action.

In 2003, Thomas wrote in one opinion: “The Constitution abhors classifications based on race, not only because those classifications can harm favored races or are based on illegitimate motives, but also because every time the government places citizens on racial registers and makes race relevant to the provision of burdens or benefits, it demeans us all.”

SSFA argues that the Harvard policy violates Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act that prohibits schools receiving federal funds from discriminating based on race. He says that the UNC policy is subject to Title VI, as well as 14th Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection under the law, which covers state universities.

Lower US courts have ruled in favor of the schools finding that that the programs used race in a sufficiently limited way to fulfill a compelling interest in diversity.

The two disputes were initially consolidated, but after Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson announced she would recuse herself from the Harvard case because she had served on the school’s board of overseers, they were decoupled, so the nation’s first black female justice could weigh in on the issue in at least one case.

The University of North Carolina, established in 1789, was formally segregated for much of its history. The current challenge comes some 70 years after the first Black student was admitted.

After an eight-day trial in 2020, district Judge Loretta C. Biggs ruled in favor of the school making special mention of its history steeped in racism.

In a footnote, she noted the school’s “comparatively recent embrace of diversity,” citing Southern historian Dr. David Cecelski, who, she said provided the court with credible evidence that UNC has been a “strong and active promoter of white supremacy and racist exclusion for most of its history.” The judge noted that Cecelski put forth considerable findings that while the school has made “important strides to reform the institution’s racial outlook and policies” the efforts have fallen short of “repairing deep-seated strides to reform the institution’s racial outlook and policies.”

“The University continues to face challenges admitting and enrolling underrepresented minorities particularly African American males, Hispanics, and Native Americans,” Biggs said and noted that in 2013 enrollment of African American men in the first-year class fell below 100 students.

Siding with UNC, Biggs said “Ensuring that our public institutions of higher learning are open and available to all segments of our citizenry is not a gift to be sparingly given only to select populations, but rather is an institutional obligation to be broadly and equitably administered.” The Supreme Court stepped in to consider the case before it was heard by a federal appeals court.

The school’s admissions office consists of about 120 employees engaged in a process where in the typical cycle the school receives about 43,500 applications for a freshman class of 4,200. Generally, about half the applicants are North Carolina residents. The requirements for admissions include a common application, an essay, letters of recommendation and standardized test scores. Race is used as a “plus factor” as the school considers criteria that includes a high school’s program criteria, academic performance, testing and engagement in activities outside of the classroom as well as personal attributes such as curiosity, honesty, motivation, and impact on the community. In addition, the school considers race-neutral alternatives that would allow it to achieve diversity.

North Carolina Solicitor General Ryan Park, argued that diversity is a compelling interest at the school and that the admissions office uses a holistic approach that affords an individualized consideration of all aspects of an applicant’s background, never relying upon quotas when it considers race. He also said the school makes a good faith effort to consider race neutral alternatives.

“In UNC’s academic judgement, diversity is central to the education it aims to provide the next generation of leaders in business, science, medicine, government and beyond,” Park said in court papers.

He said that while an applicant’s race may occasionally tip the balance toward admission in an individual case “it almost always does not.” He said the school offers about $159 million in undergraduate scholarships, part of which go to students based on their family’s socio-economic standing. It also recruits from a pool of high achieving community college students.

Park also borrowed from the judicial philosophy favored by several of the current conservative justices who believe that the Constitution should be interpreted according to the original meaning of the founders. Park argued that the 14th Amendment was originally understood to allow “appropriately tailored race-conscious decision making”, an argument that Justice Jackson made in a different case earlier in the term concerning the historic Voting Rights Act. To make the connection, Park referred to historian Andrew Kull, who wrote that the framers considered and rejected proposals that would have made the Constitution explicitly colorblind.

And he cited Brown v. Board of Education, the seminal opinion holding that state laws requiring separate but equal schools violated the Constitution. He argued that UNC’s admissions policy furthers the school’s “unwavering commitment to providing equal educational opportunities to all qualified students, no matter their race.”

