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Editorial
Sharon Hunt
$100,000 question
Sharon Hunt, the chairman of the Lumbee Tribal Council, last week said she wasn’t playing “hard ball” in her refusal to answer questions from the media concerning the tribe’s response to allegations of misspent housing money. And we believe her. Hunt is bound by an ordinance the tribe passed on March 18, 2010, that not only discourages such inquiries, but makes them unlikely. Hunt’s culpability is that she favored the ordinance, which was...
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Biggest loser
The District 7 race for Congress is looking like a rematch, but this time Lumberton Democrat Mike McIntyre, who sees a ninth term imperiled by Republicans with a pen and an easel, might have to face Ilario Pantano, a conservative Republican, on his home turf — assuming both survive primaries. A second version of congressional district maps that was released this week pulled Robeson County out from underneath McIntyre’s feet, putting his Che...
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Let in the sunshine
Regrettably, this state’s laws regarding public records do not apply to the Lumbee Tribe. That doesn’t, however, make it in the best interest of the tribe to continue the clandestine practices it has been known for over the years. There isn’t enough space here for but a fraction of an inventory of examples, but these are easily recalled. — The tribe briefly once banned the media from its meetings, saying they were closed to any except tri...
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First and third
There is probably no government-generated report less reliable than the one on crime in North Carolina issued annually by the state Attorney General’s Office and the State Bureau of Investigation. It doesn’t take a close examination to find errors. This year we did our double-take on the number of murders investigated by the Sheriff’s Office. The report said there were six in all of 2010. We knew better, asked, and the Sheriff’s Office told...
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Image conscious
There might remain some people who don’t understand the hazards of inhaling cigarette smoke. Anything, we’re told, is possible. But the Food and Drug Administration’s requirement that tobacco companies put graphic images with cautionary messages on cigarette packages isn’t intended for the deaf, dumb and blind among us. Rather, the images will drive even harder home the fact to cigarette smokers that each cigarette takes minutes off the e...
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City shouldn’t waste chance
The Lumberton City Council this week debated the merits of a voluntary recycling program for city residents, but in the end took no action, apparently paralyzed by the fear of a nickel a day that Waste Management would charge for the curbside service. It’s unclear when — or if — the council will revisit the issue. Even if that happens, the water might be muddied by the fact that some council members aren’t pleased with Waste Management, and...
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Want to bet
In what could be a classic case of be careful what you wish for, several Internet cafes have fled Lumberton because they couldn’t afford licensing fees for the fiscal year that began on Friday. That was the city’s intent last year when it adopted fees that were plainly prohibitive for most if not all of these small businesses — $5,000 for each business, and an additional $2,500 for each machine, making the yearly bill $30,000 for a business...
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Redistricting:
Act I

Some preliminary redistricting maps have been released, and as far as local legislators go, it’s probably too early to know with certainty, but at first blush no one seems imperiled. Although Republicans are in charge, it would be difficult for them to put a glove on our local legislators, three out of four of whom are Democrats, in a county such as Robeson, where about three out of four people calls themselves a Democrat. U.S. Rep. Mike ...
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Waiting on Manning
Robeson County last week was a major player in a court hearing in Raleigh that could chart the path of education in North Carolina for the distant future, and most certainly will for the near future. Lawyers representing Robeson, Hoke, Vance, Halifax and Cumberland counties — the plaintiffs in the landmark Leandro case — argued to Superior Court Judge Howard Manning Jr. that the recently approved state budget guts education spending enough ...
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Feeling

the blues


A long-awaited foot finally dropped on the University of North Carolina’s football program Tuesday, tarring the Tar Heels’ claim of running a sports program the “Carolina Way.” Another foot hangs as UNC will find out within 90 days the penalties it will suffer, which could include a television ban, loss of bowl eligibility, vacated wins, lost scholarships and probation. But there was a sigh of relief in Chapel Hill as there was fear things ...
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Jobs and health care
Are you looking for a career, one that would be rewarding financially, but in other ways as well, such as helping people reclaim their health? In August 2012, Robeson Community College will enroll its first class of students, probably 24 strong, who will seek to become licensed practical nurses in what amounts to a one-year program. Graduates can expect to earn more than $30,000 a year immediately upon graduation, and they shouldn’t have to...
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Sealey’s punishment
The local chapter of the NAACP believes the firing of Hubert Sealey, a Robeson County commissioner, by the Highway Patrol was “racist,” arguing that another trooper, who was white, suffered a lesser punishment for basically the same transgressions — conducting private business while on the public clock. If the local chapter’s argument is that the white trooper should have been fired as well, then it might have a point. We have a letter, sup...
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Risky behavior
When it comes to corporal punishment, Robeson County educators spared the rod with the fewest frequency of all the state’s school systems during the 2009-2010 school year, according to the state Department of Public Instruction. According to the DPI, Robeson County educators used corporal punishment 296 times during that school year, while it was used a total of 864 times in all the other state’s public schools. That means 25 percent of the...
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Tillis gives big raises while
pushing budget cutting jobs

To the Editor, Republican House Speaker Thom Tillis really is looking out for the citizens of North Carolina. He has given his personal staff members raises of up to twenty-seven (27) percent. One of his staff member’s salaries has risen from $120,000 to $ $150,000 while he has helped to eliminate many jobs where individuals were making $30,000 or less. That $30,000 raise could have employed a qualified individual somewhere in the state w...
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A better alternative
There were 20,000 good reasons for legislation that the General Assembly approved last week lifting the cap of 100 for charter schools in North Carolina. According to the Associated Press, 20,000 is the number of families in North Carolina who are on a waiting list to get their children enrolled into a charter school. If 20,000 moms and dads believe a charter school is their child’s best option for a quality education, then that choice shou...
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