North Carolina will have a second primary election on Tuesday, July 17, to determine winners for some statewide offices, who will run in the general election on Nov. 6. Eight states allow political parties to conduct a second primary under specific circumstances. For North Carolina the deciding factors are whether the winner in the May […]
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Finally, someone in Washington hears us
Hatteras and Ocracoke have been buzzing with talk of the stellar performance of West Virginia?s Democratic Senator, Joe Manchin, at Wednesday?s hearing in the Senate?s Energy and Natural Resources Committee. The committee took up a dozen Park Service bills, including S 2372, which would overturn the seashore?s final plan and regulation of off-road vehicle use […]
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DOT plans a permanent bridge at Pea Island, but long-term fix for Rodanthe not decided
Transportation planners most likely will replace the temporary bridge over the Highway 12 breach in Pea Island with a permanent one at the same location, but it will still be months before the long-term fix is chosen for the highway breach in Rodanthe. Massive sound tide from Hurricane Irene in August tore a jagged inlet […]
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Supporters of bill to overturn ORV rule find a friend on Senate committee
Supporters of a Senate bill to set aside the National Park Service’s final plan and special regulation on off-road vehicles at the Cape Hatteras National Seashore found a Democratic friend today at a Senate committee hearing. Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., took up the cause, admonishing a Park Service witness and saying that the agency had […]
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James Earl Thompson
HENDERSONVILLE, N.C. — James Earl Thompson(Jim), 78, passed away on Tuesday, June 26, 2012, in the loving embraceof his wife. After a courageous and dignified five-year battlewith cancer, he passed from this life peacefully and with dignity intothe loving arms of our Lord. He was born on October 24, 1933 in Carroll County, Virginia, to […]
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State sea-level rise policy won’t affect insurance rates By CATHERINE KOZAK Coastal Review Online
Supporters of the N.C. Senate’s now-infamous sea-level rise bill warned that property insurance rates would go through the roof if the state were allowed to plan for the three-foot rise in ocean levels that most scientists expect by the end of this century. The insurance industry in the state is caught in the middle of […]
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Seas rising faster along northern Outer Banks By Frank Tursi Coastal Review Online
With state legislators still wading through the issue of rising seas, a new federal report released yesterday seems to further muddy the water. Contrary to what we heard from some legislators the last few weeks, not only does the sea seem to be rising along the state’s northern coast, but it’s doing so at a […]
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Ocean Center’s neighbors need to get a grip on reality
The Hatteras Island Ocean Center moved a step closer to reality on Monday night when the Dare County Board of commissioners unanimously approved an amendment to the Dare County zoning ordinance. The amendment adds piers to the conditional uses allowed in the C-2 H district. The ocean center would be located on 1.5 acres of […]
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A $20.2 billion budget compromise by the North Carolina state legislature passed Thursday and awaiting Gov. Beverly Perdue’s approval, has kept the Hatteras-Ocracoke ferry a free ride. It also has kept the Knotts Island to Currituck ferry free, and tolling on the Cherry Branch ferry will be delayed one fiscal year. All other ferries will remain tolled, and increases in those rates, if any, have not yet been decided, according to Henri McClees, a lobbyist from Oriental, who with her husband, Joe, is working on behalf of Hyde, Pamlico, and Beaufort counties. With that question is still not answered, Ocracoke residents and visitors may be back to fighting ferry toll increases to the Swan Quarter and Cedar Island ferries. The specific language in the just-passed budget bill does not include a specific amount the Ferry Division has to raise from ferry tolls, McClees said. “They’ll either apply the fee schedule they came up with (earlier this spring) or come up with another ferry toll plan,” she said. However, the current bill does state: “The Department of Transportation shall disregard (Gov. Beverly Perdue’s) executive order and shall collect tolls required by last year’s law.” Last year’s budget battle ended with the Hatteras-Ocracoke and Knotts Landing ferries being exempted from tolling, while raising tolls on all other routes starting April 1. Perdue’s