What else grabbed your attention in 2023? North Carolina’s top health topics.

By Will Atwater, Anne Blythe, Michelle Crouch, Rachel Crumpler and Rose Hoban

For hundreds of thousands of North Carolina residents, 2023 will be the year the state finally expanded Medicaid and gave them access to health care that had eluded them for more than a decade.

Much more was going on in the health care world in 2023, as North Carolina Health News focused on in its reporting over the past 12 months.

The culture wars roiling political platforms across the country came to North Carolina, leading to new laws restricting abortion access and reproductive health care, as well as delaying gender-affirming care for transgender youth.

Environmental advocates continued to raise concerns about forever chemicals and PFAS. Extreme heat concerns intensified, particularly for thousands of incarcerated folks living in prisons without air conditioning and migrant workers who spend long hours in the blazing heat.

NC Health News readers homed in on these and other stories over the past year.

Many of these themes will continue into the coming year, so we’ve developed synopses to help refresh your memory about a small portion of our reporting from 2023.

Social issues loom large at the legislature

Across the country, state legislatures waded into social issues. North Carolina was no exception, with lawmakers passing new restrictions on abortion access and gender-affirming care for transgender youth. 

After the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision in June 2022 handed decision-making about abortion access to individual states, North Carolina lawmakers didn’t take immediate action to restrict access. That changed on May 2 when Republican lawmakers unveiled Senate Bill 20. The 47-page abortion bill limits access to the procedure after 12 weeks of pregnancy and places more requirements on women seeking abortions and on their providers, such as requiring an in-person appointment for state-mandated counseling at least 72 hours before an abortion.

Lawmakers moved swiftly to debate and pass the bill within 48 hours of it being presented to the public — a highly criticized fast-tracking. During two days of hours-long, contentious debate, Republican lawmakers called the bill “a mainstream abortion compromise” while Democrats and medical providers strongly protested the bill as “medically unnecessary” and interfering with the patient-physician relationship.

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abortion veto rally

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Protesters at a rally held on May 13 where Gov. Roy Cooper vetoed SB 20, a bill passed by the General Assembly that limits abortions after 12 weeks and creates other requirements for women and their providers to fulfill in order for the procedure to take place.

” data-medium-file=”https://i0.wp.com/www.northcarolinahealthnews.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/IMG_1544.jpg?fit=280%2C187&ssl=1″ data-large-file=”https://i0.wp.com/www.northcarolinahealthnews.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/IMG_1544.jpg?fit=450%2C300&ssl=1″ src=”http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics.jpg” alt=”a group of abortion rights advocates holding signs cheering in support of governor Cooper’s veto of SB20″ class=”wp-image-47573″ srcset=”http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-4.jpg 2400w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-5.jpg 280w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-6.jpg 450w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-7.jpg 150w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-8.jpg 768w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-9.jpg 1536w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-10.jpg 2048w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-11.jpg 1200w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-12.jpg 1568w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-13.jpg 400w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-14.jpg 2340w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-15.jpg 370w” sizes=”(max-width: 780px) 100vw, 780px” data-recalc-dims=”1″>

Protesters at a rally held on May 13 where Gov. Roy Cooper vetoed SB 20, a bill passed by the General Assembly that limits abortions after 12 weeks and creates other requirements for women and their providers to fulfill in order for the procedure to take place. Credit: Rose Hoban

Gov. Roy Cooper vetoed the increased restrictions at a rally attended by nearly 1,000 people on May 13. However, just days later, on May 16, the House and Senate voted to override his veto along party lines — an outcome made possible after Rep. Tricia Cotham switched her party affiliation in April.

Since the new restrictions took effect July 1, patients, medical providers and abortion clinics have worked to navigate a new era of reproductive health care. Data shows, in the three months following the implementation of restrictions, the number of abortions provided in the state has dropped significantly as patients and providers confront more logistical hurdles to care

In addition to abortion restrictions, many Republican-led legislatures across the country have introduced a record-number of anti-transgender legislation this year. North Carolina took part in this legislative wave, passing three laws affecting transgender youth.

