Plain English Summary
This bill requires North Carolina's community colleges to find a unified learning management system by December 2025 and complete the transition by December 2027. It exempts the Community Colleges System Office from state information technology requirements while allowing voluntary participation. The bill also updates North Carolina's Longitudinal Data System to include additional privacy protections (HIPAA, IDEA, CJIS compliance) and clarifies how student and workforce data can be shared among educational institutions.
Arguments in Favor
Supporters argue that a unified learning management system will improve efficiency, reduce costs, and create better alignment between community colleges and K-12 and university systems. The data system updates strengthen privacy protections by explicitly requiring compliance with multiple federal laws and establishing clearer security standards, safeguards, and audit procedures to protect sensitive student information while enabling beneficial research and decision-making across education levels.
Arguments Against
Opponents may worry that a statewide learning management system could reduce flexibility for individual colleges to choose tools that best fit their specific needs, or face transition costs and disruptions during the system changeover. Concerns about the data system include potential privacy risks if safeguards are inadequate, the broad range of agencies accessing student information, and questions about whether de-identification protections are sufficient to prevent re-identification of students in small populations.
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
Senator · District 7

Primary Sponsor
Senator · District 50

Primary Sponsor
Senator · District 43
Cosponsors (2)
Vote Breakdown (3 roll calls)
This bill was signed into law.
Final Vote
On: Second Reading
Party Breakdown