SSFA lawyer Patrick Strawbridge responded that the process is not holistic, and in fact the school conceals the improper use of race behind opaque procedures awarding “mammoth racial preferences” to African Americans and Hispanics. He said that the use of race so permeates the process that race becomes a predominant factor at “every stage.”

He told the justices that the lawsuit had revealed the schools “sporadic and unserious efforts” to examine the availability of face-neutral alternatives by providing data through simulations

“A white, out-of -state male who had only a 10% chance of admission would have a 98% chance if UNC treated him as an African American and a 69% chance if UNC treated him as a Hispanic,” he said.

Strawbridge argued that the Brown decision actually supports his position. “Separate but equal has no place in education,” he said but added that the court should overturn a 2003 case called Grutter v. Bollinger that upheld the affirmative action admissions policy at the University of Michigan Law School. “Because Brown is our law, Grutter cannot be,” he said.

Harvard’s program is like that of University of North Carolina, but the challenge at hand focuses particularly on the treatment of Asian American students and a charge that the school intentionally discriminates against them setting higher standards for their admission. While Harvard is a private university, it is still subject to Title VI because it receives public funds.

Its freshman class in 2019 had 1,600 students out of 35,000 applicants. Of the 35,000, 2,700 had perfect verbal SAT scores, 3,400 had perfect math SAT scores and more than 8,000 had perfect GPA’s. After a 15-day bench trial that featured 30 witnesses, the district court ruled in favor of Harvard, finding that the school did not discriminate against Asian Americans in violation of Title VI.

The 1st US Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the district court, holding that it did “not clearly err in finding that Harvard did not intentionally discriminate against Asian Americans. “

The admissions process at the school takes into consideration several components including pre-application recruitment efforts, applications, a “first read” of application materials, and interviews. The reading procedures include guideline to assign numerical numbers to certain categories to detail the factors admissions officers should consider. Those factors include academic ratings, extracurricular ratings, athletic ratings, and personal ratings.

The personal ratings attempt to measure how an applicant impacts people around them and contributions they might make. Considerations include perceived leadership, maturity, self-confidence, likeability, courage and kindness. After SFFA brought the suit, Harvard modified its instructions to say that an applicant’s race or ethnicity should not be considered in assigning the personal ratings. Harvard has a list of so called “tip” factors including race that are used after the first read process.

Former US Solicitor General Seth Waxman, Harvard’s lead lawyer, pointed out in court papers that court precedent allows a “holistic” review of an application, and that it need not ignore race.

“Seeking the benefits of a diverse student body, universities may consider race as one among many factors,” he said.

“Our Constitution promises ‘equal protection of the laws,’ he said and added “it does not require us to disregard the commonsense reality that race is one among many things that shape life experiences in meaningful ways.”

He roundly rejected charges of any discrimination against Asian American students arguing that while the SFFA “invokes the bogeyman of discrimination” against Asian American applicants the lower courts had found “in no uncertain terms that Harvard does not discriminate.”

And he said that the lower courts had found that none of the asserted race-neutral alternatives put forward by Harvard would allow it to achieve its goals and that if it abandoned consideration of race as one among many factors, representation of African Americans and Hispanic students would decline.

Cameron Norris, the SSFA lawyer charged with arguing the Harvard case, charges the schools with ignoring precedent and the “mistreatment” of Asian American applicants.

“Its admissions process penalizes them for supposedly lacking as much leadership, confidence likability, or kindness as white applicants” he said.

He particularly attacked Harvard’s system based on so called “personal ratings.” By considering race alongside subjective criteria like “self-confidence, likability, and courage” universities invite admissions officers to rely on anti-Asian stereotypes, he said.

“No one is under the illusion that we live in a post-racial society, or that racial discrimination is a thing of the past,” Norris said in court papers. “But when elite universities place high-schoolers on racial registers and tell the world that their skin color affects what they think and know, the universities are hurting, not helping,” he said.

Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar supports both Harvard and the University of North Carolina, urging the justices to reject the invitation to ignore court precedent stemming from the Court’s 1978 decision in Regents of the University of California v Bakke where Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr. recognized that the nation’s future “depends upon leaders trained through wide exposure to the ideas and mores of students as diverse as this Nation of many peoples.”

She noted that court precedent has played a vital role in bringing diversity in higher education that has had rippling effect in the work force.

“The Nation’s military leaders, for example, have learned through hard experience that the effectiveness of our military depends on a diverse officer corps that is ready to lead an increasingly diverse fighting force,” she said in court briefs.

Judge Jackson in remarks: I am the dream of the slave

She said court precedent has proven “eminently workable, carefully limiting the consideration of race and requiring use of race-netural alternatives to the extent possible.”

And she, too cited, Brown.

“Nothing in Brown’s condemnation of laws segregating the races to perpetuate a caste system calls into question admissions policies adopted to promote greater integration and diversity,” she wrote.

A friend of the court brief filed on behalf of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund also questions the challengers’ suggestion that Brown mandates a result in SSFA’s favor.

“Petitioner would transform Brown from an indictment against racial apartheid into a tool that supports racial exclusion, prevents further advancement in the Nation’s progress towards racial integration, and deepens persistent inequalities in educational opportunities,” the brief said.

The Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund is also supporting the school, rejecting the charge that race-conscious admissions policies discriminate against Asian Americans or perpetuate harmful stereotypes against them.

“The Asian American community is vast and varied, including first-generation college students and children whose parents’ professions secured their immigration; children of working-class refugees and multigenerational Americans; speakers of over 300 languages; aspiring entrepreneurs, artists, teachers, and more,” they argued. They say that Students for Fair Admission relies on “manipulated date” to attempt to demonstrate that Asian Americans with high test scores are admitted at lower rates than other racial groups.

Two groups, however, the Asian American Coalition for Education and the Asian American Legal Foundation, support SFFA with a particular emphasis on the “personal ratings” used by Harvard that the groups say assigns an “artificially low” rating to Asian American applicants during the admissions process to “counter their otherwise above-average metrics and ‘balance’ the racial makeup of its student body.”

“Through use of the personal rating, Harvard essentially imposes a racial hierarchy, where African Americans are the most desirable, followed by Hispanics, followed by whites, and with Asians at the very bottom as the least favored and the least likely to be admitted,” they said.

David E. Bernstein, a University Professor at George Mason University’s Antonin Scalia Law School also supports SFFA. He calls into question Harvard’s racial categories, deeming them “arbitrary and irrational.”

“Harvard cannot explain why roughly 60% of the world’s population should be grouped together as ‘Asian” despite vast differences in appearance, language, and culture,” he added.

CORRECTION: This story has been updated to specify that Jackson is the nation’s first female black justice.

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Ian recovery efforts continue in Florida and the Carolinas

Republican Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida said Sunday that he will vote against any potential congressional disaster aid for victims of Hurricane Ian if lawmakers “load it up with stuff that’s unrelated to the storm.” 

“Sure. I will fight against it having pork in it. That’s the key,” the senator told CNN’s Dana Bash on “State of the Union” when asked if he would vote against any potential relief package that also contains money for other things.

“We shouldn’t have that in there because it undermines the ability to come back and do this in the future,” he said.  

“I think disaster relief is something we shouldn’t play with. We are capable in this country, in the Congress, of voting for disaster relief for key — after key events like this without using it as a vehicle or a mechanism for people to load it up with stuff that’s unrelated to the storm.

Rubio had previously faced criticism for voting against federal disaster aid for victims of Hurricane Sandy because he said the relief wasn’t narrowly tailored to address only the storm. The senator later voted in favor of a piecemeal aid package for victims of Sandy. 

“It had been loaded up with a bunch of things that had nothing to do with disaster relief,” he told Bash on Sunday, referring to a Hurricane Sandy aid package he voted against. “I would never put out there that we should go use a disaster relief package for Florida as a way to pay for all kinds of other things people want around the country.” 