House Bill 574 bans transgender females from competing on middle school, high school and college sports teams that align with their gender identity. It’s unclear how many transgender athletes this affects, though rough estimates and anecdotal evidence suggest a few dozen — at most — across North Carolina.

Senate Bill 49, dubbed the “Parents’ Bill of Rights,” requires schools to tell parents if their child asks to use a different name or pronouns at school, and it restricts instruction about gender identity and sexuality in kindergarten through fourth-grade classrooms.

House Bill 808 prohibits doctors from providing gender-affirming care to minors, including puberty-blocking drugs, cross-sex hormones and surgeries. Only minors who began receiving this type of care before Aug. 1 may continue treatment in North Carolina with their parents’ consent.

The trio of laws brought contentious, often emotional, debate. Transgender youth, their parents and other advocates for transgender rights made many trips to Raleigh to vocally oppose the bills they view as unnecessarily targeting an already vulnerable group. They shared personal accounts of gender-affirming care being life-saving, sports participation serving as a positive social outlet and relying on teachers and school counselors for trusted, sensitive conversations. Final passage of the bills saw the halls and legislative galleries filled with advocates from both sides of the issue.

Gov. Roy Cooper voiced his opposition, vetoing the laws in July. In his veto message, he argued that “for campaign purposes only, Republicans are serving up a triple threat of political culture wars.”

<img decoding="async" width="780" height="325" data-attachment-id="49180" data-permalink="https://www.northcarolinahealthnews.org/trans-protesters-pro-con2/" data-orig-file="https://i0.wp.com/www.northcarolinahealthnews.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Trans-Protesters-pro-con2.png?fit=1865%2C778&ssl=1" data-orig-size="1865,778" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="Trans Protesters – pro con2" data-image-description data-image-caption="

Protesters both supporting and opposing the transgender restriction bills showed up at the General Assembly building in Raleigh on Wednesday as legislators voted to override all three measures.

” data-medium-file=”https://i0.wp.com/www.northcarolinahealthnews.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Trans-Protesters-pro-con2.png?fit=280%2C117&ssl=1″ data-large-file=”https://i0.wp.com/www.northcarolinahealthnews.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Trans-Protesters-pro-con2.png?fit=450%2C188&ssl=1″ src=”http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics.png” alt=”Shows two images side by side, one side has people holding up signs in support of transgender youth, the other side holds up signs encouraging veto overrides.” class=”wp-image-49180″ srcset=”http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-2.png 1865w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-3.png 280w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-4.png 450w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-5.png 150w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-6.png 768w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-7.png 1536w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-8.png 1200w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-9.png 1024w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-10.png 1568w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-11.png 400w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-12.png 370w” sizes=”(max-width: 780px) 100vw, 780px” data-recalc-dims=”1″>

Protesters both supporting and opposing the transgender restriction bills showed up at the General Assembly building in Raleigh on Wednesday as legislators voted to override all three measures. Credit: Rose Hoban

Republican lawmakers argued that they are needed to protect children and, with supermajorities in each chamber, easily overrode Cooper’s vetoes on Aug. 16 — mostly along party-line votes.

However, North Carolina’s gender-affirming care ban is being challenged in court. In a federal lawsuit filed on Oct. 11 by Lambda Legal and the National Health Law Program, lawyers argued that House Bill 808 is unconstitutional because it discriminates on the basis of sex and transgender status and infringes on parents’ rights to make medical decisions for their children. 

As a result of these new laws, transgender youth face more restrictions in health care, sports and school, and it’s now up to them and other advocates for transgender youth to figure out how to function in a more constrained environment. 

— Rachel Crumpler

Proposed UNC/ ECU restructure and the aftermath

The proposal first turned up in Senate Bill 743, which would have given UNC Health, the health system based out of UNC Chapel Hill with 11 hospitals on 13 hospital campuses, the ability to extract itself from the state employee benefits system. This initial bill also would have given UNC Health protection from antitrust scrutiny at the state and federal levels and made it possible for the system to expand as it saw fit. 

