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North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson says the cuts could result in about 1,000 job cuts in public schools.
North Carolina, along with over 20 other states, is suing the Department of Education over billions in frozen funding meant for public schools.
Schools in Bladen, Columbus, Robeson and Scotland counties could lose more than $6 million as part a freeze on federal funding.
On Jan. 1, 2025, around 11:20 p.m., officers said the suspect, identified as Terros Drayton, 34, went to the 1700 block of ...
North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson and State Superintendent Mo Green held a joint press conference Monday to ...
According to the AG’s office, the state’s schools will lose more than $165 million in public education funding, and nearly ...
WCPSS is out $8 million -- money budgeted for staffing programs like English as a second language and after-school programs.
The lawsuit argued that the decision to freeze these funds resulted in “chaos” for schools across the country.
North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson joined two dozen states in suing the Trump administration for withholding nearly ...
Governor Stein has appointed Ginger M. Cash of Johnston County to the North Carolina Interagency Coordinating Council for Children from Birth to Five with Disabilities. Cash is the ...
Overall, four people die by suicide very day in North Carolina, she said. “That’s just overwhelming,” Crosbie said. State ...