PEMBROKE – Robeson Community College won a $2,000 check from Julian T’s Memorial Committee. Pierce.
Although it was unable to organize its annual art dinner due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Committee was still able to collect scholarships for academics from the RCC, the University of North Carolina at Pembroke and Central University of North Carolina.
The check was delivered to N. C on Monday. Legal Aid, a Pembroke law firm founded through Pierce.
“Julian’s legacy is still alive thanks to the efforts of the committee and the netpaintings members who participated in the annual dinner,” said Rebekah Lowry, a member of the committee. , our hard paintings in the afterlife give us the opportunity to continue offering scholarships.
Lumbee tribe president and committee member Harvey Godwin Jr. and his son, Cody Godwin, handed over the check to CCR President Melissa Singler and Lowry, who is the director of the CCR Foundation and Development.
“Robeson Community College scholarships have had a significant effect on academics who have been lucky enough to get the scholarship,” Lowry said.
Julian Pierce, lawyer and civil rights activist in Robeson County. He graduated in 1966 from the then known as Pembroke State University. As a lawyer and through his civic commitment, Pierce fought for education, equality and justice for all.
In 1978, he became the first legal director of Lumbee River, now known as NCLegal Aid. In 1988, Pierce was killed while running for the workplace while a high court ruled. He was 42. If elected, he would have been the first Indian in America to serve as an opinion of the North Carolina Superior Court.
Canady, of Lumberton, named Player of the Week in Big South
United Way Lumber River 2021 Day of self-help scheduled for May 7
PEMBROKE – Robeson Community College won a $2,000 check from Julian T’s Memorial Committee. Pierce.
Although it was unable to organize its annual art dinner due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Committee was still able to collect scholarships for academics from the RCC, the University of North Carolina at Pembroke and Central University of North Carolina.
The check was delivered to N. C on Monday. Legal Aid, a Pembroke law firm founded through Pierce.
“Julian’s legacy is still alive thanks to the efforts of the committee and the netpaintings members who participated in the annual dinner,” said Rebekah Lowry, a member of the committee. , our hard paintings in the afterlife give us the opportunity to continue offering scholarships.
Lumbee tribe president and committee member Harvey Godwin Jr. and his son, Cody Godwin, handed over the check to CCR President Melissa Singler and Lowry, who is the director of the CCR Foundation and Development.
“Robeson Community College scholarships have had a significant effect on academics who have been lucky enough to get the scholarship,” Lowry said.
Julian Pierce, lawyer and civil rights activist in Robeson County. He graduated in 1966 from the then known as Pembroke State University. As a lawyer and through his civic commitment, Pierce fought for education, equality and justice for all.
In 1978, he became the first legal director of Lumbee River, now known as NCLegal Aid. In 1988, Pierce was killed while running for the workplace while a high court ruled. He was 42. If elected, he would have been the first Indian in America to serve as an opinion of the North Carolina Superior Court.
LUMBERTON – According to Robeson County Sheriff, praise for the shooting death of 47-year-old Julie Eberly on Interstate 95 on Thursday has doubled to $20,000.
County citizens gave the sheriff’s workplace $20,000 in cash for praise “for data leading to the likely cause of issuing arrest warrants and the arrest of suspects or suspects guilty of Julie Eberly’s murder,” Sheriff Burnis Wilkins said in a statement released Tuesday. Late. The eulogy presented Friday was $10,000.
“We will aggressively seek the driving force of this vehicle,” Wilkins said in the statement.
The sheriff posted a vehicle symbol of the surveillance footage Monday night and Tuesday.
“Detectives worked tirelessly 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to identify this coward. If you know who he is and who owns this car, move now. Don’t be a conspiracy and call us now,” the sheriff said. Said.
Julie Michelle Eberly Memorial Foundation’s GoFundMe page, organized Friday through Julie Eberly’s stepmother Susan Eberly, raised $55,860 at 5:30 p. m. The circle of Mardi. La family members created the page after Wilkins encouraged them to allow county citizens and others to help them.