In the past, UNC has been called on by ailing hospitals around the state to either come in and provide management services — such as at the Boone-based Appalachian Regional Healthcare System — or to take over the hospital outright, which has happened in locations as far-flung as Rockingham County, Henderson County, Robeson County and Siler City

Notably for employees, the bill would peel UNC Health out of the state employees health and the state retirement plans, allowing the system to devise a richer, more attractive benefits package to compete with well-heeled private hospital systems, such as Duke, which sits a mere 12 miles away. 

The bill was heard in and passed the state Senate, then languished once it got to the House. The proposals re-emerged once the public was able to see a draft of the final state budget, except that proposal also gave ECU Health — the state’s other academic medical system — the ability to do the same as UNC. 

The final state budget ordered UNC and ECU to collaborate on building capacity for care in the rural eastern part of the state and gave both systems the ability to create the new benefits packages, but it stripped out the antitrust language. 

Now, the two systems will collaborate on creating new rural health clinics and a new children’s hospital, among other initiatives. And come Jan. 1, 2024, the two systems’ benefits packages will have an overhaul, even as many of the details remain unclear.  

— Rose Hoban

After UNC campus shooting, students demand gun safety laws

Six days into the fall semester at UNC Chapel Hill, college students, faculty and staff were forced to shelter in place after a gunman shot and killed a chemistry professor.

Confusion reigned on campus for hours as law enforcement officers from multiple agencies flocked to the area to search for the suspect who ended the life of Zijie Yan, a professor in the UNC-CH Department of Applied Physical Sciences.

After the violence, students who grew up with school shooting drills, an age group often described as “the lockdown generation,” were galvanized by the incident and rallied in mid-September inside and outside the Legislative Building in Raleigh for gun safety laws.

They said they were fed up with the “thoughts and prayers” that typically flowed after school shootings and mass killings, and they tried, unsuccessfully, to persuade lawmakers to adopt “common sense” gun laws and to stop dividing voters over this hot-button social issue.

In North Carolina, firearms are now the top cause of death for children. From 2012 to 2021, there has been a 47 percent increase in gun-related deaths in this state.

The students, who were joined by peers from N.C. A&T University and other campuses across the state, lobbied for safe storage bills, purchase permit requirements for long guns and “red flag laws,” which would give a judge the authority to temporarily confiscate a firearm from someone found to be a danger to themselves or others.

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UNC Chapel Hill senior Luke Diasio describes how he sat huddled in a bathroom during the lockdown on Aug. 28 during a campus shooting event. He described how foreign students he was sheltering with learned about U.S. gun violence on that day.

” data-medium-file=”https://i0.wp.com/www.northcarolinahealthnews.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/IMG_1894-scaled.jpg?fit=280%2C187&ssl=1″ data-large-file=”https://i0.wp.com/www.northcarolinahealthnews.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/IMG_1894-scaled.jpg?fit=450%2C300&ssl=1″ src=”http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-1.jpg” alt=”Shows a young man in a UNC-blue shirt using a microphone to speak about gun violence and the lack of gun safety laws.” class=”wp-image-49699″ srcset=”http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-16.jpg 2560w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-17.jpg 280w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-18.jpg 450w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-19.jpg 150w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-20.jpg 768w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-21.jpg 1536w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-22.jpg 2048w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-23.jpg 1200w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-24.jpg 1024w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-25.jpg 1568w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-26.jpg 400w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-27.jpg 2340w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-28.jpg 370w” sizes=”(max-width: 780px) 100vw, 780px” data-recalc-dims=”1″>

UNC Chapel Hill senior Luke Diasio describes how he sat huddled in a bathroom during the lockdown on Aug. 28 during a campus shooting event. He described how foreign students he was sheltering with learned about U.S. gun violence on that day. Credit: Rose Hoban/NC Health News

Republicans, who have supermajorities in the state House and Senate, took the opposite tack in the 2023 legislative session and repealed a law that required gun purchasers to pass a background check at a local sheriff’s department to get a pistol permit. Federal background checks are still required for public pistol sales, but not for private transactions, a loophole that troubles gun safety advocates.

