VOLUME 6 ISSUE 5
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WWW.NSJONLINE.COM
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31, 2021
Bull-ish on being ready for baseball Durham Bulls seasonal employees sit in a waiting area after receiving a COVID-19 vaccination at Durham Bulls Athletic Park last week. The team held the vaccination clinic so employees will be fully vaccinated in time for the start of the Triple-A East season in early May. Major League Baseball opens its season April 1. See B4 for a preview of all the players with North Carolina ties who are on MLB rosters to start the season.
PHOTO BY MELANIE MCCULLOUGH
the Wednesday
NEWS BRIEFING
Biden wants infrastructure package approved over summer Washington, D.C. President Joe Biden is pushing a $3 trillion infrastructure plan and hopes Congress will pass it this summer. The president will announce parts of his “Build Back Better” package Wednesday in Pittsburgh. The plan aims to spend federal dollars on infrastructure, domestic manufacturing and Biden’s green agenda, according to the officials. It could include $3 trillion in tax increases.
Bill would name new Ag Science center for Troxler Raleigh A bill to name the new Agricultural Sciences Center of the Department of Agriculture after current Ag Commissioner Steve Troxler passed the state Senate unanimously last week and is headed to the N.C. House. The cutting-edge laboratory, located on Reedy Creek Road in Raleigh, will perform tests for the department on food safety, pesticides and veterinary medicine.
Biden makes first judicial nominations Washington, D.C. President Joe Biden has announced his first slate of judicial nominations. The nine women and two men mark the first major impact Biden will have on the judicial branch. Biden has promised to nominate a black female to the Supreme Court if he has the opportunity to nominate a justice. Four of his first nominees to the federal bench are black females.
White House wants mask mandates Washington, D.C. President Joe Biden called the situation “deadly serious” and the head of Biden’s CDC said she had a feeling of “impending doom” as the two appealed for new mask mandates to stave off a “fourth surge” of coronavirus. Biden’s calls come as more states have eliminated mask mandates as cases have dropped by approximately 75% and deaths have declined by 70% since the new year.
NORTH
STATE
JOURNaL ELEVATE THE CONVERSATION
Lawmakers seek to end ‘sue and settle’ agreements Any deal attempting to settle a lawsuit the General Assembly is a party to would require joint approval of statehouse leaders By A.P. Dillon North State Journal
law change via secret settlement with political allies.” The bill was filed just a few days after N.C. State Board of Elections (NCSBE) Director Karen Brinson Bell was questioned by members of the Senate Redistricting and Elections Committee about the settlement she and N.C. Attorney General Josh Stein entered into with Democratic attorney and former Hillary Clinton campaign lawyer Marc Elias. The agreement tripled the number of days an absentee ballot could be accepted by county election boards, jumping from the three days after election day required by law to nine days. The agreement also attempted to end the legal witness requirement for absentee ballots. Brinson Bell said during the hearing that she had been given authority by the NCBSE to negotiate the agreement. Lawmakers, who were a party in the lawsuit, were not informed of the settlement agreement until it had already been filed with the court. Brinson Bell told lawmakers that she was “not aware they were in the dark” about the settlement and that it was “not her concern.” During questioning, lawmakers pressed Brinson Bell about her role in the settlement, which changed absentee ballot rules after voting was already underway. Brinson Bell maintained her actions and those of the NCSBE were legal. She also maintained the rule changes did not alter state law, a point that both lawmakers and several judges disagreed with. “I don’t think you changed the law; I think you broke the law,” said Sen. Bill Rabon (R- Brunswick) to Brinson Bell, later adding, “the buck stops with you,
RALEIGH — Members of the North Carolina Senate have filed a bill to block future “sue and settle” agreements like the one the N.C. State Board of Elections director and state attorney general entered into during the 2020 election. Senate Bill 360, titled, “Prohibit Collusive Settlements by the Attorney General,” was filed on March 25 by the three cochairs of the Senate Redistricting and Elections Committee, Sens. Paul Newton (R-Cabarrus), Warren Daniel (R-Caldwell) and Ralph Hise (R-Mitchell). “Elections Director Karen Brinson Bell and Attorney General Josh Stein behaved so egregiously and improperly that they’ve lost the trust of voters and legislators,” said Newton in a statement. “Director Brinson Bell wouldn’t even acknowledge that she changed state law last year, a fact that federal judges and reporters have upheld for months.” According to the one-page bill, any deal attempting to settle a lawsuit the General Assembly is a party to would require joint approval from the speaker of the House and the president pro tempore of the Senate. Newton also said that “This bill is intended to make sure no elections director, whether Ms. Brinson Bell or someone else, ever has the power to secretly execute a mid-election See SUE AND SETTLE, page A2
House bill would limit eminent domain Bill passed House with bipartisan supermajority By David Larson North State Journal RALEIGH — A bill aimed at strengthening property owner protections from eminent domain is headed to the state Senate after the House passed the bill with a bipartisan supermajority. H.B. 271 passed the House 101-17 on March 25. Eminent domain is a process whereby governments can take private property from the owner, typically for use in a public project, like building a road or school. But at times, governments have taken private property through eminent domain only to give it to
another private owner who plans on developing the land in a way the government considers a “public benefit.” The bill aims to directly prevent this by adding the following language to Section 1 of the N.C. Constitution: “Private property shall not be taken by eminent domain except for a public use. Just compensation shall be paid and shall be determined by a jury at the request of any party.” The bill would create a constitutional amendment referendum, so voters would choose whether or not to approve this language on eminent domain during the 2022 elections. “This legislation is necessary to prevent overreach of state governSee EMINENT DOMAIN, page A3
House redistricting leader expects a bipartisan, transparent process Rep. Destin Hall will lead effort to revisit state’s election laws By A.P. Dillon North State Journal RALEIGH — With the 2020 election in the rearview, the General Assembly will be turning its attention to the 2022 midterms and beyond. That means a focus on election law and redistricting with an eye on what is happening on Capitol Hill. North State Journal sat down with Rep. Destin Hall (R-Caldwell) recently and talked to him about the coming redistricting process and possible election-related legislation. Delayed census data, which Hall says they anticipate receiving sometime in September, has pushed back redistricting efforts by lawmakers, but Hall says conversations on the topic are already happening. “That’s important because you can’t draw any districts really until you have that data,” said Hall. “Anywhere from a municipality all the way up to your congressional seats — until you get data, you really can’t do much.” “I know their filing dates are going to be coming up this summer,” Hall said of the situation municipalities are in due to the delayed data. “We are starting to have those discussions about how to handle the municipality part of that. As far as our legislative congressional maps, we still think we’ll have time to get that done because those [races] won’t be until 2022.” This will be Hall’s third time be-
ing involved in redistricting, but it is the first time he’ll do it as chair of See HALL, page A2