Local News Audio

Noon News 11-17-20 Cardinal Innovations; Vance Co. Farmers Mrkt.; Frank “The Bluebird Man” Newell

Stories include:

– Cardinal Innovations Health Care’s county action plan

– Vance Co. Regional Farmer’s Market hand crafted holiday market

– Frank “The Bluebird Man” Newell

For full details and audio, click play.

 

Nicholas Adam Hughes

Louisburg Man Arrested on Second Degree Kidnapping, Weapons Charges

100.1 FM ~ 1450 AM ~ WIZS, Your Community Voice ~ Click to LISTEN LOCAL

-Information courtesy the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office

On November 12, 2020, at approximately 9:15 p.m., the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office Patrol Division and Domestic Violence Unit responded to 888 Fuller Road in Louisburg in reference to a domestic with weapons call.

As a result of the incident, Nicholas Adam Hughes, a Franklin County resident, was arrested and charged with: one (1) count of Felony Discharge Firearm within Enclosure to Incite Fear, one (1) count of Felony Second Degree Kidnapping, one (1) count of Misdemeanor Assault with a Deadly Weapon, one (1) count of Misdemeanor Communicating Threats, one (1) count of Misdemeanor Injury to Real Property, and one (1) count of Misdemeanor Resisting a Public Officer.

Hughes is currently in the Franklin County Detention Center under an $80,000 secured bond.

Nicholas Adam Hughes – 39 years of age – 888 Fuller Road, Louisburg, NC 27549

Nicholas Adam Hughes (Photo courtesy FCSO)

Cardinal Innovations Healthcare

Cardinal Innovations Healthcare Releases County Action Plan

100.1 FM ~ 1450 AM ~ WIZS, Your Community Voice ~ Click to LISTEN LOCAL

-Information courtesy Cardinal Innovations Healthcare

Cardinal Innovations County Action Plan

Cardinal Innovations Healthcare is wholeheartedly committed to helping the people we serve and are invested in supporting the counties and communities where our members live. In the spirit of transparency, ongoing improvement and partnership, and together with the NC Department of Health and Human Services, Cardinal Innovations has committed to a detailed plan of action, effective immediately.

Contained in this plan are concrete measures and specific steps for improvement to address county concerns and hold us accountable to our members and our communities.

Supporting Children Entering DSS Custody

• We recognize that even with all deliberate speed, change will take time and will not resolve all pain points overnight. For this reason, and in addition to the steps outlined in our plan of action, we plan to invest an additional $30 million to help our counties take care of children in foster care.

Effective immediately, Cardinal will enter into a subcapitation agreement with its county DSS partners to provide a Per Member Per Month (PMPM) payment for every Medicaid-eligible foster child in its care. Counties will be able to use these Medicaid funds to cover the cost of some preliminary or transitional care or to address social determinants of health (e.g., housing, transportation, food insecurity).

Payments will begin retroactively from March 2020 due to additional constraints caused by the pandemic and extend through June 30, 2022.

Access to Care

• Cardinal will remove authorization requirements for a broad category of outpatient and community-based services. For services that still require a Treatment Authorization Request (TAR), Cardinal will issue a decision within 72 calendar hours for foster children/juveniles and individuals with two or more occurrences in the Emergency Department within 60 days.

• Cardinal will co-locate Cardinal staff at county DSS offices to work directly with DSS staff to identify high-needs cases sooner, help to resolve emerging issues, and assist in identifying care needs earlier.

• To increase the availability of immediate access to care, Cardinal will partner with preferred Therapeutic Foster Care (TFC) providers to enhance the delivery of TFC by creating an emergency/transitional setting option, as well as pairing the service with evidence-based support and high-fidelity wrap-around services.