On Friday, Rubio and fellow GOP Florida Sen. Rick Scott sent a letter to the Senate Appropriations Committee requesting their “support in developing a disaster supplemental to provide much needed assistance to Florida.” 

“A robust and timely federal response, including through supplemental programs and funding, will be required to ensure that sufficient resources are provided to rebuild critical infrastructure and public services capacity, and to assist our fellow Floridians in rebuilding their lives,” the Republican lawmakers wrote. 

Rubio did praise the federal government’s immediate response to Hurricane Ian stating, “There will be more that’s needed but as usual and always FEMA has been a great partner, the Biden administration has responded, and so there’s no complaint there. These are professionals, and I think in times like this, people realize that it’s not about politics. It shouldn’t be.”

Hurricane Ian — expected to be ranked the most expensive storm in Florida’s history — made landfall Wednesday as a powerful Category 4 and had weakened to a post-tropical cyclone by Saturday, dropping rain over parts of West Virginia and western Maryland.

At least 67 people have been killed by Ian in Florida as it swallowed homes in its furious rushing waters, obliterated roadways and ripped down powerlines. Four people were also killed in storm-related incidents in North Carolina, officials have said. 

CNN’s Betsy Klein contributed to this report.

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Hurricane Ian lashes Carolinas as death toll in Florida rises

Hurricane Ian was barreling toward South Carolina Friday after bludgeoning southwestern and central Florida, leaving catastrophic damage in its wake.

The National Hurricane Center said Ian, which regained hurricane status after a brief span as a tropical storm, was expected to bring “life-threatening storm surge” and hurricane conditions to the Carolina coast along with “flooding rains” across South and North Carolina and southern Virginia. It issued a hurricane warning for the entire South Carolina coast.

Ian was already bringing tropical storm conditions to the Georgia and Carolina coasts on Friday morning, the hurricane center reported.

And Ian could have more in store for Florida: “Major to record river flooding will continue across central Florida through next week,” the hurricane center predicted.

Ian made landfall Wednesday in southwestern Florida as a major Category 4 hurricane, then ripped across the state. It was one of the strongest hurricanes ever to hit the U.S., and could be the deadliest in the state’s history, President Biden has said.

State emergency officials announced 21 deaths as of Friday morning, however they’re not sure if all are directly related to the storm. Additionally, in Volusia County, the sheriff’s department has confirmed two storm-related deaths there.

People were trapped in homes. Videos and images showed devastating flooding. Today, nearly 2 million homes and businesses remain without power, according to poweroutage.us.

Now, Ian is forecast to make its second landfall somewhere near Charleston, South Carolina, mid-afternoon on Friday, CBS News weather producer David Parkinson said. As of 11 a.m., its center was about 65 miles east-southeast of Charleston, and it was moving north at 14 mph with maximum sustained winds of 85 mph, according to the hurricane center.

It should “rapidly weaken” after landfall and move farther inland over South and North Carolina before dissipating by Saturday night, according to forecasters.


Hurricane Ian churns toward South Carolina coast

03:57

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Wake County Public Health announces North Carolina’s first confirmed cases of monkeypox in women :: WRAL.com

Wake County Public Health announced on Thursday the county has two confirmed cases of monkeypox in women.

A county-issued release said they are the first confirmed cases of the virus in women in North Carolina.

“While this global outbreak appears to mostly affect men who have sex with other men, monkeypox is a public health concern for all of us,” said Wake County Preventative Health Director Rebecca Kaufman in the release. “Although there is a low level of risk from just being in the same area as someone who has monkeypox, it is always important to clean surfaces, wear a mask when needed and wash hands frequently.”

Monkeypox is transmitted person-to-person through direct skin-to-skin contact, having contact with an infectious rash, through body fluids or through respiratory secretions. Such contact often occurs during prolonged, face-to-face contact or during intimate physical contact, such as kissing, cuddling or sex.

