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The SEANC Scoop STATE EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION OF NORTH CAROLINA IMPORTANT LINKS
Member-Only Discounts SEANC Insurance
June 6, 2014
Legislative Update: House begins budget deliberations
SEANC in the News Update Contact Info Calendar of Events The Reporter
After releasing its proposed 2014-15 spending plan late last Wednesday night, the Senate wasted no time approving its $21.2 billion budget on a largely party line vote shortly after midnight Saturday. Upon receiving the budget, the chairmen and vice chairmen of the House Appropriations Committee spent the weekend and into Monday in their own budget discussions. Then, in contrast to the Senate, they convened the appropriations subcommittees to begin work on their proposals. That work has continued throughout the week and is expected to wrap up next week.
Stay Connected! Sign up today for our new text messaging service to receive Special Action Alerts about what's happening at the General Assembly or for urgent member news. Just text the word SEANC to 787753!
In the meantime, SEANC lobbyists and members are continuing to stay in close contact with representatives, urging them to value North Carolina’s vital public services and the people who provide them. "At the end of the day," SEANC Executive Director Cope said in an interview with TWC-News Capital Tonight, a budget is "where you put your priorities. I would hope they would value public services." Elsewhere in the General Assembly, SEANC has continued to advocate for the priorities of state employees and retirees while working on bills regarding pension transparency and vision discounts. Click here for the full Legislative Update.
Become a SEANC Warrior! Want to talk to lawmakers face-to-face and make sure your voice is heard? Then sign up to join SEANC's professional lobbyists each Monday night while the General Assembly is in session.
Set SEANC's policy platform SEANC members decide every year what the association's legislative priorities will be for the upcoming session. Learn how SEANC's policy platforms are created and then get involved.
Annual meetings are going on now Want to become more involved in SEANC, perhaps become a convention delegate? It all begins at your district's annual meeting.
Convention time is fast approaching! The 31st Annual Convention website is now live.
Award season is here! Award nominations for outstanding SEANC members and districts are being accepted through July 26. Email your nomination today!
Remembering those we've lost. Help us honor the memory of those members we've lost during the last year.
State Health Plan approves coverage for key autism treatment Meeting last Friday, May 30, the State Health Plan Board of Trustees voted unanimously to approve adding Applied Behavior Analysis coverage for people with Autism Spectrum Disorder. This decision, one that SEANC has long advocated for, was applauded by autism support groups and state employees and retirees with autistic children across the state. The coverage, as currently designed, applies when the member is younger than age 26, has an ASD diagnosis by a licensed physician or doctoral level clinical psychologist and the mental health care manager determines the treatment medically necessary. It is available only in-network, is limited to a maximum of $36,000 per benefit year and is subject to copay, deductible and coinsurance as applicable. But not everything the SHP board did was as positive. The board also re-upped the punitive smoking cessation, primary care physician and health assessment wellness surcharges for the 80/20 and consumer driven health plans for 2015. A report by the SHP's private consulting firm, The Segal Company, also brought up the possibility of adding those wellness surcharges to the 70/30 plan and the potential for premium increases beginning in 2016, despite a report showing the plan has a trendline of overestimating its costs. SEANC will continue to advocate against the punitive surcharges and any unnecessary premium increases. At the meeting, Charles Johnson, an SHP board member and past SEANC president, voiced displeasure with Treasurer Janet Cowell's unilateral decision to offer the General Assembly the $22 million in savings this year. That money that could have been used to lower premiums for all state employees but is being used for teacher raises in the Senate budget.
Fill out our Remembrance Form.
SEANC in the news SEANC's position on the state budget proposals submitted by the Senate and the governor have led its news coverage recently.
Want to serve on a statewide committee? Nominations are being accepted now through July 17 for the Insurance Board of Trustees, the Retiree Council and the Scholarship Foundation Board. Click here for more information.
Calling all volunteers! The SEANC Youth Council is holding a community service project - a Habitat for Humanity build! If interested in joining, meet at the SEANC office, 1621 Midtown Place, Raleigh, at 10 a.m., Saturday, June 28. It should last 3 to 4 hours.
The SEANC Store is now online!