Emergency Department Utilization

• Cardinal will develop a transition of care program, which will include both hospital inpatient and ED discharge planning program with the goal of reducing the length of stay and improving access to services post-discharge

Improved Processes

• Effective immediately, Cardinal will eliminate site-specific contracting with TFC provider agencies

• Within 30 days, Cardinal will eliminate site-specific authorizations for TFC or Level II Family Type homes

• To increase provider accountability for timely authorizations, Cardinal will expand its provider monitoring activities to include tracking the length of time between a provider’s receipt of an assessment and the date the provider submits a completed TAR

Outreach and Education

• Cardinal will conduct in-depth trainings with DSS staff around the adult service continuum, including the state-funded registry, the Transitions to Community Living Initiative (TCLI), the Registry of Unmet Needs (Innovations waitlist), Medicaid services, (b)(3) services, and non-Medicaid services

• Cardinal will provide at least quarterly webinar trainings on the state-funded eligibility criteria and service array for DSS partners and other community stakeholders and will conduct pre/post surveys to assess the level of understanding pre/post to adjust content as needed

• Cardinal will develop updated member resources to improve ease of navigation and raise awareness of the service array offered by Cardinal

• Cardinal will begin implementation of a new service model that raises awareness of the Cardinal service array, simplifying the process for members to issue and resolve complaints and ensuring that members have access to services

For more information on Cardinal Innovations Healthcare, please visit www.cardinalinnovations.org.

VCRFM Handcrafted Holiday Market

VCRFM’s ‘Handcrafted Holiday Market’ to Offer Unique Gifts & More

THIS STORY IS PRESENTED IN PART BY DRAKE DENTISTRY

The Vance County Regional Farmers Market (VCRFM) will hold a “Handcrafted Holiday Market” on Saturday, November 21, 2020, from 8 a.m. until 3 p.m.

Come browse the large selection of unique gifts, soaps, candles, hand-sewn and crocheted items, glassware, wood crafts, wreaths, ornaments, baked goods, local honey, pasture-raised pork, pasture-raised beef and fresh local produce.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, VCRFM will take all precautions to ensure a safe and sanitary shopping environment. Face coverings/masks are MANDATORY – no one will be allowed in the facility without a mask. Hand sanitizer and handwashing stations will be available. The maximum facility capacity will be limited to 75. Social distancing will be enforced.

Don’t have a face mask? No worries. VCRFM will have several craft vendors making unique, comfortable, washable and reusable masks. Lots of great colors and designs to choose from including masks with your favorite local college team logos and Christmas designs.

The Vance County Regional Farmers Market is located at 210 Southpark Dr. in Henderson, NC.

(This is not a paid advertisement)

Duke Energy

Duke Energy Warns Customers to Beware of Utility Scams

100.1 FM ~ 1450 AM ~ WIZS, Your Community Voice ~ Click to LISTEN LOCAL

-Press Release, Duke Energy

The phone rings. It’s Duke Energy. We’re on the way to disconnect your electric service unless you pay us over the phone right now. You follow the instructions and – just like that – you’ve been scammed.

Sadly, this is not an uncommon phone call. That’s why Duke Energy has again joined forces with utilities across the continent to bring awareness to these criminal scam tactics on the fifth annual Utility Scam Awareness Day on November 18. Utility Scam Awareness Day is part of the week-long International Scam Awareness Week, an advocacy and awareness campaign focused on educating customers and exposing the tactics used by scammers.

“As the COVID-19 pandemic continues, it’s absolutely critical to remind all utility customers to beware of impostors attempting to scam them,” said Jared Lawrence, Duke Energy’s vice president of revenue services and metering. “We’ve made great progress as an industry in getting the word out the past few years, and the numbers continue to improve. But so do the scammers, and that’s why we must continue to keep our customers informed and aware so they don’t become the next victims. Together, we can stop scams.”

Recognized annually, Utility Scam Awareness Day was created by Utilities United Against Scams (UUAS), a consortium of nearly 150 U.S. and Canadian electric, water, and natural gas companies and their respective trade associations.

Scamming through the pandemic

Duke Energy – a founding member of UUAS – and the consortium’s other member companies have seen an increase in scam attempts appearing to take advantage of the uncertainty of the pandemic. In addition to the frequent impostor scam, some new tactics include bogus COVID-19 references to steal personal information. Although impostors continue to target utility customers, UUAS members and partners have succeeded in taking nearly 9,400 scam telephone numbers out of operation.

