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Personal Privacy Protection Act

PassedWarren Daniel (R)Senate2025–2026 Session
AI Generated

This bill prohibits North Carolina public agencies from collecting, disclosing, or publicly releasing personal information about members, volunteers, and donors to nonprofit organizations, except in limited legal circumstances like court-ordered warrants or litigation with protective orders. Violations can result in civil lawsuits for damages of at least $2,500 per violation, up to triple that amount for intentional violations, plus attorneys' fees, and can constitute a Class 2 misdemeanor.

Arguments in Favor

Supporters argue this bill protects First Amendment associational rights by preventing government surveillance of nonprofit donors and supporters, which could chill charitable giving and civic participation. They contend that nonprofit membership and donor lists are sensitive personal information that should not be vulnerable to public disclosure, and that the law includes reasonable exemptions for legitimate law enforcement and legal proceedings.

Arguments Against

Opponents worry the bill may hamper government oversight and accountability by restricting public agencies' ability to investigate fraud, conflicts of interest, or misuse of public funds involving nonprofit organizations and their donors. They also raise concerns that the broad protections could shield illegal activity from discovery in civil litigation and that the financial penalties and criminal provisions may discourage legitimate government inquiries into nonprofit compliance with state and federal law.

AI-generated analysis based on bill text. Always verify with official sources at ncleg.gov. This is not legal or political advice.

Sponsors

Cosponsors (4)

Vote Breakdown (10 roll calls)

This bill was signed into law.

Final Vote

Veto Override AttemptJul 29, 2025
Passed
74
Yea
46
Nay
0
Not Voting
0
Absent
74 Yea46 Nay
Republican71 Yea·0 Nay
Democrat3 Yea·46 Nay