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HB 701

An Act amending the act of March 4, 1970 (P.L.128, No.49), entitled "An act granting to the Governor of the Commonwealth the sole authority for regulating the display of the flag of the United States from any public ground or building and from any ground or building of certain other institutions," further providing for display of flag.

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Jake Banta and 16 co-sponsors

Designates May 17 as Lafayette Day in North Carolina to honor Lafayette; a ceremonial observance with no funds or mandatory closures, enabling schools and groups to plan events.

Referred to State Government
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HB 701

HB 701 — Adopt Lafayette Day (North Carolina, 2025) — Summary

Status
- Bill filed: November 12, 2024 (filed/printed version dated Apr 2–3, 2025).
- Primary sponsor: Rep. Charles Smith (with several co-sponsors listed on the Edition 1 filing).
- Referred to: State and Local Government committee (if favorable, then Rules, Calendar, and Operations of the House).
- Current procedural status (as of the provided record): introduced and referred to committee. The bill becomes effective when enacted.

Purpose / Intent
- Designate May 17 of each year as "Lafayette Day" in North Carolina to honor Gilbert‑du‑Motier, Marquis de Lafayette — a key American Revolutionary War ally of George Washington — and to recognize his contributions to liberty, human rights, and the historical ties between North Carolina and Lafayette.

Key provisions
- Adds a new section to Chapter 103 of the North Carolina General Statutes:
- § 103‑19: “The seventeenth day of May of each year is designated as Lafayette Day in the State of North Carolina.”
- No provisions creating an annual state holiday, paid leave, or mandated government closures; the bill simply establishes an official day of observance.

Findings and background cited in the bill
- Notes bicentennial commemorations tied to Lafayette’s Farewell Tour of America (1824–1825) and related local celebrations across the state.
- Highlights Lafayette’s military service (including Brandywine, Monmouth, and Yorktown), his advocacy for human and civil rights, anti‑slavery positions, and support for certain women’s rights reforms.
- Notes North Carolina’s historical link to Lafayette: the State Assembly renamed “Campellton” to “Fayetteville” on May 17, 1783 — cited as a reason to select May 17 for the observance.

Who is affected
- General public: primarily symbolic/ceremonial recognition.
- Local governments, historical societies, schools, museums, veterans’ and civic organizations may plan commemorative events or educational programming.
- No direct fiscal, regulatory, or administrative obligations are imposed on state agencies by the text provided.

Fiscal or practical impact
- The bill is largely ceremonial. It does not appropriate funds, create new programs, or impose duties beyond authorizing the designation.
- Any costs would relate to voluntary observances or events planned by public or private entities.

Implementation / Effective date
- The act would take effect upon becoming law. No implementation details or reporting requirements are included.

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

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