Categories
Small Business Funding

Combatting misinformation in North Carolina [Video]

Misinformation about Federal Emergency Management Agency resources has taken over social media, worrying many residents in North Carolina who are still looking for aid. FEMA spokespeople said there is still plenty of money and agents to go around, even with Milton approaching Florida as a major hurricane.La-Tanga Hopes, a FEMA spokesperson for Western North Carolina, said rumors online make it difficult for FEMA to get families the help they need. She said misinformation isn’t helping with building trust in the community.”Funding has been made available for North Carolina, and they need not worry about Milton,” Hopes said. “There are some people that are going to take care of everything that’s happening with that new disaster.”FEMA does have a deadline of Nov. 27, 2024, for North Carolina Hurricane Helene applications, but as with other storms in the past, it could be extended. The agency announced the Boone recovery center will close on Oct. 12.One expert from the University of North Carolina says it is the shared responsibility of social media users, platforms and government agencies to squash misconceptions. “In the same way that there are those who are out intentionally trying to mislead people for political purposes, we have an opportunity and really an obligation to one another to make sure that our affected friends and neighbors do have reliable information,” said Meredith D. Clark, associate professor of race and political communication at UNC Hussman. Claim: FEMA will reallocate resources away from North Carolina to Florida or foreign efforts.Fact: FEMA said resources are not moving from Western North Carolina until claims are closed. Floridians impacted by Hurricane Milton will have their own FEMA agents to address their claims and allocate funding to them. Claim: FEMA will take away your home or property if you file a claim.Fact: “FEMA is not interested in your property other than helping you restore and rebuild it,” Hopes said. “FEMA is not an income driven agency, and what I mean by that is this: there is money being made available to you in the form of a cash grant.”FEMA said getting denied after submitting a claim may be the result of not providing enough documentation, and field agents may be able to connect families to resources to track the status of their report.Claim: FEMA is not helping on the ground.Fact: FEMA said they have crews across Western North Carolina. Tracey said FEMA, along with military operations, were authorized by the federal government to assist in search-and-rescue operations units and disaster survivor response teams. Temporary centers for assistance are being implemented in each county so residents can follow up on the status of their claims. Calling their hotline 1-800-621-3362 will get you connected to an agent and allow you to start your application for assistance if you haven’t already. Jann Tracey, a FEMA spokesperson in Avery County, said that, for those without internet, calling over the phone or speaking with an agent face-to-face is the best option.”Talking to somebody one-on-one is really helpful,” she said. “Rather than just talking to your neighbors and getting rumors and not getting after the information, that’s the ideal way.”Claim: FEMA is taking away food and donations from distribution sites.Fact: They said food and water resources delivered to distribution sites in many counties have been dropped off by FEMA resources. Just because someone working at distribution sites or fire stations is not wearing a FEMA polo shirt does not mean the work was not authorized by FEMA, Tracey said.Claim: FEMA is only giving residents $750 in aid and withholding funding from North Carolina.Fact: The initial funding you can request from FEMA is $750 for necessities, food and water, but that does not exclude you from getting more funding and submitting an application for aid. There is a cap on funding that FEMA can provide, but Hopes told us the agency will defer to state and other resources to provide aid until claims are closed, and that is not expected to happen soon. “They need to reassure people that withholding aid, especially on the basis of partisanship, isn’t a practice of the federal government,” said Clark. “And then, they need to provide people with a way to check honestly, verify, that what they are saying is true.”FEMA said it will never ask for money from disaster survivors and that you should report anyone trying to get you to pay for aid.

Categories
Small Business Funding

Warnings of price gouging on Balloon Fiesta tickets [Video]

If you’re looking to buy Balloon Fiesta tickets, be wary of where you’re getting them. One man found he was paying double the price of what they should be. With thousands coming for the event, the president of the International Balloon Fiesta, Judy Nakamura, said they try to make this as accessible as possible and to be wary of tickets that are above $15. On Tuesday, a viewer contacted the Target 7 tipline saying he bought two tickets for $70. He found those tickets in an online search, looking up Balloon Fiesta tickets, and was sent to an online third-party website. “It’s very unfortunate. It’s not something that we approve of, particularly because we try to make sure tickets are affordable for people to get into Balloon Fiesta,” Nakamura said. “You never have to worry that we’re going to run out of space. We have over a 70-acre launch field out here. There is plenty of room to accommodate people who want to come to balloon fiesta.” There are three places you can buy tickets: on their website, outside the park at the ticket booths and the Balloon Fiesta gift shop.”We do not condone ticket resellers; we don’t sell batches of tickets to anyone else to sell the tickets for us,” said Nakamura. However, price gouging has happened for other big events around town. In May, a similar ticket price changes targeted the New Mexico Ballet Company. Target 7 learned they weren’t alone. Opera Southwest and the New Mexico Gay Men’s Chorus also said patrons were overcharged for tickets. Our legal expert, John Day, said there’s not many people can do. “You can scalp tickets to high school events, other cultural events pretty much anything you want and it’s not illegal,” Day said. “A lot of other states have made laws that make that illegal, but New Mexico is not one of them.” Day said in New Mexico, ticket scalping is only illegal for college athletic events. General admission prices are $15, and children 12 and under are able to get in for free. When you pay online with a credit card or at the booth, there will be a $1.50 charge.

Categories
Small Business Funding

Hurricane Milton prompts evacuations along Florida’s Gulf Coast [Video]

Evacuation orders have been issued for communities along Florida’s Gulf Coast as Hurricane Milton rapidly intensifies. Right now, millions are under a hurricane warning, including 3.3 million in the Tampa Bay area, which could see a direct hit from the storm. “If you stay in an evacuation zone, I can’t promise you that you’ll be safe,” said Chief Lee Bercaw of the Tampa Police Department. Milton’s current path has Tampa Bay in its bull’s-eye, an area still recovering from Hurricane Helene. Efforts to clean up debris from previous storms are ongoing as residents prepare for Milton’s landfall.”We’re still going to have the debris removal operations ongoing all the way until we start to hit tropical storm force winds,” said Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.In a news conference Monday, DeSantis also warned residents to take the storm seriously, saying, “This is not a storm you want to take a risk on. As I’ve said many times over the last day or two, we can’t guarantee where this thing is going to end up making landfall.”On Fort Myers Beach, businesses are boarding up windows and doors with plywood and placing sandbags to mitigate the storm’s impact, which could include storm surges up to 12 feet in some areas.Don Girard, a Fort Myers Beach resident, recalled his experience with Hurricane Ian in 2022, saying he didn’t take a chance on safety then, and he won’t be taking one now. “About this time on Monday before Ian hit, Fort Myers Beach was barely in the cone, just like it is now, and it took that hard right turn and wiped us out,” said Girard.Girard’s home experienced nearly 9 feet of storm surge during Hurricane Ian.Florida has been hit by several hurricanes in the last 13 months. Hurricane Ian in 2022 caused $113 billion worth of damage, much of it in the southwest portion of the state, including Fort Myers Beach, and the total impact from Helene is still being calculated. President Joe Biden has issued an emergency declaration for Florida ahead of Hurricane Milton’s landfall, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency says it has sufficient funding and resources to support federal response to the storm without impacting its response to Helene.