Speaking to TWC News' Capital Tonight on Monday, SEANC Executive Director Dana Cope said that both the Senate and Gov. Pat McCrory were playing a “smoke and mirrors game� with the employee pay raise proposal. He also said that while state employees and retirees are concerned about their pay raises, they are "most concerned with the quality of public service degrading" because of the continued unwillingness of the General Assembly to "take care of the public resources" as lawmakers continue to push for privatization in areas of the departments of Public Safety and Transportation, and in the management of Medicaid. SEANC also spoke out in the media, calling the House's anti-pension spiking bill 'window dressing' and explaining that a bill to eliminate vision discounts would hurt state employees. And finally, SEANC's decision to allow student athletes to join as members has continued to gain attention, including from N.C. State's The Technician.
More state workers side with SEANC Congrats to the 66 new members who chose to empower themselves and the public services they provide by joining SEANC recently! Welcome new members from Appalachian State University, Central Piedmont Community College, East Carolina University, Forsyth Technical College, N.C. A&T University, N.C. State University, UNC Hospitals, UNC-Pembroke, State Employees' Credit Union, the state departments of Health and Human Services, Public Safety, Revenue and Transportation, as well as the Administrative Office of the Courts and N.C. Education Lottery, and schools in Robeson, Vance and Wake counties, as well as Weldon city. Contact Lynn Cote for more information on hosting an event at your worksite.
Let SEANC help you buy in bulk at Sam's Club SEANC members can now enjoy membership rewards at any Sam's Club in North Carolina. Receive a $25 Sam's Club gift card when you join or renew as a Sam's Plus Member, or receive a $10 Sam's Club gift card when you join or renew as a Sam's Business or Sam's Savings Member. SEANC members must present a voucher at time of membership purchase or renewal. Contact a Member Benefits Specialist at 1800-222-2758 or cderrick@seanc.org for a voucher. Click here to find a Sam's Club near you.
State Employees Association of North Carolina 1621 Midtown Place Raleigh, NC 27609 800-222-2758 | seanc.org
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The SEANC Scoop STATE EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION OF NORTH CAROLINA IMPORTANT LINKS
June 13, 2014
Member-Only Discounts SEANC Insurance SEANC in the News Update Contact Info Calendar of Events The Reporter
Legislative Update: N.C. House budget includes higher pay raise, COLA & bonus paid leave The N.C. House passed its version of a 2014-15 spending plan this morning. The House budget proposal calls for a true $1,000 increase in base salary for employees, as well as five days of paid leave. It also calls for a 1.44 percent cost-of-livingadjustment for retirees. These are priorities that SEANC lobbyists have worked closely with representatives to secure. Also included in the budget, thanks to an amendment from Rep. Jean Farmer-Butterfield, is a provision that, for now, protects the four CDSAs that had been slated for closure. SEANC has long advocated for protection of the CDSAs.
Stay Connected! Sign up today for our new text messaging service to receive Special Action Alerts about what's happening at the General Assembly or for urgent member news. Just text the word SEANC to 787753!
Become a SEANC Warrior! Want to talk to lawmakers face-to-face and make sure your voice is heard? Then sign up to join SEANC's professional lobbyists each Monday night while the General Assembly is in session.
But even though the House budget comes closer to SEANC's pay raise and COLA priorities, that doesn't mean it was all good news for public services and public employees. The budget still includes provisions moving both the Department of Public Safety and the Department of Transportation toward privatization. The budget will now go to conference committee to work out differences between the House and Senate versions. Despite threats by the Senate to leave without a budget, House Speaker Thom Tillis says he expects the General Assembly to finish its process by the end of next week, at which point the bill will head to Gov. Pat McCrory for his consideration. In other legislative news this week, the joint Legislative Program Evaluation Oversight Committee asked state Auditor Beth Wood to investigate the Department of Health and Human Services' singlesource contracts. According to the legislature’s Program Evaluation Division, only 10 of the department's 143 single-source contracts since 2010 have gone through the appropriate, legally-required review process. SEANC says no thanks to these types of no-bid, sweetheart contracts, and so should DHHS. Click
here
for
the
full
Legislative
Update.
Set SEANC's policy platform SEANC members decide every year what the association's legislative priorities will be for the upcoming session. Learn how SEANC's policy platforms are created and then get involved.
Annual meetings are going on now Want to become more involved in SEANC, perhaps become a convention delegate? It all begins at your district's annual meeting.
Convention time is fast approaching! The 31st Annual Convention website is now live.