On Thursday, the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services reported 282 cases of monkeypox in the state, which is an increase compared to 198 cases reported on Aug. 18. Here is a breakdown of the state’s cases:

  • Sex/gender
  • Age
    • 0-17: Two
    • 18-29: 106
    • 30-49: 153
    • 50 years and older: 21
  • Race
    • American Indian/Alaskan Native: Three
    • Asian: One
    • Black or African American: 190
    • Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander: Zero
    • White: 68
    • Multi-racial: Seven
    • Other: 10
    • Unknown: Three
  • Ethnicity
    • Hispanic: 25
    • Non-Hispanic: 248
    • Unknown: Nine

As of Aug. 25, there are 31 documented cases of the virus confirmed in Wake County.

Monkeypox symptoms are similar to smallpox symptoms, but milder, and monkeypox is rarely fatal. The symptoms can include a fever and sores that can spread all over the body.

As of Thursday, Wake County Public Health as administered more than 1,300 doses of the vaccine.

Also, North Carolina has two confirmed cases of monkeypox among children as of Thursday.

On Tuesday, the Mecklenburg County Health Department reported North Carolina’s first known pediatric case of monkeypox.

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North Carolina’s first known pediatric case of monkeypox reported in Mecklenburg County :: WRAL.com

The Mecklenburg County Health Department reported the state of North Carolina’s first known pediatric case of monkeypox on Tuesday.

That means someone younger than 18 years of age has tested positive for the virus.

In the past week, North Carolina is adding an average of 11 new monkeypox cases every day.

The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services said the state has 261 cases of monkeypox as of Tuesday. On Aug. 9, the state reported 114 cases. On July 25, North Carolina reported 34 cases.

As of Tuesday, nearly all of the cases in North Carolina are among men other than the lone case in someone under 18.

Black men make up nearly 70% of the cases in the state, but only 26% of those who have been vaccinated in North Carolina. White men make up about 25% of all cases, but 63% of vaccinations.

Health leaders said they are addressing the disparity through targeted vaccination events.

Over the weekend at Charlotte Pride, some 2,000 people got vaccinated against monkeypox.

In North Carolina, four out of every 10 infections are among people who live in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg area. The virus is spreading mostly among gay and bisexual men and transgender people.

“The reason we are doing this because we do not have enough vaccine,” UNC Health Infectious Disease Specialist Dr. David Wohl. “That’s what concerns me.

“With yet another outbreak, we are behind the eight ball. We didn’t get our act together on a federal level. We didn’t get the vaccine in the country like we should have. Others beat us to the punch and ordered the vaccine.”

Earlier this month, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced it would expand its authorization to allow a different way to get a dose of the monkeypox vaccine due to high demand in some parts of the country. Instead of a regular shot, providers can now use an intradermal shot between the layers of skin. The new way of vaccine injection is one-fifth of the original dose.

Wohl said there are three things people can do to protect themselves:

  • Be thoughtful and check your partners for lesions
  • Encourage people who are at high-risk to get a vaccine
  • Monitor for symptoms

“We are seeing a lot of lesions in the genital area or the rectal area, sometimes in the face or other places,” Wohl said.

Wohl said people who attend Pride or other social settings, like bars and concerts, should not be concerned about catching monkeypox. However, he encourages people to monitor for symptoms — like bumps and blisters — and to be thoughtful about sexual partners.

“You have to know your partner,” Wohl said. “If you don’t know them, know them. That means talking.

“Any new lesions? Any new bumps or ulcers that I should know about? If you are going to be intimate with someone, maybe just take a look before you leap and just check each other out. I don’t think that’s off the table.”

Initial symptoms can include fever or pain when swallowing. Symptoms can take one to three weeks to appear.

“Condoms will not protect you from monkeypox given a lesion can be outside the area a condom covers,” Wohl said. “You do have to be thoughtful about it and we don’t know how much shedding occurs before a lesion shows up.”

As of Tuesday, Wake County is reporting 24 cases, Durham County has 11 cases and Cumberland County has nine cases.

