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Horses, teens and $20,000

The CORRAL Riding Academy raised more than $20,000 at its inaugural Gala Fundraiser held Feb. 19 at the Angus Barn Pavilion in Raleigh, the nonprofit organization announced this past week.

The money, which included more than $3,000 raised in the night’s silent auction, will be used in the treatment of at-risk and adjudicated teenage girls who are paired with rescued horses in the nonprofit organization’s riding and mentoring program.

Soles Bill Would Help Longtime Ally

As North Carolina struggles to close an $800 million deficit, Sen. R.C. Soles has filed a bill to sweeten pensions for judges and district attorneys.
The bill, in particular, would benefit Soles' longtime friend and ally, District Attorney Rex Gore, who lost to an opponent in the Democratic primary earlier this month.
Under current law, judges and district attorneys can begin collecting their pensions when they turn 65, or when they complete 24 years of service.
Soles' bill would allow judges or district attorneys to begin collecting their pensions at age 62 if they have 20 or more years of service. That means Gore could collect his pension immediately upon leaving office in January 2011, rather than waiting until he turns 65 in April of 2013.
Gore, who has about 22 years of service, said he discovered the loophole after his loss in the primary.
"I absolutely talked with (Soles) about this," Gore said in a telephone interview. "After I lost, I got to looking at the retirement play and discovered this loophole.... When I did my own calculation I saw that I would lose 5 percent."
The bill brought harsh words from some good government advocates.
"At a time when we are cutting teachers and cutting health care spending for the poor, the notion that we are going to pad elective officials' retirements is insane," said political activist Joe Sinsheimer. "I would hope there will be an ethics investigation."

Gore said he does not plan on retiring from government service when he leaves office. He said he wants to keep working, perhaps as a public defender or a teacher at a community college. In that case, he said, he would not collect his retirement early.
Soles did not return phone calls on Friday afternoon.

Durham judges announce election plans

Elaine Bushfan, chief District Court judge for Durham County, has told Bull's Eye she intends to run for a Superior Court seat in this spring's election.

And four of her current colleagues plan to run for re-election, according to a statement released Monday night by District Court Judge Marcia Morey.

Morey (right) announced her plan to seek a fourth term Monday,as well as the re-election candidacies of current District judges James T. Hill, Nancy E. Gordon and Brian Wilks.

Eleven-year District Court veteran Judge Ann McKown does not plan to run again, according to Morey.

Six Durham District Court seats are up for election in 2010, along with three Superior Court seats, four Durham Public Schools Board positions, all six General Assembly seats and numerous other local and statewide offices. No City Council or county commissioner seats are on this year's ballot.

Candidate filing opens at noon Feb. 8 and closes at noon Feb. 26. The partisan primary and School Board election is May 4 with a second primary and School Board runoff June 22, if necessary.

The general election is Nov. 2.

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