The students accused lawmakers who did away with the extra background checks of being oblivious to mounting trauma created by firearms.

“Until they do what it takes to save lives, they can save those thoughts and prayers. Keep ’em,” said Samuel Scarborough, one of the Chapel Hill students at the rally.  

— Anne Blythe

Extreme heat in NC

As 2023 comes to a close, the extreme heat of the summer can seem like a distant memory. And while a debate about climate change is a social issue that divides many Americans, according to NASA, it’s undeniable that the summer of 2023 was the Earth’s hottest on record.

Although North Carolina logged many days with temperatures in the high 90s, and even topped triple digits on occasion, there have been hotter summer months in the state record books.

Nonetheless, scientists in North Carolina and elsewhere waved caution flags about heat index values and climate changes that are likely to make heat seasons like the one in 2023 more pronounced and more routine in the years ahead.

“It isn’t unreasonable to think this could quite possibly be the coolest heat season of our lives,” Ashley Ward, director of the new Heat Policy Innovation Hub at Duke University, said during a July webinar.

Given that, Ward and others are urging government entities to develop extreme heat policies for housing standards, schools, the workforce and health care.

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Extreme heat, agricultural death, migrant farm workers, climate change labor laws

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Migrant workers advocate for new extreme heat laws after death at Nash County farm.

” data-medium-file=”https://i0.wp.com/www.northcarolinahealthnews.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/MIGRA-N-TWORKERRALLY2.jpg?fit=225%2C300&ssl=1″ data-large-file=”https://i0.wp.com/www.northcarolinahealthnews.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/MIGRA-N-TWORKERRALLY2.jpg?fit=338%2C450&ssl=1″ src=”http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-2.jpg” alt=”Two migrant farm workers in dark clothes stand by colorful altar honoring NC migrant worker from Mexico who died in NC in extreme heat.” class=”wp-image-50705″ srcset=”http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-2.jpg 338w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-29.jpg 225w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-30.jpg 113w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-31.jpg 768w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-32.jpg 900w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-33.jpg 600w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-34.jpg 450w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-35.jpg 300w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-36.jpg 150w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-37.jpg 400w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-38.jpg 944w, http://www.akh99.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/what-else-grabbed-your-attention-in-2023-north-carolinas-top-health-topics-39.jpg 370w” sizes=”(max-width: 338px) 100vw, 338px” data-recalc-dims=”1″>

Migrant workers advocate for new extreme heat laws after death at Nash County farm. Credit: Anne Blythe/NC Health News

For instance, in North Carolina, there has been incremental progress on outfitting the state’s prison facilities with air conditioning.

Schools have been forced to weigh student and athlete safety in sports seasons that begin in August.

Migrant workers and their advocates have rallied for extreme heat labor protections after a seasonal worker from Mexico died while harvesting sweet potatoes. 

“As the heat in North Carolina continues to intensify and become more humid, we must take long-overdue action to protect essential workers from preventable harm. We must prioritize the lives of North Carolina workers and protect them from the extreme weather conditions they face,” a petition circulated by the Farmworker Advocacy Network states. 

— Anne Blythe

PFAS consistently remains in the news

Reports about per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) were a constant fixture through the 2023 news cycle.  

Brunswick County community activist Veronica Carter, a liaison between community residents and researchers, had a busy year keeping up with the twists and turns in this ongoing story. 

“It’s almost like we haven’t had time to be proactive yet where we can wave our little cheerleader flag because we’re too busy being reactive.”

Early in 2023, NC Health News reported on a study that found PFAS contamination in freshwater fish. The news served as a wake-up call for anglers who enjoy fishing in waterways near current or past industrial sites contaminated by ‘”forever chemicals,” a term used to describe PFAS because the compounds take a long time to decompose.

In the spring, the Environmental Protection Agency announced proposed maximum contamination levels for PFAS. The EPA’s proposal includes calls for two PFAS — PFOA (perfluorooctanoic acid) and PFOS (perfluorooctanesulfonic acid) — to be regulated as individual contaminants, with maximum contaminant levels for both chemicals at four parts per trillion. Activists were pleased by the announcement and anticipate the standards will be finalized sometime in 2024.

Another moment on the PFAS timeline occurred in the fall, when N.C. Newsline reported that the EPA granted Chemours permission to import PFAS waste from the Netherlands to its Fayetteville Works facility. However, in November, citing problems with the request submitted by Chemours, the EPA rescinded its permission.

Throughout the year, researchers with the Gen X Exposure Study worked to increase the enrollment of African Americans and people of color in their work, and get a handle on the extent of human contamination by the chemicals.

— Will Atwater

NC kids needing foster care sleep in county offices

For the state’s foster care system, 2023 was one of the worst years in recent memory.

The number of foster homes in North Carolina has plunged in recent years, creating a crisis that forced children across the state to sleep in offices, hotel rooms and converted storage closets.

Charles Bradley, youth and family services division director in Mecklenburg County, told NC Health News earlier this year that the situation was “as bad as it’s ever been” in his 19 years at the department.

In Wake County, where the number of foster homes dropped by half, up to 11 children at a time spent the night in county offices.

Many children come into county custody after allegations of abuse, neglect or abandonment. While the number of children coming into care statewide hasn’t increased significantly, more foster children — like other kids across the country — have mental or behavioral health issues that make it difficult to secure appropriate placements for them. 

In addition, high turnover among social workers and higher caseloads for those that remain mean that foster families have less support, said Gaile Osborne, executive director of Foster Family Alliance, a statewide association of foster, kinship and adoptive parents.   

“At the end of the day, foster parents are feeling frustration from every angle,” Osborne said. “We’re losing families faster than we are bringing them in.”

The number of licensed foster homes in North Carolina is down 34 percent since 2021, according to federal data. That leaves the state with only 5,616 foster homes for more than 10,200 foster children.

In response to the crisis, state lawmakers boosted the monthly stipend for foster families and changed the law to allow foster families to have more than five children in their home in some instances. Osborne said she is optimistic that those changes will eventually make a difference.

— Michelle Crouch

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The civil rights leader who would hate identity politics

… wealthy, powerful oppressors of African-Americans. Speaking to one … gutter religion”. “Farrakhan racism and anti-Semitism are … movement, believe that “racism equals prejudice plus power”, … the UN, Rustin founded Black Americans to Support Israel Committee … RankTribe™ Black Business Directory News

‘Sister-friend’ of Angelou, Baldwin and Morrison champions their books

At 90, Eleanor Traylor isn’t done fighting for Black literature. Not even close.

Eleanor Traylor is the former head of Howard University’s humanities and English departments. (Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post)

11 min

Eleanor Traylor has a schedule that rivals those of most Washington dignitaries.

On a Sunday afternoon in October, Traylor was speaking on the life of actress Hattie McDaniel during a ceremony at Howard University marking the return of the Black actress’s historic 1940 Oscar, which had long been missing from the school. After a horde of guests jostled to take photos with her, Traylor slipped out the back door and into the driver’s seat of her cobalt-blue Mercedes.

An onlooker marveled, “Dr. Traylor, you still drive?”

“Of course I still drive. I’m not dead yet,” she snapped, putting her car in reverse.

Traylor, who turned 90 this month, bristles at the notion that age should slow her down. The former head of Howard’s humanities and English departments, Traylor is among the last of a close-knit generation of African American writers that included James Baldwin, Maya Angelou and Toni Morrison. As many of her old friends’ published works have faced book bans, Traylor has become one of the most prominent voices countering that effort.

