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Bill

Bill

SB 36

Relating to patient billing.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Deb Patterson

China Grove shifts municipal elections from odd to even years, starting 2026, aligning four-year terms; 2025/2027 incumbents get extensions, and voting mirrors general elections.

In committee upon adjournment.
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Bill Summary · SB 36

SB 36 — China Grove Even‑Year Elections (Local/Charter Change)

Status: Enacted (effective upon becoming law)
Primary action: Amend Town of China Grove charter to move regular municipal elections from odd to even‑numbered years.

Purpose

Shift the Town of China Grove’s regular municipal election cycle from odd‑numbered years to even‑numbered years so municipal contests align with fall general election years (beginning in 2026). The change is intended to consolidate election timing and adjust office terms so staggered four‑year terms are preserved.

Key provisions

  • Amends Article III (Sections 3.1–3.3) of the Town of China Grove charter:
    • Section 3.1 — Regular municipal elections: held in even‑numbered years (previously odd years); conducted on a nonpartisan plurality basis under state uniform municipal election law.
    • Section 3.2 — Aldermen: retains staggered four‑year terms; adjusts the election schedule so the same staggering continues after the shift to even‑year elections.
    • Section 3.3 — Mayor: continues as a four‑year term with election now aligned to the new even‑year schedule.
  • Transitional timing and term extensions:
    • No municipal elections will be held in China Grove in 2025.
    • The three aldermen whose terms were set to expire in 2025 have their terms extended by one year (to 2026).
    • The two aldermen and the mayor whose terms were set to expire in 2027 have their terms extended by one year (to 2028).
    • Regular municipal elections resume in even‑numbered years beginning in 2026, with the existing staggering of seats preserved.

Who is affected

  • Voters and candidates in the Town of China Grove (Rowan County): election timing, campaigning calendar, and when offices turn over.
  • Town officials: temporary term extensions for certain incumbents; election administration adjustments.
  • County election officials: ballot planning, consolidation with state/federal elections in even years.

Practical effects and considerations

  • Turnout: aligning local contests with general elections may increase voter participation compared with standalone odd‑year municipal elections.
  • Cost and administration: potential cost savings and efficiency from holding municipal races on the same ballot as other even‑year races; conversely, local races may receive less visibility among a larger ballot.
  • Continuity: one‑year term extensions maintain staggered terms and avoid shortening terms; incumbents and prospective candidates should note the adjusted filing/campaign timetable.
  • Legal implementation: elections and procedures continue to follow North Carolina’s uniform municipal election laws; the charter amendment takes effect when the act becomes law and applies to elections held on/after that date.

Timeline / Next steps

  • No China Grove municipal election in 2025.
  • First even‑year municipal elections under this change: 2026.
  • Town, county election officials, and prospective candidates should update calendars, filing deadlines, and voter outreach plans to reflect the new schedule.

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

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