Brooks Pierce Capital Dispatch: Budget Negotiations Continue, Farm and Energy Choice Bills Become Law

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Two notable bills became law this week and legislators continued budget negotiations.

Budget Negotiations

Budget negotiators this week continued work on a conference committee report for the budget bill (H 259). There was not an agreement by June 30, the end of the state’s fiscal year. Although a new budget was not enacted by June 30, state government operations will continue at the FY 23 level pursuant to the state’s budget continuation law (GS 143C-5-4).    

Farm Bill

Legislators this week overrode Gov. Cooper’s veto of the Farm Bill (S 582). The votes in both chambers—78 to 40 in the House and 29 to 17 in the Senate—met the 60 percent number necessary to override. The bill includes a number of provisions dealing with agriculture such as honey production, timber larceny, hog waste regulations and wetlands.

Energy Choice/Solar Decommissioning

An “energy choice” bill (H 130) that includes solar decommissioning procedures became law this week when Gov. Cooper did not act upon it within 10 days after receiving it. The bill prohibits local governments from adopting any ordinance prohibiting connection, reconnection, modification, or expansion of an energy service based on the type or source of energy. Bill supporters noted that some local governments in other states have enacted such ordinances related to natural gas. The bill also requires owners of utility-scale solar projects to follow certain procedures when decommissioning projects upon cessation of their operation and to establish financial assurance to cover the decommissioning.

Regulatory Reform

The Senate on Wednesday by a 31 to 13 vote passed the Regulatory Reform Act of 2023 (H 600) and sent it to the House. If the House does not agree to the Senate version, both chambers will work on a conference report that will resolve differences between their versions. The bill includes provisions on a variety of topics including watersheds, stormwater, fish harvests, drinking water, environmental permitting, disposal of lithium-ion batteries and solar panels and nonprofit raffles.  

July 4 Holiday Break

Legislators left Raleigh on Thursday and will return on July 10 after taking a week off for the July 4 holiday.

Information about bills and work of the General Assembly can be found at its website: www.ncleg.gov.

DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.

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