The numbers are lower than the 112 cases reported in Mecklenburg County, which remains the center of the outbreak.

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Durham patient questions North Carolina’s readiness for monkeypox outbreak :: WRAL.com

A 29-year-old Durham man who struggled for nearly two weeks to find a monkeypox test is questioning the readiness of medical providers, state and county public health officials and the federal government in combating the growing outbreak.

The man was notified of his positive monkeypox test on Monday. He spoke to WRAL News on the condition of anonymity.

“It’s been terrible,” he said.

The man said he started making phone calls on June 28 after he had developed mouth sores five days before.

“[I] said, ‘Hey, I think maybe I have monkeypox,’” he said. “’What do I do?’”

The man’s primary care doctor at Duke Family Medicine Center in Durham and the Durham County Health Department told him they weren’t offering monkeypox testing. During the next week, he developed a 103-degree fever.

“The fever is the worst fever I have had in my life,” he said. “The chills, the night sweats.

“I could not eat because opening my mouth to put a fork full of food in my mouth was impossible. It was so painful.”

During two urgent care visits and a trip to the emergency room, he said doctors only tested him for more common sexually transmitted infections.

“We are emerging from two years of a global pandemic, and I don’t feel like we are prepared for the next one,” the man said.

The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services has identified 11 cases of monkeypox in the last three weeks within the state. The state does not publicly provide a county-by-county breakdown of where the cases are to protect the identity of the people with monkeypox.

When a monkeypox case is identified in a North Carolina resident, the NCDHHS works closely with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, local health departments and health care providers to identify and notify individuals who may have been in contact with an infectious person and to assess each individual contact’s level of risk.

“This is a big deal, and we are already behind,” said UNC Health Dr. David Wohl. “It’s true. We didn’t learn our lesson well enough from COVID-19 and how hard it was, and a struggle to get things up and running, including testing.”

Wohl said there’s not enough testing, and not nearly enough vaccine for gay and bisexual men at the highest risk.

WRAL News asked Wohl why the man was not tested for monkeypox despite getting tested for STIs.

“Good question. I think it’s the availability of the tests,” Wohl said. “I think it’s also sensitivity of people that monkeypox is around.

“It’s still not getting out as much as we need it to, to a lot of providers that this has to be on your radar.”

As of Tuesday, doctors are required to make a phone call before every monkeypox test. A state epidemiologist must give permission. Then, doctors collect a sample by swabbing a patient’s lesions. The process can take hours, and the results can take up to two days.

However, a new monkeypox test from LabCorp could expedite the process.

“The beauty of LabCorp is you don’t need to call the state for permission to test, and you can use the criteria you feel is best as a provider,” Wohl said.

On July 8, the Durham man traveled to UNC Health in Pittsboro, which is about 40 minutes from his home and is outside his insurance network. There, medical professionals were willing to test him. On Monday, the test came positive for monkeypox, more than two weeks after he first developed symptoms. The man had to isolate for two more weeks, which will mark one month since his exposure.

“I think my frustration is at every possible level,” the man told WRAL News. “At every step of the process, I have had to fight to get a test for monkeypox.”

There is a vaccine for monkeypox that should be given within 14 days of exposure to the virus. On Tuesday afternoon, the Durham County Health Department vaccinated its first four people.

On Tuesday, Duke Health said all primary care, urgent care and infectious disease clinics are able to collect specimens for monkeypox.

“In recent days, we have taken steps to ensure that staff and providers are more fully aware of the symptoms of monkeypox, the associated risk factors for exposure and the processes for specimen collection and testing,” Duke officials said in a statement.

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Winter weather: More than 20 million people from Texas to the Carolinas are under winter weather alerts

The double-whammy threat prompted the governors of North and South Carolina and Virginia to issue states of emergency. Overall, the alerts cover a wide swathe that includes southern Texas, southern Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, western Florida, Virginia and the Carolinas.

