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“We are 100 percent terrified of the effect it’s going to have …”

Emily Lamar, vice president of marketing for the Saluda, N.C., local business association, regarding the massive swelling of the Green River and the impacts the environmental change will have on outdoor adventure tourism. A survey last year estimated that outdoor recreation in Western North Carolina has an annual economic impact of nearly $5 billion. (NPR — Oct. 17, 2024)

More Quotes
  • Rahul Gupta, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, regarding the 15 percent decline in drug overdose deaths in the past 12 months as compared to the year prior. North Carolina saw the greatest decrease, with a 48.8 percent decline, while eight other states reported at least a 21 percent decrease in overdose deaths. However, several western states actually reported an increase in deaths. (CQ-Roll Call — Oct. 16, 2024)
  • A court opinion from Nebraska state Supreme Court Justice Lindsey Miller-Lerman, who wrote in the court’s ruling that Secretary of State Bob Evnen did not have the authority to strip voting rights from people convicted of a felony. The last day to register to vote for the 2024 election in Nebraska is Oct. 25 and it must be done in person. (Associated Press — Oct. 16, 2024)
  • Craig Antico, chief executive and founder of ForgiveCo, regarding the company’s decision to purchase the debt of about 8,800 residents in metro Atlanta. The total debt paid was worth $10,662,432 and the recipients were chosen at random, though they could not be making more than $100,000; the median income of the Atlanta recipients was $29,000. The Fort Collins-based company partners with for-profit companies who supply the cash to pay off the debt. So far, the company has paid off the debts of about 50,000 people across the nation. (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution — Oct. 14, 2024)
  • The title of a publicity campaign mounted by Blythe, Calif., to try to convince state officials not to close the Chuckawalla Valley State Prison in Blythe, where about 18,000 people live in 27 square miles of desert. The state corrections department has designated Chuckawalla, which employs more than 800 people, as one of the next two institutions to be closed as a result of the steep decline in the state's inmate population. (CalMatters — May 30, 2023)