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SB 322

An Act providing for approval from the Department of Health and the Office of Attorney General before certain transactions involving health care entities within this Commonwealth.

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Amanda Cappelletti and 10 co-sponsors

Adds a Class 1 misdemeanor for assaulting a readily identifiable utility or communications worker while performing duties, if no greater penalty applies; effective Dec 1, 2025.

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Bill Summary · SB 322

SB 322 — Utility Worker Protection Act (Summary)

Status: Passed 1st Reading
Introduced: February 11, 2025
Primary subject areas: Assault; Crimes; Utilities & Telecommunications; Public safety; Personnel

Main purpose

To strengthen criminal protection for utility and communications workers by making it a distinct offense to assault such workers while they are identifiable as employees/agents/contractors and are performing (or attempting to perform) their duties.

Key provisions

  • Amends North Carolina General Statute § 14-33(b) by adding a new subdivision (10).
  • Creates a specific misdemeanor offense for assaulting a “utility or communications worker” when both conditions are met:
    1. The worker is “readily identifiable as a worker” (expressly includes wearing a uniform, hat, or other outerwear bearing the employer’s logo); and
    2. The worker is discharging or attempting to discharge his or her duties.
  • Defines “utility or communications worker” broadly to include employees, agents, or contractors of entities (public or private, municipal, county, cooperative, or State-created) that provide electricity, natural gas, telecommunications, or internet access services.
  • Clarifies that this provision applies only when no other law imposing greater punishment covers the conduct (i.e., more serious criminal statutes would supersede).
  • Preservation clause: prosecutions for acts occurring before the statute’s effective date are not abated by the act.

Who is affected

  • Utility and communications workers (employees, agents, contractors) performing job duties in the field.
  • Members of the public who commit assaults against such workers — could now be charged under this statute when the specific conditions are met.
  • Law enforcement and prosecutors, who will have a statutory basis to pursue misdemeanor charges in these circumstances.

Penalties

  • The offense is classified as a Class 1 misdemeanor. (Under North Carolina law, a Class 1 misdemeanor is subject to the statutory misdemeanor penalties; consult relevant sentencing statutes for applicable jail and fine ranges.)

Procedural / timeline aspects

  • Effective date: December 1, 2025.
  • The law applies to offenses committed on or after the effective date.
  • Prosecutions for earlier offenses remain governed by prior law.

Practical impact

  • Provides a clearer, targeted criminal response for assaults on visible, on‑duty utility/communications workers — intended to deter interference with critical infrastructure work and to protect public‑facing crews (line workers, repair technicians, etc.).
  • Because the statute is limited to situations in which the worker is identifiable and performing duties, it is narrower than a blanket prohibition on assaults but supplements existing assault and public safety statutes.

If you’d like, I can:
- Draft a one‑page explainer for frontline utility managers to share with crews, or
- Compare this bill to similar “worker protection” statutes in other states.

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

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