In the days following the McDaniel ceremony, Traylor hosted a private reception at her Dupont Circle home attended by Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson and BET Networks Chair Debra L. Lee. She had a fitting with a private designer for a new gown that Traylor had modeled after the one Lady Gaga wore at President Biden’s 2021 inauguration. She was a panelist at Martin Luther King Library, where an award-winning documentary on Angelou’s life. A week later, she was a guest speaker for a program honoring Inez Smith Reid, a retired judge of the D.C. Court of Appeals. Then Traylor was on a flight to Paris to spend Thanksgiving with friends.

She keeps her scheduled packed to celebrate her legendary friends, while also finding time to orate on what she calls one of the biggest challenges facing the United States today: the censorship and banning of books. Many of the books that have been pulled from school and library shelves across the country were penned by her closest friends.

As a child, Traylor watched live news reels of Adolf Hitler storming through Europe and was a friend and neighbor of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. during the civil rights and Black arts movements. Now, she says, she has had enough.

“The language of banning the books, even the thought of it, betrays the birth narrative of this nation,” she said. “It’s treasonous. You can’t ban thought. And that’s what books are. You can’t ban speech.”

She added, “I feel that the democracy of this land is challenged in a way that it has not been challenged before, even though the struggle has been continuous all my life.”

‘Never seen anyone like her’

Traylor’s presence cuts through any room she enters. With her bright dresses that span the rainbow, her arsenal of matching bedazzled eyeglasses, her oversize jewelry and her feathered boas, she always makes a statement before she even opens her mouth. “Darling, a lady is not completely dressed unless she has a boa around her shoulders,” she said.

When MacArthur “genius grant” winner and New York Times best-selling writer Ta-Nehisi Coates was a student at Howard University in the mid-1990s, he remembers seeing Traylor buzzing through the buildings. Her reputation as a demanding teacher, literary critic and essayist was known across campus.

“I was scared of her,” Coates said with a laugh. “I didn’t talk to her when I was a student and did everything I could to avoid her.”

Coates recalled hearing from Traylor after he published his debut novel, “The Water Dancer,” in 2019. She publicly praised the work of historical fiction and now refers to Coates as one of her “babies.”

“To have someone I regarded as so severe, to have actually written a work of fiction that she was really fond of was the highest of the heights for me,” he said, adding, “The fact that she is still out here, fighting, is a statement of her commitment and her deep commitment to literature as a whole. It’s beautiful to see her fighting. We need more fighters like her.”

Inside her four-story home, Traylor’s 12-foot-high built-in shelves are full of books; so are her windowsills and side tables. Her collection of novels, works of history, anthologies and essays could rival most public libraries in the nation’s capital. Authors range from her friend LeRoi Jones (later known as Amiri Baraka) to Margaret Walker, William Shakespeare, Vincent Harding, Mark Twain and James Joyce.

“My darling,” Traylor said, stretching her hands toward the books, “these are the voices of this diverse nation in which we live, the beautiful, strong voices which built this country through thought and prose. These are the voices that have inspired generations for centuries. They must live.”

Traylor enunciates and projects her voice like a Royal Academy of Arts thespian. Famed dancer, actress, choreographer and director Debbie Allen said Traylor could have been one of the nation’s top actresses had she not become a literary critic.

When Allen was a student at Howard in the late 1960s, Traylor taught the history of theater and literature. “I had never seen anyone like her. I had never had a professor that pulled me in the way she did,” Allen said. “She would wear these fabulous outfits, leggings, a short dress, boots and a turquoise hat.”

Allen continued: “Honey, she would put us on notice. ‘Debbie, what wassss Shakespeare talking about?’ That energy that she had. You couldn’t wait until the next class to see what she was going to wear. And you had better had your homework done.”

When Allen directed the TV series “A Different World” in the late ’80s and early 1990s, Traylor served as the inspiration for the over-the-top, recurring character Dean Dorothy Dandridge Davenport, played by Jenifer Lewis. Allen also consulted with Traylor and tapped her historical expertise when she co-produced the 1997 film “Amistad” with Steven Spielberg.

