www.thecentersquare.com – By David Beasley | The Center Square contributor – (The Center Square – ) 2025-03-18 16:10:00
(The Center Square) – North Carolina agencies would have to get legislative approval for any new regulation that would have more than $1 million in economic impact under bills introduced Friday in the Senate and House of Representatives.
The legislation is part of a nationwide push by conservative groups such as Americans for Prosperity to stop unelected state agency leaders from raising costs for businesses by adding new regulations.
“The NC REINS Act is about giving the people of North Carolina a stronger voice in the rules that shape their lives,” state Rep. Allen Chesser, R-Nash, in a news conference Tuesday. “Right now, unelected bureaucrats can impose regulations with major financial consequences without direct oversight from the General Assembly. The current process is not transparent. We can do better.”
This is not a new issue, Dalton Clark, legislative liaison for Americans for Prosperity said Tuesday.
“It’s something that has been debated several times at the General Assembly,” Clark said. “I think the No. 1 question we’ve got is ‘Why now?”
The legislation now has “overwhelming” bipartisan support, Clark said. A poll shows 80% support for the bill, he said.
Donald Bryson, CEO of the Locke Foundation, said his organization has been pushing for this type of legislation for a decade.
“This is about good governance overall and reinstating accountability and transparency to democratic governance,” he said. ”At what point does a rule or regulation that’s created become so large that it in fact should be a law?”
The proposal “clarifies this strange gray area,” Bryson said.
Similar legislation is pending in at least a dozen states, including Georgia and South Carolina, said Jaimie Cavanaugh, legal policy counsel at Pacific Legal Foundation. Wyoming passed a bill this year, she said.
The Center Square was unsuccessful getting comment from Gov. Josh Stein’s office before publication.
Some legislative critics of the proposal have said that the proposal could be dangerous because it would create an extra layer of approval for regulations aimed at protecting public health.
www.thecentersquare.com – By Alan Wooten | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-04-17 15:09:00
(The Center Square) – Restrictions on K-12 students’ use of cellphones is in the Senate’s state budget proposal and in legislation originating in the state House of Representatives that has reached the Senate’s rules committee.
The outcome of negotiations for a budget between the Senate, House of Representatives and Gov. Josh Stein will determine what language, if any, comes forward and from where. The House has yet to release its two-year spending proposal.
And the cellphones in schools issue, if the House vote is an indicator, is agreed upon in General Assembly chambers holding significant Republican majorities.
The Center Square was unsuccessful getting response this week from House Speaker Destin Hall, R-Caldwell, and Senate Rules Committee Chairman Bill Rabon, R-Brunswick. Cell-Phone Free Education, known also as House Bill 87, passed the House 114-3 a day prior to going into the Senate Rules Committee.
The one-page House legislation says in part, “At the beginning of each school year, governing bodies of public school units shall notify parents of all students enrolled in the public school unit of the Cell Phone-Free Education Policy adopted under subsection (a) of this section.”
That subsection says, “Governing bodies of public school units shall adopt a cell phone-free education policy to eliminate or severely restrict student access to cell phones during instructional time.”
In the public instruction section of the Senate budget proposal, the language in part says governing bodies shall establish wireless communication policy, and sans exceptions, shall “prohibit students from using, displaying, or having a wireless communication device turned on during instructional time.”
Exceptions include teachers’ instructing use; as required by a student’s individualized education program; or to manage a student’s health care per documented medical conditions.
www.thecentersquare.com – By Alan Wooten | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-04-16 15:56:00
(The Center Square) – Within North Carolina’s $111.1 billion agriculture industry, American tariff target China is the leading export market including for pork, poultry, lumber and tobacco.
The 2024 agricultural exports there topped $691 million. President Donald Trump’s moves in some cases are removing cloaks of darkness, and in others are pushing the state’s industry leaders to encourage patience. Some, such as heads of key product organizations, want the tariff war to end sooner rather than later.
In an email to The Center Square, Agriculture Commissioner Steve Troxler wrote of China in part, “We have worked hard to develop strong business relationships there and want to see them continue. Unfortunately, when there’s a disagreement over tariffs other countries hit us through agriculture. From the last time we experienced trade disputes because of tariffs, the Trump administration was very good at looking after farmers interests and we certainly hope it happens this time.