“At the height of the pandemic, scammers preyed on Duke Energy customers with an alarming frequency,” Lawrence said. “The good news? Most people didn’t fall for it.”

When the UUAS campaign started in 2016, more than nine percent of Duke Energy customers who reported scams lost money, and so far this year less than three percent have reported falling for scams. That’s still nearly $400,000 of hard-earned money lost to scammers in less than a year, and the reason why more work needs to be done to get the word out.

“Customers need to be on high alert as we continue to see impostor utility scams rise across North America,” said UUAS Executive Director Monica Martinez. “Scammers demand money or personal information on the spot – usually with threatening language – and indicate that service will be disconnected immediately. Anyone and everyone, from senior households to small business owners, is at risk of being targeted.”

UUAS advises customers who suspect that they have been victims of fraud or who feel threatened during contact with a scammer to contact their local utility or law enforcement authorities. Here are tips to protect yourself from falling victim to utility scams:

Common scam tactics include:    

  • Threat to disconnect: Scammers may aggressively tell a customer their utility bill is past due, and service will be disconnected—usually within an hour—if a payment is not made.
  • Request for immediate payment: Scammers might instruct a customer to purchase a prepaid card, cryptocurrency, or to send funds via a mobile app to make a bill payment.
  • Request for prepaid card or payment through certain mobile apps: Customers are instructed to pay with a prepaid debit card. The impostor asks for the prepaid card’s number, which grants instant access to the card’s funds. More recently, customers have also been instructed to send a payment through a mobile app. Duke Energy currently does not accept payments through the Cash App, Venmo or Zelle apps. However, customers can make payments on Duke Energy’s mobile app available in the Apple App Store for iOS and the Google Play Store for Android.
  • Personal information: During the COVID-19 crisis, criminals are promising to mail refund checks for overpayments on their accounts if they can confirm their personal data, including birthdays and, in some cases, Social Security numbers. Duke Energy will apply refunds as a credit to customers’ accounts and will not contact customers to verify personal information by phone, email or in-person in order to mail a check.

Protect yourself

  • Customers should never purchase a prepaid card to avoid service interruption. Utility companies do not specify how customers should make a bill payment and always offer a variety of ways to pay a bill, including online payments, phone payments, automatic bank drafts, mail, or in person.
  • If someone threatens immediate service interruption, customers should be aware. Customers with past due accounts receive multiple advanced notices, typically by mail and in their regular monthly bill. Utilities will never notify of a disconnection in one hour or less.
  • If customers suspect someone is trying to scam them, they should hang up, delete the email, or shut the door. The utility should be contacted immediately at the number on the most recent monthly bill or on the utility’s official website, not the phone number the scammer provides. If customers ever feel that they are in physical danger, they should call 9-1-1.

Visit Duke Energy’s brand journalism site, illumination, to learn more about Lawrence’s involvement in founding Utilities United Against Scams and to download a call from a customer who reported being scammed.

Frank B. Newell III

Town Talk 11/16/20: Remembering Frank ‘The Bluebird Man’ Newell III

100.1 FM ~ 1450 AM ~ WIZS, Your Community Voice ~ Click to LISTEN LOCAL

-Photos courtesy Kristye Steed

Kristye Steed, wildlife rehabilitator and daughter of Frank “The Bluebird Man” Newell III, appeared on WIZS’ Town Talk Monday at 11 a.m.

A long-time wildlife rehabilitator and Warren County native, Newell, age 80, died peacefully at home on November 7, 2020.

Newell served active duty in the US Army for 38 years and as an NC State and Federal Wildlife Rehabilitator for more than 60 years. Steed said her father saved the lives of thousands of sick and injured animals, rehabilitating them on the family farm and releasing them back into their natural habitat.

According to Steed, upon retiring from the military, Newell began to notice that the changing landscape was affecting the population of the Eastern Bluebird in Warren County.