The family circle plans to donate to organizations “close to their hearts,” according to the GoFundMe page.
The Robeson County Sheriff’s Office is asking commercial homeowners and home citizens in the North Elm Street, 16th Avenue, East Fifth Street and Alamac Road neighborhoods in Lumberton and the south of the city to review their surveillance systems from 11:40 a. m. to 12:30 p. m. On Thursday for photographs of the suspect’s vehicle , described as a silver four-door Chevrolet Malibu manufactured between 2008 and 2013 with North Carolina plates.
The vehicle known Monday in surveillance footage as the one involved in Thursday’s shooting near exit 22 on I-95. The usual car has polarized glass and chrome moldings around the window frame. The user who fired the fatal shots around 11:40 am is described as an African-American boy with dreadlocks.
Ryan Eberly, who was driving his wife, Julie, to Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, on vacation, spoke about Monday’s fatal encounter with a Pennsylvania newspaper.
Eberly told Lancaster Online that he was driving a slow vehicle in the left lane of I-95 south on Thursday.
Lancaster Online reported that “when he moved in the right lane, he suddenly saw (the) Malibu rolling over his shoulder, throwing stones at Eberly’s car. The idea that Malibu could have been himself and replaced the lanes to overtake Eberly and the other car at the same time moved, forcing the Malibu in the shoulder.
Eberly recalled making a hand gesture in reaction to the drive force gesture before returning to the left lane. That’s when the Malibus approached and followed Eberly’s vehicle from behind, he told the newspaper. The driving force was then parked next to the vehicle. and began shooting next to the passenger of the Eberlys vehicle.
“Miré. La passenger window of my car was broken. My wife called me by name,” Eberly told Lancaster newspaper.
According to the sheriff’s office, the suspicious vehicle descended from I-95 to Exit 22, crossed the bridge and headed to Lumberton. The victim’s vehicle stopped at I-95 and the Eberlys waited for help.
Julie Eberly was taken to UNC Health Southeastern Medical Center in Lumberton, where she later died from her injuries. Ryan wasn’t injured in the shooting.
The sheriff described the shooting as a furious encounter on the road.
Julie Eberly leaves her seven-year-old husband and six children living in Manheim, Pennsylvania.
Investigators are asking with research data to call the Robeson County Sheriff’s Office at 910-671-3170 or email sheriff@robesoncoso. org.
A miner reported Tuesday to the Robeson County Sheriff’s Office that he assaulted someone with a gun on Albert Road in Pembroke.
The following robberies reported Monday and Tuesday to the Robeson County Sheriff’s Office:
Gary Demery, United States 74 West, Lumberton; Brittany Locklear, Brooklynn Drive, Maxton; Jacquelyn Hurlburt, 5044 Interstate 74 on mile marker 215, Lumberton; Youth, McIver Road, Bridge; and Todd Jonsson, Meadow Road, Lumberton.
Jacqueline Bullard reported Monday to the Robeson County Sheriff’s Office that she broke into her vehicle while stationed at a location on McGirt Gin Road in Maxton. Bullard reported estimated losses of $600.
Christopher Rogers reported Monday to the Robeson County Sheriff’s Office that he was the victim of a break-in on Allenton Road in Lumberton and reported estimated losses of $9,699.
LUMBERTON – A soft shed Tuesday about the crusade against sexual assault.
Mayor Bruce Davis declared April awareness of sexual assault and identified the efforts of the Robeson County Rape Crisis Center to assist victims and survivors in a rite at the center’s lumberton office. The mayor was accompanied by the center’s executive director, Virginia Locklear, and the center’s board of directors, Sheila Beck, president; Anthony Dial, treasurer; and Stephen McIntyre, President of Human Resources, for a rite of proclamation at the Center’s Lumberton office.
“It’s an emotion for this organization and the clever paintings it makes,” Davis said. “It’s not just smart for the city, it’s for the whole county and we are — we’re happy to do that, and we’d like to see a lot more people join forces and contribute to it. “
The proclamation states that all members of the Republic play a role in ending sexual violence.
