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State education leader encourages cellphone policy by lawmakers | North Carolina

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www.thecentersquare.com – By David Beasley | The Center Square contributor – (The Center Square – ) 2025-04-30 10:28:00

(The Center Square) – North Carolina needs a statewide policy regulating the use of student cellphones in public schools, a top state educator said Tuesday.

Two bills are pending in the Legislature. Cell Phone-Free Education, known also as House Bill 87, requires school boards to “adopt a cellphone-free education policy to eliminate or severely restrict student access to cellphones during instructional time.”

It allows exceptions if a teacher authorizes the use for educational purposes, if a cell phone is required for a students’ individualized education program or for the student’s health care.

Student Use of Wireless Communication Devices, known also as Senate Bill 55, contains similar language.

In North Carolina and nationally, there is a “wide disparity” in how school districts handle cellphone use in the classroom, Michael Maher, chief accountability of the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction, told The Center Square.

“There is emerging evidence on the negative impact of not only on instruction but on student long-term outcomes on mental health,” Maher said.

Social media in particular is “highly addictive,” Maher said.

“If there is a way for us to help remove that, it would absolutely help instructional practice,” said Maher, a former high school teacher. “Student performance is actually tied to student attention. Phones are attention grabbing. You have this device that is drawing their attention.”

A classroom ban would likely require teachers to collect cellphones in the morning as class begins and return them at the end of the school day, said Maher.

“There are pouches and other types of solutions to store student devices,” he said. “The teacher would just make that part of their daily routine.”

Collecting student cellphones early in the day before instruction begins might be easier for teachers than having to constantly be on the lookout for students secretly using them throughout the day in the classrooms, Maher said.

“We already ask teachers to do too much,” he said. “I don’t think it’s fair to them.”

It is important to provide adequate funding for school districts to pay for storage devices, Maher added.

The North Carolina School Board Association has not taken a position on the two pending bills, spokesman Ben Christoph told The Center Square.

Cell Phone-Free Education passed 114-3 in the House of Representatives and is in the Rules Committee of the Senate. Student Use of Wireless Communication Devices passed 41-1 in the Senate and is in the Rules Committee of the House.

The post State education leader encourages cellphone policy by lawmakers | 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 presents information about proposed legislation regulating student cell phone use in North Carolina public schools in a straightforward and factual manner. It quotes a state education official explaining the rationale behind the bills, including concerns about student attention and mental health, without using emotionally charged or partisan language. The piece also notes the positions and actions of legislative bodies and impartial organizations, avoiding taking a stance or advocating for or against the bills. Overall, the tone and content align with neutral reporting on policy proposals rather than expressing an ideological bias.

News from the South - North Carolina News Feed

Car crashes into Raleigh home after attempted traffic stop; firefighters stop gas leak

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www.youtube.com – WRAL – 2025-05-22 20:03:31


SUMMARY: A car crashed into a home on Futura Lane in Raleigh following an attempted police traffic stop involving a suspect wanted for armed robbery and assault with a deadly weapon. Five people were inside the vehicle; all were taken into custody, with the driver charged with fleeing to elude. The crash caused significant damage, rendering the house unsafe to enter and triggering a brief gas leak, which firefighters contained by 2:30 p.m. Fortunately, no one was home at the time, and no injuries were reported. Police have cleared the scene after towing the wrecked Jeep.

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Police said five people, including four juveniles, are in custody.

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Attorney for Tyrone Mason family await release of crash scene videos

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www.youtube.com – ABC11 – 2025-05-22 19:20:54


SUMMARY: Tyrone Mason’s family awaits public release of body cam and dash cam videos from the fatal October 2024 crash on Capitol Boulevard in Raleigh, where Mason died from blunt force injuries. The Wake County DA found that Trooper Garrett Macario gave false and misleading information to Raleigh police, leading to dismissal of 180 cases linked to him. Despite this, no criminal charges were filed against Macario or his supervisor. Mason’s family has filed a federal lawsuit accusing Trooper Mario of initiating the chase and failing to aid Mason. Both officers have been on administrative leave since January.

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The video is expected to reveal the false and misleading information given by NCSHP Trooper Garrett Macario to Raleigh Police.

https://abc11.com/post/ncshp-troopers-investigation-tyrone-mason-deadly-crash-aftermath-video-expected-released-raleigh-police/16510012/
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HCA says it honored Mission sale agreement in 2024, the same year hospital faced immediate jeopardy • Asheville Watchdog

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avlwatchdog.org – ANDREW R. JONES – 2025-05-22 15:16:00


In 2024, HCA Healthcare, owner of Mission Hospital, claimed compliance with its 2019 Asset Purchase Agreement (APA), despite the hospital being placed in immediate jeopardy by federal authorities for serious care deficiencies, including patient harm and deaths in the emergency and oncology departments. HCA’s self-report to the APA’s independent monitor omitted this sanction, which risks Medicare and Medicaid funding. The monitor, Affiliated Monitors, Inc., found HCA potentially non-compliant, noting that while Medicare enrollment was maintained, “good standing” was lost. Meanwhile, Dogwood Health Trust oversees monitoring but awaits the final report. The hospital faces ongoing scrutiny amid staffing issues, service reductions, and community concerns.

HCA Healthcare, the corporate owner of Mission Hospital, maintains it honored its asset purchase agreement (APA) in 2024, the same year the federal government placed the facility in immediate jeopardy because of deficiencies in care in its emergency and oncology departments.

HCA’s report, submitted to the independent monitor of Mission’s sale and obtained by Asheville Watchdog, makes no mention of the federal sanction, the toughest a hospital can face.

