Plain English Summary
This bill creates a State Critical Infrastructure and Construction Resiliency Fund administered by the Governor. The fund would be financed by diverting 5% of highway use tax revenue from counties that have experienced gubernatorial disaster declarations in the past three years, and the Governor could use these funds for disaster-related construction, infrastructure, and response activities in affected counties.
Arguments in Favor
Supporters argue this bill helps communities prepare for and recover from disasters more quickly by creating dedicated funding for resilience projects and infrastructure improvements. Proponents contend that counties repeatedly affected by disasters need reliable resources to rebuild critical infrastructure and reduce future disaster impacts, and that this mechanism ensures disaster-prone areas contribute to their own preparedness.
Arguments Against
Opponents worry that diverting 5% of highway tax revenue from disaster-affected counties reduces local funding for road maintenance and other essential services when those counties are already financially stressed. Critics also question whether the Governor should have sole discretion over fund use without local input, and whether taking tax revenue from struggling counties is the fairest way to fund disaster preparation, particularly if some counties are hit more frequently than others.
AI-generated analysis based on bill text. Always verify with official sources at ncleg.gov. This is not legal or political advice.
Sponsors
Cosponsors (11)
Representative · District 114
Representative · District 42
Representative · District 115
Representative · District 41
Representative · District 8
Representative · District 72
Representative · District 45
Representative · District 61
Representative · District 88
Representative · District 103
Representative · District 101