Award season is here! Award nominations for outstanding SEANC members and districts are being accepted through July 26. Email your nomination today!
Remembering those we've lost. Help us honor the memory of those members we've lost during the last year.
Treasurer responds to pension investigation State Treasurer Janet Cowell responded this week to the investigative report released by Benchmark Financial Services and SEANC on April 22. In her response, Cowell's chief investment officer Kevin SigRist said the report contained "inaccuracies and unsupported allegations." Click here to read the full News & Observer story about her response. Obviously, SEANC disagrees with SigRist's characterization, which we consider to be full of its own inaccuracies and misleading statements. Currently, our focus is on the state budget and the priorities of state employees and retirees. Once the budget process is complete, we will fully examine Cowell's report and issue a more complete response. In the meantime, if Cowell really wants to match her actions with her words, she should stop hiding behind the term "trade secrets" and make public all fees associated with the pension system. She also is welcome to debate former SEC investigator and author of the report, Ted Siedle, in public. Additionally, she should end her support of a bill that, under the guise of transparency, would simply continue the secrecy by allowing her office to keep investment information out of the public eye for 10 years, making it nearly impossible for retirees, employees and taxpayers to recoup any losses or hold anybody accountable. Already, this is what passes for complying with public records requests when it comes to investment information – redacted pages from Carousel Capital Partners and blank pages from Halifax Capital Partners. This bill would just allow that to continue.
Help stop elimination of vision discounts SEANC members and other state residents have one final opportunity to lobby their legislators on a bill, SB477, that would eliminate the discounts they currently enjoy on vision products and services not covered under the State Health Plan or other health insurance plans.
Fill out our Remembrance Form.
Want to serve on a statewide committee? Nominations are being accepted now through July 17 for the Insurance Board of Trustees, the Retiree Council and the Scholarship Foundation Board. Click here for more information.
Calling all volunteers! The SEANC Youth Council is holding a community service project - a Habitat for Humanity build! If interested in joining, meet at the SEANC office, 1621 Midtown Place, Raleigh, at 10 a.m., Saturday, June 28. It should last 3 to 4 hours.
The SEANC Store is now online!
Optometrists, who stand to profit from this change, also have been successful in removing a provision that would have required written notice about the federal law requiring them to freely give patients their prescriptions so they can purchases glasses, contacts and other products elsewhere at lower prices. Sen. Tom Apodaca, chairman of the Senate Rules Committee, has said he has heard from optometrists supporting the bill, but not from citizens opposing it. Call him today. And call your own senators and ask them to defeat this measure.
More state workers side with SEANC Congrats to the 90 new members who chose to empower themselves and the public services they provide by joining SEANC this week! Welcome new members from Fayetteville Technical Community College, N.C. Central University-Durham, UNC Hospitals, UNCPembroke, Western Piedmont Community College, Winston-Salem State University, the state departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Health and Human Services, Public Safety, Revenue, Transportation, the State Employees Health Insurance Plan, the Administrative Office of the Courts, as well as the schools in Hoke, Robeson, Rutherford and Wake counties. Contact Lynn Cote for more information on hosting an event at your worksite.
Veterinary Pet Insurance benefits everyone sweepstakes Pets are members of your family, and they need protection, too. Register today for a free quote for VPI pet insurance and enter for a chance to win an Apple iPad Mini for you, and a Whistle fitness monitor for your pet. Check VPI's website daily for more chances to enter. No purchase necessary. Deadline to enter is July 31. Click here for official rules.
Carowinds closed Sunday, June 29 Making vacation plans? SEANC members can purchase discount tickets to Carowinds at any State Employees' Credit Union branch location. But please note that Carowinds is closed for the entire day on Sunday, June 29.
State Employees Association of North Carolina 1621 Midtown Place Raleigh, NC 27609 800-222-2758 | seanc.org
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The SEANC Scoop STATE EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION OF NORTH CAROLINA IMPORTANT LINKS
Member-Only Discounts SEANC Insurance
June 20, 2014
Legislative Update: Budget stalled; House committee acts on pension secrecy
SEANC in the News Update Contact Info Calendar of Events The Reporter
The General Assembly is at something of a stalemate currently as Senate and House leaders are at odds over several key provisions in their respective budgets, including how to give raises to state employees and retirees.