The APA, created in 2019 at the time of HCA’s purchase of the Mission Health system, binds HCA to several commitments regarding how it would maintain and expand services throughout the hospital system. HCA is required to submit a report on its compliance each year to Dogwood Health Trust and the independent monitor it employs to ensure HCA is staying in compliance with the APA.

One of those commitments was that the hospital would “remain enrolled and in good standing” with the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

“During the Reporting Period, the Material Facilities and the Local Hospital Facilities remained enrolled and in good standing in the Medicare and Medicaid programs,” HCA said in its 2024 report.

But the report did not acknowledge that on Feb. 1, 2024, Mission announced it had been placed into immediate jeopardy after state and federal investigators found 18 incidents in 2023 of patient harm, including four deaths. 

A finding of immediate jeopardy places a healthcare facility’s Medicare and Medicaid funding in jeopardy. HCA and Mission were given 23 days to issue a plan of correction. CMS lifted the sanction after reviewing the plan less than a month later.

HCA and Mission Health spokesperson Nancy Lindell did not respond directly to questions about why the immediate jeopardy finding wasn’t included in the report.

“This is covered in the report you have,” she said. 

This isn’t the first time HCA has given itself sterling marks despite controversies surrounding Mission. 

In its 2023 self-report, HCA maintained that it had honored all commitments in the APA, despite then-North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein suing HCA and Mission. Stein’s litigation alleged HCA has mismanaged Mission, endangering patients and prompting an exodus of doctors and nurses, and has shuttered or reduced some services, which he says violate the APA. 

HCA countered that it never promised to deliver quality care, arguing that APA commitments “are not promises to meet subjective healthcare standards.”

Last year’s finding of potential non-compliance

Affiliated Monitors, Inc., the independent monitor responsible for assessing HCA’s compliance with the APA, disagreed with the company’s previous self-assessment. In 2024, AMI published a report that found HCA in potential non-compliance for several issues, including the immediate jeopardy finding.

Addressing HCA’s 2024 self-report, AMI Managing Director Gerald Coyne said the company made “a similar claim … in last year’s report (2023), which we analyzed in light of the initial immediate jeopardy findings brought against the company late in 2023.” 

“Our analysis concluded that although the company did, in fact, remain enrolled in Medicare and Medicaid, it did not remain ‘in good standing,’ Coyne said. “That determination was cited as one of the grounds that we concluded that HCA was in potential non-compliance with the Asset Purchase Agreement.”

“This issue was discussed in our recent community meetings in Marion and Asheville. Our review of activities in the calendar year of 2024 is ongoing, but the analysis of this issue we used last year is consistent.”

In a community meeting in Asheville earlier this month, Coyne said that his group is paying attention to quality-of-care issues at Mission. 

AMI is employed by Dogwood, the independent entity created from the proceeds of the Mission sale and responsible for improving health care, education and economic opportunity in western North Carolina. Dogwood also is responsible for holding HCA accountable by reviewing the independent monitor’s recommendations and deciding if the hospital is out of compliance.

“Dogwood wants to honor and follow the established monitoring process, allowing the Independent Monitor to finish its active review of HCA’s annual report,” a spokesperson said when asked about the apparent gap in HCA’s report. “As our advisor, the Independent Monitor will complete their review and submit a report to Dogwood for our review. From there, we will be able to share our findings with the Attorney General and any statements with the public as we have in the past, typically by the end of July.”

HCA has touted its ownership of Mission since Tropical Storm Helene and highlighted the hospital’s response to the disaster.

The company, whose revenue is up $1 billion from the previous fiscal year, showed multiple images of Mission Health staff serving during Tropical Storm Helene response efforts in its annual nationwide impact report. One photo shows Melina Arrowood, COO at Sweeten Creek Mental Health and Wellness Center, hugging HCA CEO Sam Hazen.

HCA was broadly praised for its response to the storm’s impact and aftermath. It provided water, food, gas, volunteer health care workers and other resources badly needed to help weather the hardships brought on by the disaster.

Despite this triumph, Mission still faced physician departures, frustrations from nurses whose pay was cut, the shuttering of the only long-term acute care facility in the region — which was permitted by the APA — and ongoing outcry over a lack of staff.

In February, a patient died in an emergency department bathroom after his call for assistance went unanswered for  several minutes.

Surveyors from the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services returned to Mission Hospital last week, investigating nurse complaints about staffing and at least one patient death.


Asheville Watchdog welcomes thoughtful reader comments on this story, which has been republished on our Facebook page. Please submit your comments there.


Asheville Watchdog is a nonprofit news team producing stories that matter to Asheville and Buncombe County. Andrew R. Jones is a Watchdog investigative reporter. Email arjones@avlwatchdog.org. The Watchdog’s local reporting is made possible by donations from the community. To show your support for this vital public service go to avlwatchdog.org/support-our-publication/.

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The post HCA says it honored Mission sale agreement in 2024, the same year hospital faced immediate jeopardy • Asheville Watchdog appeared first on avlwatchdog.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: Center-Left

This article exhibits a center-left bias by focusing critically on a large healthcare corporation’s failures and regulatory issues, emphasizing patient harm, legal challenges, and accountability. The language highlights controversies, lawsuits, and whistleblower concerns, which align with values of consumer protection and oversight often associated with center-left perspectives. However, the reporting remains largely fact-based and sourced, including responses from the company and regulators, avoiding overt editorializing or ideological rhetoric that would push it further left. The coverage leans toward holding corporate power accountable while maintaining journalistic restraint.

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