Category Archives: Local News

Report from NCGOP Convention, June 3-5, 2011

Greeting,

The NCGOP convention ended today on a high note with a very motivated and energized executive committee sent forth by our Chairman to “GO OUT AND WIN”.

The convention got off to a very slow start on Friday but soon found its legs and took off running Friday night with a rousing speech from Congressman Allen West.  Saturday’s attendance swelled to 1161 delegates with 90 counties in attendance.  Counties from the east, Brunswick, New Hanover and Onslow had high attendance numbers along with several larger counties, Wake, Mecklenburg and Forsyth.   Carteret County had 24 delegates in attendance and I wish to thank all of them for attending.

On Saturday House Speaker Thom Tillis and President Pro Tempore Phil Berger reported on the budget and other legislative goals of the session.    Congressmen Mick Mulvaney and Andrew Breitbart were the guest speakers at lunch.

Supreme Court Justice Paul Newby led off the afternoon session.  Justice Newby is the only Supreme Court Justice on the ballot in 2012.  Prior the Democratic Legislatures change from partisan to non-partisan races the Republicans held a 5-2 majority on the Supreme Court.  Republicans currently hold a 4 to 3 majority on the Court with Justice Newby seat being the swing seat this year.  The matching funds period will commence on September 1, 2011 for judicial races.  So mark your calendars for September and plan to make a contribution to Justice Newby’s campaign.  On a related note Senator Phil Berger earlier informed the convention that a bill to reverse the non-partisan judicial races to partisan races will be debated in committee this week.

Pat McCrory addressed the convention to a standing ovation and listed 10 reasons why Bev Perdue should not be reelected Governor.  He also explained that the Democrats need to win at least one southern state in 2012 to retain the Presidency.   President Obama and the Democratic Party have put North Carolina in play by selecting Charlotte as the site of their national Convention.   They will pour people and money into the state to win.  He reminded the convention that it will take three M’s to win, Money, Manpower and Motivation.

The Convention then took a serious turn when it came to elections of party officers.  Current Party Chairman Robin Hayes was challenged by Marcus Kindley for the post of State Party Chairman.  After nominations, seconding  and finally campaign speeches  from the candidates Chair Hayes was reelected by unanimous consent.

In one of the most contentious events of the convention Wayne King challenged current State Party Vice-Chairman Tim Johnson.  Votes were awarded on a portion method of total delegates granted to each county.  The winner was in doubt until the end when Wake County cast its votes.  Vice-Chairman Tim Johnson led with the most votes’ cast by delegates present throughout the election; but lost to Wayne King on the total votes awarded.

Saturday ended with two final highlights.  The first was a standing ovation to a resolution honoring former State Party Chairman Frank Rouse.   The second was the evening banquet honoring former chairman Tom Fetzer.  US Congressman Tim Scott was also a guest speaker at the banquet.

Sunday the convention ended on a VERY high note as the Executive Committees meeting was held.   Chairman Hayes and Billy Miller, the convention chairman, worked through the agenda effortless while energizing and sometimes amusing the committee with their wit.  Chairman Hayes informed the committee that the  plan for the upcoming election was simple, WIN, retain the State House and Senate, and defeat Governor Perdue and President Obama.  To accomplish this task we need to do the following:

1.       Raise Money

2.       Hire the right people

3.       Formulate a grass roots effort

Following former chairman Tom Fetzer’s winning effort in the last election we need to develop a statewide plan.  In the past counties focused on local races, in order to hold our current gains and win the governorship and presidency he asks us to assist the state party in raising funds and forming a grass roots organization.

The following officers were submitted by Chairman Hayes and approved by the Executive Committee:

Secretary – Martha Jenkins

Treasurer – Ken Dickson

General Counsel – John Branch

Asst. Secretary – Tommy Adams

Asst. Treasure – Steve Long

Asst. Council – Paul Farley

 

David Williams submitted his name for General Counsel but withdrew before the vote was taken.   The  final order of business was the appointment of  Terry Hutchens as Finance Chairman.  The Executive Committee then adjourned.

As the convention has come to an end the campaign has just begun.  I know each of you will do your part in the upcoming election.

Greg Lewis

Carteret County Party Chairman

Questions Concerning O'Neal Baseball Field

The Crystal Coast Tea Party Patriots was requested by a Morehead City resident to look into the funding of O’Neal Field by the city of Morehead City, and some related issues. The vice chairman of the CCTPP, Eric Broyles contacted Morehead City officials with questions, and talked to them at length about the issue. The document found at the following link provides a explanation of the project, MHC ONeal Field Response

 

Your comments are welcomed.

State Law to Provide for Acceptable IDs

From NCFire

Attention members:
The NC House Judiciary Subcommittee “A”, will be holding a hearing this Wednesday, March 23rd to get comments from the public on HB33– the State Law to Provide for Acceptable IDs. The hearings will be held in Rm 1327 of the Legislative Bldg in Raleigh @ 10:00 am.
This bill, if enacted will effectively eliminate the Mexican matricula consular ID card as an acceptable form of ID in North Carolina and remove the quasi-legal status that illegal aliens currently enjoy in our state. Passing this bill will go along way towards reducing our illegal alien population.


