Plain English Summary
This bill makes technical corrections to North Carolina state law by repealing obsolete language from past executive branch reorganizations (particularly from 1971 and 1973), reorganizing where certain statutes are located in the General Statutes, and making various other minor changes to improve clarity and accuracy in state law. The bill does not change the actual functions or powers of state agencies, but cleans up outdated references and reorganizes legal code.
Arguments in Favor
Supporters argue this bill improves North Carolina's legal code by removing confusing language about reorganizations that occurred decades ago, making it easier for citizens and lawyers to understand current law. By reorganizing and clarifying outdated provisions, the bill reduces potential legal confusion and makes state statutes more accessible and logically organized. The General Statutes Commission recommended these technical corrections to keep state law current and coherent.
Arguments Against
Opponents might argue that large technical correction bills can be difficult to scrutinize thoroughly and could inadvertently affect how laws are interpreted or applied, even when that is not the intent. Some may be concerned that reorganizing and removing historical language could potentially affect legal precedents or interpretations that relied on the previous statutory structure, though proponents would counter that the substantive law remains unchanged.
AI-generated analysis based on bill text. Always verify with official sources at ncleg.gov. This is not legal or political advice.
Sponsors
Vote Breakdown (2 roll calls)
Final Vote
On: A1 Davis Second Reading
Party Breakdown
