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SB 69

Medication Amendments

2025 General Session Introduced by Steve Eliason and 1 co-sponsor

Localized NC bill: Haywood vacancy rules standardized, Jackson County BOE elections partisan starting Dec 2026, and Jacksonville ETJ ends; land-use shifts to Henderson County.

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Bill Summary · SB 69

SB 69 — Various Local Provisions V

Status: Special Message Sent to Senate
Introduced: August 6, 2025

This bill is a multi-part “local provisions” package that makes targeted changes to local government election, vacancy, and land‑use authorities in several North Carolina localities. It is not a single substantive policy change statewide but a set of distinct, localized amendments grouped into one measure.

Main purpose

  • Implement local governance and election law changes for specific counties and municipalities.
  • Limit municipal planning/regulatory authority outside city corporate limits in specified municipalities.
  • Update procedures for filling vacancies and for how certain local boards are elected.

Key provisions (by part)

  1. Haywood County — vacancy filling (Part I)

    • Requires that vacancies on the Haywood County Board of Commissioners be filled in accordance with G.S. 153A‑27 (the general statutory process for filling county board vacancies).
    • Applies to Haywood County only. Effective on enactment and applies to vacancies filled on or after that date.
  2. Jackson County — Board of Education elections (Part II)

    • Changes elections for the Jackson County Board of Education from nonpartisan plurality to partisan elections (candidates run with party nomination/affiliation).
    • Maintains five single‑member residency districts with countywide voting for each seat and staggered four‑year terms.
    • Transitional rules: members elected in 2024 keep their terms; vacancies for 2024‑elected members are filled by appointment to finish the term. New partisan elections take effect starting with the terms expiring under the new schedule. Effective the first Monday in December 2026; 2026 elections will be conducted as if the law is already in effect.
  3. City of Jacksonville — extraterritorial jurisdiction (Part III)

    • Prohibits the City of Jacksonville from exercising planning/development authority beyond its contiguous corporate limits (i.e., removes or limits extraterritorial jurisdiction (ETJ) for the city).
    • Relinquishment becomes effective upon enactment, but the city’s existing development regulations and enforcement outside the corporate limits remain in force until Henderson County adopts equivalent regulations or until the statutory transition period (per G.S. 160D‑202(h)) expires.
    • Affects municipal regulatory authority, county planning responsibility, and property owners in the former ETJ.

Who is affected

  • County boards of commissioners and school boards (Haywood, Jackson).
  • Voters in Jackson County (change from nonpartisan to partisan contests).
  • City of Jacksonville, Henderson County, affected property owners and developers formerly regulated under Jacksonville’s ETJ.
  • Local election and administration offices that must implement new nomination, ballot, and transition procedures.

Procedural/timing notes

  • Effective dates vary by part: Haywood changes effective on enactment; Jacksonville ETJ change effective upon enactment (with statutory transition for regulations); Jackson County partisan elections effective December 2026.
  • The bill applies only to the named localities (it’s not a statewide reform).
  • Transition provisions preserve current officeholders’ terms and provide appointment rules for vacancies created under the old regime.

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Partisan school board elections (Jackson): likely to change campaign dynamics, candidate recruitment, fundraising, and partisan visibility of local school issues.
  • ETJ removal (Jacksonville): shifts land‑use control and permitting authority to county government; may require coordination on zoning, infrastructure, and service provision; could create temporary regulatory gaps until County adopts ordinances.
  • Vacancy rule harmonization (Haywood) simplifies or standardizes appointment practice but may change local political dynamics for interim appointments.
  • Administrative work for local election boards, county planners, and legal counsel to implement statutory and procedural changes.

This bill is a localized, technical package that will require municipal and county governments to update administrative rules, election procedures, and planning code implementation where it applies.

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

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