NCFIRE strongly supports this bill and we urge our membership to contact the House Subcommittee members and tell them that you also support passing HB33. The pro-illegal alien lobby will be there in full force and we need to let our Legislators know how we, as NC citizens, feel about it.
Chairman:
Members:
Rep. Ross (D) – Deborah.Ross@ncleg.net 

James Johnson
President-NCFIRE
North Carolinians For Immigration Reform and Enforcement
www.NCFIRE.info
www.Facebook.com/NCFIRE
NCFIRE@ncfire.info
NCFIRE Hotline: 1-888-885-0879

“Restore Confidence in Government” Update

Good afternoon,

 

Before the Blue Devils, Tar Heels or Bulldogs (UNC-Asheville) play and your brackets start getting busted, the NCGOP Political Office wanted to update you on the latest on H.351, the “Restore Confidence in Government” bill.

 

The House could vote on H.351 as early as next week, and we are calling on supporters of the bill to complete 2 simple actions today!

1.      Write a Letter to the Editor in support of “Restore Confidence in Government” –  click HERE to find your local paper and click HERE to get the facts on the bill

2.      Call your representatives and urge them to support the Restore Confidence in Government bill.

 

In case you missed it,  the editorial board of UNC’s student newspaper “The Daily Tar Heel” endorsed the “Restore Confidence in Government” bill and called it “a bill worth passing.”   Go to www.tinyurl.com/UNC-ID to read the editorial.

I also suggest you watch the video produced by Carolina Journal about Tuesday’s public hearing on the “Restore Confidence in Government” bill.

 

 

Please be sure to share this “Call to Action” from the North Carolina Senate Republican Senate Caucus with your organization:

 

“Over 2,500 people signed the petition supporting H351, the Restore Confidence in Government bill, which includes voter ID and other election law reforms.

 

Republican lawmakers in the NC Senate and House understand that the vast majority of North Carolinians, 84 percent, according to a recent poll, favor voter ID. The overwhelming response to the Voter ID Petition demonstrates where the people of North Carolina stand on this issue.

 

But this debate is far from over.

 

There are four crucial ways you can stay involved and help Republicans and conservative-leaning Democrats pass this important legislation:

 

  1. Write a letter to the editor supporting voter ID. (Click here for a list of NC newspapers.)
  2. Submit a public comment to the House Elections Committee.
  3. Call local talk radio stations to voice your opinion and spur others to act.
  4. Donate to the NC Republican Senate Caucus. Your contributions help us spread the word about voter ID, explain the facts and what’s at stake, and push back against bogus arguments from liberal special interest groups.

 

Thank you for standing up and speaking out! With your support, voter ID will pass the NC House and then the NC Senate with overwhelming bipartisan support.”

 

If you have any questions or concerns, please do not hesitate to contact the NCGOP Political Office at 919-828-6423.

 

 

 

Paid for by the North Carolina Republican Party
www.NCGOP.org

Twitter:  @NCGOP

We Can’t Be Too Nice about This Revolution by NC Renegade

To see video go to Randy’s Right

MoveOn.org in Garner, NC

 

March 16, 2011 by randyedye

This is the second video from the Moveon.org meeting in Garner, NC on 3/15/11. The moderator starts his presentation concerning their plans with:

“We can’t be too nice about this. We’re going to have to do this revolution, do what they do in Wisconsin to get anything out of the powers that be”

The article that is read in this video is “Power Concedes Nothing Without a Demand”
by Chris Hedges. I encourage everyone to read the entire article.

The liberal class is discovering what happens when you tolerate the intolerant. Let hate speech pollute the airways. Let corporations buy up your courts and state and federal legislative bodies. Let the Christian religion be manipulated by charlatans to demonize Muslims, gays and intellectuals, discredit science and become a source of personal enrichment. Let unions wither under corporate assault. Let social services and public education be stripped of funding. Let Wall Street loot the national treasury with impunity. Let sleazy con artists use lies and deception to carry out unethical sting operations on tottering liberal institutions, and you roll out the welcome mat for fascism.

cont…

http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/power_concedes_nothing_without_a_demand_20110314/

Press Release – re. Immigration Enforcement

Press Releases

Contact: Catherine Fodor 202-225-3415
JONES BECOMES FIRST IN THE HOUSE TO WIN IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENT ACCOLADE
 

 

Washington, Mar 9  

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today U.S. Congressman Walter B. Jones (NC-3) received recognition by Numbers USA, a nationwide organization that encourages enforcement of our nation’s immigration laws.  Jones is the first member of the House of Representatives to earn the “5 for 5” status by cosponsoring five bills in Congress that if passed would “resolve most of our nation’s immigration problems.”  Throughout his nine terms in Congress, Representative Jones has maintained an “A” grade on immigration enforcement issues according to Numbers USA.

“I am honored by the recognition,” said Jones. “It is far beyond time for the federal government to meaningfully enforce our immigration laws.”

