Trending
Teacher Appreciation Week restaurant deals & freebies :: WRAL.com
* This post may contain affiliate links and we earn a commission on qualifying purchases.
During Teacher Appreciation Week 2026, multiple restaurants are offering freebies and discounts starting May 4th! Read on for a growing list of offers. Restaurants often announce their deals the day they are valid so check back for additional offers. Keep in mind that these deals are only available at participating locations.
Chick-fil-A
Select Greater Triangle area Chick-fil-A locations are offering a free 4 ct Chick-fil-A Chick-n-Minis or Chick-fil-A Chicken Sandwich on May 5, 2026 when you present your school ID. Check with your specific location to verify if they are participating. See the offer posted on the Chick-fil-A Garner Facebook page.
Chipotle
Chipotle is offering teachers (and healthcare workers) a chance to enter to win a free entrée e-gift card through May 12, 2026. According to their press release:
“Through May 12, Chipotle invites teachers and healthcare workers to enter for a chance to receive a free entrée e-gift card on their respective microsites:
Teachers: teacherthanks.chipotle.com
Healthcare workers: healthcarethanks.chipotle.com
At the conclusion of the entry period, an initial 100,000 teachers and 100,000 healthcare workers will be randomly selected and invited to verify their employment status via ID.me. If potential winners do not verify their employment status, additional potential winners will be selected and invited to verify their status.
Teachers and healthcare workers who successfully verify their employment status within 48 hours will receive a free entrée e-gift card. Winners will be notified starting May 13.”
Insomnia Cookies
Insomnia Cookies is offering teachers (and nurses) a deal May 5-12, according to their Facebook page. Once the specific offer is announced, we’ll update this post.
McAlister’s Deli
McAlister’s Deli is offering teachers (and nurses) a free sweet or unsweet tea at participating locations from May 4-8, 2026 by showing your valid educator or medical ID in-store. There is a limit of 1 per person and no purchase is necessary.
Potbelly
Potbelly is offering teachers (and nurses) a free cookie or regular-sized fountain drink when you buy an entrée from Monday, May 4 through May 12, 2026, according to an e-mail from their PR folks. The offer is available in-shop at participating locations when you show a valid school or healthcare employee ID at checkout. In addition, through Sunday, May 10, get 10% off catering orders over $200 when you use the code SAVE10 at checkout at participating locations.
Ruby Tuesday
Ruby Tuesday is offering teachers (and nurses) a free add-on Garden Bar with any entrée purchase May 5-6, 2026 at participating locations when you show valid I.D. and use code THANKYOU26. Valid for dine-in only. See the offer posted on their Instagram. In addition, get 20% off catering orders of $150 or more with code SCHOOLDEAL through May 9, 2026 at participating locations. See the offer shared on their Instagram.
Whataburger
According to their press release: “On Thursday, May 7, teachers and school staff are invited to start their day with a free, hot breakfast during the brand’s annual Whatateacher celebration.
From 5 to 9 a.m. local time, educators can stop by participating Whataburger restaurants and enjoy their choice of a free Breakfast on a Bun, Honey Butter Chicken Biscuit or Breakfast Taquito with a valid school ID. Promotion hours may vary by location based on operating hours, so Guests are encouraged to check with their local Whataburger for exact timing. Offer is available for dine-in, takeout and drive-thru orders, limit one per person. Eligible recipient must be present to redeem.” This offer is valid at participating locations on May 7, 2026.
.
See the list of Nurse Appreciation Week restaurant deals HERE!
.
Gift Card Offers
Applebee’s: Buy a $50 Applebee’s gift card and get a $10 bonus gift card through 6/28/26. Bonus card expires 8/2/26.
Auntie Anne’s: Buy $25 in Auntie Anne’s gift cards and get two $5 Rewards through May 10, 2026. The $5 rewards are valid through 7/31/26.
Bruegger’s Bagels: Get 20% off e-Gift Cards when purchased online through June 23, 2026.
Cinnabon: Buy $25 in Cinnabon gift cards and get two $5 Rewards through May 10, 2026. The $5 rewards are valid through 7/31/26.
Jamba: Buy $30 in Jamba gift cards and get two $5 Rewards through May 10, 2026. The $5 rewards are valid through 7/21/26.
Moe’s Southwest Grill: Get a $25 gift card for $20 through 5/10/26 on their website.
Outback Steakhouse: Buy $50 in gift cards through 6/21/2026 and receive a $10 bonus card that is valid 6/22-8/23/2026.