“NOW DONC, IT IS PROCLAIMED that I, Bruce W. Davis, mayor of the city of Lumberton, on behalf of the Lumberton City Council, sign up for advocates of sexual violence and service programs, including but not including, but not too, Robeson County. Crisis Center Rape, convinced that all members of the network will have to be part of the solution. Along with the U. S. government and the state of North Carolina, the city of Lumberton here proclaims “Sexual Assault Awareness Month” in April, the component proclamation says.
McIntyre said the Center needs to “raise awareness (and) make other people aware of the other people here. “
“We need to solve the disorders that affect everyone,” he said.
Dial, a children’s program manager at the Robeson County Department of Social Services, thanked the Center for its efforts to help survivors of sexual violence.
“On behalf of the Department of Social Services, we actually appreciate all the facilities they provide to the community, whether young and adult, and we thank everyone,” Dial said.
According to the North Carolina Council for the Involvement of Women and Youth, 10696 clients who were sexually assaulted were served throughout the state from July 2019 to June 2020, based on knowledge reported through granted organizations. Served.
“On average, there are 433,648 victims (ages 12 and older) of rape and sexual assault each year in the United States,” according to the National Rape, Abuse and Incest Network.
The Robeson County Rape Crisis Center recorded a 42% increase in sexual assaults of children from January to March until the same time in 2020, Virginia Locklear said. In 2020, the Centre recorded a 66% increase in all cases involving young people and adults last year.
“The Robeson County Rape Crisis Center aims to expand the peripheral to unify networked paintings in order to paint for the same purpose of raising awareness of the motion to end sexual violence,” Locklear said.
But the proclamation is a step in getting the word in, he said.
The Center will launch a social media awareness crusade in April with videos on its Facebook page showing the percentage of survivor stories.
The names of the survivors will be replaced for confidentiality reasons, said Locklear, who hopes those affected will attach those stories and ask the Center for help.
On April 28, the Center participates in Denim Day by wearing jeans to raise awareness of sexual violence, he said, and aims to address the misconceptions, myths and guilt of victims for sexual violence.
Denim Day is derived from a 1992 case in Italy in which an 18-year-old woman reported being raped by her 45-year-old driving instructor. The court said the jeans were too tight to get rid of them through the instructor while the victim tried to fight him, according to a New York Times report.
In 1999, the nonprofit Peace Over Violence organized its first day of denim in reaction to the verdict, according to https://www. peaceoverviolence. org. The non-profit organization followed others to protest the case, as in the Italian Parliament.
“The purpose is to bring cowboys to survivors,” he said.
The Center encourages others to denim and send photos so that they can be posted on the Center’s Facebook page, Locklear said.
The Center continues to care about the virtual and educational that comes with the technical protection of adolescents (technology and abuse), violence in youth courtship, sexual harassment, the fight against harassment, human trafficking, healthy dating workshops (consent, limits) and viewer participation, Locklear said. . He also teaches yoga and zumba sessions with clients.
In January, the Center was identified in Byrne’s Criminal Justice Innovation Bulletin for its portraits with the North Carolina Youth Violence Prevention Center to offer healing sessions through portraits and art for young people from the October to December 2020 era.
For more information, call the Center at 910-739-6278 or stop by https://www. rapecrisiscenterrobesoncounty. com/. Additional resources can be obtained at www. rainn. org. Sexual Assault Hotline at 1-800-656-4673 confidentially 24/7.
LUMBERTON – Investigators have known the vehicle in question in Thursday’s fatal shooting on Interstate 95, and the Robeson County Sheriff’s Office is the public’s assistance in the investigation.
The suspicious vehicle known as a silver four-door Chevrolet Malibu manufactured between 2008 and 2013, announced the sheriff’s workplace on Monday night, believed to be the vehicle from which someone shot a vehicle and killed a Pennsylvania woguy near exit 22 of I-95 South near Lumberton on Thursday around 11:40 a. m. The vehicle has polarized glass and chrome moldings around the frame out of the window. The user who fired the fatal shots is described as an African-American type with dreadlocks.
