WeVote

Bill

Bill

SB 180

Sale, Transfer, and Storage of Firearms

2026 Regular Session Introduced by Tina Polsky

Anson County will elect seven district-resident commissioners, but all voters statewide will still vote for all seats.

Died in Criminal Justice
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · SB 180

SB 180 — Anson County Board of Commissioners (North Carolina)

Status: Introduced / Passed (see enactment below)
Primary sponsor: Sen. Johnson
Effective date: First Monday in December 2026 (elections in 2026 and thereafter)

Purpose / Intent

SB 180 changes how members of the Anson County Board of Commissioners are chosen by establishing single‑member residency districts for the board. The measure requires commissioners to live in specific districts but retains countywide voting for those seats.

Key provisions

  • Board composition: The Anson County Board of Commissioners will consist of seven members elected from seven single‑member residency districts (one member per district).
  • Residency requirement: A candidate must be a qualified voter and a resident of the district they seek to represent in order to file for, be elected to, or serve on the board.
  • At‑large voting: Despite district residency requirements, all candidates for the board will be voted on by all eligible voters in Anson County (i.e., candidates are district‑residents but voted on countywide).
  • District delineation: The residency districts to be used initially are the same election districts used in the 2020 and 2022 Anson County Board of Commissioners elections, and will remain so until revised.
  • Timing and terms:
    • Commissioners take office and qualify on the first Monday in December of the election year.
    • Outgoing members’ terms expire at that same time. Members serve until their successors are elected and qualified.
  • Repeal and statutory note:
    • Chapter 281 of the 1987 Session Laws is repealed.
    • G.S. 153A‑22.1(f) is amended to explicitly note applicability to Anson County (and named counties) as rewritten in the bill.

Who is affected

  • Prospective candidates: must reside in the specific residency district where they run.
  • Voters in Anson County: will continue to vote countywide for all commissioner seats, but their choices will include district‑resident candidates.
  • County election officials: will implement residency verification and use the 2020/2022 district maps until any revision.
  • The Board of Commissioners and county governance generally: representation dynamics may change because of the residency requirement.

Procedural / timeline notes

  • The bill becomes effective the first Monday in December 2026; thus, elections held in 2026 and thereafter will follow the new structure.
  • The bill establishes an interim rule (use of 2020/2022 districts) until any legal redistricting or map revision occurs.

Potential implications (objective)

  • Enforces geographic residency for candidates while preserving countywide voter choice (a “residency‑district, at‑large” model).
  • May alter the pool of eligible candidates in each district and change representational balance.
  • Electoral administration adjustments will be required to verify candidate residency against district boundaries and to communicate the change to voters.

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

Sign in to ask a question.