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art robinhoodPresented as a live radio broadcast onstage, “Robin Hood – The Legacy” will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 26, in the John W. Bardo Fine and Performing Arts Center at Western Carolina University.

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art willsMulti-platinum country music artist Mark Wills will perform at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 28, at the Smoky Mountain Center for the Performing Arts in Franklin.

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art nelsonLegendary outlaw country singer Willie Nelson will perform at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 28, Harrah’s Cherokee.

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ingles dietitianQUESTION: Where does Ingles Laura Lynn milk come from?

ANSWER: Most (80%) of the dairy farmers who supply Ingles Markets with Laura Lynn milk live within about 100-150 miles of Asheville. These dairy farms generally have about 100-200 cows and are family owned like English Farm in Marion NC and Ramsey Dairy Farm in Fairview.

To the Editor:

It’s true, you only get one chance to make a good one. Entering Waynesville from any direction does not make a good first impression. 

Coming from the east on N.C. 19/23 you only have to be about 500 feet inside the town limits before encountering a junkyard. There are dozens of unlicensed over-the-road vehicles that haven’t moved for at least the last 20 years. Several are parked within six or seven feet of the sidewalk and obviously are on the road right of way. Keep going a little farther and at the traffic circle you have a great view of a drive-in movie screen that has been falling apart for the last decade. Go another half mile and enjoy the next junkyard on your left. Continue on North Main another half mile or so and gaze upon the next junkyards on both sides of North Main. I have been to ghost towns in the West that gave a similar first impression. Now let’s come to town from the south on U.S. 276. Immediately upon entering the town limits on your left you will see a junkyard that has been growing for the last 15 years. Then come in from South Main and encounter another junkyard on your right, inside the town limits. 

Some of these aren’t real junkyards, but they are businesses who need to clean up their act.

What has happened to our junkyard and sign ordinances? We had temporary real estate signs removed and not returned just days after putting them up. South on U.S. 276 about a half mile from Main Street, there is a development sign that has been there at least 20 years for a development that has never been or will ever be. Consistency in enforcement would be nice. 

I guess my question should be: what individual does the performance review of the town employee being paid to enforce our ordinances? It appears that neither of these people are doing what they are being paid by the taxpayers to do. We have the ordinances in place and code enforcement employees on the taxpayers payroll. Isn’t it time to clean up the impression we make on people coming to Waynesville?

Bruce Gardner

Waynesville

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To the Editor:

It took newly elected Sen. Thom Tillis , R-N.C., merely a month in Washington to make himself North Carolina’s reigning national embarrassment, succeeding Rep. Mark “Shutdown” Meadows, R-Cashiers, and John “Casanova” Edwards. People elsewhere are asking how we elected a U.S. senator who doesn’t believe the government should make restaurant workers wash their hands before work or after using the toilet.

The simple explanation is that too many people didn’t care enough to vote; those who did seemed to know what a throwback Sen. Tillis is and most must have approved.

The surprise is not that he’s babbling like a disciple of the nihilist author Ayn Rand, but that he chose so offensive an example to make his point. Sen. Tillis isn’t saying that cooks or servers shouldn’t wash their hands, but simply that it isn’t the government’s job to make them do it. The public deserves only to know whether their employers require it.

His ideology is the law of the jungle. It used to prevail nationwide until Upton Sinclair and other crusaders began writing about such things as spoiled meat disguised with chemicals and littered with rat feces. To return to such unfettered free enterprise is the not-so-secret ambition of the big shots in every sector of the economy and their stooges in the Congress and the legislatures.

In Sen. Tillis’s dream world, restaurants are required only to tell their customers whether employees must wash their hands. To a bemused audience, Sen. Tillis remarked that the market — meaning the patrons — would “take care” of those establishments that didn’t.

Of course, every place would claim that it did. But so what?

To say, as some do, that Sen. Tillis proposes to replace one regulation with another misses the point. As a Bloomberg Politics essay put it, “he’d rather make things easier for businesses than safe for consumers.”

Requiring a restaurant to say only whether it orders its workers to wash their hands isn’t the same as holding it responsible — as the law does — for seeing that it’s done and done well.

