Connect with us

News from the South - North Carolina News Feed

Regional library system exit bungled by Yancey County, critics say

Published

on

carolinapublicpress.org – Lucas Thomae – 2025-05-01 06:00:00

With only two months remaining until Yancey County officially exits its regional library system, local opponents to the change are urging elected officials to reconsider their decision in the wake of economic challenges incurred by Tropical Storm Helene.

Up to this point, they haven’t been convinced.

Carolina Public Press previously reported on Yancey’s “surprise” exit, which was made official in a June 2024 special meeting called by the commissioners when the regional library director was out of town for a conference. Preceding that was a months-long political fight stemming from controversy over a LGTBQ+ Pride month display featured in the Yancey County Public Library during 2023.

[Subscribe for FREE to Carolina Public Press’ alerts and weekend roundup newsletters]

The county insists that the decision to leave the AMY Regional Library system, which they shared with neighboring Avery and Mitchell counties for more than 60 years, is solely based on a desire to operate with more financial and administrative independence.

On July 1, following a year of transition planning, the change will go into effect.

County Manager Lynn Austin told CPP that the move is no different from past decisions to exit regional transportation and public health departments.

“It’s kind of nice to focus our efforts and our taxpayer dollars on our citizens,” Austin said. “The library falls in the same boat.”

Membership has its privileges

However, the county’s decision to leave the library system came before the devastation wrought upon Western North Carolina by Helene.

Yancey was among North Carolina’s hardest-hit areas, recording the state’s strongest wind gusts and highest rainfall totals during the storm. Helene killed 11 people in the county, according to the state.

Nicole Rogers, a Mitchell County-based activist who organized protests and community meetings in support of keeping AMY Regional together, said that Yancey’s insistence on leaving was irresponsible in the wake of the recovery process.

“When there’s instability in this region, having pulled resources to work from together is just a protective factor — period,” she said. “And you also have the expertise of all the staff across four different library branches plus a regional staff that can share their knowledge base.”

Rogers leads regular meetings at the library in Burnsville that she calls “Keep AMY Together” sessions. 

Dozens of residents opposed to the change have shown up at the county’s public meetings. They’re skeptical of the county’s claim that they will be able to maintain all of the services and collections at the library without a major hit to its budget. Many, including Rogers, believe any extra county funds that might be spent on its newly independent library should instead go towards disaster recovery.

The first of Yancey County’s budget work sessions for the upcoming fiscal year started Monday.

“It doesn’t make sense financially and it doesn’t seem to me to be responsible governing choices to have any time or attention devoted to changing a functional library when not everyone has running water or heat or homes,” Rogers said.

Turning the page on regional library system

After making the decision to exit the regional library system last summer, the Yancey County commissioners didn’t return to the issue publicly until their regular meeting on April 14.

Austin delivered updates on the financials of the transition, which included announcements that the county would retain access to all the materials in the Burnsville library as well as the bookmobile operated by AMY Regional.

The state funding for the library would be about $98,000. The county expects to contribute an additional $150,000 for maintenance.

Austin told CPP that in years past Yancey County allocated a similar amount to AMY Regional through its annual budget, meaning that the county wouldn’t be taking on a bigger financial burden to maintain its own library.

“It’s really not taken away from any Helene (funding) unless we were going to cut the AMY (contribution) to zero anyway,” she said. “And we would never have done that.”

As far as funding for disaster recovery is concerned, Austin said the county is lucky in that the state and federal government continues to reimburse nearly all of the costs for debris removal, infrastructure repair and other expenses related to the storm.

County Commissioner Jeff Whitson addressed the library situation in a video posted to the county’s Facebook page on April 15.

“To put everything to rest, all the rumors and all the things that have been spread in a negative way, it’s going to be a great thing,” Whitson said. “Just to be honest, if all the hoopla and the circus wasn’t going on, the vast, vast majority of the public wouldn’t even know that anything had transpired with the library.” 

Taking a cue from Yancey County

As much as Yancey County has attempted to smooth over the controversy regarding its library transition, it’s undeniable that public libraries have become a political battleground all across the country.

Western North Carolina is no different.

At its annual convention on Monday, the Mitchell County Democratic Party passed a resolution in support of AMY Regional while denouncing Yancey County’s handling of its exit.

Meanwhile, similar turmoil has surfaced in Macon County involving its own potential departure from their regional library system, according to several local media reports.

A leaked email originating from the address of a member of Macon’s local library board referred to Yancey County’s actions as a potential blueprint for Macon to stage its own exit from the Fontana Regional Library, which also serves Jackson and Swain counties.

This article first appeared on Carolina Public Press and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

The post Regional library system exit bungled by Yancey County, critics say appeared first on carolinapublicpress.org



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

The article maintains a relatively neutral stance by presenting both sides of the issue surrounding Yancey County’s decision to exit its regional library system. It reports on the county’s desire for financial and administrative independence while also highlighting opposition from local activists and community members, particularly in light of the economic challenges caused by Tropical Storm Helene. The article describes the political context of library system decisions in the region, but avoids endorsing one perspective over another. The language is factual and does not include overtly partisan framing, providing a balanced portrayal of the situation.

