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Overrides: History says chances higher on school choice than freedom to carry | North Carolina

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Alan Wooten | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-08-17 08:01:00


North Carolina’s Legislature faces challenges overriding several gubernatorial vetoes, including a proposed $1,700 tax credit for schoolchildren and permitless concealed carry. While eight vetoes were overridden on July 29, including immigration and firearms measures, others tied to diversity policies and gun laws remain contentious. Bipartisan support helped override some bills, notably the Educational Choice for Children Act, but permitless carry lacks Democratic backing and faces Republican absences. Diversity-related bills saw no Democratic support and mixed Republican attendance. Overrides require three-fifths majorities in both chambers, with vote shifts common. Legislative leaders aim to time override efforts strategically amid ongoing political dynamics.

(The Center Square) – Establishing a tax credit program of up to $1,700 in 2027 for North Carolina school children has a historical pathway to overcoming gubernatorial veto, according to pattern analysis by The Center Square.

No permits for concealed carry, however, is quite a bit more challenging.

Outside of the fatigued question on the Legislature putting forth a full two-year spending plan, those two vetoes and three others tied to diversity policies are creating the main storylines for the Legislature’s return next week. The pre-Labor Day session has no guarantees of movement on any; rather, all will depend on chamber leaders having members present and their votes known as to what opportunities will be taken.

Senate President Pro Tempore Phil Berger, R-Rockingham, and Speaker Destin Hall, R-Caldwell, in the House of Representatives have pledged to get the timing right, whether next week or later.

Eight vetoes were overridden into law by both chambers on July 29. They included measures on immigration, what was known as the REINS Act, environmental goals, powers of the state auditor, clarifying men and women, donor privacy, and firearms.

Senators completed the override on four more – two related to diversity policy, one on permitless concealed carry and another on immigration. If the House can get the override for a third diversity bill that originated in its chamber, the Senate is expected to follow suit.

The other two vetoes involve a squatters bill that went an alternative route to first-term Democratic Gov. Josh Stein’s signature, and the federal school choice initiative championed by second-term Republican President Donald Trump.

Plenty of attention was rightly thrust upon the four Democrats in the House of Representatives helping move the Grand Old Party agenda this summer. Reps. Shelly Willingham of Edgecombe County six times and Carla Cunningham of Mecklenburg County five times were most instrumental. Twice each, Reps. Cecil Brockman of Guilford County and Nasif Majeed of Mecklenburg County were on board to get the chamber’s overrides to 72 votes or higher.

For each of the eight vetoes that got an override, at least one Democrat in the House had voted for the measure at passage. Only once – Brockman on donors – did a yes vote switch to no. And once – Rep. Ben Moss, R-Richmond, on the power bill – a Republican changed a no vote to yes at override.

That would bode well for the push – Educational Choice for Children Act (House Bill 87) – to make North Carolina the first in the nation codifying the signature education initiative of the president. Cunningham and Willingham were each on board, though Republicans had three excused and another – Rep. Neal Jackson, R-Moore – choosing not to vote.

It doesn’t bode well for becoming the 30th state to be without permit for concealed carry.

Freedom to Carry NC, known also as Senate Bill 50, not only had no Democrats in the House at passage, but it also has Republican Reps. William Brisson of Bladen County and Ted Davis Jr. of New Hanover County with no votes at passage. Ten other Republicans took excused absences, including notably Rules Chairman John Bell of Wayne County, Rep. Tricia Cotham of Mecklenburg County and Rep. Allen Chesser of Nash County.

The North Carolina Border Protection Act, known also as Senate Bill 153, was straight party line. The 11 excused absences among Republicans included notables Cotham and Rep. Erin Pare, R-Wake.

For the package of bills on diversity, equity and inclusion, the proposals would respectively take them out of state agencies, K-12 education, and higher education. None drew a Democrat’s vote in either chamber.

On the Republican side, Reps. Jackson, John Blust of Guilford County, Brenden Jones of Columbus County and John Sauls of Lee County had excused absences for all three votes; Hall and Rep. Edwin Goodwin of Chowan County chose not to vote on the higher ed bill; and Rep. Mike Clampitt of Swain County chose not to vote on the state agencies bill.

Six other Republicans also had excused absences mixed among the three votes.

Three-fifths majorities are needed in each chamber to get an override, both chambers must accomplish it, and there’s only one override vote per bill. Republicans have majorities of 30-20 in the Senate and 71-49 in the House.

And votes at passage are not guaranteed through veto override. Never was that clearer than the 2023-24 session when a bill related to evictions sailed through the chambers 44-0 and 113-1, only to be vetoed by former Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper. It became law on the strength of override votes of 27-17 and 72-44.

Already on the eight overrides this session, six senators and 12 House members have changed votes at least once from yes at passage to no at override. Respective chamber leaders at three each are Sen. Dan Blue, D-Wake, and Rep. Charles Smith, D-Cumberland. One senator and four House members have already made such changes twice each.

In the 2023-24 session, all 29 vetoes by Cooper were overridden amid 19 senators and 34 House members changing votes at least once between passage and override.

The post Overrides: History says chances higher on school choice than freedom to carry | North Carolina appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Right

The article predominantly reports on legislative actions and veto override efforts in North Carolina with an emphasis on bills favored by Republican lawmakers, such as tax credits for school children, permitless concealed carry, border protection, and anti-diversity policies. While it maintains a largely factual tone, the selection and framing of issues—highlighting GOP achievements and describing Democratic opposition without similar context—suggests a subtle center-right leaning. The language is generally neutral but implicitly supports the Republican legislative agenda by focusing attention on successful overrides and the challenges Democrats face, rather than critically examining the content or broader implications of the policies. Overall, the piece reports on political events and positions but does so through a lens sympathetic to conservative priorities.

News from the South - North Carolina News Feed

Poll: Even with a slip, Stein overwhelmingly favorable | North Carolina

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Alan Wooten | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-08-16 08:01:00


A recent Carolina Journal/Harper Poll shows North Carolina Gov. Josh Stein with a solid 50.5% job approval among likely voters, down 15% from March. Stein, a first-term Democrat and former attorney general, has issued 15 vetoes and proposed a budget $2 billion above the legislature’s offer, with eight vetoes overridden and the budget delayed by 46 days. Opinions on his vetoes are split: 36% see them as cautious policy checks, 33% as political obstruction, and 31% undecided. President Trump holds a 47.8% approval in the state, slightly above national averages, despite a general disapproval majority nationally.

(The Center Square) – Job approval by likely North Carolina voters for Gov. Josh Stein is robustly high and for President Donald Trump running just a tick better than national polling.



Gov. Josh Stein, of North Carolina




Stein, the first-term Democrat with eight years experience as attorney general prior, has dropped a net 15% in five months to 50.5% approving against 30.1% disapproving. In March, approval was 55.6% to 20.4% disapproving, according to a poll taken Monday and Tuesday and released Thursday by Carolina Journal in conjunction with Harper Polling.

His most significant actions in that time have been 15 vetoes and a two-year budget proposal about $2 billion higher than either chamber of the General Assembly. Eight of his vetoes have been overturned, and Friday marked the 46th day late on the spending plan.

Given choices for what Stein’s vetoes reflect, respondents said “a careful approach to policy that checks overreach by the legislative branch” (36%); “a politically motivated obstruction that blocks legislative priorities” (32.9%); and 31% were unsure.

The statewide sampling gave the second-term Republican president an approval of 47.8% and disapproval of 50.3%. In March, he was at 49.5% approval and 48.7% disapproval. Nationally this week, the RealClear Polling average for the time period of July 16 to Thursday is 45.5% approval and 51.5% disapproval.

Trump has won the state in presidential races three consecutive times.

The Carolina Journal/Harper polling of 600 likely voters’ responses were given a 95% confidence level and a margin of error of +/= 3.98%.

The post Poll: Even with a slip, Stein overwhelmingly favorable | North Carolina appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

The article presents polling data and factual information about the approval ratings of North Carolina Governor Josh Stein and former President Donald Trump without using language that promotes a particular ideological viewpoint. It reports on the actions and public perceptions of the political figures, including details such as vetoes and budget proposals, as well as polling statistics, in a straightforward manner. The tone is neutral and descriptive, focusing on presenting the data and differing opinions from respondents rather than advocating for or against any political stance. This adherence to factual reporting without editorializing indicates a centrist, unbiased approach.

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Warren County pastor faces 10 counts related to child porn

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www.youtube.com – WRAL – 2025-08-15 18:42:22


SUMMARY: Warren County pastor Shelton Birkhard, formerly of Zion Global Methodist Church in Norina, faces 10 counts of possession of child pornography involving five images, including children in changing rooms. After his arrest by the FBI, the church immediately removed him from his duties. Church leaders expressed heartbreak and emphasized they do not support his actions. Warren County Sheriff John Branch confirmed Birkhard is in custody with a $200,000 bond and stated no local physical abuse allegations have been identified. Child advocacy group Safe Child urges parents to have body safety conversations and ensure safety protocols, like background checks, are in place in all child-related groups.

A warrant issued for 30-year-old Shelton Burkart alleged that on June 24, 2024, he “knowingly” possessed visual material of children, ages 8 to 12, naked in dressing rooms and engaging in sexual activity.

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What’s up with the trailers at Revol Church in north Asheville? Why so much wet cardboard at the Curbie recycling plant? • Asheville Watchdog

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avlwatchdog.org – JOHN BOYLE – 2025-08-15 06:00:00


Two local issues were addressed: First, unoccupied motor homes parked near Revol Church on Beaverdam Road are part of Asheville Dream Center’s hurricane relief efforts. These RVs provide temporary housing for families displaced by Tropical Storm Helene. The Dream Center, partnering with multiple churches, stores these units on church property with city permission until October 2025, aiming to quickly reassign them to families in need. Second, piles of wet cardboard at the Curbie recycling center in Woodfin are due to a broken collection truck. Despite exposure to rain, the cardboard remains recyclable unless saturated long-term. The company is managing the situation and expects repairs soon.

Today’s round of questions, my smart-aleck replies and the real answers:

Question: What are the unoccupied motor homes doing in the grassy field across from Revol Church on Beaverdam Road? This is the second batch of such motor vehicles. They seem to sit there for months. Thanks for looking into this mystery.

My answer: What are they doing there? Waiting for someone to offer $3,500 a month to rent them.

Real answer: These homes are part of the mission of the Asheville Dream Center, a nonprofit that offers a variety of services and programs to those in need, including providing temporary homes and rebuilding houses for victims of Tropical Storm Helene. The Dream Center is a separate entity from Revol Church, but the church has allowed the Dream Center to store homes there post-Helene.

“The church has been gracious to us, and we partner with about 27 churches in the city,” said Paul Benjamin, a Dream Center board member. “And we’re constantly doing things to impact the community. We find a need and try to fill it.”

After Helene, that was badly needed housing.

“Over the past ten months, the Asheville Dream Center has had the privilege of supporting 22 families with temporary housing after they lost everything in the hurricane,” the Dream Center said in a media statement. “As part of our emergency response, the Asheville Dream Center utilized RVs as a practical solution to provide shelter for displaced families in our region.”

Six recreational vehicles remained parked on the field next to the church, as of early August.

“These units are not in active use at this time but remain on-site as part of our extended Hurricane Helene relief operations,” the center stated. “Revol Church, owner of the property, has been in close communication with the City of Asheville, which has granted permission for these RVs to remain in place until October 2025, in alignment with the city’s extended disaster relief timeline.”

The Dream Center is currently working on three homes in the Barnardsville community, and it has helped complete four home rebuilds in western North Carolina. The nonprofit has helped “clean, clear, and muck out or landscape a dozen homes and properties,” according to its statement.

Benjamin said the organization provides the homes for free to families in need.

“They’re just used until they get housing, and the units come back to us,” Benjamin said. “So these units were already being used, and now we’re just looking for the next families that have a need.”

Benjamin and the Dream Center say they understand that neighbors may have concerns about empty homes being on or near the church site. 

“We can understand the concerns of our neighbors in the community who are seeing these RVs parked on the Revol property,” the group’s statement said. “Every effort is being made to quickly place these units with deserving families.”

Question: For the second week in a row, I’ve found piles of cardboard at the Curbie cardboard recycle center in Woodfin. All of it is saturated with rain. That means it isn’t recyclable now, right? There was a bulldozer waiting for me to finish adding my layer to the heap. I had driven around for a week with a load of cardboard hoping the two absent Dumpsters would return but found they had not by this morning. What’s up?

My answer: I’ve got to think that nonstop driving for a week with a load of cardboard probably wasn’t great for the environment, either, but I do appreciate your determination.

Real answer: This is a situation that looks worse than it is.

A reader wants to know if cardboard that has piled up at the Curbside Recycling facility in Woodfin is now ruined or still recyclable. The company president says it’s piled up because a truck used for the pickups is out of commission. // Provided photo.

“Our truck that normally empties these Dumpsters has been down and in the shop being fixed,” Abe Lawson, president of Curbside Management, the area’s primary recycling entity, told me via email. “We have a sign up for residents to drop cardboard between the Dumpsters on the ground.”

While the piled-up, soggy cardboard looks bad, it’s still usable.

“Being in the elements does not mean that the cardboard is not recyclable,” Lawson said. “In fact, we ask residents who have too much cardboard to fit into their 96 gallon cart to stack it neatly (outside) next to the cart.”

Cardboard can take a pretty decent soaking.

“The wetness only becomes an issue if it is saturated for a prolonged period of time and it starts to break down,” Lawson said Tuesday. “We are/have been collecting the cardboard multiple times a day to keep the piles contained and hope to have the truck back up and running very soon.”


Asheville Watchdog welcomes thoughtful reader comments on this story, which has been republished on our Facebook page. Please submit your comments there.


Asheville Watchdog is a nonprofit news team producing stories that matter to Asheville and Buncombe County. Got a question? Send it to John Boyle at jboyle@avlwatchdog.org or 828-337-0941. His Answer Man columns appear each Tuesday and Friday. The Watchdog’s reporting is made possible by donations from the community. To show your support for this vital public service go to avlwatchdog.org/support-our-publication/

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The post What’s up with the trailers at Revol Church in north Asheville? Why so much wet cardboard at the Curbie recycling plant? • Asheville Watchdog appeared first on avlwatchdog.org



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

The content focuses on community issues such as disaster relief and recycling without evident partisan framing or ideological language. It presents facts and responses from nonprofit organizations and local officials in a straightforward manner, aiming to inform the public on practical matters. The tone and content suggest an objective approach with no apparent lean toward either left or right political perspectives.

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