North Carolina’s hand-washing rules are fairly detailed and explicit, and properly so. The water needs to be warm, hands and arms should be scrubbed with an approved product for at least 20 seconds, there have to be clean towels or a dryer, and there must be a separate sink so that the one where food is prepared won’t be used for post-toilet sanitation.

In Tillisland, none of that would matter.

Overall, there are 204 pages in our state’s Food Code. If you think that’s too many, you have not suffered such miseries as E. Coli, shigella, or salmonella. The Centers for Disease Control estimates that there are 48 million cases of food-borne diseases in the U.S. every year. That’s one for every six of us. At least 128,000 people are hospitalized and 3,000 die.

During a salmonella outbreak two years ago that sickened 100 people in Fayetteville — yes, right here in North Carolina — inspectors identified multiple possible rule violations at the restaurant in question. They included improper water temperature and a lack of hand-washing supplies. The report also noted that seven employees had violated the code by working when they were ill.

Granted, the employees shouldn’t have worked. But without paid sick leave, it was likely a matter of breaking either the law or their leases.

For public safety, the law should demand paid sick leave for food service and health care workers, so many of whom live precariously from one pay check to the next. But we’re not likely to get something so obviously necessary from a General Assembly of Sen. Tillis clones. With a committee chair’s gavel now in her hands, Rep. Michelle Presnell, R-Burnsville, is promising to attack what she calls “onerous regulatory overreach.”

Tom Tillis and Michelle Presnell: King and Queen of the jungle.  

Martin A. Dyckman

Waynesville

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Maggie Valley’s inaugural WinterFest Smoky Style will celebrate the best of the cold-weather season 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 28, at the Maggie Valley Festival Grounds, with other events bookending the festival Friday and Saturday nights.

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out gatewaysmokiesRunners will take to the streets of downtown Waynesville as the inaugural Gateway to the Smokies Half Marathon starts from Main Street at 7:30 a.m. on Saturday, May 2. 

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out forestryHCCHaywood Community College just became the only two-year community college in North Carolina to offer a forest management technology program accredited by the Society of American Foresters, a national organization for professional foresters.

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out wildernessskillsRegistration is now open for the fifth Wilderness Skills Institute, a training program for Wilderness stewardship and management, held at the Cradle of Forestry in Pisgah National Forest.

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out polarplungeLake Junaluska was only 39 degrees on Jan. 31, but 120 people still braved the cold to participate in Haywood Waterways Association’s Third Annual Polar Plunge.

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out superintendentTwo open houses this month will offer the chance to meet and greet the Great Smoky Mountains National Park Superintendent, Cassius Cash, who had his first day at work this Monday (Feb. 9).

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A nonprofit organization, Catch the Spirit of Appalachia wishes to once again provide four opportunities for a scholarship in the amount of $500 each for Appalachian Studies to be presented to four deserving seniors in the Western North Carolina counties.

• The Annie Lee Bryson Memorial Scholarship is for a local student who has declared a major or minor in Appalachian Studies or related studies with an interest in traditional crafts.

• The Mary Jane Queen Memorial Scholarship is for students who have declared a major or minor in music, with an interest in the traditional music of the Appalachian Mountains.

• The Elmer & Irene Hooper Memorial Scholarship is for high school seniors who have demonstrated excellence in volunteerism and leadership. 

• The Founders Scholarship is awarded on the basis of merit or potential within the visual arts, writing or history, with consideration of financial need.

Applicants must submit a completed application and all supporting documents to the guidance counselor of the applicant’s school by March 10 in order to be considered for this year’s scholarship awards. Home-schooler applicants should complete the application and send it to CSA, 29 Regal Avenue, Sylva, N.C. 28779, also by March 10. The application may be downloaded at www.spiritofappalachia.org.

828.631.4587.

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art barnwellA collection of images by acclaimed photographer Tim Barnwell that reflects the musical and craft traditions of the Southern Appalachian Mountains is currently on display through April 1 at Western Carolina University’s Mountain Heritage Center.

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art applifestylesThe Downtown Waynesville Association is seeking heritage themed vendors for the fifth annual Appalachian Lifestyle Celebration that will take place Saturday, June 13.