executive order putting a moratorium on raising ferry tolls delayed that implementation. If the budget passes, the question is whether or not DOT will use the schedule of fees it arrived at before April 1. Under that plan, the Swan Quarter and Cedar Island ferries will have the highest increases of all the tolled ferries. A car would cost $27, up from $15; passengers in any sized vehicles would be $5, up from zero; pedestrians $5, up from $1; motorcycles and riders, $15, up from $10; vehicles or combination 20 feet or less $27, up from $15; vehicles or combination over 40 to 65 feet $65, up from $45. The weblink for the current rules is http://www.ncdot.gov/about/regulations/rules/ProposedRules1.html But, McClees said the schedule can’t go into effect until after the budget is finally passed. “If Perdue vetoes the budget, it still is not law,” McClees said. “If they address the budget again, it would be after it’s vetoed.” In the meantime, Perdue has 10 days to either accept or veto the budget. If she vetoes it, the Senate has enough votes to override the veto, but the House does not. McClees said the NC House of Representatives has been great in holding down ferry increases or additional tolls, thanks to Representatives Bill Owens of Elizabeth City and Tim Spear, who represents part of Hyde County. The Senate is another matter. “There are some people in the Senate Transportation Committee who are downright hostile,” she said. Despite Sen. Stan White’s impassioned arguments (to leave the ferry tolls status quo), he is still in the minority, she said. White represents Dare and Hyde and other counties nearby. “The Senate has the votes to override a veto by the Governor,” she said. “The House barely has it and only if four Democrats vote with Republicans. Bill Owens and Tim Spear are part of that four.” If the Senate overrides the veto but the House does not, then the current budget will still be in effect, McClees said, which includes the mandate to raise tolls on tolled ferries. However, Perdue’s moratorium on raising tolls would still hold. Authority as to what the ferry tolls will be rests with the North Carolina Board of Transportation, which is a politically-appointed body that oversees the DOT. The 19 persons on this board each oversee a district in state. George M. “Matt” Wood, Jr., of Camden, oversees District One, which include Hyde and Dare counties. McClees said interested citizens are encouraged to write to Wood about their concerns. Wood’s contact information, as well as information about the board, can be found at this weblink: http://www.ncdot.gov/about/board/ In the meantime, McClees said she and Joe got the go-ahead from some members of the House to draft a bill to study the economic impact on coastal citizens affected by any proposed ferry toll increase. “We want this bill ready by next week and then to conduct it between this session and January,” she said. “This gives us more opportunities to get more information on the things we’re arguing about. Many of the legislators are just not informed enough about coastal issues to understand the devastation we’ve suffered.” And they are also not informed about the unique geography of Hyde County. “No one has considered Hyde County’s having to pay for county workers to ride the Swan Quarter ferry, or school buses,” she said. The argument from folks in the western part of the state that they pay tolls, too, doesn’t quite wash, she said. The specific language in the transportation law that says if a road is tolled, there must be an alternative free route available. The alternative route for Ocracokers is the free Hatteras-Ocracoke ferry. Yes, we all pay taxes that help the western parts of the state plow snow in the winter or salt their roads, she said. “But there’s nothing comparable anywhere in the state to these ferries,” she said. “We have ferries that are part of our highway system and we’re supposed to just foot the entire bill?” FOR MORE INFORMATION: Senate budget wins final approval, with ferry tolls Ocracokers are in shock about Republicans’ renewed effort to put tolls on Hatteras Inlet ferry Hatteras-Ocracoke ferry tolls are back in proposed Senate budget
By CONNIE LEINBACH By CONNIE LEINBACH A $20.2 billion budget compromise by the North Carolina state legislature passed Thursday and awaiting Gov. Beverly Perdue’s approval, has kept the Hatteras-Ocracoke ferry a free ride. It also has kept the Knotts Island to Currituck ferry free, and tolling on the Cherry Branch ferry will be delayed one […]
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By IRENE NOLAN
By IRENE NOLAN By IRENE NOLAN Two visitors to the Outer Banks, a man and a woman in their 40s, died while swimming in the ocean in two separate incidents on Wednesday, June 20. Rip currents were implicated in both incidents. The first death occurred about 2 p.m. in Nags Head, south of Limulus Street, […]
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