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Squatters bill adjusted, will return to House floor | North Carolina

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www.thecentersquare.com – By David Beasley | The Center Square contributor – (The Center Square – ) 2025-07-29 05:49:00


The North Carolina House Rules Committee approved revised legislation addressing eviction of squatters from private property, removing controversial Senate additions on classroom cellphone use and pet shop regulations that led to Gov. Josh Stein’s veto. The bill now requires a magistrate hearing within 48 hours of a property owner’s complaint. Stein opposed the original bill due to a provision banning local pet shop regulations, fearing it would enable inhumane puppy mills. The updated bill returns to the full House. Additionally, the committee approved a joint resolution for legislative adjournment with planned short sessions amid ongoing budget negotiations.

(The Center Square) – Eviction of squatters from private property is in adjusted legislation approved by the Rules Committee of the North Carolina House of Representatives, a move toward settling the dispute of a veto from the governor.

The bill stripped out provisions added by the Senate that regulate student’s use of cellphones in the classroom and also removes a ban on local government regulation of pet shops, which caused Gov. Josh Stein to issue one of his 14 vetoes.

“They decided to add something that didn’t belong,” Rep. Julia Howard, R-Davie, a real estate agent, told the committee about the Senate’s classroom cellphone addition to the bill. “We are bringing it back under Senate Bill 55, and it is the exact language that we had in the original squatter’s bill, with two small exceptions.”

Under the legislation adopted by the committee, a hearing before a magistrate would be required within 48 hours of a complaint filed by a property owner. Similar legislation was originally sponsored last year, passed the House but not the Senate.

“This legislation originally addressed squatters, and I supported it,” Stein wrote in the veto. ”At the last moment, however, an unrelated amendment was added that prohibits local governments from regulating pet stores. This bill would facilitate inhumane puppy mills in North Carolina. Without this provision, I would sign the legislation. With it, I cannot support it.”

The new version of the bill now goes back before the full House.

The Rules Committee also approved a proposed joint House-Senate resolution for adjournment as the Legislature remains undecided on a new two-year state budget that was due to begin July 1.

Under the proposal, the legislators would convene for three-day sessions in August and September followed by one-day “check-in” sessions every 30 days after until a short session April 21 of next year.

“It is hoped that we can work with the Senate to get this resolved,” said Rules Committee Chairman John Bell, R-Wayne. “This is our attempt to do just that.”

The post Squatters bill adjusted, will return to House floor | 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 a straightforward report on legislative developments in North Carolina without endorsing any particular viewpoint. It neutrally describes the actions of both Republican and Democratic figures, including the governor’s veto and the legislature’s response, using factual language and balanced quotations. The content focuses on conveying the procedural aspects and differing positions without employing loaded language or framing that would suggest an ideological bias. Thus, it adheres to neutral, factual reporting rather than promoting a specific political stance.

News from the South - North Carolina News Feed

To require full Social Security numbers to register to vote, NC would need to hurdle a federal law

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ncnewsline.com – Lynn Bonner – 2025-08-26 05:00:00

SUMMARY: North Carolina’s proposed House Bill 958 would require voters to provide their full Social Security numbers when registering, a move experts say violates the 1974 federal Privacy Act, which prohibits denying rights for refusing to disclose full SSNs. Current law accepts less sensitive identifiers like driver’s license numbers or the last four SSN digits. Critics, including privacy advocates and voting rights groups, warn this requirement risks identity theft and creates barriers to voting without enhancing security. Legislators sponsoring the bill have yet to justify the full SSN demand, and the measure faces legal and procedural challenges as it advances through the House.

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The post To require full Social Security numbers to register to vote, NC would need to hurdle a federal law appeared first on ncnewsline.com

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Man killed in train crash at Clayton railroad crossing

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www.youtube.com – WRAL – 2025-08-25 18:18:39


SUMMARY: A man, 62-year-old Bryant Alton, died after his car was struck by a Norfolk Southern cargo train at the Clayton railroad crossing near Central and East Maine around 10:45 a.m. Alton reportedly tried to bypass lowered crossing arms with flashing lights when the collision occurred. The crash severely damaged his Toyota Corolla, and police closed nearby streets for investigation and cleanup. This is the second fatal train incident in Clayton this month, following the death of a 21-year-old UNCW student hit by an Amtrak train. Local residents expressed shock, and officials have yet to respond about potential safety improvements.

A Clayton man died after attempting to drive around crossing gates at a railroad crossing on Monday morning.

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Transportation energy prices below national norm as Labor Day approaches | North Carolina

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Alan Wooten | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-08-25 09:11:00


North Carolina motorists are paying about 30 cents less per gallon for gasoline than the national average, with the state average at $2.86 for unleaded gas and $3.45 for diesel. Prices are slightly lower in the mountains and higher along the coast. Compared to last year, gas and diesel prices have decreased. The state follows EPA rules requiring summer blend fuel until September 15, adding 10-15 cents per gallon. North Carolina has over 8 million combustion engine vehicles and more than 100,000 electric vehicles, with EV charging rates below the national average. Motor fuel taxes fund state transportation projects.

(The Center Square) – As they often have throughout the summer, motorists in North Carolina are paying about 30 cents less than the nation on average for gasoline.

Summer’s unofficial closing of Labor Day weekend arrives this week, with many families already in the state’s tourism meccas. The state average for a gallon of unleaded gasoline is $2.86, with prices a little lower in the mountains and a tick higher along the 320 miles of ocean shoreline.

A year ago, the state average was $3.11, according to the American Automobile Association. The average for diesel is $3.45, down from $3.64 a year ago.

Nationally, the unleaded gas average is $3.16, down from $3.35 last year, and diesel is $3.68, down slightly from $3.70, respectively.

Per Environmental Protection Agency rules in place from June 1 to Sept. 15, the less volatile summer blend fuel must be sold. Price impact is generally considered 10 cents to 15 cents higher per gallon.

Combustion engine consumers make up more than 8 million vehicle registrations in the nation’s ninth-largest state.

North Carolina’s electric vehicle charging rate average, according to AAA, is 33.2 cents per kilowatt-hour. The national average is 36.3 cents per kWh. More than 100,000 zero-emission vehicles are registered in the state. At the start of the calendar year, the state norm was 33.5 cents per kWh and the national was 34.7 cents per kWh.

Ten states have lower average prices for a gallon of unleaded; 14 are lower for diesel; and seven are lower in electric.

Among 14 major metro areas, the least expensive average for unleaded gas is in Fayetteville at $2.76. The most expensive area is the Durham-Chapel Hill metro area at $2.92.

Diesel is the most consumer-friendly ($3.29) in the Hickory-Lenoir-Morganton market.

North Carolina’s 40.3 cents per gallon tax rate for 2025 is topped by California (59.6), Pennsylvania (57.6), Washington (49.4), Illinois (47), Maryland (46.1), and New Jersey (44.9).

Motor fuel taxes in the state fund the Department of Transportation’s highway and multi-modal projects, accounting for more than half of the state transportation resources. The revenues go into the Highway Fund and the Highway Trust Fund.

The post Transportation energy prices below national norm as Labor Day approaches | 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

This article provides a straightforward report on gasoline and diesel prices in North Carolina compared to national averages, along with information about electric vehicle charging rates and state fuel taxes. The language is neutral and factual, focusing on data, statistics, and relevant state policies without endorsing or criticizing any political ideology or party. The content neither advances a particular political perspective nor uses charged language, making it a clear example of neutral, factual reporting rather than an article with discernible political bias.

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