“I don’t know anyone like her at any age. A 24-year-old, 30- or 40-year-old — I don’t know anyone like her. I want to keep her as close as I can,” Allen said. “Eleanor Traylor’s mind is beyond any computer that could ever catch up. When you’re using that brain the way she does, it’s not going to fail you.”

‘She’s lived without fear’

Born Eleanor Elizabeth Williams in 1933 in Thomasville, Ga., Traylor moved north with her parents to Atlanta as a toddler. She grew up on Auburn Avenue, a few blocks from King and his family’s Ebenezer Baptist Church, where his father pastored. Traylor grew up attending church and neighborhood events with King and his young siblings, and was later a bridesmaid in the wedding of Christine King, the civil rights leader’s older sister.

She majored in English at Spelman College and then obtained her master’s degree from Atlanta University. “I wanted to be a teacher because I had good teachers,” she said. “All the glorious people in my life were teachers. They were dressed and spoke beautifully and were so caring.”

After graduation, Traylor spent a year studying history and art in Germany on an academic fellowship. In 1956, she married Melvin Traylor, an engineering and architecture student at Howard. She relocated to Washington and began teaching English composition at Howard while her husband attended classes. The two divorced years later, and Traylor remained in Washington.

While at Howard in the early 1970s, she shared an office with an English teacher, Chloe Anthony “Toni” Wofford, who later would be known to the world as Toni Morrison. Traylor remembers watching Morrison writing her first novel, “The Bluest Eye,” on a yellow legal pad. She and Morrison, she said, became best “sister-friends.”

Around the same time, Traylor met Angelou at poetry readings she attended with Morrison. Traylor and Angelou bonded over poetry, American history, theater and English literature.

Angelou’s grandson, Colin Johnson, 47, doesn’t remember a time when his “Auntie Eleanor” was not in his life. “She was one of those ‘aunties’ that has been in my corner since day one. She was part of my grandmother’s tribe,” he said.

Johnson said he is not surprised that Traylor continues to fight against book banning.

“She’s lived without fear,” he said. “Or if she had fear, she didn’t show it. She was a Black woman, flying off to Germany and Paris at a time when Black people, especially Black women, did not do that.”

He added, “Anyone who is not scared to put feathers and rhinestones on is not afraid of anything.”

Johnson described Traylor as the last of his grandmother’s “first-round crew” of best friends from the early 1970s.

She’s now “the last one standing and fighting. And as long as her voice is working, I would expect her to be on the front lines of this fight,” he said. “That is her place to be.”

Censorship is ‘more pronounced now’

After a nearly a decade teaching at Howard, Traylor left the school and attended Catholic University, where she earned her doctorate in English. She went on to teach English at Georgetown University and Montgomery College in Rockville, Md. She briefly relocated to New York to teach at Cornell University and Hobart and William Smith Colleges. Then, in 1990, she returned to Washington to teach English and then chair Howard’s humanities department. She later served as chair of the university’s English department for more than a decade. She retired in 2014.

“She has this ability to communicate with gravitas without announcing it,” said Dana A. Williams, a professor of African American literature at Howard and dean of the university’s graduate school. “She could tell you everything from ‘The Epic of Gilgamesh’ to KRS-One.”

Williams credits Traylor with helping to establish African American literature as a field of study. “Dr. Traylor was in that cohort of people who said this has to be a distinct study and hire faculty and write dissertations, and that this is distinct from American literature,” she said.

Traylor said a fear of new and different narratives — of Black Americans, immigrants and LGBTQ people — has stoked the book-banning push among people determined to “erase” those stories from American culture. The irony, she said, is that America — and especially Hollywood — has profited from those very narratives, even if the stories were sometimes exaggerated or distorted.

