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LRC Study Paper Towns

EngrossedStephen Ross (R)House2025–2026 Session
AI Generated

This bill directs the Legislative Research Commission to study North Carolina towns that exist legally but do not provide adequate services to residents. The study will examine towns incorporated since 1995, assess whether they're delivering promised services, and recommend whether the General Assembly should suspend or revoke their charters if they're failing to serve residents properly.

Arguments in Favor

Supporters argue that some incorporated towns fail to deliver basic services like police, fire, water, or planning that justified their creation, yet still collect taxes and regulate property. This study would identify 'paper towns' that exist in name only and potentially allow the state to take action—such as charter revocation—to either improve service delivery or dissolve ineffective municipalities, protecting taxpayers from paying for government services they don't actually receive.

Arguments Against

Opponents may argue that studying and potentially revoking town charters raises questions about local autonomy and the stability of local government. They might contend that some towns have legitimate reasons for limited services, that the state should work with towns to improve rather than revoke charters, and that this study could lead to unwanted state intervention in local governance decisions made by residents.

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

Sponsors

Cosponsors (3)

Vote Breakdown (1 roll call)

Final Vote

House Initial PassageApr 30, 2025

On: Second Reading

Passed
99
Yea
3
Nay
7
Not Voting
11
Absent
99 Yea3 Nay
Republican60 Yea·3 Nay
Democrat39 Yea·0 Nay