Plain English Summary
The NC REACH Act requires all students graduating from UNC constituent institutions with a bachelor's degree and community colleges with an associate degree to complete at least three credit hours of American history or American government instruction. The course must include reading eight specified founding documents and Constitution-related texts, with a cumulative final exam counting for at least 20% of the grade, while replacing an existing elective rather than adding credit hour requirements.
Arguments in Favor
Supporters argue this bill ensures all college graduates have foundational knowledge of American history, government, and constitutional principles. They contend that exposure to primary documents like the Constitution, Declaration of Independence, and speeches by Martin Luther King Jr. and George Washington promotes civic literacy and shared understanding of American values across the state's higher education system.
Arguments Against
Opponents worry the bill reduces curriculum flexibility by mandating specific course content and documents rather than letting institutions and instructors determine course materials. They also raise concerns about the tight deadline for implementation (2026-2027), potential accreditation conflicts, and whether penalties like removing chancellors are appropriate enforcement mechanisms for curriculum requirements.
AI-generated analysis based on bill text. Always verify with official sources at ncleg.gov. This is not legal or political advice.
Sponsors

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 68

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 13

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 52

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 79
Cosponsors (6)
Representative · District 43
Representative · District 26
Representative · District 17
Representative · District 84
Representative · District 119
Representative · District 82