Panera Bread: Get a $10 Bonus Card for every $50 in Gift Cards you purchase through May 31, 2026. The Bonus Card is valid 6/1-6/30/26.
Subway: Buy $25 in gift cards and get a free 6″ sub through June 30, 2026.
Texas Road House: Get a $10 Bonus eGift Card for every $50 in gift cards purchased online through 5/15/26.
.
See additional grocery, restaurant and retail deals on the WRAL Smart Shopper page HERE!
.
Trending
Man Utd: Sir Alex Ferguson taken to hospital as a precaution
Sir Alex Ferguson was taken to hospital after falling unwell at Old Trafford shortly before Manchester United’s Premier League match with Liverpool on Sunday.
Sources stressed it was a precautionary move for the 84-year-old former Manchester United manager, and not an emergency situation.
Ferguson, who managed United for 27 years during a glittering reign, watches the club’s games from the directors’ box.
No further update has been provided on his condition after his admission to hospital.
Ferguson had a brain haemorrhage in 2018 which left him seriously ill. He spoke about his recovery in detail three years later.
He was pictured with guests at the stadium on Sunday a couple of hours before kick-off.
Ferguson was subsequently taken in an ambulance from Old Trafford to the hospital.
Club officials are optimistic Ferguson will soon be fit enough to return home.
Trending
Data privacy vs. data security | TeamMate
The strategic impact of data privacy vs. data security
The lines between data privacy and security are blurring, and today’s business environment isn’t making it any easier. Cloud migrations. Rapid digital transformation. The sudden integration of artificial intelligence (AI). Companies are collecting more data than ever before, and it is very hard to keep track of it all. To put this in perspective, Statista and IDC did research that showed the world created and consumed 181 zettabytes of data in 2025.
When a breach occurs, the strategic impact hits hard. Failure in data security leads to ransomware attacks, intellectual property theft, and operations grinding to a halt. On the flip side, failure in data privacy results in massive regulatory fines and a profound loss of customer trust. In the financial services sector, where consumer confidence is the currency that matters most, a privacy misstep can be just as fatal as a breached firewall.
Let’s look at this from the boardroom perspective. Ten years ago, the audit committee might have been satisfied with a simple check-the-box exercise stating that the firewalls were active and antivirus software was up to date. Today? The conversation has entirely changed. Board members are asking pointed questions about data lineage, third-party handlers, and the financial exposure associated with a potential privacy breach. They recognize that a fractured approach to data privacy vs. data security is a massive, unmitigated risk. In the financial services sector, where consumer confidence is the currency that matters most, a privacy misstep can be just as fatal as a breached firewall. Rebuilding a server takes days; rebuilding customer trust takes decades.
Stakeholders view data privacy vs. security not as back-office IT problems but as non-negotiable pillars of organizational health. In fact, The Institute of Internal Auditors’ (The IIA) Risk in Focus Report 2026 found that cybersecurity continues to hold the number one spot in global risk rankings and internal audit priorities. By evaluating the strategic impact of these elements, internal audit can step out of the reactive compliance checker role and become a proactive advisor on risk management.
Data privacy vs. data security: Definitions, differences, and audit implications
You can’t audit what you don’t understand. To effectively evaluate these domains, auditors need clear definitions. They are connected, but they need different controls, frameworks, and ways to evaluate them.
What is data privacy?
Data privacy dictates the rights, usage, and consent governing how data is collected, processed, shared, and destroyed. But for an internal audit, assessing privacy goes far beyond reviewing policy documents to see if the business says it respects consumer rights. As highlighted in ISACA’s 2025 Privacy in Practice analysis, consumer protection should not be based solely on jurisdiction; the ethical burden of privacy belongs to enterprises, not end users. A comprehensive audit requires testing the actual mechanisms enforcing those rights.
Privacy asks the challenging audit questions: Are the automated deletion scripts effectively purging data at the end of its retention lifecycle, or is the organization unnecessarily hoarding data simply because it can? Is sensitive information properly masked or tokenized when used in non-production testing environments? Are we tracking the flow of data through complicated API integrations to make sure that third-party vendors aren’t breaking our consent agreements? To do a full data privacy audit, we need to get our hands dirty and check the architectural level of data minimization and consent management workflows.
What is data security?
Data security is about the technical, physical, and administrative measures that are taken to keep data safe from being accessed or changed (without permission) or destroyed or stolen. Privacy sets the rules for how people can interact, while security puts up the walls.
