News & Views

Conversations with prominent state and national newsmakers – politicians, advocates, analysts, academics and activists – about the news, events and public policy debates that shape life in North Carolina.

Elon University poll director Jason Husser on the rapidly changing world of college athletics

  Few areas of modern American popular culture have undergone greater or more rapid changes in recent years that college sports. Thanks to a series of successful legal challenges, the nation’s longstanding practice of treating college athletes as amateurs has been completely upended and, especially at big schools engaged high-profile sports like football and basketball, […]

10-20
26:44

Disability Rights NC about a groundbreaking settlement impacting people with substance use disorders

  Over the last several decades, much of the world has made significant progress in how it views and responds to the affliction we’ve come to refer to as substance use disorder. Whereas people who once struggled with the misuse of and addiction to drugs and alcohol were once dismissed as weak and flawed, we’ve […]

10-20
12:04

Common Cause of North Carolina’s Bob Phillips on the threat of mid-decade redistricting

  If there’s a single factor that’s playing the largest role in spurring the dysfunction and divisiveness that plague modern American politics, gerrymandering – the intentional rigging of electoral districts for partisan purposes – is it. With the assistance of digital technology and recent judicial rulings that have given them complete carte blanche, state legislatures […]

10-13
20:07

Drew Ball of the NRDC on the most important environmental policy issues confronting NC

  Despite the fact that they have yet to adopt a budget for the state fiscal year that commenced July 1, and are scheduled to return to Raleigh a couple more times this year, it appears that state lawmakers have wrapped up most of their action for the 2025 legislative session. And if that is in […]

10-13
12:05

State Rep. Carolyn Logan on the new anti-crime legislation approved by the General Assembly

  State lawmakers returned to Raleigh in late September for a brief stay, and in the aftermath of a horrific killing that had occurred just weeks before on a Charlotte commuter train, legislative leaders made criminal justice and their stated intention of “getting tough on crime” the central focus. Among the law changes sent to […]

10-06
12:48

Jake Sussman of the Southern Coalition for Social Justice on services to enhance public safety

  The North Carolina General Assembly was back in Raleigh in late September to enact legislation that leaders say will quote “get tough on crime” by limiting access to bail and pre-trial release for more criminal defendants and jump-starting the state’s long un-used death penalty. Shortly after lawmakers departed the capital, Newsline caught up with […]

10-06
17:48

Alex Campbell of the NC Budget and Tax Center on the state’s fiscal policies and Helene recovery

  North Carolina is now into the second year of Hurricane Helene recovery and as we discussed in a special edition of News & Views last week, while there have been many encouraging and inspiring aspects to this story, the hard truth is that we have a very long way to go. And as Newsline […]

10-06
13:00

Matt Calabria, the Director of Governor Josh Stein’s Recovery Office for Western North Carolina

  This past week marked the one-year anniversary of Helene – a deadly hurricane-turned tropical-storm that wreaked unprecedented havoc in western North Carolina. Helene caused widespread and massive flooding that killed scores of people and caused more than $60 billion dollars in damage to North Carolina’s mountain west. In the year since, clean-up and recovery […]

09-29
19:05

Chris Joyell of Mountain True on efforts to better prepare for the next time disaster strikes

  As with virtually all natural disasters, public funds and programs are at the heart of the ongoing recovery effort from Hurricane Helene. That said, federal relief from the Trump administration has been maddeningly minimal and slow, and that hard reality has helped force local private actors to display unusual resiliency and creativity in helping […]

09-29
15:12

Matt Raker of Mountain BizWorks on how investments are helping WNC recover from Helene

  If western North Carolina is going to fully rebuild and recapture the economic vitality it enjoyed prior to Helene, small businesses will be at the heart of the effort. And make no mistake, the challenges are enormous. Surveys show that 96% of small businesses in the region were impacted by the storm, and while […]

09-29
11:26

Jared Bernstein, former chair of the Council of Economic Advisers, on the state of the economy

  Over the last couple of decades, few if any American economists have played a more prominent role in the national debate over the economy or in actually crafting economic policy than Jared Bernstein. Bernstein served as chair of the national Council of Economic Advisers under President Biden and is currently a senior fellow at […]

09-22
15:09

Senator DeAndrea Salvador discusses AI – its policy implications and abuse of the technology

It’s almost impossible to turn on one’s computer, phone or TV these days without hearing about or, indeed, experiencing the impact of AI – artificial intelligence. The rapid rise of this remarkable technology is reshaping our world in many important ways – some that provide grounds for great hope and others that give rise to […]

09-22
24:00

Rep. Pricey Harrison on the overdue state budget, new proposed changes to state voting laws

  North Carolina state government continues to operate without a budget for the fiscal year that commenced July 1. Thanks largely to a disagreement between Republican leaders of the House and Senate over whether the state should plow ahead with a series of scheduled tax cuts – even as fiscal analysts warn of big impending […]

09-15
19:12

Education policy expert Kris Nordstrom on declining enrollment in public schools

  It’s an interesting fact that while North Carolina’s population continues to steadily increase, enrollment in public schools is trending in the opposite direction. Part of the explanation for this is to be found in demographic shifts, but as Newsline learned in a recent conversation with veteran education policy analyst Kris Nordstrom of the North […]

09-15
14:51

NC League of Women Voters’ Jennifer Rubin on some of the latest controversies surrounding voting

The 2026 midterm elections are still a long way off, but that isn’t keeping debates over voting rights and election laws off the front page. Indeed, both here in North Carolina and around the country, Republican politicians and their appointees are continuing to aggressively pursue policy changes that will – according to an array of […]

09-08
19:06

UNC Health infectious disease expert David Wohl on the respiratory virus season and public health

  Ever since the world was overtaken by the COVID-19 pandemic, public health policy and vaccine policy have been front and center in the national political debate. And tragically, despite a longstanding and overwhelming consensus among public health experts across the globe about the efficacy of vaccines and their vital importance in protecting human health […]

09-08
26:04

Sam Hiner of the Young People’s Alliance on efforts to protect young people from evolving technology

  In our fast-changing world, few technological developments of recent years have had a bigger impact on young people than the emergence of instant communication and social media. And while it’s not difficult to identify the positive impacts of these phenomena, the worrisome impacts are also numerous. And this is a trend that seems certain […]

09-01
13:01

Jessica Burroughs of MomsRising on NC legislation that would further deregulate concealed weapons

  One of the most controversial bills to win approval by the North Carolina legislature during the 2025 session was a bill (SB 50) to allow any person 18 or older to carry a loaded concealed weapon without any kind of permit or background check. Gov. Josh Stein vetoed the measure, but the question of […]

09-01
13:07

Patricia Stottlemyer with Oxfam America discusses the best U.S. states for workers

  Another Labor Day is upon us and in anticipation of that, Oxfam, the global nonprofit that works to fight inequality and end poverty and injustice, has released the seventh edition of its Best States to Work Index. The index tracks 27 policies across three dimensions—wages, worker protections, and rights to organize—that support low-wage workers […]

09-01
13:09

NC Newsline reporter Lynn Bonner on improving the financial stability of the State Health Plan

  After several months of uncertainty and waiting, the State Health Plan board finally made some decisions recently about how it will deal with the half-billion-dollar shortfall it’s been running. And topping the list, as had been expected, will be some new and not insignificant premium hikes for state employees. The increases – especially when […]

08-25
12:38

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