North Carolina
Dead woman found entangled in O'Hare baggage machinery was from North Carolina, authorities say
CHICAGO (AP) — The dead woman who was found entangled in a baggage conveyor belt at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport was from North Carolina, authorities said Friday.
The Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office identified the woman as 57-year-old Virginia Christine Vinton of Waxhaw, North Carolina. The office’s spokesperson, Natalia Derevyanny, said an autopsy was scheduled for Friday.
Firefighters responding to a 911 call found Vinton’s body entangled in the belt around 7:45 a.m. Thursday in a baggage room near a terminal that serves international flights.
According to police, surveillance footage shows Vinton enter the area around 2:27 a.m. Thursday, but it doesn’t show what happened to her.
The room where Vinton’s body was found is off limits to the public, and it’s unclear why she was in it, authorities said. A U.S. Department of Labor spokesman said she was not an airport employee.
Police declined to comment further on the matter.
There was no immediate response Friday to messages left at possible phone numbers listed as belonging to Vinton’s family
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North Carolina
Thousands still without power in central NC; Debby moves toward northeast
![Thousands still without power in central NC; Debby moves toward northeast Thousands still without power in central NC; Debby moves toward northeast](https://cdn.abcotvs.com/dip/images/5581057_100119-wtvd-duke-energy-rate-increase-vid.jpg?w=1600)
NORTH CAROLINA (WTVD) — Thousands across central NC are still without power Friday morning after Debby made its way through the state.
According to Duke Energy, there are over 500,000 customers were affected overall by the storm across the Carolinas. About 18,000 customers are impacted Friday morning.
Jeff Brooks with Duke Energy said most of the Triangle outages are in Chatham and rural Orange County.
ABC11 is tracking these outages across the Triangle and other counties.
Debby, which entered North Carolina as a tropical storm, weakened into a tropical depression and is continuing in its path toward the north.
RELATED | Debby leaves significant damage in NC as it heads northeast
Copyright © 2024 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.
North Carolina
27 main roads, 268 secondary ones impacted by flooding across NC
![27 main roads, 268 secondary ones impacted by flooding across NC 27 main roads, 268 secondary ones impacted by flooding across NC](https://gray-witn-prod.cdn.arcpublishing.com/resizer/v2/YDEQ7REPNBEWVJZ4BLNII53M2U.jpg?auth=f3507cc41544e463dd93d181b6af6e0d5b594c13bca4aaf5b238aebd9492f606&width=1200&height=600&smart=true)
GREENVILLE, N.C. (WITN) – As of Thursday night, nearly 300 roads are impacted by flooding across North Carolina.
Pitt County:
U.S. 264 just past NC 30 from Washington to Greenville has water covering part of the roadway. The road was closed but has since reopened.
Hudsons Crossroads south of Grimesland near Black Jack Grimesland Road is impassable in both directions.
Greene County:
SR-1204 (Gurganus), Near Peanut south of Snow Hill closed in both directions.
Jones County:
SR-1310 (British), Near Caswell Station northwest of Trenton closed in both directions.
SR-1306 (Webb Farm), near Wyse Fork North west of Trenton closed in both directions.
SR-1130 (Pleasant Hill), near Vine Swamp west of Trenton closed in both directions.
Duplin County:
SR-1378 (Stokes Gooding), near W. Best Rd. near Kenansville closed in both directions.
SR-1301 (Bowdens Road), Near Faison McGowen Road west of Kenansville closed in both directions
SR-1959 (DS Williams Road), near NC 11/903 near Kenansville closed in both directions.
SR-1911 (Brooks Quinn Road), near Dickson Road near Magnolia closed in both directions.
SR-1148 (Rosemary Road), near Bay Road In Rose Hill closed in both directions.
SR-1116 (South Railroad St), near S NC 41 Hwy in Wallace closed in both directions.
SR-1154 (HC Powers Road), near Shaw Road in Wallace closed in both directions.
Carteret County:
SR-1385 (Shell Hill Rd), Near Nelson Neck Rd closed in both directions.
Click here for a complete list or closed roads across NC.
Copyright 2024 WITN. All rights reserved.
North Carolina
‘Diaper Bank’ helps support families in North Carolina
Any parent knows how expensive and necessary it is to buy diapers for their children, but there’s a larger conversation to be had about the very real impact of parents not being able to afford diapers.
Now, there’s help for some families thanks to the Diaper Bank of North Carolina.
Venessa Diaz is a young mom with three kids, but she’s smiling more easily these days knowing what her family has overcome.
When her son Raul was two years old, he was hospitalized with acute pancreatitis. Beyond the emotional and financial stress, Venessa worried how she was going to get enough diapers to cover all of her children.
“It was a lot, and without the diaper bank, I don’t think we would have made it through that time,” Diaz said. “I feel like it really just took a lot of pressure off at a time where we were most vulnerable.”
There’s no government assistance for diapers, and they’re not covered by WIC or food stamps — the cost adds up.
“Families are literally making choices between buying food or buying diapers and every single time, they will choose to feed their children and try to make those diapers lasts as long as they can,” said Michelle Schaefer-Old, the founder of the Diaper Bank of North Carolina. “So we’re seeing babies left in one diaper a day, families rinsing out and reusing diapers.”
Schaefer-Old started the bank in the Durham area in 2013. In 2022, they opened a warehouse in Charlotte.
“People are not aware that the need is there. Because it’s embarrassing to talk about,” she said.
About 76% of the families served by the diaper bank work one to three jobs, and they still can’t afford basic hygiene items like diapers.
Diaz told Channel 9′s Elsa Gillis she wouldn’t have been able to work if she didn’t have a diaper supply to drop off with her child.
“Because if you don’t have diapers there, [day care] won’t take your kid,” she said.
All of these years later, the commitment remains to spreading the word that help is available.
“It comes down to dignity, and dignity should not be a privilege,” Schaefer-Old said.
You can get more information about the Diaper Bank of North Carolina at this link.
(VIDEO: Iredell County organization works with local businesses to provide diapers for struggling families)
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