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Bill

HB 161

Hydrogen severance tax.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Eric Barlow and 6 co-sponsors

Restores Randolph County and its municipalities’ authority to initiate down‑zoning amendments, affecting property by potentially stricter land use rules without owner unanimity.

H:Died in Committee Returned Bill Pursuant to HR 5-4
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Bill Summary · HB 161

HB 161 — Restore Down‑Zoning Authority / Randolph County (North Carolina)

Purpose

To restore local governments’ authority to initiate down‑zoning in Randolph County and in municipalities located in Randolph County. The bill reverses the effect of a recent statewide change (S.L. 2024‑57) that restricted down‑zoning, by expressly permitting a local government (county or municipality) to initiate a down‑zoning amendment affecting property within its jurisdiction.

Key provisions

  • Amends G.S. 160D‑601(d) to allow local governments to initiate down‑zoning amendments. It preserves the provision that a down‑zoning amendment otherwise requires the written consent of all property owners affected unless the local government initiates the amendment.
  • Retains the statutory definition of “down‑zoning” to include any zoning change that:
    1. Decreases the allowed development density compared with the previous designation;
    2. Reduces permitted uses for the land compared with the previous designation; or
    3. Creates a nonconformity on nonresidential land (nonconforming use, lot, structure, improvement, or site element).
  • Geographic and temporal scope:
    • Applies only to Randolph County and to municipalities located in Randolph County.
    • Effective when enacted; applies retroactively to December 11, 2024. Any ordinance in Randolph County affected by Section 3K.1 of S.L. 2024‑57 is to be treated as it existed on or before December 11, 2024.

Who is affected

  • Randolph County government and municipalities within Randolph County: regain the ability to initiate down‑zoning actions as part of local land‑use planning and zoning updates.
  • Property owners and developers in Randolph County: may be subject to down‑zoning enacted by local governments without having to provide unanimous written consent.
  • Local planning and permitting officials: responsible for preparing, adopting, and enforcing zoning amendments that may now be initiated by local governments.

Procedural / timeline aspects

  • Bill filing and referral: introduced/filed in February 2025 and referred to relevant House committees (Judiciary/Housing & Development as reflected in bill docketing).
  • Effectiveness: takes effect upon becoming law and applies retroactively to December 11, 2024, restoring local authority for actions taken after that date that were affected by S.L. 2024‑57.

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Restores local control and policymaking flexibility over land use in Randolph County, enabling governments to pursue community planning objectives (e.g., managing growth, protecting environmental resources).
  • May reduce property owners’ veto power over zoning changes, which could affect property values and development expectations; could increase the likelihood of legal challenges claiming regulatory takings or other constitutional claims.
  • Because the change is geographically limited (Randolph County only), it creates a local exception to the statewide rule established by S.L. 2024‑57; this could raise questions about uniformity of zoning law across the state.

If you want, I can:
- Extract the exact current bill status and committee assignments from the legislative website, or
- Draft a one‑page explainer (pros/cons) targeted to Randolph County stakeholders (commissioners, developers, landowners).

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

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