Episode Details
Back to Episodes
North Carolina Weathers Historic Winter Storm and Economic Boom: Jobs, Investments, and Recovery Take Center Stage
Published 1 month, 3 weeks ago
Description
North Carolina grapples with the aftermath of a massive winter storm that blanketed the state in heavy snow, marking the first time in over a decade all 100 counties saw measurable accumulation, according to NASA's Earth Observatory[13]. Governor Josh Stein reported nearly a foot of snow around Charlotte, a top-five event historically, over 1,000 traffic collisions, two road deaths, and major flight disruptions at Charlotte Douglas International Airport, with cleanup expected to take days, as detailed by WUNC[1]. The bomb cyclone also caused chaos on Interstate 85 and power outages lingering from prior storms.
On the economic front, the state shines as Business Facilities magazine's 2025 State of the Year, with record 35,000 job commitments and $24 billion in capital investments across industries like aerospace and life sciences[7][15]. Governor Stein announced key wins: Daimler Truck Financial Services creating 276 jobs with $7.8 million in Charlotte; AVL Manufacturing adding 325 jobs via a $56 million facility there; Genentech's $700 million plant in Wake County for 400 jobs; and PPG's 110 jobs in Cleveland County, per NC Commerce[3]. Tourism hit a new high of $36.7 billion in 2024 despite Hurricane Helene[3]. Duke Energy Foundation invested $500,000 in up to 20 community colleges for energy workforce training, with applications due February 25[4].
In government and politics, Stein signed Executive Order 33 to bolster behavioral health and criminal justice coordination, including crisis care and reentry support, amid a historic $835 million budget investment[6]. The State Board of Elections extended public comments on list maintenance rules, rescheduling a hearing for March 9[2].
Community efforts advance too: Camden County's new high school project progresses with site work underway and bids open[8], while data center booms from tech giants like Google and Microsoft drive construction and energy upgrades[11].
Looking Ahead: Watch the North Carolina Main Street Conference March 10-12 in New Bern, elections rulemaking decisions post-March hearing, and ongoing storm recovery as energy demand surges from data centers[3][2][11].
Thank you for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs
For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
On the economic front, the state shines as Business Facilities magazine's 2025 State of the Year, with record 35,000 job commitments and $24 billion in capital investments across industries like aerospace and life sciences[7][15]. Governor Stein announced key wins: Daimler Truck Financial Services creating 276 jobs with $7.8 million in Charlotte; AVL Manufacturing adding 325 jobs via a $56 million facility there; Genentech's $700 million plant in Wake County for 400 jobs; and PPG's 110 jobs in Cleveland County, per NC Commerce[3]. Tourism hit a new high of $36.7 billion in 2024 despite Hurricane Helene[3]. Duke Energy Foundation invested $500,000 in up to 20 community colleges for energy workforce training, with applications due February 25[4].
In government and politics, Stein signed Executive Order 33 to bolster behavioral health and criminal justice coordination, including crisis care and reentry support, amid a historic $835 million budget investment[6]. The State Board of Elections extended public comments on list maintenance rules, rescheduling a hearing for March 9[2].
Community efforts advance too: Camden County's new high school project progresses with site work underway and bids open[8], while data center booms from tech giants like Google and Microsoft drive construction and energy upgrades[11].
Looking Ahead: Watch the North Carolina Main Street Conference March 10-12 in New Bern, elections rulemaking decisions post-March hearing, and ongoing storm recovery as energy demand surges from data centers[3][2][11].
Thank you for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs
For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI