Bill Summary for H 169 (2015-2016)
Summary date:
- Alcoholic Beverage Control
- Animals
- Development, Land Use and Housing
- Building and Construction
- Property and Housing
- Education
- Elementary and Secondary Education
- Higher Education
- Environment
- Environment/Natural Resources
- Government
- APA/Rule Making
- State Agencies
- Department of Administration
- Department of Natural and Cultural Resources (formerly Dept. of Cultural Resources)
- Department of Environmental Quality (formerly DENR)
- Department of Transportation
- Health and Human Services
- Health
- Health Care Facilities and Providers
- Public Health
- Transportation
Bill Information:
View NCGA Bill Details | 2015-2016 Session |
AN ACT TO RESTORE THE STATE TORT CLAIM FOR WRONGFUL DISCHARGE.Intro. by Hager, Presnell.
View: All Summaries for Bill | Tracking: |
Bill summary
Senate committee substitute makes the following changes to the 4th edition.
Amends GS 150B-21.6(4) to allow an agency to incorporate all or part of a code, standard, or regulation adopted by the federal government in a rule without repeating the text of the referenced material, if the agency establishes a procedure by which any change by the federal government is reviewed and approved by the agency within 120 days of the change, instead of the previous edition's 30-day window.
Adds a new provision in Section 4.3 to the act to provide an effective date of January 1, 2017, for Section 4.3(b) that repeals GS 113A-112, which provided for planning grants under the Coastal Area Management Act.
© 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.