“With all due respect to the late great Norman Lear and to the beloved Tyler Perry — in fact, to the entire popular cultural Black enterprise which enriches the nation’s treasury by billions of dollars — Black consciousness as a birth narrative has less to do with popular cultural mannerism as it does with the DNA of a democratic government, the birth narrative in which Black Americans were born,” she said, adding, “All of our efforts, the civil rights movement, the Black empowerment movement, the Black Lives Matter movement, the Freedom Movement in America, have been championed by Black America. It’s not a commercial oddity, and it exists on a deeper level than J.J.’s ‘Dyn-o-mite!’ and Madea and Florence on ‘The Jeffersons.’”

On a recent Sunday, Traylor stopped by one of her favorite neighborhood restaurants, Annie’s, just off Dupont Circle, for a brunch of pancakes, bacon and a shot of Frangelico with her coffee. The host greeted Traylor with a big, familiar smile and a “Hello, Ms. Eleanor.” Minutes later, patrons walked over to her, leaned down and offered hugs. “Hello, my darling — hello,” she beamed to a string of six or seven admirers.

Back in her kitchen, Traylor had a pot of neckbones boiling, which she seasoned with pepper, garlic and sugar, to which she planned to add lima beans for soup. The walls throughout her home are painted yellow and orange, and each covered with original art chronicling her international travels. Bright colors, she said, are “strengthening.”

She reminded visitors that book banning is not new in this country.

“There has always been censorship, but it’s more pronounced now,” she said, and it requires a real fight to counter it.

“This democracy is not perfect, but its ideal is exceptional,” she said, “and must be fought for and earned.”

Monika Mathur contributed to this report.

RankTribe™ Black Business Directory News – Arts & Entertainment

The Black Men’s Mental Health Conference Tour Hits Houston

The MH Foundation brought quite an amazing tour to audiences of Black men.

A recent tour stop in Houston included, The Council on Recovery, The Harris Center for Mental Health and IDD, Houston Texas, Health and Human Services, The Alice Collective, The African American Male Wellness, Rverzealous Mindset LLC and The State of Texas Aids Awareness Commission.

The Office of Commissioner Rodney Ellis honored and presented Camillia Harris, justUS, MH Foundation, and the Black Men’s Mental Health Conference with a resolution.

Houston City Council Member Edward Pollard presented Camillia Harris, justUS, MH Foundation, and the Black Men’s Mental Health Conference with a certificate of recognition due to her hard work in the mental health space. 

The Keynote Speaker of the event provided dynamic poetry with life stories of how he overcame depression, anger, and the struggles faced by black and Latino men.

As a survivor, Camillia Harris could no longer stand by and not help the voiceless or those in need, and took action.

The Black Men’s Mental Health Conference is a multi-city tour bringing awareness and education to mental health care for black men. On this tour, they will share stories, provide access to resources, and equip communities with the necessary tools to create systems of support to ensure that Black men have the best access to mental healthcare.  

The tour will feature events aimed to better understand the social determinants of mental health and the specific psychological issues facing Black men through panel discussions, mental health experts, resources and more. This tour will empower and inspire attendees to prioritize their mental well-being and  take steps to heal and improve their overall mental health.  

MH Foundation invites you to join them on their journey to celebrate and curate this important conversation around mental health in Black communities, travel city to city, and work together to galvanize collective action to ensure a healthier future for generations of Black men. 

Camillia Harris is a mental health advocate, dedicated to providing resources and support to those  struggling with mental health issues. In 2019, Camillia lost her father to a murder-suicide and, since then, has devoted her life to helping others in similar situations. Her mission is to save not one but many, fathers, brothers, sons, etc. She wants to provide a window that dispels and eradicates suicide. She wants to build on mental health resources and help reach those in mental turmoil. Harris’ goal is to assist the world with providing a safe space for healthy minds. She believes in the power of storytelling and has used her own experiences to bring awareness to the importance of mental health. Camillia will work to ensure individuals receive quality mental health care and to break down the stigma associated with mental illness. 

Follow The Black Men’s Mental Health Conference at @BMMHC1 on IG, and to learn more about the next stop of the tour log onto www.Bmmhc.com

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Healthcare in the age of inequality

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