For seasoned IT auditors, assessing security means moving past basic compliance checklists. Because of insider threats—whether malicious employees or well-meaning staff accidentally emailing unencrypted client data— account for a massive percentage of security incidents, modern audits must heavily scrutinize Zero Trust architectures.
The audit implications here involve deep technical control testing. Rather than just verifying that encryption exists, auditors need to evaluate cryptographic key management lifecycles. They should test the efficacy of Data Loss Prevention (DLP) rules in stopping unauthorized data egress, review Identify and Access Management (IAM) privilege creep, and challenge the rigor of the vulnerability management program. Are we merely running automated network scans, or are we actively testing incident response playbooks and the configurations of our Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) tools?
How data privacy and data security intersect—and why both matter for internal audit
Privacy and security are distinct, but you can’t have one without the other. It is impossible to guarantee privacy without the security infrastructure to protect the data. Conversely, you can have airtight security, including firewalls and zero-trust architecture, and still completely violate privacy laws if you sell a consumer’s data without their explicit consent.
Evaluating this intersection is crucial. A siloed audit approach leaves glaring blind spots. Auditors must assess the extent to which security controls facilitate compliance with privacy regulations, ensuring that data privacy and data security operate in concert to manage information ethically and protect it rigorously.
Key audit considerations for data privacy and security programs
As regulatory pressures mount, internal audit teams must look critically at whether managements’ data governance strategies actually work in practice, not just on paper.
Assessing risk across privacy and security domains
Everything starts with the risk assessment. When looking at data privacy and security, an internal audit must assess the specific threat landscape.
What types of Personally Identifiable Information (PII) does the organization hold? Where does it live? Who has access to it? Internal audit adds immense value by helping organizations establish formal data governance practices, and it’s important to provide a roadmap for scoping these assessments effectively.
Internal Audit also needs to consider organizational changes that suddenly shift the risk profile. Mergers and acquisitions are a great example. When two companies combine, they aren’t just merging bank accounts and office spaces; they are merging entirely different data ecosystems, often with conflicting security postures and privacy standards. Identifying these friction points early is where internal audit can earn its keep.
Can data privacy be achieved without data security?
This is a question that frequently surfaces in the boardroom, and the answer is a definitive no. Can data privacy be achieved without data security? It is impossible. If you lack the security architecture to keep unauthorized users out of your database, any privacy promises you made to your customers are worthless. Security is the foundational infrastructure upon which privacy is built.
Once you identify the risks, you must test the design and operating effectiveness of the controls.
For privacy controls, internal audit needs to evaluate the data retention policies, right-to-be-forgotten procedures, and vendor data agreements. Third parties often handle your most sensitive data. If you aren’t watching them, you are exposed. The role of internal audit in vendor and third-party risk management is critical to preventing downstream privacy violations.
For security controls, test the access management and incident response plans. Are security patches applied on time, or are they sitting in a backlog? Is data encrypted in transit and at rest?
Trending
Ronald Acuña Jr. exits game with apparent left hamstring ailment
Just when it seemed like the Atlanta Braves were starting to turn a corner with injury luck with all of the positive updates on players who are currently on the injury list and Michael Harris II continuing to rake despite quad issues of his own, the injury bug appears to have taken another bite from this squad.
Ronald Acuña Jr. has exited Saturday night’s game against the Colorado Rockies with what appears to be a left hamstring issue. Acuña was simply running out a ground ball to second base and pulled up grabbing at his left hamstring. He walked off the field under his own power but he did need help getting down the stairs according to what we saw on the television broadcast.
We’ll provide more updates as they become available and hopefully it’s not as bad as looks for Acuña.
-
Trending3 weeks agoApril 15, 2026 – MJF vs. Darby Allin for AEW World Title, More
-
Trending2 weeks ago2026 NBA playoffs: Western Conference first-round takeaways
-
Trending2 weeks agoCincinnati Reds Minor League Game Review: April 18, 2026
-
Trending2 weeks ago2026 NFL draft intel, notes: What Adam Schefter is hearing
-
Trending2 weeks agoPeter Lambert’s six shutout innings | 04/22/2026
-
Trending2 weeks agoAsk the Developer Vol. 21: Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream — Part 1 – News
-
Entertainment2 weeks agoChristina Applegate’s friends fearing the worst as ‘hellish’ details of star’s hospitalization are revealed: report
-
Trending2 weeks agoLuka Doncic, Cade Cunningham eligible for NBA season awards
