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County Level Dashboard Could Help Improve NC Vaccine Distribution / Public News Service
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An immediate, transparent, and fully comprehensive vaccine plan, accompanied by a documents drive is urgently required, write the authors. (Michael Ciaglo, Getty Images via AFP)
Global South Against Xenophobia (GSAX) of the COVID-19 People’s Coalition, Lawyers for Human Rights (LHR) and the
South African Human Rights Defenders Network (SAHRDN) have written an open letter to President Cyril Ramaphosa asking that government reveal its vaccine rollout strategy.
Global South Against Xenophobia (GSAX) of the COVID-19 People’s Coalition,
Lawyers for Human Rights (LHR) and the South African Human Rights Defenders
Network (SAHRDN) call on government to transparently reveal its vaccine
A line of voters waits outside Beatties Ford Library.
This article is made possible through a partnership between WFAE and Votebeat, a nonpartisan reporting project covering local election integrity and voting access. This article is available for reprint under the terms of our republishing policy.
North Carolina’s Black voter turnout in the 2020 general election ticked up 4% from 2016. The turnout for Black votes overall was 68% , according to State Board of Elections data.
One possible reason? It comes down to former President Trump, says UNC Charlotte political science professor Eric Heberlig.
“After four years of a Trump presidency, people felt strongly that the country was going in the right or wrong direction and felt it was important to keep him in office or get him out,” Heberlig said.
With the state breaking records for coronavirus infections and hospitalizations, parents are worried about sending children into classrooms to take required state exams.
High school students began returning to school buildings this week for state End of Course (EOCs) exams and career and technical education assessment exams.
The state is requiring students to report to campuses to take those exams in person, even if they’ve chosen to take online classes.
But some parents are pushing back against sending children to school to take tests amid a pandemic that has claimed more than 5,700 lives in North Carolina.
Not taking tests could be costly for students. The exams account for 20% of their final grade. Missing the exam could be the difference between passing or failing a course. It could also lower grade-point-averages and cause students to miss out on scholarship awards or getting into top universities.
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