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art heartRenowned classic rock act Heart will hit the stage at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 21, at Harrah’s Cherokee.

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Jackson County commissioners will spend $100,000 on a storage room at the Cashiers library for the Friends of the Cashiers Library to house used book donations.

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Haywood County Schools will be offering signing bonuses for teachers in hard-to-get fields starting next school year.

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ingles dietitianQUESTION: Do you do talks for the public and if so, what is the cost?

Answer: Yes! I frequently do presentations on nutrition and food related topics for various non-profit groups, students, and community organizations. I request that you have a minimum of 50 people in attendance for the presentation. There is no cost. The best way to check on my availability is to e-mail me at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or call me at: 800-334-4936.

out experienceThe Experience Your Smokies program is looking for applicants who want to get an insider’s look at park operations while getting some exploration into their lives as well.

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Two potential candidates for wilderness designation in the Pisgah and Nantahala national forests were accidentally left off a master list compiled by the U.S. Forest Service.

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out redwolfThe N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission has publicly denounced the red wolf reintroduction in coastal counties, calling for the red wolves to be rounded up — despite being the only wild population of red wolves on the planet.

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out sandymushThe northern slopes of Little Sandy Mush Bald, an iconic view for those who live in the coves and farms of the surrounding Sandy Mush community in Buncombe County, will remain undeveloped following the Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy’s purchase of 241 acres in Madison County, which includes part of the bald.

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The father of American landscape architecture will soon be memorialized at the North Carolina Arboretum.

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out leopoldAldo Leopold and his writings are cornerstones of modern environmental ethic, and a program teaching how to use his work as a springboard to engage students in natural science and literature is now being offered through the Jackson and Swain county cooperative extension centers. 

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To the Editor:

A rich man, a middle class man and a poor man walk into a bar. They sit at a table with 12 cookies. The rich man takes 11 cookies and then tells the middle class man that the poor man is trying to steal the last cookie. Such is the state of American political landscape at the beginning of the 21 century.

The Koch brothers are the rich man. They are going to raise and spend almost $1 billion on the next presidential campaign. They are going to tell the hard-working middle class that the money given to the less fortunate in our society is being taken away from them. 

They are going to spend more money in this election cycle than the whole of the Republican Party — or for that matter the Democratic Party — spent in 2012. And that was the most expensive campaign in history.

Their Libertarian agenda is even to the right of the Tea Party. But with all that money to throw around, the possible Republican party candidates for president are now lining up to became their new best friends. It is quite possible that they will choose who gets the money to run as the Republican nominee.

When the Supreme Court said via the Citizens United decision that money equals speech, they created new political order. One man, one vote, now seems like a quaint, old-fashioned notion, gone the way of the dodo bird. Money for advertising; money for paid staff; money to pay lobbyists; money to fund campaigns; money to register voters; money for sophisticated computer programs to get out the vote, money, money, money is the lifeblood of politics. 

The next time your friendly Republican or Democratic Party fundraiser asks for a $5 donation, try not to laugh. Even if 5 million people each give $5 and raise $25 million, that is only 2.5 percent of a billion dollars. The Koch brothers are worth over $41.5 billion; so, even if they contribute a billion dollars all by themselves, that is only 2.5 percent of their personal fortune.

This is not how democracy is supposed to work.

Louis Vitale

Franklin

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op harrisOver the past couple of months there has been a fair amount of coverage in area media outlets about the “changing” landscape of women’s health care services in Western North Carolina. A couple of individuals have chosen to provide their independent opinions, though both of them are not without a conflict of interest due to past or current business relationships.

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More than 30 downtown Waynesville businesses are offering discounts for local residents throughout the month of February. Look for the big red heart on the door and be prepared to show proof of local residence.

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art nctourThere will be an interactive presentation to “tour” the state of North Carolina during “Tar Heel Tour: Our State, Our Time” from 5 to 7 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 12, in the A.K. Hinds University Center at Western Carolina University.

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Professional craft artists in Jackson, Macon, and Swain counties and the Qualla Boundary have a $3,000 incentive to create or update their business plans.