Several school districts in the Carolinas decided to move to virtual learning on Friday and canceled activities in anticipation of the ice-snow storm, CNN affiliate WYFF reported. Some districts cited low temperatures and icy roads that could make traveling unsafe.

The ice storm warning for portions of the coastal Carolinas went into effect at midnight and is expected to remain in place through noon Saturday.

Widespread ice accumulation is expected in Wilmington, North Carolina, with some areas possibly seeing up to half an inch, according to CNN meteorologist Robert Shackelford.

“Power outages are very likely in the ice storm warning areas,” Shackelford said.

The region is also bracing for heavy snowfall this weekend. Warnings issued for parts of North Carolina and Virginia predict 1 to 4 inches of snow, with some areas seeing up to 6 inches. Wind gusts may also reach 40 mph.

In Charleston, South Carolina, the main threat is freezing rain with ice accumulations up to a light glaze, Shackelford said. For North Carolina, there could be slightly more snow, with totals potentially reaching 2 inches, and ice accumulation remaining a light glaze, he added.

For Texas, wind chill and winter storm warnings are in effect through Friday afternoon, Shackelford said.

Temperatures across parts of Texas were expected to plummet, from Wednesday’s highs of 70s and 80s to below freezing Thursday night into Friday, with the chance of a wintry mix.
“Widespread temps in the 30s are now being observed across coastal counties, spreading westward. As temps continue to steadily drop through the night, freezing temps won’t be reached until after 12AM,” the National Weather Service office in Brownsville tweeted Thursday.

Because of icing, travel and power outages remain the biggest concerns.

In North Carolina, Gov. Roy Cooper warned that southeastern counties could see widespread outages and treacherous roads.

“That’s where a quarter-inch or more of ice is expected on trees and powerlines, and that’s a recipe for power outages, unfortunately,” Cooper said Thursday in a news conference as he encouraged people to stock up on groceries.

Cooper added that his National Guard has been activated, providing 114 soldiers with equipment including high clearance vehicles, trucks and ambulances.

The latest weather disturbance comes nearly a week after a snowstorm slammed the Southeast, leaving more than 130,000 people in the dark across the Carolinas, Virginia, Georgia and Maryland. Ice was also a major threat as hundreds of car crashes were reported.

In anticipation of hazardous roads, the South Carolina Department of Transportation said it’s prepared to work around the clock to ensure drivers’ safety. Still, the department urged people to stay off the roads.



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South Carolina’s missed putback sends Stanford into women’s NCAA tournament championship game

SAN ANTONIO — In a battle of No. 1 seeds in the first semifinal of the women’s Final Four on Friday, Stanford survived 66-65 against South Carolina to advance to Sunday’s championship game.

Haley Jones, who led Stanford with 24 points, hit a jumper off a rebound to give the Cardinal a one-point lead with 32 seconds left in a game that had a wild finish.

“I just saw the ball bouncing around and most of my teammates were hitting some bodies to open it up. I just let it fly and I said, ‘Please, Jesus, go in,’ and it did,” Jones said of what would end up being the game-winning shot. “And then we just had to go on to the next play, there’s no time to get hyped about, we had to get back on defense.”

After a timeout, South Carolina inbounded the ball. Aliyah Boston had a shot blocked by Cameron Brink but got her own rebound before a steal by Ashten Prechtel gave the ball back to Stanford.

After a South Carolina foul, the Cardinal inbounded the ball to Brink, but it got away from her and the Gamecocks had a chance at the winning basket. Brea Beal missed the shot on a drive to the basket, and Boston followed with a putback at the buzzer that also missed.

“Bre had a great shot. Aliyah, we should’ve boxed her out, she had a great shot. Thankfully, it didn’t go in and we’re moving on to Sunday,” Jones said.

Both teams struggled inside in facing each other’s strong defense, but the Gamecocks were especially affected, finishing 11-of-37 in the paint. Stanford will go for the program’s third NCAA title on Sunday.

The Cardinal will face the winner of the UConn-Arizona game.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

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