Today @NCCapitol (March 8): MetLife comes to town, drunken driving laws lag
McCrory touts MetLife expansion; Republicans worked with Allpoint Voter Services; a bill is filed to allow counties to take over school properties; North Carolina's Medicaid director says turning down expansion was the right thing to do. There are no legislative committee meetings scheduled today.
Posted — UpdatedAnd asked whether North Carolina wasn't missing out on federal funding by turning down Medicaid expansion, she said, "If I gave 700,000 people who don’t have health care coverage a Medicaid card in North Carolina, do you really think they would get healthier? There simply are not enough providers. Again, that goes back to shoring up the program we have. I would be surprised if any Medicaid director in this country told you that if they gave a Medicaid card to the people that are in that expansion that, in fact, they would get good quality health care and access to the primary care doctors they need."
“The Deadspin story presents an incomplete picture of the Carolina Panthers profitability. The figures offer an isolated snapshot of the team’s financial situation during an unusual time as the NFL lockout loomed. At the time, the team had strategically reduced its spending because of the uncertainty and as part of a long-term plan to secure the team's best talent once a collective bargaining agreement had been reached. The team's actual operating cash flow, even before federal and state tax payments were made, was significantly less than the accounting income reported in the story. The most meaningful reflection of a company's profitability is cash flow, and the team's operating cash flow fluctuated between pre-tax figures of $26.7M in fiscal year 2011 and $39.8M in fiscal year 2012. A detailed review of the financial statements demonstrates the difficulty of being competitive in the NFL, paying players to the cap, and trying to add the financing of a major stadium renovation.”
- Five years after Florida toddler Caylee Anthony disappeared and was later found dead, North Carolina lawmakers are considering legislation that would make it a crime not to report a missing child in a timely manner. The House voted unanimously Thursday for House Bill 149, also known as Caylee's Law. The measure now moves to the Senate.
- A January survey of the state's 115 school systems by the North Carolina School Boards Association shows that approximately 95 percent of school districts allow all school resource officers to carry firearms but that local school boards are concerned about how to pay for additional officers. According to the survey, 82.7 percent of North Carolina high schools and 74.7 percent of middle schools have a school resource officer, while only 3.6 percent of elementary schools do.
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