News from the South - North Carolina News Feed

NC State graduates reflect on time on campus, future plans

Published

on

www.youtube.com – ABC11 – 2025-05-02 22:42:08


SUMMARY: At NC State’s graduation, Lily Vaughn, a political science major, shared her pride in overcoming challenges and is now focused on job hunting and pursuing a master’s in public health. Romesh Sha, a civil engineering major from India, plans to stay in the area for work due to the growing tech hub. Dean Peabody, a mechanical engineering graduate, already secured a job and reflected on his personal growth during his college years, emphasizing resilience and confidence gained throughout his time at NC State. Graduates highlighted both their academic achievements and future aspirations in their reflections.

YouTube video

“As I went through the years, I gained friends. I gained confidence. And I learned how to love myself.”

https://abc11.com/post/2025-graduations-nc-state-graduates-reflect-time-campus-future-plans-been-amazing/16307020/
Download: https://abc11.com/apps/
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ABC11/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/abc11_wtvd/
Threads: https://www.threads.net/@abc11_wtvd
TIKTOK: https://www.tiktok.com/@abc11_eyewitnessnews

Source

Continue Reading

News from the South - North Carolina News Feed

Proposal gives new weapon in fight against cartels | North Carolina

Published

on

www.thecentersquare.com – By Alan Wooten | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-05-02 13:37:00

(The Center Square) – Assistance from one of North Carolina’s 100 county sheriffs helped a freshman congressman craft legislation to assist law enforcement’s fight against international cartels.

If passed, the Financial Intelligence and National Security Act – FINS Act for short – would amend Section 5312 of Title 31, classifying wire transfer service providers as financial institutions under the Bank Secrecy Act and the Anti-Money Laundering Act of 2020.

“This is a vital step in addressing the national drug crisis that is taking American lives every single day,” Iredell County Sheriff Darren Campbell said.

U.S. Rep. Pat Harrigan, R-N.C., author of the bill, said drug traffickers, human smugglers and terrorist financiers use wire transfer companies such as Western Union and Ria as “a backdoor into our financial system.”

“It’s been a gift to the worst people in the world – and Washington let it happen,” Harrigan said. “The FINS Act shuts that door. It brings accountability, oversight and puts our national security first.”

Harrigan says billions of dollars are moving with little to no oversight. He says it funds fentanyl, human trafficking and organized crime.

In examples, Harrigan said three cellphone stores in Ohio laundered $44 million in cartel drug proceeds. Fake names were used, and heroin and fentanyl profits went across the border. In Atlanta, $40 million was used in drug money for trafficking and organized crime, he said.

In Oakland, the representative from the 10th Congressional District said, a shop called Rincon Musical used WhatsApp to shift thousands of dollars in street drug profits. A woman in the northwestern Mexican state of Sinaloa, Harrigan said, got what appeared to be legitimate transfers even though it was thousands of dollars for a cartel from fentanyl and heroin sold in American cities.

“This bill requires wire services to follow the same anti-money laundering rules as banks – so these kinds of operations can’t happen,” Harrigan said.

The post Proposal gives new weapon in fight against cartels | North Carolina appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

The article primarily reports on the introduction of the Financial Intelligence and National Security Act (FINS Act) by Rep. Pat Harrigan (R-N.C.) to tackle drug trafficking and money laundering via wire transfer services. It presents factual information on the bill’s intent and the arguments made by law enforcement officials like Sheriff Darren Campbell and Rep. Harrigan, without overtly promoting a specific ideological stance.

The tone is informative, focusing on legislative action and national security concerns related to drug trafficking and human smuggling. While the language emphasizes accountability and national security, there is no explicit partisan advocacy, keeping the reporting neutral. The piece quotes Harrigan’s assertions about the risks of unregulated wire transfers, highlighting the consequences of such activities, but it does not delve into a detailed political critique, thus avoiding any noticeable bias. The article sticks to reporting actions and positions rather than pushing a distinct ideological agenda, which places it in a centrist category.

Continue Reading

News from the South - North Carolina News Feed

Trump asks Congress to cut $163B in non-defense spending, ax dozens of programs

Published

on

ncnewsline.com – Jennifer Shutt, Ariana Figueroa – 2025-05-02 13:12:00

SUMMARY: President Trump released a 2025 budget proposal aiming to cut federal domestic spending drastically while increasing defense funding. The plan targets over 60 programs for elimination, including Community Services Block Grants, low-income home energy aid, and various health and education programs. Non-defense accounts would face a $163 billion cut, while defense funding stays flat at $893 billion, potentially rising to $1.01 trillion with a reconciliation package. The budget boosts Homeland Security spending by 64.9%, aligning with stricter immigration policies. The proposal faces mixed congressional reactions, with some GOP senators opposing the defense funding level and Democrats vowing to block domestic cuts. Congress must act by September to avoid a partial government shutdown.

Read the full article

The post Trump asks Congress to cut $163B in non-defense spending, ax dozens of programs appeared first on ncnewsline.com

Continue Reading

Trending