Time's running out, become a SEANC Warrior today!
Click here for a complete comparison between the two proposed spending plans.
The state budget has finally reached the conference committee. Now is your chance to lobby lawmakers face-toface about the priorities of state employees and retirees, including a pay raise. Sign up to join SEANC's professional lobbyists at the General Assembly on Monday.
Click here for the list of conferees. Then contact them and let them know you expect them to do more to value vital public services and the people who provide them.
Stay Connected! Sign up today for our new text messaging service to receive Special Action
SEANC is continuing to advocate to lawmakers that they not punish state employees who have not had a meaningful raise in six years and pass a budget containing at least the $1,000 salary raise and five bonus days leave for employees and 1.44 percent cost-of-living adjustment for retirees proposed by the House.
In the meantime, though, SEANC lobbyists also are continuing to work against a bill that would allow the state treasurer to keep investment information secret for five years after the end of the contract. SEANC's Legislative Affairs Director Ardis Watkins spoke to the House State Personnel Committee about why House Bill 1209 is bad for state employees, retirees and taxpayers before the panel voted Wednesday to give it a favorable report and pass it along to the House Appropriations Committee. Click here to hear her comments.
Alerts about what's happening at the General Assembly or for urgent member news. Just text the word SEANC to 787753!
Set SEANC's policy platform SEANC members decide every year what the association's legislative priorities will be for the upcoming session. Learn how SEANC's policy platforms are created and then get involved.
Annual meetings are going on now Want to become more involved in SEANC, perhaps become a convention delegate? It all begins at your district's annual meeting.
Convention time is fast approaching! The 31st Annual Convention website is now live.
Remembering those we've lost. Help us honor the memory of those members we've lost during the last year. Fill out our Remembrance Form.
Want to serve on a statewide
Click here for the full Legislative Update.
SEANC President Sidney Sandy speaks out for transparency in pension system SEANC President Sidney Sandy weighed in on the debate over the future of the state Teachers' and State Employees' Retirement System this week, responding to an editorial by the News & Observer that defended state Treasurer Janet Cowell's management of the pension fund and her support of continued secrecy. In his letter, Sandy told the N&O that he was disappointed the newspaper had chosen to characterize this effort to increase transparency as a personal crusade against Cowell. The reason for SEANC's concern, he explained, is because: "That's our money in the retirement system. It's not Cowell's to use as a bargaining chip to gain political favors in the General Assembly and campaign contributions from Wall Street." He then went on to point out that while the pension is one of the best funded in the nation, because of the 6 percent contributions of members and those from the General Assembly, Cowell's performance lags behind the national median. Sandy also pointed out that just as the N&O and others had criticized SEANC for speaking out against former Treasurer Richard Moore's pay-to-play shenanigans, it turned out that we were right. He then encouraged the N&O to actually read our report and do its own investigative reporting, explaining that: "All we want is openness. After all, it's our money at stake." Click here to read Sandy's full letter.
committee? Nominations are being accepted now through July 17 for the Insurance Board of Trustees, the Retiree Council and the Scholarship Foundation Board. Click here for more information.
The SEANC Store
Award season is here Each year SEANC seeks to recognize those members who have gone above and beyond in their dedication to the association and its efforts. But who knows best who is deserving than the people who work alongside them every day on the district level? That's why we need you to send in your nominations now. The deadline is July 26.
is now online! The award categories are: •
Member of the Year This award recognizes a SEANC member for his/her dedication and active support for SEANC in both words and actions during the current year (Oct. 1, 2013 to Sept. 30, 2014).
•
District Chairperson of the Year This award recognizes a District Chairperson for his/her dedication and active support for SEANC in both words and actions during the current year (Oct. 1, 2013 - Sept. 30, 2014).
•
Distinguished Service Award This award recognizes the cumulative service and dedication to SEANC. It is given to people who, year after year, work to promote SEANC's goals and objectives, serving in whatever capacity is needed.
•
District of the Year This award recognizes the SEANC district with outstanding membership involvement in advancing SEANC's goals within the current year (Oct. 1, 2013 - Sept. 30, 2014). Three awards will be given out based on district size: 1-999 members, 1,000-1,499 members and more than 1,500 members.
For more information and printable nomination forms, click here.
