North Carolina
North Carolina has wasted 1.7 million COVID-19 vaccine doses. Big data hopes to help
Since COVID-19 vaccines have been accessible, greater than 1.7 million doses in North Carolina have gone to waste.
About half have been wasted due to leftover doses in an opened vial, and the opposite half as a result of they reached an expiration date, in keeping with information supplied by the N.C. Division of Well being and Human Providers. Statewide, greater than 16 million doses have been administered throughout the state.
Nationwide, 65 million COVID-19 vaccines have been wasted, in keeping with information from the U.S. Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention.
Doses have to be stored very chilly, and the NC Collaboratory —a analysis and coverage group — has supplied 63 freezers throughout the state with the intent to enhance equitable vaccine distribution to underserved communities.
The Collaboratory is working with SAS to optimize provide distribution. “The venture monitored the influence of things together with temperature, humidity, vibration throughout transport, opening and shutting, period in storage and freezer capability,” in keeping with SAS.
Put merely: sensors within the storage freezers work type of like a wise fridge that alerts you if you’re low on eggs.
“Basically offering clever alerting, when the virus unfold begins to outpace vaccine provide in a specific area,” mentioned Bobby Shkolnikov, principal of SAS’s Web of Issues unit. “After which the system can present suggestions for tips on how to transfer provide to satisfy that demand.”
Sensors monitor freezer temperature and capability.
“So monitoring the variety of vaccines to find out the house availability in every of the freezers,” he mentioned.
Copyright 2022 North Carolina Public Radio. To see extra, go to North Carolina Public Radio.
North Carolina
North Carolina federal prison supervisor convicted after instructing physical punishment
BUTNER, N.C. — A North Carolina federal prison supervisor has been convicted after investigators say he instructed a correctional officer to physically punish a man incarcerated at the institution by beating him.
Daniel Mitchell, a former Federal Bureau of Prisons lieutenant, pleaded guilty earlier this week to a felony charge of conspiring to violate civil rights, according to a U.S. Department of Justice statement.
“Corrections officers work in dangerous environments with limited resources and deserve our respect and gratitude,” U.S. Attorney Michael F. Easley Jr. said in a statement. “But officers acting outside the law to injure an inmate erodes the rule of law, violates civil rights and puts other officers’ lives in jeopardy.”
An attorney who represented Mitchell declined to comment Saturday.
The beating happened at the Federal Correctional Institute Butner Medium II in the special housing unit in Granville County, which Mitchell supervised, authorities said. The prison houses more than 1,600 people, according to its website.
A correctional officer reported to Mitchell on Dec. 8, 2021, that the incarcerated man had exposed himself and “engaged in a sexual act” in front of her while she was doing rounds in the unit, investigators said. Mitchell then began discussing with another correctional officer about how to punish the man.
Neither the man nor the two correctional officers were named by the U.S. Department of Justice or court documents from the case. The department did not indicate whether the conspiring officer also faced charges.
Normally, the prison’s misconduct discipline process involves a writeup for violations. The writeup is then delivered to the person, which is referred to as “counseling,” according to court records.
Mitchell and the conspiring officer agreed traditional punishment methods wouldn’t work for the man, investigators said. While giving instructions, Mitchell allegedly told the officer to “teach a lesson” and “tune” him up — phrasing they both understood as physical punishment, according to court documents. He also ordered the officer to “stay away from face” while punishing him, authorities said.
The man was taken to another cell where the officer hit and kicked him until other correctional officers intervened, the department said. The man later had a medical emergency involving spasms after the beating aggravated his preexisting back condition, investigators said.
An eyewitness officer reported the beating, which prompted an investigation from the U.S. Justice Department’s Officer of Inspector General. Mitchell and the conspiring officer both admitted to investigators that they planned to physically punish the inmate as disciplinary action, authorities said.
Mitchell’s sentencing hearing is scheduled for late March, where he faces up to 10 years in prison.
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.
North Carolina
Top UConn and North Carolina Players Not Playing in the Fenway Bowl
The UConn Huskies had their best season since 2010, and their reward is a Fenway Bowl clash with a North Carolina Tar Heels side transitioning to an exciting new coaching staff in 2025, led by legendary NFL head coach Bill Belichick.
Between injuries, transfer portal entrants, and NFL Draft declarations, there will be several UConn and North Carolina players not playing in the Fenway Bowl.
Top UConn Players Not Playing in Fenway Bowl
Thanks to the CFN Bowl Game Opt-Out Tracker, we know which players from the Huskies won’t be in action in the Fenway Bowl.
