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NC Senate Takes Up Hurricane insurance Plan Fix

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RALEIGH, N.C.  – The powerful head of the North Carolina Senate is turning his attention to the insurance woes of his neighbors now that the state budget is in hand.

The Senate Commerce Committee on Wednesday takes up legislation fixing an underfunded coastal insurance program. The plan to beef up the Beach Plan includes tacking an extra charge on every property insurance policy in the state if there is a disastrous storm season.

Senate leader Marc Basnight of Dare County says a version that passed the House would lock in big insurance increases that have hurt his conttiuents. Basnight said he pays $4,000 a year on his three-bedroom house, and three-quarters of that is for wind coverage.

NC Coastal Insurance Fix Gets Financial Once-Over

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RALEIGH, N.C.  – A state House committee pores over the financial effects on North Carolina from revamping an underfunded insurance program for coastal properties.

The House Finance Committee on Thursday considers the best way to fix the Beach Plan, a vital insurance provider for homes in 18 coastal counties.

The Beach Plan has promised insurance coverage to properties valued at nearly $74 billion, but its resources top out at about $2.4 billion. Beyond that, the Beach Plan would turn to all of the state’s property insurers to pay claims.

Lawmakers are proposing changes that include capping how much insurers would be assessed after a bad hurricane and shifting the remaining rebuilding costs to all North Carolina policyholders.

NC House Panel Unveils Bid to Fix Beach Insurance

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RALEIGH, N.C.  – North Carolina lawmakers are unveiling a proposal for who would pay claims for coastal damage after a bad hurricane season.

The House Insurance Committee on Thursday is considering an attempted compromise on the Beach Plan that’s still unlikely to please property owners or insurance companies.

The legislation is trying to fix the state-created insurance agency for property in 18 coastal counties.

The Beach Plan was created in 1969 as the insurer of last resort. But it has ballooned as insurance companies raised rates in storm-prone coastal areas after Hurricane Andrew in 1993.

The Beach Plan now insures 170,000 properties valued at nearly $74 billion. But it has the resources to cover just a fraction of that.

Obama: Government Preparing For Hurricane Season

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WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama says residents of hurricane-prone communities need to take responsibility for their own safety and they need to start planning now.

Hurricane season officially begins Monday.
 
Emerging from a disaster-preparedness briefing Friday, the president said the government is determined to be ready when the next large storm hits the coast of the United States.

Obama said individuals should have their own plans – a supply of non-perishable food, water, first aid kits and radios.
 
The president said state governments have the primary responsibility for preparing and responding to disasters. He said all the resources of the federal government are there to back them up.
 
Obama was critical of the Bush administration’s late response and poor preparation for Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

Perdue, Cabinet To Participate In Hurricane Exercise

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Governor Perdue, cabinet members and state emergency management officials will conduct a hurricane simulation exercise rehearsing the roles and responsibilities of each agency during a disaster.

The 2009 Hurricane Season briefing will begin at 1 p.m. following the exercise.

Who:               Gov. Bev Perdue, Crime Control and Public Safety Sec. Reuben Young, Emergency Management Director Doug Hoell, representatives from other state agencies

What:             Hurricane Tabletop Exercise for State Emergency Response Team (SERT) members, state leaders and staff

Where:           State Emergency Operations Center, Administration Building

116 W. Jones Street, Raleigh

When:            Thursday, May 28, 2009

Obama: Government Cannot Forget Lessons Of Katrina

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WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama said Friday that Gulf Coast residents still struggling to rebuild three years after Hurricane Katrina “have not always received the support they deserve” from Washington.

He announced he was extending the Office of the Federal Coordinator for Gulf Coast Rebuilding, a position created by former President George W. Bush that was set to expire at the end of this month. Obama extended it through the rest of the current fiscal year, which goes to the end of September. Acting coordinator Paul Conway, a holdover from the Bush administration, will remain in the position until Obama chooses a replacement to head the office.

The president also is dispatching two Cabinet secretaries to visit New Orleans and other storm-ravaged parts of the Gulf Coast. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and Housing Secretary Shaun Donovan will tour the region March 5-6.

Obama promised a stepped-up and sustained commitment to the region.

“The residents of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast who are helping rebuild are heroes who believe in their communities and they are succeeding despite the fact that they have not always received the support they deserve from the federal government,” he said in a statement. “We must ensure that the failures of the past are never repeated.”

Obama’s words amounted to sharp though indirect criticism of Bush’s oversight of the Katrina recovery. Bush was widely panned for his immediate response to the massive August 2005 storm that ripped through New Orleans and along the Mississippi Gulf Coast. But Bush also has been the subject of intense criticism, though less high-profile, from those who said he never committed enough money or effort to rebuilding, and eventually appeared to lose interest in it altogether.

Katrina was blamed for more than 1,600 deaths and $41 billion in property damage.

