North Carolina
67 districts in North Carolina are using a program that monitors student email accounts
RALEIGH — In March of this yr, Wake County Public Colleges (WCPSS) was one of many first districts in North Carolina to start utilizing an app that screens scholar electronic mail accounts to determine and flag “inappropriate phrases and pictures” with the aim to “alert faculty officers instantly if there’s an imminent menace to a scholar.”
In line with the Gaggle web site, 440,000 college students throughout 67 of the state’s 115 districts are being monitored by this system. The web site additionally boasts that it flagged 23,000 scholar security incidents for district officers, that 4 in 10 incidents reported have been for self-harm or suicide, and that “113 scholar lives have been saved.”
“Gaggle will monitor college students’ Google Drive and Outlook E mail for issues round self-harm and suicide, harassment, medication and alcohol, violence in direction of others, nudity and sexual content material,” in response to WCPSS communications on this system.
On the onset of the 2021-22 faculty yr, WCPSS handed out Google Chromebooks to each scholar within the district. Which means round 157,673 college students are being monitored utilizing Gaggle.
In line with WCPSS Communications Director Lisa Luten, the Gaggle “is just not meant for workers,” and their units will not be topic to the identical monitoring as college students.
In line with Gaggle report, North Carolina has seen a marked enhance within the majority of the doable scholar conditions between the 2019-20 and the 2020-21 faculty years.
WCPSS’ announcement of Gaggle implementation utilized already current guidelines on content material associated to scholar units and Google merchandise used within the district. Nonetheless, WCPSS warned dad and mom and college students that if a scholar linked a cellular phone or different private gadget to their district-provided Google Drive account, they “could also be held accountable for inappropriate materials per WCPSS Board Coverage 3225: Expertise Accountable Use and the Pupil Code of Conduct.”
The knowledge despatched out to folks about Gaggle says this system “makes use of a security administration response rubric” to categorize “all recorded objects in response to the character and severity of the content material in query.” Classes embrace “violation” and “questionable content material.” Gaggle’s Security Administration Staff then determines the place objects fall in that rubric and “takes acceptable motion.”
North State Journal requested WCPSS who had entry to the info being pulled by Gaggle and Luten mentioned “Solely the response crew on the faculty and district stage response crew.” Luten additionally mentioned the info is saved in a cloud and “content material is saved for 30 days.”
“Something flagged or alerted is saved for one yr,” mentioned Luten in an electronic mail to North State Journal. “The exception: Gaggle has a authorized obligation to delete little one pornography after 90 days. Additionally it is auto reported to the Nationwide Heart for Lacking and Exploited Kids.”
Moreover, Luten indicated that Gaggle sends electronic mail notifications to district officers and there’s a “Gaggle Dashboard” these officers have entry to.
Using Gaggle provides an extra layer to trace scholar interactions on prime of the already state board of schooling contracted app. In Might 2019, former state Superintendent Mark Johnson introduced a contract with Sandy Hook Promise to supply a statewide “Say One thing Nameless Reporting System” for reporting incidents like bullying and threats.
The Say One thing app got here with a hefty five-year time period contract of over $3.1 million with round $600,000 to paid within the first yr. Scheduled value will increase for the app put the second yr at $553,728, third at $570,340, fourth at $587,450, and fifth at $605,074. Further annual “Disaster Heart charges” of $50,000-a-year licensing was a part of the contract.
Gaggle additionally has a big greenback determine connected to its use.
The Common Meeting made appropriations from COVID-19 aid funds for the N.C. Division of Public Instruction (NCDPI) to make Gaggle and its merchandise out there to highschool districts.
In its most not too long ago enacted price range, state lawmakers allotted $5 million in federal aid {dollars} for this system that districts can apply for to implement Gaggle.
HB 1105, The Coronavirus Reduction Act 3.0, signed into regulation by Cooper on Sept. 4, 2020, gave NCDPI $1 million to make Gaggle security administration merchandise out there to districts “to boost scholar security whereas offering distant instruction in response to COVID-19.”
NCDPI’s 2019-2022 guide monitoring COVID aid fund allotments element the breakdown of monitoring prices by district common each day membership (ADM) dimension within the contract with Gaggle. For Google E mail and Drive the fee is $2.50/ADM, whereas it prices $1.25/ADM for Microsoft Groups or Google Hangouts and Microsoft O365 or Google Drive ONLY.
North Carolina
Snow drought ends: Parts of central NC gets first measurable snowfall in 2 years | Live
The North Carolina Department of Transportation gave an update Friday afternoon on its preparations and strategies for managing roadways before, during and after the winter storm.
Doug McNeal, division maintenance engineer for NCDOT’s Division 5, said NCDOT has been preparing for this during the past three days.
Division 5 covers Durham and Wake counties as well as surrounding counties up to the Virginia line.
“We’ve had about 65 salt-brine applicators out in the division. We’ve put out roughly 465,000 gallons in our division,” McNeal said.
Statewide, more than 3 million gallons have been put down.
“We’re expecting impacts across pretty much all of North Carolina. Right now, we’re transitioning to our response time,” McNeal said. “We’re starting to see a little bit of snow in the air … but it’s certainly going to get treacherous out there.”
He said 110 DOT trucks and motor graders are ready to go and an additional 150 contract trucks are loaded and staged.
“As it starts to roll in, we generally wait until you can see tracks in the road before we start taking in, applying salt,” McNeal said. “If you apply before then, it just bounces off the roads, so you need a little bit of material there to capture it but once we give it a little bit of time to activate, and we’re plowing from there.”
