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HB 83

Regards state highways located in villages and cities

136th Legislature (2025-2026) Introduced by Ron Ferguson and 1 co-sponsor

The bill increases felonies for exposing minors to obscene material, expands sex-offender registration, and requires parental consent for minors using ride-hailing services.

Referred to committee
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Bill Summary · HB 83

HB 83 — "Revise Laws Governing Minors" (North Carolina, 2025) — Summary

Status & Timeline
- Introduced: February 11, 2025 (House).
- Committee action: Committee Substitute Favorable adopted March 11, 2025.
- Current status: Regular message sent to the Senate (transmitted to Senate for consideration).

Purpose
- Strengthen criminal penalties for offenses that expose minors to obscene or harmful material or sexualized conduct, create new aggravated/habitual exposure offenses, expand the circumstances in which courts may require sex‑offender registration, and impose consent requirements on transportation network companies (TNCs) that transport unemancipated minors.

Key substantive provisions
- Increases penalties for dissemination/exhibition offenses:
- G.S. 14‑190.7 (dissemination to minors under 16): elevated to a Class H felony in certain circumstances (applies to persons 18+; bill language adds age‑difference elements in the committee substitute).
- G.S. 14‑190.8 (dissemination to minors under 13): elevated to a Class G felony for persons 18+.
- G.S. 14‑190.15 (disseminating harmful material to minors; exhibiting harmful performances to minors): penalty changed from a misdemeanor to a Class H felony.
- Creates stronger indecent exposure offenses (G.S. 14‑190.9):
- Exposure in the presence of a minor by a person 18+ for sexual arousal: Class H felony.
- Habitual indecent exposure (multiple prior convictions under indecent exposure provisions): upgraded to a felony offense (committee substitute lists Class F felony for habitual; Class E for aggravated habitual where seriousness is higher).
- Sex‑offender registration:
- Amends G.S. 14‑208.6 to permit the sentencing court to require registration after convictions for G.S. 14‑190.7, 14‑190.8, or 14‑190.15 (court discretion to order registration based on danger to the community).
- Adds habitual indecent exposure convictions to offenses that require registration.
- Transportation network companies (TNCs):
- Prohibits TNCs from providing transportation to unemancipated minors without prior consent from the minor’s parent or legal guardian (summary language in bill; full statutory placement/penalties appear in the bill text).

Who is affected
- Adults (generally 18+) who disseminate obscene or harmful material to persons under 16 or 13, or who expose themselves in the presence of minors.
- Performers, venue operators, and others who present live performances or distribute material harmful to minors.
- Individuals with prior indecent‑exposure convictions (subject to new habitual/aggravated felonies).
- Sentencing courts (new discretion around registration orders).
- Transportation network companies, drivers, minors and parents/guardians (new consent requirements).

Potential impacts
- Criminal justice: more conduct will carry felony exposure and potentially longer sentences; courts have new discretion to require sex‑offender registration for these offenses.
- Public safety/administration: increased prosecutorial and court filings for upgraded offenses; implications for supervision and registry administration.
- TNCs: operational and compliance changes to verify parental consent; potential enforcement mechanisms and civil penalties (not fully detailed in summary text).

Notes & caveats
- The bill as amended is a committee substitute; some sections (exact felony class assignments, age‑difference elements, and TNC enforcement details) differ between earlier and later drafts. The sentencing consequences depend on North Carolina’s existing felony classification sentencing ranges.
- Readers seeking precise statutory language should consult the committee substitute text and the version transmitted to the Senate.

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

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