- Nathaniel Wallace-Dilling, P, UConn (transfer portal)
- Reggie Akles, CB, UConn (transfer portal)
- Durrell Robinson, RB, UConn (transfer portal)
- Jarvarius Sims, CB, UConn (transfer portal)
- Brock Montgomery, WR, UConn (transfer portal)
- Lee Molette III, DB, UConn (transfer portal)
- Julien Simon, LB, UConn (transfer portal)
- Skyler Bell, WR, UConn (transfer portal)
- Pryce Yates, DL, UConn (transfer portal)
- Malcolm Bell, CB, UConn (transfer portal)
10 UConn student-athletes entered the college football transfer portal at the end of the season. The Huskies haven’t issued a depth chart ahead of their matchup with the Tar Heels, and with very little information on social media as to individual intentions on social media, the assumption is that all those players are not playing in the Fenway Bowl.
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Wide receiver Bell is the most notable of the UConn players not playing in the Fenway Bowl. He led the team with 783 receiving yards and four receiving touchdowns this season. However, running back Robinson is also in the portal. He paced the team in yards per carry (6.8) and rushing touchdowns (8). The Huskies do have two players available with over 100 carries in 2024.
Top North Carolina Players Not Playing in Fenway Bowl
Thanks to the CFN Bowl Game Opt-Out Tracker, we know which players from the Tar Heels won’t be in action in the Fenway Bowl.
- Omarion Hampton, RB, North Carolina (NFL Draft)
- Garrett Jordan, LS, North Carolina (transfer portal)
- Howard Sampson, OT, North Carolina (transfer portal)
- Zach Greenberg, iOL, North Carolina (transfer portal)
- Andrew Rosinski, OT, North Carolina (transfer portal)
- Conner Harrell, QB, North Carolina (transfer portal)
- Jordan Louie, RB, North Carolina (transfer portal)
- Eli Sutton, iOL, North Carolina (transfer portal)
While it will be Freddie Kitchens rather than Belichick who coaches the Tar Heels in the Fenway Bowl, there’s still some excitement around the program heading into Saturday’s game. Sadly, that will be tempered by the departure of star running back Hampton, who declared for the NFL Draft in early December and opted out of the Fenway Bowl soon after.
MORE: 2025 NFL Draft Underclassmen Tracker
That deprives college football fans of one final look at one of the most explosive playmakers in the country. Hampton led the ACC in rushing yards and rushing touchdowns this fall, increasing his NFL Draft stock exponentially in the process.
Joining Hampton among the North Carolina players not playing in the Fenway Bowl is quarterback Harrell, who appeared in just six games this fall, and several offensive linemen. It’s worth noting that several of the Tar Heels players currently in the transfer portal are set to play on Saturday, including starting linebacker Amare Campbell, who tallied 11 tackles for loss in 2024.
College Football Network has you covered with the latest from the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, SEC, and every Group of Five conference and FBS Independent program.
North Carolina
'I'm ready, y'all': Carrie Everett aims to become first Miss America from NC since 1962
On Saturday, Carrie Everett will start her journey to become the next Miss America.
The Johnston County native will head to Orlando on Saturday as she prepares to compete in the Miss America Pageant on Jan. 5.
Everett will be joined by Kamryn Howell, who won the 20th Miss Teen North Carolina.
“We are currently stopped in Georgia and on our way to Orlando in the morning,” Everett told WRAL News on Friday. “We just needed a bit of rest.”
In June, Everett won the 87th Miss North Carolina pageant. In an August interview, she told WRAL News that her family struggled with finances and that her journey to be Miss North Carolina was challenging.
She said it wasn’t a journey she wouldn’t have been able to do alone.
“I learned it’s okay to ask for help,” she said. “I have always been an individual who is scared to ask for help because I don’t want to feel the shame of not being able to do things myself.”
While she describes herself as independent, she said she has learned that you can be independent and still as for help.
She told WRAL News she plans to take those lessons into the competition and not only compete but bring Miss America back to North Carolina for the first time since 1962.
“I am feeling ready, willing and like I can totally bring that crown home with the grace of God,” she said. “I hope to make history for North Carolina. I’m ready, y’all.”
The Miss America pageant will take place at the Walt Disney Theater at the Dr. Phillips Center for Performing Arts, with preliminary competitions starting on New Year’s Eve.
The pageant has five areas of competition: interviews, sportswear, evening gowns, on-stage questions and talent.
Everett will perform “The Impossible Dream” from the Broadway musical, “Man of La Mancha,” an adaptation of the 17th-century novel Don Quixote.
“It’s a beautiful piece and tells the story of our lives [and] my family … It will tell the story of my life and how far I’ve come, dreaming the impossible dream to inspire [the] youth of this generation that they can dream so much bigger than they think they can,” she said.
The Miss America pageant will be live-streamed on YouTube and MissAmerica.TV.
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