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SB 446

A Joint Resolution proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, providing for powers reserved to the people.

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Lisa Boscola and 1 co-sponsor

SB 446 recapitalizes NC Housing Trust Fund with $30M and establishes ongoing HTF funding via a share of deeds fees and conveyance tax remittances to support affordable and workforc

Referred to State Government
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Bill Summary · SB 446

SB 446 — Expand Workforce Housing (North Carolina) — Summary

Status & timeline
- Introduced: 2025 (first edition filed March 25, 2025).
- Senate: Passed first reading; referred through committee process.
- Effective date (as written): July 1, 2025.

Purpose
- Recapitalize and create recurring funding for the North Carolina Housing Trust Fund (HTF) to expand workforce and affordable housing production and preservation across the State.

Key provisions
1. One‑time appropriation
- Appropriates $30,000,000 in nonrecurring General Fund money to the North Carolina Housing Trust Fund for FY 2025–2026 (G.S. 122E‑3 purposes).

  1. New/recurring revenue streams for the HTF

    • Amends G.S. 161‑11.5 (register of deeds fee remittances): directs 1.5% of the $6.20 remitted portion of certain register of deeds fees to the North Carolina Housing Trust Fund.
    • Amends G.S. 105‑228.30 (real estate transfer excise tax distribution): requires the Department of Revenue to credit an amount equal to 33% of the county remittances (the State’s share of the conveyance excise tax) to the Housing Trust Fund; the remainder continues to the General Fund.
  2. Legislative findings and intent

    • Reaffirms HTF’s role (created in 1987; administered by NC Housing Finance Agency) as the State’s most flexible affordable housing resource (homeownership, rentals, supportive housing, rehab, emergency repairs).
    • Notes declining historic levels of State investment and the disproportion between housing need and available units.

Who is affected
- Primary beneficiaries: low‑ and moderate‑income households, families needing affordable rental or homeownership opportunities, and communities served by HTF‑funded projects.
- Administrative/financial actors: NC Housing Finance Agency (HTF administrator), State Treasurer, Department of Revenue, county registers of deeds, county finance officers.
- State budget: one‑time $30M General Fund outlay in FY25‑26 and ongoing revenue flows from modified fee/tax remittances.

Fiscal and programmatic impacts
- One‑time nonrecurring cost: $30 million (reverts if unexpended at FY end).
- The bill establishes ongoing revenue sources for the HTF, but does not provide an explicit annual dollar total; impact depends on deed‑fee volume and real estate transfer activity.
- The bill cites HTF performance metrics (example: every $1M spent historically assists ~108 households, generates ~$5.169M in real estate value, supports ~110 jobs, and yields ~$455K in state/local revenue).

Procedural notes
- The act amends two existing statutes (G.S. 161‑11.5 and G.S. 105‑228.30) and provides an appropriation section.
- Effective July 1, 2025 (start of the State fiscal year), so recurring allocations would begin after that date subject to administrative implementation.

Bottom line
SB 446 provides an immediate $30 million recapitalization for North Carolina’s Housing Trust Fund and establishes statutory changes to generate recurring revenue (via a small share of register of deeds fees and a portion of excise tax remittances) to support ongoing affordable and workforce housing investments statewide.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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