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Small Business Funding

Funding to replace Bourne Bridge lags billions behind Sagamore [Video]

Both of the Cape Cod bridges need to be replaced but funding for one of the projects is lagging behind the other. While Massachusetts has received several federal grants toward replacing the Sagamore Bridge, the state has recently been unsuccessful at obtaining grants for the Bourne Bridge. During an interview for Sunday’s episode of “On The Record,” Sen. Ed Markey was confident the delegation and Gov. Maura Healey will find funding for the Bourne Bridge. “She’s got a great team in place. We’re going to partner with her and Sen. Warren and I and Congressman Keating and we’re going to go right back in and we’re going to continue to advocate for the Bourne Bridge as well,” he said. Both bridges opened to drivers in 1935 and are responsible for transporting hundreds of thousands of people onto and off Cape Cod every year. According to a Mass.gov web page, the Bourne and Sagamore bridges are “functionally obsolete,” and they “no longer meet the needs of the traveling public.”The full cost of replacing the bridges had exploded to more than $4.5 billion.In August 2023, Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey announced her administration would take a phased approach to replacing the bridges. She decided to focus on the Sagamore Bridge first. For the Sagamore Bridge, Massachusetts has so far secured $1 billion in funding from the federal Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Bridge Investment Program; $372 million from the BIL Federal Multimodal Project Discretionary Grant Program; and $350 million from the fiscal year 2024 Energy and Water Development Appropriations Act. There’s also $700 million in state funding pledged to the effort.MassDOT said it expects construction on the Sagamore to begin in late 2027 or early 2028 and work could last up to 10 years.”We are proud to have secured $1.7 billion in federal funding to rebuild the Cape Cod Bridges,” Healey said in a statement issued Friday. “We’ll continue aggressively competing for every available opportunity to win federal funding for transportation infrastructure across our state.” Markey and Warren asked for $5 million in appropriations this year to keep the Bourne in a state of good repair ahead of a full replacement.

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Small Business Funding

Triad artist sell painting to fundraise for WNC artists [Video]

A Triad artist is using her artwork to help Western North Carolina artists impacted by Helene. Lizzie Morrison is a Mount Airy resident who has been making art for more than 20 years. Over that time, shes created a diverse portfolio of paintings, drawings, and prints. She describes herself as a maximalist when it comes to art. I like a busy piece of work that you could stare at for a long time, she said. And I love movement.Morrison also loves the mountains of North Carolina. As a native of the state, she says she and her family travel to the high country often and were saddened by the devastation caused by Helene. I did what I always do when something is hard, and I took some time in front of a blank canvas and just let it out that way, Morrison said. Get the latest news stories of interest by clicking hereThe result was WNC Sunrise, a 12 X 12 canvas painting showing a sunrise peeking over the mountains of Banner Elk. Morrison says she sketched the scene after a trip to the town over the summer. Banner Elk is one of many communities that suffered tremendous losses during the storm. For Morrison, the acrylic and ink painting inspired by the sketch took on a whole new meaning. There’s a lot of line work, a lot of color, and I wanted it to capture both the feeling of calm that you get when you’re looking at the mountains in western North Carolina, she said. But also, I wanted it to give hope to the people who have suffered tremendous loss.Keep up with the latest news and weather by downloading the WXII app here.Morrison posted a picture of the painting on social media to sell for $500. She had the goal of donating the money to the Craft Emergency Relief Fund, or CERF +, for short. I wanted to channel funds to a reputable cause, she said. CERF+ has been around since 1985, and they provide relief grants to artists that are in disaster and emergencies.The painting not only sold but garnered additional interest. Thats when Morrison decided to expand the fundraiser. She created 55 canvas prints of the original painting and began selling them. So far, shes sold 53 of them, raising more than her new fundraising goal of $5,000.It’s been amazing to see that people not only gravitate towards my work, Morrison said. But that they want to support artists in western North Carolina.Morrison says 100% of the proceeds will go toward CERF+ to help artists who lost their work, studios, and livelihoods to the storm. She is currently preparing to ship the prints to at least eight states across the country. Watch: NOWCAST streaming newscastsMorrison is not only an artist. She works as a community economic development planner for the North Carolina Department of Commerce. With that background, she says she knows how important artists are to the economies of communities such as those in Western North Carolina. I think artists are such a pivotal part of not only our culture but also of our economy, she said. And one thing that I knew I could tangibly do was use my art to raise funds for them.She encourages others to donate to reputable art organizations working to help artists and to buy directly from the artists selling their work through the recovery. It’s incremental growth, she said. I have seen everybody rolling up their sleeves and doing whatever they can in the way that they know best to help western North Carolina.NAVIGATE: Home | Weather | Watch NOWCAST TV | Local News | National | News We Love | Trending Stories

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Small Business Funding

Millions set aside for home, business recovery [Video]

The Asheville City Council has set aside millions of dollars to create a grant program to help homes and businesses recover from damage caused by Hurricane Helene.City Council member Maggie Ullman said Wednesday the measure is the first step in recovering from Helene, and it comes nearly a month after the storm passed through the area.”People that care about us from near and far have already been contributing a lot of money so that we can get up and rolling, but for us and local government, anything that we could find so that we could do this immediately is of utmost importance,” Ullman said. Around $4 million for the grant program is coming from the city’s affordable housing capital improvement program, a housing authority project no longer under development and other grants, according to public documents.Officials said the money could be used to begin repairing homes and businesses, provide rental assistance, and cover administrative expenses.”This first money is to stop the bleeding,” Ullman said. “There are businesses that are still keeping people on payroll out of their own pocket, and we want those people to keep their jobs, but we want those businesses to survive also.”Manna Food Bank’s former facility on Swannanoa River Road is among the severely damaged or destroyed structures the city is continuing to count since Helene. Weeks after the storm, the nonprofit has set up its operations out of a leased facility in Mills River, near Asheville Regional Airport. “The flooding destroyed all of our inventory, our equipment, and we’re literally starting from scratch,” spokesperson Micah Chrisman said. “You can see all of our donations are sitting on the floor, and we’re starting from the beginning.”Chrisman added the food bank served around 158,000 people per month throughout the 16 counties it serves prior to the storm. He said he would not be surprised if that number has doubled.”We need your support two months from now, six months from now, because it’s going to take years to recover from this,” he said. Officials said the city is looking to identify nonprofits to partner with to distribute the grants where needed. They added they plan to select the nonprofits within the next two weeks.