Investigators have known the surveillance footage of the suspicious vehicle and are looking for more images, according to the sheriff’s office. Anyone with a business or living in the domain of Elm Street and Roberts Avenue in Lumberton should review their vehicle tracking system. for images recorded between 11:40 a. m. and 12:30 p. m. on Thursday.
On Thursday, Lumberton police, county sheriff’s workplace officers, North Carolina State Highway Patrol infantrymen, and emS workers’ corps arrived to locate 47-year-old Julie Eberly from Manheim, Pennsylvania, with a gunshot wound, according to the sheriff’s workplace. The passenger’s door. Her husband, Ryan Eberly, unscathed. Immediate assistance was provided until Julie Eberly was taken to UNC Health Southeastern Medical Center, where she later died.
“The investigation revealed that, unknowingly, there was a fury on the road after the victim’s vehicle approached the suspicious vehicle during a lane collapse,” says one from the sheriff’s office. fired several shots at the passenger’s door, one of which hit Julie Eberly.
According to the sheriff’s office, the suspicious vehicle left I-95 at exit 22, crossed the bridge and headed to Lumberton. The victim’s vehicle stopped at I-95 and the Eberlys waited for help.
On Friday, a $10,000 eulogy was filed with the sheriff’s workplace through an anonymous Resident of Robeson County for data leading to probable cause for issuing court orders and arresting the guilty user or users of Julie Eberly’s death.
“Someone recognizes this vehicle. I ask with data about who or where to touch our workplace right away. We’ll continue with this suspect until we’re in his yard,” Sheriff Burnis Wilkins said.
Sheriff’s investigators are asking with research data to call the Robeson County Sheriff’s office at 910-671-3170 or email sheriff@robesoncoso. org.
WASHINGTON – Biden’s administration is prepared to dramatically increase offshore wind force along the East Coast, and said Monday that it is taking the first steps to approve a massive wind farm off the coast of New Jersey as a component of an effort to generate electricity for more than 10 million homes nationwide by 2030.
Meeting the goal can mean jobs for more than 44,000 employees and 33,000 in similar jobs, the White House said. The effort would also save you 78 million metric tons of year-over-year carbon dioxide emissions, a key step in the administration’s fight to slow global warming.
President Joe Biden “believes we have a great opportunity in front of us just to address the threats of climate change, but also to use it as a possibility to create millions of well-paid union jobs that will drive America’s economic recovery,” White said. . Gina McCarthy House Climate Advisor. ” Nowhere is the scale of this opportunity clearer than in offshore wind energy. “
Management’s commitment to this untapped sector “will create paths to average elegance for others from all walks of life and communities,” he added. “We’re in a rock and roll position. “
Management said it intends to prepare a formal environmental investigation for Ocean Wind’s allocation off the coast of New Jersey, which would allow Ocean Wind to conduct the third marine wind energy advertising allocation in the United States.
The Interior Department’s Office of Ocean Energy Management said it aimed at shallow sea wind projects between Long Island and the New Jersey coast. A recent review shows that the region can generate up to 25,000 jobs in progression and structure through 2030, Interior said. .
The Office of Ocean Energy said it would push to sell ad rentals in the region at the expiration of 2021 or early 2022.
The administration also committed $230 million to modernize US ports. But it’s not the first time And provide up to $3 billion in loan promises for offshore wind projects from the Department of Energy’s recently relaunched Clean Energy Loan Program.
“It will be a wave of well-paid union jobs that will stimulate people,” said Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm.
Ocean Wind, 15 miles off the south coast of New Jersey, is expected to produce about 1,100 megawatts consistently with the year, to force 500,000 homes, once inconsistent with the usual by 2024.
The Department of the Interior has already announced environmental testing of Vineyard Wind in Massachusetts and the South Fork wind farm about 35 miles east of Montauk Point on Long Island, New York. Vineyard Wind will produce about 800 megawatts of electrical power and South Fork approximately. 132 megawatts.
Biden has promised to double offshore wind generation until 2030 as part of its efforts to curb climate change. Approval of Atlantic coast projects, at the forefront of at least 16 offshore wind projects along the East Coast, is likely to mark a dramatic shift through the Trump administration, which has blocked wind power both on land and in the ocean.
As president, Donald Trump has occasionally mocked wind power as an expensive and bird-sucking way to generate electricity, and his administration has resisted or opposed wind allocations across the country, adding Vineyard Wind. In an effort to avoid imaginable rejection through the Trump administration, Biden provided a new opportunity for assignment after taking up the job in January.
“For generations, we have postponed the transition to blank energy and are now facing a climate crisis,” said Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, whose branch oversees offshore wind energy.
“As our country faces demanding and interdependent situations of a global pandemic, economic recession, racial injustice, and climate crisis, we will have to make the long-term transition for all,” Haaland said.
Vineyard Wind is expected to be operational in 2023, followed by Ocean Wind a year later.
Despite the enthusiasm, the progression of offshore wind energy is still in its infancy in the United States, far from the progress made in Europe. A small wind farm operates near Block Island in controlled Rhode Island waters, and another small wind farm operates off the coast of Virginia.
The progression of the 3 primary allocations is owned by European corporations or subsidiaries: Vineyard Wind is a joint allocation of a Danish company and an American subsidiary of Spanish energy giant Iberdrola, Ocean Wind and South Fork are managed through Danish company Orsted.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced Monday that it will sign an agreement with Orsted for the percentage of knowledge about US waters. But it’s not the first time Where the company has leases. NOAA will also spend $1 million to examine the effects of offshore wind operations on fishing operators and coastal communities.
Wind developers are about to create tens of thousands of jobs and generate more than $100 billion in new investments by 2030, “but the Office of Ocean Energy Management will first have to open the door to new leases,” said Erik Milito, president. National Association of Ocean Industry.
Not everyone is promoting offshore wind power. Fishing teams from Maine to Florida have expressed fear that giant offshore wind projects could make the ocean’s giant and coveted spaces off limits.
LUMBERTON – Communities in Robeson County schools recently earned 1,500 pencils to be distributed to schoolchildren to advertise systems to prevent waste.
The pencils were donated Friday through the Image Committee of the Lumberton Region Chamber of Commerce. Each pencil, bought with a gift from the Kiwanis Club of Robeson, bore the message “Don’t throw trash; gift from Robeson Kiwanis; Lumberton Commerce Area Chamber. “
With systems throughout the county, CIS will distribute pencils when young people return to school after the pandemic, said Danny Stedman, cis director.
“I’ve been back with the Clean and Green program for a long time, so I’ve been a supporter of this cause for a long time,” Stedman said. “We will look for opportunities to get the anti-waste message to as many young people as possible. “
Linda Scoggins, retired instructor and leader of the House Image Committee subcommittee on the symbol committee, organized the pencil project and thanked CIS for the partnership.
“We have known that waste cleaning in Robeson County is a priority, and we believe it is vital that the project succeeds school-age children with this message,” Scoggins said. “The Image Committee is looking for partners and CIS is the ideal organization to succeed in as many young people as possible. “
Partnerships are a more sensible precedent of the Image Committee, said Mickey Gregory, Co-Chair of the Committee. In addition to the Kiwanis Club and the CIS, the committee worked with Robeson County Sheriff Burnis Wilkins, Robeson Community College and the University of North Carolina. pembroke.
“Our purpose is to publicize the positives here, and we have moved on despite the pandemic,” Gregory said. “The public can see some of those positives on our Facebook page, Trends in Robeson. “
CHARLOTTE – A U. S. senator representing North Carolina reminds the electorate of the importance of undergoing fitness checks while preparing for cancer surgery.
“Next week, I’m going to have surgery in North Carolina to treat prostate cancer,” Senator Thom Tillis said Monday.
He is in the custody of “exceptional fitness professionals” and will make a full recovery, the senator said.
