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Governor Cooper Proclaims July 17-23, 2022 as Probation, Parole and Community Supervision Officers Week

Governor Cooper Proclaims July 17-23, 2022 as Probation, Parole and Community Supervision Officers Week
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Death Row Inmate Files Grievance After Being Denied Access to College Education

Death Row Inmate Files Grievance After Being Denied Access to College Education Lyle May A North Carolina death row inmate has filed a grievance with the state Department of Public Safety after he was denied the opportunity to finish a privately funded bachelor’s degree program. Lyle May filed the 10-page handwritten letter last month after staffers at Central Prison in Raleigh abruptly told him that he would no longer have access to the correspondence courses, which he had paid for with private funds and scholarships. Public safety spokesman John Bull told the INDY this week that the policy forbidding death row inmates from enrolling in any type of educational program went into effect more than 20 years ago.

NC prison inmates and staff started getting vaccinated this week

The Department of Public Safety announced that it will finish administering the inaugural 1,300 doses of vaccines it received this week at a press conference today. As of Wednesday, 534 staff and 49 inmates had been vaccinated within 24 hours after the DPS received the doses from the Department of Health and Human Services, said Todd Ishee, Commissioner of Prisons. Ishee said both staff and residents exhibit an increased level of interest in being vaccinated. Inmates aged 75 and older are among the first group eligible to be vaccinated. Individuals are free to decide whether they wish to be vaccinated or not. “We see the vaccine as a pathway out of this terrible and tragic pandemic,” Tim Moose, chief deputy secretary at of Adult Correction and Juvenile Justice said at the press conference.

Timetable uncertain on vaccinating NC inmates

Most people with allergies should be safe taking the COVID-19 vaccine, says a University of Washington doctor. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has counted at least 29 people developing severe allergic reactions to new COVID-19 vaccines out of 5.3 million people who have been vaccinated. The 29 had suffered anaphylaxis, a life-threatening allergic reaction that can be controlled through an epinephrine injection. Inmates and staff members at the state s prisons, including Forsyth Correctional Center, who are 65 and older are eligible to receive COVID-19 vaccines, but state correction officials don t have an immediate timetable when the shots will be administered. We are not scheduling specific prisons per se, said Dr. Arthur Les Campbell, the medical director of the N.C. Division of Adult Correction and Juvenile Justice.

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