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Legislative Update: May 2021 | Nexsen Pruet, PLLC

To embed, copy and paste the code into your website or blog: The General Assembly had a light week, with the House of Representatives holding no floor votes and only having committee meetings on Thursday. The Senate was in Raleigh this week but also took very few votes. Neither chamber is expected to conduct business until Tuesday.  In response to last week’s fuel shortage caused by the Colonial pipeline cyber-attack, the Senate Agriculture, Environment, Natural Resources, and Energy Committee heard from a panel of energy and fuel transportation leaders on ways the state can better prepare for a similar event in the future. Most of the meeting focused on North Carolina’s dependence on one pipeline for gasoline. 

Gov Cooper introduces the first North Carolina plan for rebuilding with American Rescue Plan resources

Gov. Cooper last week released his plan for American Rescue Plan dollars, focusing primarily on the $5.7 billion in federal funds that will be available to North Carolina to shift from relief and response to rebuilding and recovery. There’s a lot of merit to the governor’s proposal, but the long-term impact will hinge on how these investments are made and whether the legislature gets serious about meeting the needs that cannot be addressed with federal money alone.  The dollars coming to North Carolina were an essential part of the American Rescue Plan, a transformational piece of federal legislation signed into law on March 11, 2021, that will reduce child poverty nationwide by half. The allocation of federal funds for states and local governments, in particular, addresses the critical role that state and local leaders and public institutions must play in addressing systemic failures and responding to the greatest need.  

North Carolina General Assembly Week in Review - May 2021 #3 | McGuireWoods Consulting

To embed, copy and paste the code into your website or blog: With crossover behind us, the legislature was a bit slower this week. While calendars were not jam packed with back-to-back committee meetings, lawmakers were still in town to discuss and approve several important pieces of legislation. We will focus on some of those bills in this week s newsletter. As of Thursday morning, in the state of North Carolina, there were 1,187 confirmed cases of the coronavirus, 793 individuals hospitalized, and sadly, 12,950 confirmed deaths. There have been 7,989,892 doses of the vaccine distributed in NC, which is about 52% of the total adult population.

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