North Carolina Officials to Zoom About Child Welfare Problems
Published Date: 1/13/2025
Notice
Summary
The North Carolina Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights is hosting a free, virtual meeting on January 31, 2025, to talk about civil rights in the state's child welfare system. Anyone interested can join online or by phone, share their thoughts, and submit written comments within 30 days after the meeting. This is a great chance for North Carolinians to get involved and help shape fairer child welfare policies.
No Economic Impacts Identified for this Document
Your PRIA Score
Personalized for You
How does this regulation affect your finances?
Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this federal register document and every other regulation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.
Key Dates
Related Federal Register Documents
2026-12937 — List of Bulk Drug Substances for Which There Is a Clinical Need Under Section 503B of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act; Extension of Comment Period
The FDA is giving folks more time to share their thoughts on whether certain medicines like semaglutide, tirzepatide, and liraglutide should be allowed for special compounding by outsourcing drug makers. This extension means anyone interested has until July 30, 2026, to weigh in. It affects drug makers, healthcare pros, and patients waiting for these meds, with no immediate cost changes but plenty of chances to influence future drug availability.
2026-12918 — Agency Information Collection Activities; Notice and Request for Comment; 49 CFR Part 569, 571.110, 571.120 & 574, Compliance and Labeling of Motor Vehicle Tires and Rims
NHTSA wants to keep collecting info on motor vehicle tires and rims but with some updates. More vehicles and rims mean a slight cost increase and more work for manufacturers and recordkeepers. If you’re involved in making or tracking tires and rims, your input is needed by August 25, 2026!
2026-12972 — Reopening or Extension of Application Deadline Dates; Applications for New Awards
The Department of Education may give extra time or reopen grant application deadlines for people affected by major disasters. This helps those in disaster-hit areas get a fair chance to apply for funding, usually adding up to five extra business days. These changes only affect eligible applicants in the disaster zones and could shift related review deadlines too.
2026-12954 — Harbert Mezzanine Partners II SBIC, L.P.; Surrender of License of Small Business Investment Company
Harbert Mezzanine Partners II SBIC, L.P. has officially given up its license to operate as a Small Business Investment Company. This means they won’t be making new investments under this program anymore. The change is effective immediately, so small businesses looking for funding from them will need to look elsewhere.
2026-12979 — Agency Information Collection Activities: Request for Comments for a New Information Collection
The Federal Highway Administration wants your thoughts on a new form they plan to collect info with. This affects state transportation departments and anyone interested in highway planning. You’ve got until July 27, 2026, to share your ideas, and the goal is to keep paperwork fair and manageable without extra costs.
2026-12916 — Notice of OFAC Sanctions Action
On June 23, 2026, the U.S. Treasury’s OFAC added new people to its blacklist, blocking their property and stopping Americans from doing business with them. They also updated info on someone already on the list. This means certain assets are frozen, and U.S. folks need to watch out for these changes right away.
Previous / Next Documents
Previous: 2025-00420 — Presidential Declaration Amendment of a Major Disaster for the State of South Carolina
South Carolina’s disaster help for Hurricane Helene just got a deadline extension! If you suffered physical damage, you now have until January 28, 2025, to apply for loans. Economic injury loan applications are open until June 30, 2025, so there’s more time to get the financial support you need.
Next: 2025-00427 — Fiscal Year (FY) 2025 Notice of Supplemental Funding Opportunity
SAMHSA is giving extra money—up to $361,200 each—to five groups already working on mental health support projects. This $1.8 million boost will extend their work by one year, until March 30, 2026, helping them keep improving care for adults with serious mental illness. It’s a smart move to keep the good work going while updating the program for today’s needs.