Bill Summary for S 303 (2015-2016)
Summary date:
- Agriculture
- Animals
- Business and Commerce
- Corporation and Partnerships
- Occupational Licensing
- Courts/Judiciary
- Civil
- Civil Procedure
- Motor Vehicle
- Development, Land Use and Housing
- Environment
- Environment/Natural Resources
- Government
- General Assembly
- Public Records and Open Meetings
- State Agencies
- Department of Administration
- Department of Environmental Quality (formerly DENR)
- Department of Military & Veterans Affairs
- Public Enterprises and Utilities
Bill Information:
View NCGA Bill Details | 2015-2016 Session |
AN ACT TO PROVIDE FURTHER REGULATORY RELIEF TO THE CITIZENS OF NORTH CAROLINA.Intro. by Barefoot, J. Davis, Hise.
View: All Summaries for Bill | Tracking: |
Bill summary
House amendments make the following changes to the 5th edition.
Amendment #1
Amends GS 153A-341 concerning the consideration of a zoning amendment, adding a requirement that the planning board must advise and comment on a proposed zoning amendment's consistency with any comprehensive plan before any consideration by the governing board.
Amends GS 87-10 concerning application for licensure as a general contractor, making a technical correction.
Amendment #2
Deletes Part IV of the act, concerning the Umstead exemption in GS 66-58(b) for the sale of merchandise or services by governmental units, to allow for the lease of parking space, replacing it with provisions that direct the Department of Administration to study and report on recommended legislative changes by which the Umstead Act can be modified to balance limiting governmental participation in business and the State's interest in properly stewarding assets of the State that are unneeded and underused. Requires the Department to submit a report on its findings to the Joint Legislative Commission on Governmental Operations no later than November 1, 2016.
© 2021 School of Government The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
This work is copyrighted and subject to "fair use" as permitted by federal copyright law. No portion of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without the express written permission of the publisher. Distribution by third parties is prohibited. Prohibited distribution includes, but is not limited to, posting, e-mailing, faxing, archiving in a public database, installing on intranets or servers, and redistributing via a computer network or in printed form. Unauthorized use or reproduction may result in legal action against the unauthorized user.