“I am blessed that my cancer was detected relatively early and I cannot overreact the importance of regimen screening, regardless of your fitness,” Tillis said. “I had no symptoms and I never imagined I had cancer. My diagnosis is as smart as I went to my annual physical exam and won a PSA test, which led to a biopsy and eventually my diagnosis. Early detection can save lives. “
The senator’s suggestion will take a position at the two-week annual parliamentary recess for the Easter and Easter birthday party.
Tillis’ Republican colleague in the Senate, Senator Richard Burr, said he was praying for Tillis and his wife, Susan.
“I’m sure Thom will take on this latest challenge in the way he approaches everything in life: with wonderful energy, intelligent humor and that of his friends and family,” Burr wrote.
RALEIGH – Residents of North Carolina no longer want to stop at a North Carolina Motor Vehicle Division to renew government-issued ID cards.
Individuals with a government-issued identity can renew their subscription online by accessing payments. ncdot. gov and following the instructions. The state-issued identity can be renewed up to six months before it expires. The value for renewing an ID is $14, plus the $3 online. However, there are also ID cardholders that can be renewed for free. This data can be obtained https://www. ncdot. gov/dmv/license-id/identity/Pages/default. aspx under Toll- Free ID Cards.
Obtaining a state-issued initial ID requires a stopover at the driver’s license office. Information on how to obtain an ID card can be found on the DMV website.
HMCD already provides online to many services, adding driver’s license renewals, dual licenses and ID cards, driver’s license applications, workplace driver’s license appointments, registration renewals, vehicle asset tax payment, duplicate registration cards. applying to register to vote.
RALEIGH – Residents of North Carolina no longer want to stop at a North Carolina Motor Vehicle Division to renew government-issued ID cards.
Individuals with a government-issued identity can renew their subscription online by accessing payments. ncdot. gov and following the instructions. The state-issued identity can be renewed up to six months before it expires. The value for renewing an ID is $14, plus the $3 online. However, there are also ID cardholders that can be renewed for free. This data can be obtained https://www. ncdot. gov/dmv/license-id/identity/Pages/default. aspx under Toll- Free ID Cards.
Obtaining a government-issued initial ID requires a stopover at the driver’s license office. Information on how to obtain an ID card can be found on the DMV website.
HMCD already provides online to many services, adding driver’s license renewals, dual licenses and ID cards, driver’s license applications, workplace driver’s license appointments, registration renewals, vehicle asset tax payment, duplicate registration cards. applying to register to vote.
LUMBERTON – Dates and times have been set for eligible people to enter or schedule a first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine at the COVID-19 Vaccination Clinic in southeastern Elm Street in Lumberton.
These times and dates are from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. Tuesdays, Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, April 7 and April 9-10. Vaccines shall be submitted without an appointment until the allocation materials are exhausted.
The clinic is at 2901 North Elm Street in Lumberton.
As of Wednesday, the rest of Group Four will be eligible for the vaccine, in addition to previous groups, according to the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services. – risky medical conditions, those living in nearby groups, essential workers, fitness care professionals and people over the age of 65. For more information about eligibility, visit https://covid19. ncdhhs. gov/vaccines/find- your-place-take-your-shot /
To schedule an appointment, other eligible people can stop at srmc. org and click “Vaccinate”. People who register as MyChart guests when planning their appointment will not get confirmation notices by email or SMS. cancelled or replaced due to scheduling issues or other points that may arise, those who have registered as guests send an email to vaccin@srmc. org to request adjustments to the appointment.
RALEIGH – State and local school officials are partnering with the North Carolina Governor’s road protection program to sound the alarm about speeding, one of the leading causes of death among youth and one of the leading causes of death among young adults.
“Speeding is the most sensitive on the list of the leading causes of preventable death on the road, especially among young adults,” said Mark Ezzell, director of THE NCGHSP.
“Speed a little, lose a lot”. The crusade began on Monday and will end on Sunday.
During the campaign, higher police patrols from agencies across the state will check for speeding.
According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, on average more than 9,000 lives are lost across the United States in speed-related traffic accidents per year. In North Carolina, numbers have increased.
According to a report released Monday through analysts from the North Carolina Department of Transportation, there is an 11% increase in speed-related deaths throughout the state from 2019 to 2020.