“He noticed that hardwoods and forests had been cleared, and most wooden posts had been replaced with metal posts.” Steed explained, “Bluebirds are cavity nesters; they can’t build a nest on a tree limb like a robin or a cardinal.”

It was a chance encounter with a bluebird that gave Newell a sense of direction in how to solve that problem. Steed said, “He always told the story that he was sitting on his front porch one morning, drinking a cup of coffee, and saw a bluebird in the dogwood tree next to him. He felt like it was a sign that the bluebird was asking to have a home built. So, he went to his woodshop and started building a bluebird house.”

What started at a pace of approximately two bluebird homes completed each weekend grew to include “hundreds of volunteers” that have completed 365,000 houses to date. Newell’s bluebird houses have been distributed to all 50 US states as well as several other countries.

Steed said many of the volunteer builders are members of the Lake Gaston Striper Club that “fish in the summer and build bluebird houses in the winter.”

Once considered an endangered species due to their decline, the work of Newell’s Eastern Bluebird Rescue Group resulted in the removal of bluebirds from the list. “That is one of his major accomplishments in life,” Steed said. “In fact, Warren County Commissioners deemed Warren County the bluebird capital of the world several years ago.”

In addition to bluebirds, Steed said Newell was also well-known for his work with wolves. “They are his second love,” remarked Steed. “They are often portrayed as big, bad and angry in stories like ‘Little Red Riding Hood,’ but they are actually very docile animals.”

Acquiring several wolves from a zoo in Ohio, Newell used the animals for educational purposes, conducting lectures and programs for schools, scouts, church groups and more.

With his recent passing, Steed said she and her family plan to honor her father’s legacy by keeping the bluebird operation and the wildlife rehabilitation going. So far this year, the family has released 39 baby fawns in addition to numerous squirrels, rabbits, hawks and eagles.

To hear the interview in its entirety, go to WIZS.com and click on Town Talk.

Cooperative Extension with Wayne Rowland 11-16-20 – Woody Ornamentals

Listen live at 100.1 FM / 1450 AM / or on the live stream at WIZS.com at 2 PM Monday – Thursday.

Town Talk Logo

Town Talk 11/16/20: Deputy Sheriff Charged With Extortion; Increase in COVID Cases

100.1 FM ~ 1450 AM ~ WIZS, Your Community Voice ~ Click to LISTEN LOCAL

– Vance County Deputy Sheriff Mitch Pittman turned himself into the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation after being charged with two counts of Extortion and two counts of Obstruction of Justice.

– Local cases of COVID-19 continue to rise.

Click play for the Town Talk audio…

Local News Audio

Noon News 11-16-20 Vance Co. Deputy turns himself in; Covid 19 figures; VGCC Job Fair

Noon News 11-16-20. Stories include:

– A Vance County Deputy Sheriff has turned himself in to authorities after charges are brought

– Latest Coved19 Figures

– Vance Granville Community College conducts job fairs.

For full details and audio click play

 

Paint With DP

Free ‘Paint With DP’ Sessions Scheduled for Nov.

100.1 FM ~ 1450 AM ~ WIZS, Your Community Voice ~ Click to LISTEN LOCAL

Henderson-Vance Recreation & Parks will feature FREE “Paint With DP” Facebook live sessions. Tune in to participate or just watch on the Henderson-Vance Athletics Facebook page.

The live sessions will be on Tuesday, November 17, 2020, at 6:30 p.m. and Saturday, November 28, 2020, at 2 p.m.

You can now come in to paint in-person at Aycock Recreation Center. The registration fee is $20 and includes all needed supplies. You can register at Aycock Recreation Center or online at https://hvrpd.recdesk.com/. There are only 10 slots available.

Once the painting is completed, participants can submit pictures of their masterpieces to Darius Pitt at dpitt@ci.henderson.nc.us or on Facebook Messenger. The best painting will receive a $25 gift card.

For more information, please contact Darius Pitt at (252) 438-3408 (dpitt@ci.henderson.nc.us).