The federal government has devoted more than $175 billion to the region since Katrina. It’s unclear how much more money will be needed to fix the leftover damage. But nearly everyone agrees the federal government should continue investing heavily to significantly strengthen the region’s levees and make other flood control improvements to prevent a repeat of Katrina’s devastation.

Bush argued that additional reconstruction money wasn’t necessary, because billions of those federal dollars remain unspent – bogged down in bureaucracy or tied up in long-range planning.

The same reasons were given for not including Katrina money in the recent economic stimulus package.

Second Hurricane Sends GOP Delegates Scrambling

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ST. PAUL, Minn. – As the Republican National Convention began this week, GOP delegates from Gulf Coast states in the path of Hurricane Gustav scrambled South to protect their homes.

And now a second hurricane could affect the convention. Before the convention wraps up Thursday, delegates from some Atlantic coast states plan to bailout early to prepare for the approach of Hurricane Hanna, perhaps as soon as today.

Cleo Steele, an alternate delegate from North Myrtle Beach, S.C., who lives less than a mile from the ocean, plans to head back to South Carolina on Thursday before John McCain accepts his party’s nomination in a primetime speech.

“It’s a big disappointment. I’ve been here since Sunday, and I wanted to be there to watch. But you do what you have to do. I imagine I’ll catch it on TV at home,” she said.

Republicans can’t seem to catch a break from the weather this month. The McCain campaign had hoped to spend four straight days beginning Monday talking about his biography and attacking Barack Obama.

Gustav forced the party to exclude most political content from Monday’s session and focus on hurricane relief efforts. The party resumed previously scheduled political speeches Tuesday, and expected to keep them up through the week.

It’s unclear what impact Hanna will have on the convention. Current forecasts predict it making landfall somewhere between South Florida and South Carolina around Friday morning as a weak hurricane or tropical storm.

But the effects of the system could be felt on the coast a full day earlier, which could again distract national attention from the convention.

McCain is likely to accept the nomination on Thursday night in prime time, though organizers caution that the convention schedule could still change.

If McCain does speak Thursday, South Carolina State House Speaker Bobby Harrell won’t be watching from the floor. Harrell, a delegate, plans to leave St. Paul Thursday morning to help the state, his family in Charleston, S.C., and his State Farm insurance agency prepare for the storm.

“I need to be at home on Friday when it comes,” he said.

Though forecasters do not expect a repeat of Hurricane Hugo, a powerful storm that devastated South Carolina in 1989, Harrell said experience has taught him forecasts can change at any time.

“This isn’t Hugo – yet. People still need to be prepared,” he said.

State Rep. Alan Clemmons, a delegate from Myrtle Beach, S.C., said Tuesday that he wasn’t sure how the storm would affect his convention plans.

“We’re prepared to head out if need be, but it all depends on the movement of the storm,” he said. “Right now, we’re just watching Hanna very closely to see where she’s headed.”

GOP Convention Opens With Appeal For Gustav Aid

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ST. PAUL, Minn. – Republicans, determined to propel John McCain to the White House, opened their storm-shortened national convention on Monday amid distractions involving running mate Sarah Palin. Police made more than 50 arrests in the surrounding streets as anti-war protests turned violent.

Delegates had scarcely settled into their seats when it was disclosed a lawyer had been hired to represent the Alaska governor in an investigation of her firing of the state’s public safety commissioner. The other disclosure was personal, not political – the pregnancy of her 17-year-old unmarried daughter.

The convention’s opening session was abbreviated as Hurricane Gustav hit the Gulf Coast, sparing New Orleans the type of damage inflicted by Hurricane Katrina almost exactly three years ago.

President Bush skipped his planned speech to go to disaster and relief centers, determined to avoid a repeat of the mismanagement of Katrina.

McCain was in Waterville, Ohio, where he helped pack supplies to be sent to the Gulf.

Both men’s wives sparked cheers when they appeared before the delegates, shunning politics to urge contributions to help storm victims.

Virtually the only political business of the convention’s 2½-hour session was approval of a platform that sidestepped the Iraq War, one of the key issues in the campaign between McCain and Democrat Barack Obama.

“The waging of war – and the achieving of peace – should never be micromanaged in a party platform. … In dealing with present conflicts or future crises, our next president must preserve all options,” it said.

Outside the Xcel Center was a reminder of the passions the war stirs. Protesters smashed windows, punctured car tires and threw bottles, and there were reports that delegates from Connecticut were attacked as they stepped off their bus to attend the day’s convention session.

Police used pepper spray to disperse demonstrators, and reported making at least 56 arrests.

The convention was less than 15 minutes old when Mike Duncan, chairman of the Republican National Committee, asked delegates to use their cell phones to text a five-digit code that would make a donation to the Red Cross for victims of the hurricane.

It was a theme that first lady Laura Bush and Cindy McCain picked up more than an hour later.

“This is a time when we take off our Republican hats and put on our American hats,” McCain said.
 