From 2016 to 2020, most, 27%, of the fatal speed-related injuries occurred in Mecklenburg, Wake, Guilford, Cumberland and Robeson counties, up to NCDOT.
By 2020 alone, there were 416 speed-related deaths and 18332 speed-related injuries across the state. Speed was a “contributing factor” in 25% of all fatal injuries. Ninety-one in line with the percentage of speed-related deaths occurred on interstates.
To reduce these numbers, NCGHSP is sharing a series of online videos with educational establishments to be used inside and outside the classroom as a tool to raise awareness of this challenge and, in the end, save lives.
Robeson County Public Schools will be on the path of efforts to help the dead, said Gordon Burnette, PSRC’s Director of Communications.
“This data will be percentages through our online driving force schooling courses and the district’s physical education/health teachers will focus it through their courses,” he said Monday in a statement.
“We promoted the crusade on our district’s social media pages,” Burnette added.
North Carolina Community College President Thomas Stith III, the president of the North Carolina Parents and Teachers Association, Harold C. Dixon, and UNC System President Peter Hans joined the effort.
“We teach other young people to look for higher education opportunities that provide them with task stability, homework satisfaction, and monetary gains; However, we, as a society, want to help in the behaviors of consultants that will help them live healthy lives,” Stith told me.
“Drivers want our cars to bring our most valuable shipment: our youth and members of the family circle. Decreasing life saves lives. We all want to do more by paying attention to speed limits,” Dixon said.
“These figures show that many other people are in danger, especially our other young people,” Hans said. “As educators, we must spread this message of security to university academics so that they can thrive and lead a productive life. . “
State Public Education Superintendent Catherine Truitt said sending these protective messages to students, parents, and educators can be critical to reducing road deaths in the state.
“We hope that sharing those safe driving messages with parents, teachers and academics will help curb the violent trends on roads that claim thousands of lives,” Truitt said.
“Even a life lost because of that is too much. That’s why this series of videos, partnerships with school officials and a greater police presence are so important,” Mark Ezzell said.
Transport officials are asking everyone to provide a percentage of driving messages on social media using the hashtags #SpeedALittleLoseALot and stick to @NCGHSP on Facebook and @NC_GHSP on Twitter and Instagram to help replace the culture of speeding.
PEMBROKE – Purnell Swett’s softball team won 12-2 innings against Hoke County on Tuesday.
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RED SPRINGS – Eight days after the Red Springs softball team’s 17-0 win over St. Paul,the two groups played another type of game when they met Tuesday in Red Springs.
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Just over a week ago, many newspapers ended Sunshine Week policy, a time set to publicize government responsibility through public records and public meetings. In North Carolina, the concept of the sun is more ambitious than founded on reality. More explanation of why to rejoice in what we have noticed in a long time, with the arrival on March 25 of Senate Bill 355 – Government Transparency Act 2021.
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The Robeson County Sheriff’s Office wants the public’s help in catching a murderer, and a circle of Pennsylvania relatives wants closure and justice.
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LUMBERTON – United Way Lumber River has scheduled Self-Help Day for 2021 on May 7.
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PEMBROKE – Robeson Community College won a $2,000 check from Julian T’s Memorial Committee. Pierce.
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CHARLOTTE – Madison Canady, a softball student from Radford and Lumberton High School, has been named Big South Softball Week Player for games to be played March 22-28, the league announced Monday.
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The last few years have not been the best for Robeson County, from hurricanes and floods to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the county.
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WHITEVILLE – The Fairmont football team is the only football program in Robeson County that had to interrupt its season this spring due to a COVID-19 quarantine.
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LUMBERTON – Lumberton High School season is coming to an early end due to COVID-19 protocols.
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LUMBERTON – According to Robeson County Sheriff, praise for the shooting death of 47-year-old Julie Eberly on Interstate 95 on Thursday has doubled to $20,000.
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A miner reported Tuesday to the Robeson County Sheriff’s Office that he assaulted someone with a gun on Albert Road in Pembroke.
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