Mike Clampitt
Election Day: November 3, 2026 · Register to vote at ncsbe.gov
Sponsored Bills (25)
2026 Wildlife Resources Changes
This bill makes several changes to North Carolina's wildlife laws, including protecting sensitive information about rare species locations, authorizing new wildlife-themed vehicle registration plates, adjusting recreational boating safety rules, and allowing the Wildlife Resources Commission to issue elk hunting permits through raffles and auctions to raise conservation funds.
Various Local Provisions II
This bill makes several local changes to North Carolina law: it restricts wake surfing in Lake Glenville to 200 feet from shore and other watercraft; changes the Town of Louisburg's election timing and methods for selecting council members and mayors; and authorizes Henderson County, Johnston County, and Rutherford County to construct and finance community college buildings on their respective community college campuses.
Transylvania Rural Development Authority
This bill establishes the Transylvania Rural Development Authority, an independent organization to promote economic development in Transylvania County. The Authority will be governed by a nine-member board appointed by the Transylvania Economic Alliance and will have the powers granted to rural development authorities under state law.
Motorcycle Road Guard Safety Act
This bill creates a Motorcycle Road Guard Certification Program that allows trained and certified motorcycle riders to direct traffic while escorting motorcycle groups along approved public routes. Certified road guards must meet safety standards, hold a valid motorcycle driver's license endorsement, and complete a Division-developed certification course, with routes requiring approval from local police chiefs or sheriffs.
Adopt State Veterans Museum
This bill designates the Veterans History Museum of the Carolinas in Brevard as North Carolina's official state veterans history museum. The museum, which opened in 2016, preserves military artifacts and honors veterans through exhibits, educational programs, and community gathering spaces.
Responsible Firefighting Foam Management Act
This bill prohibits the use of firefighting foams containing PFAS chemicals (a type of 'forever chemical') for training and practice purposes by firefighters and emergency responders in North Carolina. It allows PFAS-containing foam to still be used in actual emergencies but requires safe containment and disposal when used for testing, and mandates the use of non-fluorinated alternative foams for training instead.
School Internet Emergency Access Act
This bill requires North Carolina's Department of Public Instruction to develop a plan for providing temporary internet service to public schools during emergencies and establishes a funded Emergency Internet Service Fund. The bill appropriates $3.9 million for the 2025-2026 school year to support this emergency internet access program.
AEDs and CPR in Schools
This bill requires North Carolina public schools to install at least two Automatic External Defibrillators (AEDs) in each school building, provide training to school personnel on AED and CPR use, and maintain the devices according to state board rules. The bill applies to all public school types including traditional public schools, charter schools, and regional schools, with implementation beginning in the 2025-2026 school year.
Muddy Sneakers/St. Gerard House
This bill appropriates $500,000 in recurring funds to the Muddy Sneakers program to support hands-on science learning for fifth graders, and $2,750,000 in nonrecurring funds to St. Gerard House to support autism treatment programs. Both appropriations are funded from the General Fund and take effect July 1, 2025.
Cosponsored Bills (50)
Revise Laws on Minors/Human Trafficking
This bill strengthens laws protecting minors by amending obscenity and harmful material statutes, requiring courts to consider sex offender registration for certain convictions involving minors, and directing the Human Trafficking Commission to study and develop a statewide human trafficking reporting system. It also adds human trafficking awareness training requirements for vacation rental employees.
NC Farmland and Military Protection Act
This bill prohibits entities controlled by adversarial foreign governments from purchasing, leasing, or holding agricultural land or property within 50 miles of North Carolina military installations. It requires existing foreign owners to register with the Secretary of State, allows the Attorney General to enforce violations through forced sales, and establishes penalties for non-compliance.
Equality in State Agencies/Prohibition on DEI
This bill prohibits North Carolina state agencies and local governments from spending money on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs, policies, or staff positions. It defines DEI as initiatives that influence hiring or employment based on race, sex, color, ethnicity, nationality, country of origin, or sexual orientation outside of merit-based processes, and establishes penalties for violations including fines up to $10,000 and potential removal from employment.