He said another concern with this storm is the potential for freezing rain.
“We’re seeing forecasts potentially up to a quarter-inch of ice in the area,” McNeal said.
They’ve also staged what McNeal called cut-and-shove crews.
“We’ll take and try to cut it back to the edge of the pavement and then push off everything else so that the lanes are open and then we come back after things warm up in a couple of days and clear it up from there,” he explained.
McNeal said Saturday would be a good day for people to sleep in and “enjoy that cup of coffee before you go out.”
North Carolina
North Carolina Governor Josh Stein declares state of emergency ahead of winter storm
(WGHP) — Governor Josh Stein declared a statewide state of emergency on Thursday evening ahead of a winter storm expected to sweep through the Piedmont Triad on Friday.
He is urging people across North Carolina to prepare for cold temperatures, snow and ice.
“This storm will likely bring significant impacts from snow, sleet and freezing rain in different parts of the state,” Stein said. “North Carolinians should pay close attention to their local weather forecast, make sure they are prepared with what they need at home before Friday afternoon and stay home if possible as ice on the roadways will likely create dangerous driving conditions.”
On Wednesday, Stein activated state resources to set into motion a cross-agency storm response and enable the potential of federal reimbursement if the event qualifies.
The North Carolina Department of Transportation has begun brining roads. They will work around the clock in 12-hour shifts to plow and treat snow and ice until all state-maintained roads are cleared.
“State emergency officials are monitoring the situation and are prepared to assist the counties and municipalities if needed,” NC Emergency Management Director Will Ray said. “Residents across the state should be prepared to shelter in place. If the power goes out, be sure to operate generators outside and away from open windows or doors to prevent carbon monoxide poisoning.”
North Carolina
No. 24 Cal Women Beat No. 21 North Carolina State
The 24th-ranked Cal women’s basketball team defeated a ranked opponent for the second time this season on Thursday night when the Bears knocked off No. 21 North Carolina State 78-71 at Haas Pavilion.
“I think this was one of the biggest wins for Cal women’s basketball in some time,” Cal coach Charmin Smith.
The Bears defeated then-No. 19 Alabama back on December 5 at Haas Pavilion, and on Thurday Cal beat a team that reached the Final Four last season.
Marta Suarez scored 17 points for Cal (15-2, 3-1 ACC.), and 14 of those points came in the first half when Cal took control late in the second quarter. Ioanna Krimili, Michelle Onyiah and Kayla Williams added 15 points apeice to help the Bears end the Wolfpack’s seven-game winning streak while keeping Cal unbeaten at home (11-0).
Krimili was just 6-for-18 from the the field, including 3-for-12 on three-pointers, but she hit one of the biggest shots of the game when she nailed a three-point shot with 4:57 left, 21 seconds after the Wolfpack had scored six straight points to close Cal’s nine-point lead to three points.
“She made it when we needed it, and we have a habit of doing that,” Smth said.
North Carolina State (11-4, 3-1 ACC) never got closer than four points the rest of the way and suffered its first conference loss despite 21 points from Aziaha James and 19 from Tilda Trygger.
Cal took the lead for good with 1:01 left in the third quarter, then held off every North Carolina State surge after that.
An important reason for Cal’s consistency throughout the game was the play of point guard Kayla Williams, who played all 40 minutes, shot 7-for-13 from the field and added six assists with just two turnovers while doing all the ball-handling chores and driving the lane to create opportunities for herself or others.
“I thought Williams killed us off the bounce,” North Carolina State coach Wes Moore said.
Williams may be the key to Cal’s success this season, because her strong play has come as a surprise to casual observers. She did not start any games for USC last season when she averaged 10.8 minutes, 2.6 points and 0.6 assists per game. After transferring to Cal, Williams has started every game for the Bears this season while averaging 33 minutes, 12.2 points and 4.6 assists to go along with 44.5% three-point shooting.
Thursday was the first time two top-25 women’s teams played a game at Haas Pavilion since Dec. 22, 2018, when 14th-ranked Cal lost to No. 1 UConn.
Cal led by eight points entering the fourth quarter, and the Wolfpack got as close as three points, but the Bears maintained the lead throughout. Cal had scored the final eight points of the third quarter to break away from a 52-52 tie to grab that 60-52 advantage after three quarters.
Cal held a 39-33 lead at halftime, thanks in large part to a one-minute shooting spree by Suarez. She hit three-pointers on three consecutive Cal possessions over a span of 56 seconds to cap a 16-0 Bears run that took Cal from a 22-14 deficit to a 30-22 lead with 5:22 left in the first half.
Suarez’s one-minute shooting spree seemed to change the complexion of the game. Cal never trailed after that.
“I was feeling it,” Suarez said.
Suarez was 4-for-4 from long range in the first half and had 14 points and 10 rebounds at intermission. The rest of the Cal team was just 3-for-12 on three-pointers, and Krimili was 1-for-7 from beyond the arc at halftime. Her one made three-pointer came from well behind the line with the shot clock running down.
Cal shot 44.4% from the field in the first half, while the Wolfpack made just 35.3% of its shots. Cal attempted just one free throw in the first half, and missed it.
NOTES: The top two scorers from North Carolina State’s Final Four team of last season are starters on this season’s Wolfpack squad – Aziaha James and Saniya Rivers.
Heading into Thursday’s action, Cal was averaging 10.1 made three-pointers per game, sixth-most in the country, and were making 37.8% of its three-point shots, which is 12th-best in the nation.
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