Show off your SEANC spirit What does SEANC mean to you? That's the question members are trying to answer this year for the opportunity to win $1,000 at this year's annual convention. Districts or individual members are asked to submit videos telling us what SEANC and this year's convention theme "Building a Better Tomorrow: Work in Progress" mean to you. Be creative with your approach. Videos should be no longer than three minutes and must be submitted by July 23. Any camera or phone with digital video capability will work, but if you have questions, call Matt Whittle at 919-833-6436 or email mwhittle@seanc.org. Completed videos should also be emailed to mwhittle@seanc.org. The top three videos will be chosen by the Board of Governors and will be shown at the convention on Friday, Sept. 5. Delegates will vote for the best. The winner will receive $1,000. Please be clear whether the video is being submitted by a district or an individual. By submitting a video to SEANC, each entrant affirms that he or she is at least 18 years of age, consents to SEANC's use and publication of the information provided to SEANC, including names, photographs, videos and any other information given to SEANC, and releases SEANC and its employees and agents from any liability and all claims arising out of SEANC's use and publication of the information provided.
Cool off at Country USA
Water
Looking for somewhere to cool off as temperatures skyrocket and summer officially gets under way? Whether you like slipping down thrilling slides, relaxing by the pool, lounging in the lazy river or watching an amazing dive show, there's something for everyone at Water Country USA. And now, SEANC members can purchase special discount tickets through the Benefits page on the SEANC website, or by calling the
SEANC office at 919-833-6436 (800-222-2758) and speaking with a Member Benefits Program Specialist.
State Employees Association of North Carolina 1621 Midtown Place Raleigh, NC 27609 800-222-2758 | seanc.org
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The SEANC Scoop STATE EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION OF NORTH CAROLINA IMPORTANT LINKS
June 27, 2014
Member-Only Discounts SEANC Insurance SEANC in the News Update Contact Info Calendar of Events The Reporter
Stay Connected! Sign up today for our new text messaging service to receive Special Action Alerts about what's happening at the General Assembly or for urgent member news. Just text the word SEANC to 787753!
Set SEANC's policy platform SEANC members decide every year what the association's legislative priorities will be for the upcoming session. Learn how SEANC's policy platforms are created and then get involved.
Legislative Update: Hurry up and wait. Budget, pension secrecy bills stall The General Assembly's budget conference committee continues to meet, but have yet to come to an agreement about how to pay for priorities such as state employee pay increases and retiree cost-of-living adjustments. With the budget stalled in conference committee, SEANC lobbyists are continuing to remind lawmakers of the need to take care of state employees and retirees who have not had a meaningful raise in six years. SEANC is advocating for at least the $1,000 base salary increase and five days paid bonus leave for employees and 1.44 percent COLA for retirees that were included in the House proposal. In the meantime, the House Appropriations Committee on Wednesday approved a new "mini budget" that does provide for the $1,000 pay increase, five days leave and 1.44 percent COLA, but does little else, leaving much of the rest of the original two-year budget passed in 2013 in place. The bill, which also carries the governor's support, was then passed unanimously by the House on Thursday. Rep. Nelson Dollar, the House Appropriations Committee chairman, was careful to say that this was not a compromise bill, but rather represented the most important priorities the House wanted to take care of in the coming fiscal year. He did say, though, that he believes it could help spur the conference committee toward finishing its budget agreement. Click here for the full Legislative Update.
Annual meetings are going on now
Battle over future of pension secrecy heats up, tide turning toward transparency
Want to become more involved in SEANC, perhaps become a convention delegate? It all begins at your district's annual meeting.
The battle between the state treasurer's office and others wanting to keep pension information secret, and those, including SEANC, who want more transparency continued this week.
It's award season!
On Wednesday, the Senate Pensions & Retirement and Aging Committee took up Senate Bill 878, a companion to House Bill 1209.
Know a member who goes above and beyond in his or her dedication to SEANC and its efforts? Check out our four categories of awards and submit your nominations by July 26.
Convention time is fast approaching! The 31st Annual Convention website is now live.
What does SEANC and this year's convention theme mean to you? Share what SEANC and this year's theme "Building a Better Tomorrow: Work in Progress" means to you. Send us your video and enter for a chance to win $1,000.
Remembering those we've lost. Help us honor the memory of those members we've lost during the last year. Fill out our Remembrance Form.