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art papercuttingValentine’s Day paper arts class

A book/paper arts workshop will be held from 2 to 4:30 p.m. Feb. 7 at Blue Ridge Books in Waynesville.

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art uptownThe Macon County Art Association will host a “Grand Re-Opening” of their Uptown Gallery from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Friday, Feb. 13, at 30 East Main Street in Franklin.

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art winesellerjazzA special Valentine’s Day dinner and live performance by jazz singer Jesse Earl Junior will take place at 7 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 14, at The Classic Wineseller in Waynesville.

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art avalon1950s pop sensation Frankie Avalon will perform at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 13, at the Smoky Mountain Center for the Performing Arts in Franklin.

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out fontanaA community museum and learning center at Fontana Village along Fontana Lake will commemorate the 70th anniversary of power production at Fontana Dam, thanks to an alliance between Proctor Revival Organization, Fontana Village Resort, Graham Revitalization Economic Action Team and Western Carolina University’s Mountain Heritage Center.

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out waterrockA 10-acre tract along the Blue Ridge Parkway and a new section of the Mountains-to-Sea Trail in Jackson County will likely become Blue Ridge Parkway land following its Dec. 18, 2014, purchase by the Conservation Trust for North Carolina.

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out kidtrailsTrail adventures for kids will expand in North Carolina over the coming years, thanks to a $921,000 grant from the Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina Foundation.

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out streamsA three-year stream-mapping project in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park is now complete, revealing new information about the park’s water resources. 

Using a combination of aircraft-mounted scanners and a Global Positioning System verification system, scientists determined that the park holds 2,900 miles of stream, 1,073 miles of which are large enough to support fish. That’s a considerable jump from the previous estimate of 2,000 miles of stream in the park. 

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art hardinA new showcase of work by artist Clint Hardin will be on display for the month of February at the Macon County Public Library in Franklin.

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art hartThe winter theater season continues with the Tony nominated Broadway play “Shining City” that will run at 7:30 p.m. Jan. 30-31 and at 3 p.m. Feb. 1 at the Haywood Arts Regional Theatre in Waynesville.

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art darrennicholsonAward-winning mandolinist Darren Nicholson of Balsam Range will perform with his solo band as part of the First Thursday concert series at 7 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 5, in the Mountain Heritage Center at Western Carolina University.

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To the Editor:

Vic Drummond’s recent letter about “The Economic and Employment Costs of Not Expanding Medicaid in NC.” was just opinion and left-wing propaganda and not fact at all.  

It seemed apparent that Drummond has not read the detailed 35-page economic analyses by Leighton Ku, PhD. Dr. Ku has conducted research and analysis regarding heath care at national and state levels for more than 20 years. He has a PhD in health policy from Boston University and a masters in public health from University of California at Berkley.   

All of the factual information used in his analyses (like number of uninsured, or number presently enrolled in Medicaid in N.C.) are from multiple public sources that are readily confirmable. He and his economic experts used scientifically verified economic software developed by Regional Economic Model Inc. (REMI) to arrive at the total economic impact of Medicaid expansion on the state.  

Of course all scientists and economists use computers to assist in their analyses, but Drummond feels just because they use computer analysis their results are not “factual.” This particular software has been used in thousands of national economic studies including fiscal analyses for the N.C. General Assembly (hardly a left-wing propaganda machine). Articles about REMI’s model equations and research findings have been published in scholarly journals such as the Ameri-can Economic Review, Review of Economic Statistics, Journal of Regional Science, and International Regional Science Review.

This state can still pass Medicaid expansion in 2015 to begin in 2016. If it does not, the economic impact from 2016 to 2020 will be devastating: lost federal funding will total $21 billion; total jobs lost will be 43,000; business activity lost $21.5 billion; N.C. state revenue lost will be $862 million; and county tax revenue lost will be $161 million.  

Drummond claims these analyses and factual information are not accurate and true, but I have not heard a single analysis by other economists that contradict the factual information or the economic projections presented in this study. If you still reject this information, look at what has already happened in a Republican-controlled state, Arkansas, that actually expanded Medicaid in 2014. Their uninsured rate dropped from 22.5 percent to 12.4 percent, uncompensated care at hospitals decreased by $69 million in just the first 6 months of 2014, and the number of uninsured patients hospitalized fell by 47 percent.

