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The 2,200 CFOs surveyed predict gross domestic product will grow 2.2% over the next four quarters.
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Rescue efforts have turned to recovery after the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore. A federal investigation is underway as the region braces for a long and costly reconstruction.
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A one-year pilot program began in late 2022. Hidden microphones were placed in neighborhoods in East and Southeast Durham that would warn police about possible gunfire.
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Guest host Colin Campbell fills in for Jeff Tiberii on this week's NC News Roundup. Our panel of reporters have been keeping up with the latest news affecting everyone in the state, and beyond. Topics today are Trump and VP Kamala Harris' weekend visits, the primary elections and more.
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A family in Raleigh was one of the first to fight to get their son Joseph Holt Jr. into an all-white school in the 1950s. As part of Black History Month, Wake County libraries highlighted the family as well as State Administrator Dudley Flood, who traveled across North Carolina assisting schools with integration.
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Nowell's Clothiers in Raleigh is closing this spring. It's a popular men's clothing store that's been open for 103 years.
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President Biden, they say, should call for a cease-fire. One representative of a network leading 15 million congregants said she hasn’t seen such a unified political front among Black congregants since the Civil Rights movement.
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A new website shows updated information about the former enslaved workers who built North Carolina’s State Capitol.
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A lack of barracks space, as well as poor living conditions in some barracks buildings, are contributing to complaints about sailors' quality of life.
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North Carolina’s top insurance regulator has rejected the industry's request for a 42% increase in homeowners’ insurance premiums. Insurance Commissioner Mike Causey says he's told them “No” and scheduled a hearing for October to evaluate what average increases would be reasonable.
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Twenty-three million families will either have to pay more for internet or cancel their subscriptions altogether if a federal subsidy program to help with the monthly bill runs out of money.
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The Justice Department said FNB will pay $13.5 million to settle the redlining charges, of which the bulk will go into a fund to help subsidize loans for Black and Latino borrowers in Charlotte and Winston-Salem, two housing markets where the DOJ found discrimination.