Added the first lady: “Our first priority for today and in the coming days is to ensure the safety and well-being of those living in the Gulf Coast region.”

Behind the two women was a giant screen showing the names of state-approved charities in Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas.
  
There was money news of a more conventional type, when John McCain’s aides announced he had raised at least $47 million last month for the fall campaign against Democratic rival Barack Obama. It was the largest monthly amount to date for the GOP candidate.

While the opening day convention program was shorn of political rhetoric, aides said McCain was likely to deliver his nomination acceptance speech as scheduled on Thursday.

They added they would determine the podium schedule for the balance of the week on a day-to-day basis.

Some Republicans were eager for a more traditional convention week.

“When the storm passes and we can see that there are enough resources and that lives are not in danger any longer and help is on its way or in place, then that’ll be the green light for us to enjoy the celebration we’re all here for,” said Kelly Burt, a delegate from California.
 
But what there was revolved around Palin, little know nationally until McCain named her his running mate last Friday.

An attorney has been hired to represent Palin in the legislature’s investigation into the dismissal of public safety commissioner Walt Monegan, who was dismissed after he refused to fire a state trooper who had divorced the governor’s sister.

“We have been hired to represent the Governor and the Governor’s Office” in the investigation, wrote Anchorage attorney Thomas V. Van Flein.

“We fully welcome a fair inquiry into these allegations. … Please know that we intend to cooperate with this investigation,” the lawyer said.
  
As for Palin’s daughter, McCain’s campaign aides said Monday’s statement was issued to rebut Internet rumors that the governor’s four-month-old baby was, in fact, daughter Bristol’s child.

“Bristol and the young man she will marry are going to realize very quickly the difficulties of raising a child, which is why they will have the love and support of our entire family,” Sarah and Todd Palin said in the brief statement.

The father was identified in the statement as Levi, but the campaign said it was not disclosing his full name or age or how he and Bristol know each other, citing privacy.

Aides said Palin had informed McCain about her daughter’s pregnancy before she was picked to be his running mate. At several points during the discussions, McCain’s team warned the governor that the scrutiny of her private life would be intense and that there was nothing she could do to prepare for it.

“Senator McCain’s view is this is a private family matter. As parents, (the Palins) love their daughter unconditionally and are going to support their daughter,” said McCain spokesman Steve Schmidt.

“Life happens,” he added.

Prominent religious conservatives, many of them long cool to McCain’s candidacy, issued statements of support.

James Dobson, founder of Focus on the Family, commended the Palins for “for not just talking about their pro-life and pro-family values, but living them out even in the midst of trying circumstances.”

Obama Opens NC Offices For Gustav Donations

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RALEIGH, N.C. – U.S. Sen. Barack Obama’s Campaign for Change said that it will begin accepting non-perishables and other materials at its 16 statewide offices on Tuesday and Wednesday in an effort to assist families affected by Hurricane Gustav.
 
“We wanted to give North Carolinians another way to provide support to families that may be in need in the aftermath of Gustav,” stated Marc Farinella, Obama’s North Carolina State Director.  “Our grassroots organization is ready and willing to pitch in and use its resources to help in any way we can.” 

Local residents are encouraged to bring non-perishables such as canned food, bottled water, first-aid supplies and other materials that may help people in the wake of the storm to their local Campaign for Change office. The supplies will be distributed to aid foundations that can ensure they are delivered to families in need.
 
Here is the full  list of offices accepting items:  
Asheville
107 Merrimon Ave., Suite A
Asheville, NC 28801
828.254.2379

Charlotte
1523 Elizabeth Ave
Charlotte, NC 28204
 
Mt. Airy
228 Franklin St.
Mt. Airy, NC 27030

Rocky Mount
2517 Sunset Ave.
Rocky Mount, NC 27804
252.443.7902
 
Durham
112 W. Main St.|
Durham, NC 27701
919.530.1401
 
Greenville
414 S. Evans St.
Greenville, NC 27858
 
Elizabeth City
427 South Hughes Blvd.
Elizabeth City, NC 27909

Hickory
46 3rd St NW
Hickory, NC 28601
 
Fayetteville
1712 Owen Dr.
Fayetteville, NC 28304
910.484.2832

Greensboro
318 S. Elm St.
Greensboro, NC 27401
336.275.1964
 
Winston-Salem
500 West 4th St.
Winston-Salem, NC
336.723.0866
 
Cary
215 E. Chatham
Cary, NC 27511
 
Raleigh
130 E. Morgan St.
Raleigh, NC 37601
919.821.4875
 
Chapel Hill
337 W. Rosemary St.
Chapel Hill, NC 27516
919.929.0737
 
Raleigh-North Carolina HQ
3600 Glenwood Ave, Ste 150
Raleigh, NC 27612
Phone: 919.423.0593

Wilmington
1302 S. 39th St.
Wilmington, NC
910.392.1907

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