Educational Choice for Children Act (ECCA)
This bill allows North Carolina to participate in a federal tax credit program that enables individuals to receive tax credits for donations they make to scholarship granting organizations. The state Education Assistance Authority must identify and maintain a list of qualifying scholarship organizations and submit it to the U.S. Treasury, allowing these organizations to provide scholarships for K-12 education expenses including homeschooling.
Elect SBE/Superintendent as SBE Chair
This bill proposes a constitutional amendment to change how the State Board of Education is structured and led. Instead of being appointed by the Governor, most board members would be elected by voters in districts for four-year terms, and the Superintendent of Public Instruction would serve as the board's chair. Voters would decide on this amendment in November 2026, with changes taking effect in 2028.
Lower Healthcare Costs
This bill aims to lower healthcare costs and increase price transparency in North Carolina through multiple measures: requiring hospitals and surgical facilities to publicly report pricing information on common procedures, mandating clear billing disclosures to patients about out-of-network providers, establishing good-faith cost estimates for scheduled procedures, limiting facility fees charged by hospitals, and strengthening prior authorization and appeals processes for health insurance.
Healthcare Workforce Reforms
House Bill 67 is a comprehensive healthcare workforce reform law that includes multiple provisions: allowing interstate medical licensure compacts for physicians and physician assistants, creating an international physician employee license pathway, expanding clinical psychologist scope of practice, enabling pharmacists to test for and treat influenza and establish collaborative practices, and modifying requirements for physician assistants and other healthcare providers to practice in team-based settings. The bill also requires surgical smoke evacuation systems in hospitals and ambulatory surgical centers, and expands behavioral health workforce eligibility through community college degrees.
Fostering Care in NC Act
This comprehensive bill makes several changes to North Carolina's child welfare and social services systems. Key provisions expand the Guardianship Assistance Program to include youth as young as 10 years old, establish procedures for judges to issue permanent no-contact orders against defendants convicted of violent offenses, make it a felony when caregivers commit or allow sexual acts against children under 16, and require cities and counties to conduct criminal history background checks for any applicant offered a position working with children.
Various Local Election Changes II
This bill makes several local election changes across North Carolina counties and municipalities. It modifies how Cabarrus County fills board vacancies, changes Currituck and Pitt County school board elections to partisan (with Currituck requiring voter approval), shifts all Pamlico County municipal elections and the Village of Simpson to even-numbered years, and changes Monroe's municipal elections to even-numbered years on a partisan basis.
Voting Record (627)
- Yea2025-04-29
2025 State Investment Modernization Act.-AB
- Yea2025-04-29
2025 Omnibus Labor Amendments.-AB
- Yea2025-04-29
Responsible Firefighting Foam Management Act
- Yea2025-04-29
Moped Regulation
- Yea2025-04-29
AOC Agency Requests.-AB
- Yea2025-04-29
County Tier Designation Study Bill
- Yea2025-04-29
Disposition Placement/Findings of Fact
- Yea2025-04-29
Reg'l Water Study/IBT Subbasin/TMDL
- Yea2025-04-29
Local Gov'ts/System Development Fees
- Yea2025-04-29
POW/MIA Flag/State Bldgs. & Schools
- Yea2025-04-29
Criminal Law Procedures
- Yea2025-04-29
Home-Based Business Fairness Act
- Yea2025-04-29
House BOG Elections
- Yea2025-04-29
Second Amendment Financial Privacy Act
- Yea2025-04-29
Second Amendment Financial Privacy Act
- Yea2025-04-29
Annual Rep't Due Date/Deployed Servicemembers
- Yea2025-04-29
Adopt SUDEP Awareness Week
- Yea2025-04-29
Revise Voluntary Ag. District Laws
- Yea2025-04-29
Access to Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
- Yea2025-04-29
Pharmacy Benefits Manager Provisions