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NC Politicians Probe Unregulated Chemical In Water Supply
North Carolina legislators are facing growing alarm about an unregulated and little-studied chemical its maker released for years into the water supply for hundreds of thousands of people.
Nearly two dozen lawmakers gathered in Wilmington on Wednesday to hear about discharges of the chemical GenX into the Cape Fear River by the Delaware-based Chemours Co. A spokesman said the company is working with officials on next steps.
GenX is related to the company's previous chemical used to make Teflon. That compound was tied to increased cancer risk.
Posters Promoting Violence Appear In North Carolina Cities
Posters spotted in North Carolina cities appear to advocate violence against anti-fascists.
The signs recently began appearing in Durham and Chapel Hill, and say "hospitalize your local antifa scumbag." It also shows three figures holding weapons.
Antifa refers to an anti-fascist group that seeks to fight fascism with direct action.
The posters have the initials YWNRU, and feature an email address that includes the words "You will not replace us," a white-supremacist slogan.
Matt Gladdek of Downtown Durham Inc. says he reported the email to Proton Mail, which replied the account has been suspended.
Banner Promoting Hate Group Posted At ASU
Someone put up a recruitment banner at Appalachian State University on Tuesday night for Identity Evropa, an organization classified by civil rights advocates as a white nationalist hate group.
Chancellor Sheri Everts said that two white men posted a banner on a pedestrian bridge that read, “A New Dawn Is Breaking, Rise And Get Active, Identity Evropa."
The Winston-Salem Journal reports the banner was removed within 20 minutes. ASU police say they haven't found a connection between the banner and any student organization.
Chancellor Everts says she and other administration officials have spoken with students about the banner.
Student Accused In Killing Extradited Back To North Carolina
A college student arrested in connection with a shooting death has been extradited back to North Carolina.
Greensboro Police Department Capt. Nathaniel Davis says that 20-year-old Samad Dawson was extradited from Philadelphia to Greensboro on Tuesday night. He was arrested on a first-degree murder charge on Aug. 4.
The News and Record of Greensboro reports that Dawson, a sophomore at North Carolina A&T State University, is charged with first-degree murder in the death of 27-year-old Kimeko Dejuan James.
Report Highlights Growing Health Disparities In Appalachia
According to a new study, the 25 million people who live among the Appalachian mountains have struggled to keep up with the health gains of the rest of the country, falling behind in nearly every major public health indicator.
The report released Thursday shows the 13-state region lags the rest of the country in 33 out of 41 public health indicators, including seven of the leading 10 causes of death in the United States.
Deaths by poisoning, which include drug overdoses, were 37 percent higher than the rest of the country - a testament to the opioid addiction crisis.
EPA Taps Alabama Business Lobbyist To Lead Southeast Region
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has named a business lobbyist and ex-environmental regulator as regional administrator for the office that oversees eight Southeastern states.
Former Alabama Department of Environmental Management director Trey Glenn will oversee EPA's work in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee.
Alabama state records show that Glenn is a registered lobbyist for the Business Council of Alabama, which promotes business interests in the state.
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