Both bills would ensure that the contracts signed between the state treasurer's office and Wall Street money managers regarding your pension dollars would remain secret long after they expire. SB 878 would keep them secret for 10 years, while HB 1209 would reduce that time frame to five years. In practical terms, though, neither is good for taxpayers as these contracts last, on average, 12 to 15 years, and the statute of limitations on securities fraud is only two years - beginning, in most cases, the day the contract is signed. That means that not only would nearly a generation of public employees go by before any information about these contracts would be made public, but that there would be no way for anyone to be held accountable in the case of wrongdoing or mismanagement. However, after SEANC's Legislative Affairs Director Ardis Watkins and Sen. Shirley Randleman (R-Wilkes) spoke in favor of transparency, committee Chairman Sen. Tom Apodaca (RHenderson) adjourned the meeting without taking a vote. Randleman told her fellow committee members that she favored transparency over secrecy, noting that she has yet to receive information regarding the pension fund's real estate holdings from a 2009 request. Watkins told the committee that these pension secrecy bills being pushed by the treasurer are losers for taxpayers and that if they are approved, then the legislators will be the ones ultimately to blame if and when there is a problem with the retirement system. Click here for more on the need for pension transparency, including a video of the latest proceedings.
Want to serve on a statewide committee? Nominations are being accepted now through July 17 for the Insurance Board of Trustees, the Retiree Council and the Scholarship Foundation Board. Click here for more information.
The SEANC Store is now online!
SEANC in the news As the debate between those who believe in pension secrecy and those who believe in transparency continues, both state and national media outlets are taking notice. In a story, "Secrecy in pensions triggers legislative brawl in North Carolina," Bloomberg News writes that even as state Treasurer Janet Cowell moves to invest more funds in 'inherently less transparent' alternative investments, many of which are known for overcharging fees, she is fighting efforts to make those contracts public record. The national business publication then quotes SEANC Legislative Director Ardis Watkins, who explained why the association is opposing Senate Bill 878 and House Bill 1209, "It's going to enshrine bad practices. For a generation it's going to keep the public from knowing what they have a right to know." Locally, in a story, "Dueling bills address transparency of NC pension fund investments," the News & Observer identifies that while Cowell is pushing the bill that would give a legislative stamp of approval to her office's practice of keeping these documents hidden, SEANC has helped to put forward a bill that would make all of these records public. Unfortunately, the N&O story also allows the treasurer's office to misrepresent when the statute of limitations on securities fraud begins. It is not, as her spokeswoman says, when a problem is discovered, but rather, according to a 1993 case, Andrew v. Fitzgerald 823 F. Supp. 356, when the contract begins.
SEANC state and district committees give out more than $120,000 in scholarships The SEANC Scholarship Foundation and the 52 districts recently announced they are giving out more than $120,000 in scholarships to assist more than 100 SEANC members, spouses and dependents attend college this year. Of the $120,000 in awards, $38,000 is given out by the statewide SEANC Scholarship Foundation to 46 well-deserving students. The winners were selected by the statewide committee after being forwarded by their districts and an extensive judging process. There are five categories of statewide scholarships: Four-year financial ($1,000), two-year financial ($500), four-year merit ($1,000), two-year merit ($500), and member-only ($500). Click here for a list of state winners.
More state workers side with SEANC Congrats to the 82 new members who recently chose to empower themselves and the public services they provide by recently joining SEANC! Welcome new members from the General Assembly, Central Piedmont Community College, East Carolina University, Fayetteville State University, Montgomery Technical College, N.C. A&T University N.C. Central University, N.C. State University, Robeson Community College, UNC-Chapel Hill, the state departments of Administration, Commerce Health and Human Services, Public Safety, Transportation, the Administrative Office of the Courts, as well as schools in Alleghany, Granville, Harnett and Wake counties and in Weldon. Contact Lynn Cote for more information on hosting an event at your worksite.
Stay connected with T-Mobile SEANC members are qualified for a special bonus offered through the exciting T-Mobile Advantage Program PLUS: early termination fee reimbursement, no annual service contract and upgrades whenever you wan. For more information, visit the Benefits page on the SEANC website and scroll down to the T-Mobile portal. You must be signed into the website with your member ID to access the portal.
State Employees Association of North Carolina 1621 Midtown Place Raleigh, NC 27609 800-222-2758 | seanc.org