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LaTEST News

Shaklan Investigative Reporting Fellowship

NC Connection:
Closing the News Gap

A special CPP research project on the news needs of rural North Carolinians


SPECIAL REPORTS

Stacked Against

A multi-part series examining charge stacking in North Carolina and its role in plea bargaining and disparities in sentencing.

The uncertain future of old-growth forests in North Carolina

This four-part series focusing on the Southside Project, a recent initiative by the U.S. Forest Service, to make the national forest more resilient and sustainable. 

Dodging Standards

Social services in NC may be in the hands of people who don’t meet minimum qualifications.
Why and how it happens, and how other states avoid the problem.

Changing Tides

How climate change affects North Carolina’s fisheries
and the people who rely on them for a living.

Finding Nurses

The importance of sexual assault nurse examiners
and the difficulty of locating them in North Carolina

Seeking Conviction

Justice elusive for NC sexual assault survivors

Fraught Forests

Climate change is causing erratic weather events and altering ecosystems in the forests of Western North Carolina’s mountains.
What these changes mean and the challenges they pose for managing the forests.

Raising Jails

How and why North Carolina counties decide to build
or expand jails, the costs of those decisions
and possible alternatives.

Patchwork Protection

Inconsistency and inequity in child welfare policies across NC

What ails NC prisons?

Struggling with the COVID-19 pandemic in state’s prison system

Questionable Care

Is one of North Carolina’s main systems
for housing those with mental illness failing?


Cierra Cobb in her home office in Greensboro on Nov. 15. She says she feels the squeeze of inflation at home and in the prices her incarcerated husband must pay for basic goods at Maury Correctional Institution in Greene County. Matt Ramey / Carolina Public Press

Burden of high prices behind bars in NC

Prison commissary prices soar in North Carolina, leaving incarcerated people and their families struggling.

Crime & Justice

A double-edged sword: North Carolina expands the fight against fentanyl

Under a state law that takes effect next month, anyone who provides certain drugs to a person who dies after taking them may be prosecuted for second-degree murder — whether they received money for the drugs or shared them freely.  “Death by distribution” first became a crime in North Carolina in 2019. Originally, the law…

Economy

Politics & Government