Steve Troxler, North Carolina agriculture commissioner
NCAGR.gov
“In reviewing the tariff levels that other countries have in place on agricultural products, I was appalled that we were under those kinds of business restrictions.”
Agriculture and agribusiness have been the state’s No. 1 industry forever. About 42,500 farms are operated on 8.1 million acres from Murphy to Manteo. The state is eighth in the nation in value of agricultural products sold, 14th in exports.
North Carolina production is No. 1 nationally each in sweetpotatoes, all tobacco, flue-cured tobacco, and poultry and eggs. The state is No. 2 in Christmas tree sales, production of turkeys, and food-size trout sold. It is No. 3 in cucumbers and hogs, No. 4 in peanuts and broilers (chicken), and No. 5 in cotton.
Brooke Rollins, secretary of the U.S. Department of Agriculture
USDA.gov
U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins over the weekend said farmers and ranchers have not been treated well in the tariff regime of other countries for decades. Michelle Grainger, executive director of the nonprofit NC Sweetpotato Commission, said she appreciates the efforts to address imbalances.
“That said,” Grainger wrote in an email to The Center Square, “for North Carolina sweetpotato growers, what matters most is stability – in the marketplace, in the supply chain, and in trade relationships. Protection against unfair practices is important, but so is access to global markets.
“When disruptions occur, it’s not just lost sales – it’s lost relationships, and those are hard to rebuild. A balanced approach that protects U.S. farmers while preserving long-term trade opportunities is critical to our success.”
According to the Peterson Institute for International Economics, tariffs by China on American products and America on Chinese products was 21.5% or lower from January 2018 until this year. Since Feb. 4, China has four times retaliated against imposed U.S. tariff increases. Chinese tariffs on U.S. exports have gone from 6.5% in January seven years ago to 147.6%, and U.S. tariffs on Chinese exports have gone, respectively, from 10.3% to 124.1%.
Grainger suggests “negotiated solutions and targeted enforcement – rather than broad tariffs – offer a better path forward.” Lessons are available from the past, she said.
“One is that agriculture can inadvertently become collateral damage in broader trade disputes as happened with the soybean industry,” she says. “While we understand the need to confront unfair labor practices, blanket tariffs can cause significant hardship for farmers – especially those who depend on exports to grow and diversify their markets, as well as the added cost pressures on inputs that come from other countries.
“Another lesson is the importance of predictability. Sudden shifts in trade policy disrupt planning, investment, and supply chain relationships.”
Roy Lee Lindsey, CEO of the North Carolina Pork Council, told The Center Square in an email that international trade, and the ability to trade freely is critical and vital to North Carolina farmers.
“More than 25% of America’s pork production is exported to high-value markets” around the world, Lindsey says. “We are vigorously opposed to retaliatory tariffs on American products, including those affecting our pork producers. Retaliatory actions against food, and pork, are the wrong approach to resolving trade disputes.”
Lindsey said U.S. pork is in demand, and barriers to market access “impact our ability to serve.”
Smithfield Foods operates the world’s largest pork processing plant in the crossroads community of Tar Heel, just south of Fayetteville on N.C. 87. The 1 million square-foot facility employs about 5,000 people and produces an average of 8 million pounds of meat daily.
Mountaire Farms operates America’s largest broiler-processing plant in Lumber Bridge, just south of Fayetteville on N.C. 71. The plant employs about 3,400 people and produces an average of more than 500,000 chickens per day.
“Tariffs are a complicated process, and it is difficult to predict an outcome,” says Troxler, the sixth-term agriculture commissioner. “This is a negotiating tactic by the Trump administration, and it will take time. History has shown us that getting countries to negotiate is a long and tedious process.
“Hopefully, these tariffs will give us a better place to negotiate from and we will be able to come up with something that’s much more favorable to the United States.”
SUMMARY: Democratic lawmakers in North Carolina held a Tax Day roundtable to hear residents’ concerns on budget priorities, with education, healthcare, and social services cuts at the forefront. Constituents expressed fears that rising costs, including housing and groceries, were making basic necessities unaffordable. Workers, especially those earning minimum wage, struggled to sustain families. Residents also voiced concerns about overcrowded classrooms, inadequate child care, and the state’s failure to support communities recovering from recent disasters. Lawmakers Sen. Graig Meyer and Sen. Natalie Murdock pledged to advocate for more targeted spending and revenue replacement to protect essential services.