I challenge Sen. Jim Davis, R-Franklin; Rep. Roger West, R-Marble; and Vic Drummond to do two things:

• Read the actual study (http://www.wral.com/asset/news/state/nccapitol/2014/12/17/14288878/158632-Expanding_Medicaid_in_North_Carolina_12-15-14_EMB_r.pdf) and report to readers of this newspaper the precise, actual factual information that is wrong in the study and give us the correct information.

• Spend two hours per month for the next six months volunteering at the Franklin Community Care Clinic and talk to real, hard-working people who can only afford the very limited medical services offered by this volunteer run clinic rather than the comprehensive medical care provided by Medicaid. Then tell us readers whether or not you believe these people deserve adequate health care for their families.

Ed Morris, MD, PhD

Volunteer and Board Member Franklin Community Care Clinic since 2010

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To the Editor:

Historical injustices, real and perceived, create seeds of terrorism. Today’s policies create a fertile environment for the seeds of terrorism to flourish. 

The first environmental factor is overpopulation. Where there is cultural pressure and/or lack of access to birth control, high birth rates lead to overpopulation.

The second factor is finite local resources to sustain that population, including food, healthcare, education, housing, and employment that results in sustainable income for families. 

During the Great Depression, millions of young men and their families were saved by government-created employment in the CCC and other programs. Now with underemployment and low wages, millions of Americans are working themselves sick with little hope of progress. Illegitimate forms of income entice.

A further factor is lack of social cohesion. Today there is little to unify us. It is time to reinstate the draft. For those who do not wish to serve militarily, they may serve domestically working in troubled areas of our nation through AmeriCorps. Young Americans need a sense of belonging, responsibility, discipline, and citizenship.

When we address the environmental factors, we can prevent significant amounts of terrorism and gang-related violence. We owe it to ourselves and our children to address these issues effectively.

Dan Kowal

Franklin

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op dogsBy Bill Lea • Guest Columnist

In the article about the bear dogs attacking a camper’s dogs (www.smokymountainnews.com/outdoors/item/14952), Wallace Messer (a bear hunter whose dogs were not involved in the attack) begins by suggesting the blame for the attack should perhaps be placed on the victims — a strategy used time after time by defense attorneys and their defendants pleading innocence. Even if Kadie Anderson’s dogs had growled as a natural reaction to protect their owner — which Kadie vehemently denies happened — that does not justify being attacked by a pack of a dozen dogs. A forest user and her pets’ well-being were still jeopardized. The bear hunting dog owners should be held accountable just like any other dog owner would be in the exact same situation. Why should any small group of dog owners be given special status with a law that protects only them when every other dog owner in the state would be held liable?

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Southwestern Community College students who earn an associate’s degree in criminal justice technology have a new transfer option thanks to SCC’s recent articulation agreement with Lees McRae College in Banner Elk.

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The Commission for a Clean County (CCC) has announced the 2014 winners of its annual Community Pride Awards program. This program honors businesses, community groups, civic clubs, schools and individuals (both adults and children) for exceptional efforts in the categories of litter pick-up and control, recycling, beautification of public areas and environmental stewardship in Haywood County. Awards will be made at a luncheon at the Waynesville Inn on Wednesday, Feb. 25.

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ingles dietitianQUESTION: Should I be worried about BPA liners in cans and be buying BPA-free cans?

Answer: While some brands do offer BPA-free cans this is not commonplace and this is typically noted on the label. 

out linvillegorgeLooking for a new way to explore the wilderness? Check out the Dirty Dozen Wilderness Hike Challenge.

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The Appalachian Trail has a new official length. It increased by 3.9 miles from last year to 2,189.2 miles due to trail remeasurements and relocations. 

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Four men, ages 22 to 49, were arrested with 970 Venus flytraps in their possession earlier this month at the Holly Shelter Game Land in Pender County, earning the distinction of being the first to be charged with a felony for the crime. It had been a misdemeanor until a law change in December.

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