The list of the legislation sponsored by Jones follows:

–          H.R. 692: ending chain immigration and reducing the number of green cards issued each year by 250,000

–          H.R. 704:  ending the visa lottery that awards 50,000 green cards through random selection

–          H.R. 800:  requiring all employers to use E-Verify

–          H.R. 140:  putting an end to the practice of birthright citizenship

–          H.R. 100:  helping local officials enforce federal immigration laws.

The Left to Protest Voter ID Legislation in Raleigh

To Make Public Comment before March 15, click here

 

From the NC GOP:

Just wanted to let you know that the big government liberals all over the state are starting to activate to organize against the common-sense Voter ID bill!

Despite recent polling data that shows over 80% of North Carolinians support the Voter ID bill and restoring faith and confidence in our elections, the big government liberals and special interest groups are trying to keep this bill from passing!

These big government liberals and special interest groups are planning to stage a huge rally at a public hearing in Raleigh next Tuesday, March 15 at 2:00 p.m. in Room 643 of the Legislative Office Building.

Our Republican leaders in the General Assembly are cutting spending, cutting regulations on businesses, passed a bill to challenge the job-crushing “Obamacare” legislation but their efforts  have been met by Governor Perdue’s veto stamp.

We need to spread the message – the common-sense Voter ID bill will restore faith and confidence in our elections!

Let’s show Governor Perdue that we stand with 80% of our fellow North Carolinians and want Voter ID to pass because we want confidence in future elections.

Please send this to your members and let’s have a big  turnout next Tuesday!

Palombo may challenge Jones for House seat

March 09, 2011 5:50 PM
Freedom ENC

NEW BERN — Retiring New Bern Police Chief Frank Palombo has confirmed that he is looking into a run for the U.S. District 3 House seat held for the last 17 years by Rep. Walter B. Jones, R-N.C.

An e-mail from the Coastal Carolina Taxpayers Association stating that Palombo is going to challenge Jones in the next primary began circulating last week. It urges members to “get behind this early as Jones is already busy raising money” and says that “exploratory work is still ongoing, but early data looks very good.”

Palombo, a Republican, said Tuesday that a decision has yet to be made.

“I’m exploring all kinds of options and opportunities,” he said. “I have an interest in a government that works well. We don’t have that at the moment.”

Jones’ communications director said the he and his staff have been made aware of the possible primary challenge.

Jones’ political campaign manager, Jonathan Brooks, said since filing for the 2012 election doesn’t begin until February of next year, it’s too early to comment on possible runners.

“It is very early to be commenting on possible candidates. Instead, I think Representative Jones is focusing on serving the people of Eastern North Carolina,” Brooks said.

Palombo has been chief of police for New Bern since July 28, 1997. He also served 21 years with the police department in Clearwater, Fla. He has a bachelor’s degree in psychology from the University of South Florida and a master’s in public administration from Troy State University.

He serves as a commissioner on two state groups — the State Emergency Response Commission and the Structured Sentencing and Policy Advisory Commission. He is a past president of the North Carolina Association of Chiefs of Police.

Palombo’s retirement is effective May 31.

Jacksonville Daily News

Monday at the NC General Assembly

Via Washington Examiner

 

HEADLINES:

NC House Republicans set override vote on Perdue veto on health care overhaul challenge

Never before approved, 2007 land transfer tax given initial approval for repeal by NC House

House gives initial OK to end requirement for community colleges to join fed loan programs

House Democrats roll out alternative bill to GOP plan for charter school changes that ends cap

Education advocates tell NC legislative budget writers to avoid making deep budget cuts

Former Union County Sheriff McGuirt appointed to succeed Gibson in North Carolina House

THE BRIEF:

VETO OVERRIDE: Republicans will attempt to cancel Democratic Gov. Beverly Perdue’s veto rejecting a measure designed to challenge a key provision of the federal health care overhaul law for North Carolina. House GOP leaders set an override vote for Wednesday. Over the weekend, Perdue vetoed a bill that attempts to block a provision of the federal law requiring most people in 2014 to buy health insurance or face a penalty. Perdue said the bill would have violated the U.S. Constitution and referred to a memo from Attorney General Roy Cooper’s office arguing the measure could harm other health programs. House Republicans may need a few more Democratic votes to get the three-fifths majority needed to override. The Senate also would have to override to let the bill become law. Former GOP gubernatorial candidate Pat McCrory is lending his voice to automated phone calls on behalf of Americans for Prosperity urging voters to ask lawmakers to vote for the override.

Help override Gov Perdue's veto of Health Care Freedom

Breaking News: Governor Perdue has Vetoed House Bill 2,
The Health Care Freedom Act

The Health Care Freedom Act was approved by wide margins by both the North Carolina House and Senate. This important bill would block the unconstitutional provision in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) requiring Americans to buy insurance beginning in 2014 or face a monetary penalty.

Despite calls from hundreds of thousands of citizens and the urging of Americans for Prosperity, Attorney General Cooper has refused to defend the constitutional rights of North Carolina citizens by challenging Obamacare’s constitutionality in court and now Governor Perdue has vetoed this common sense legislation.

Join your other AFP activists in North Carolina by telling the legislature to override Governor Perdue’s veto and pass the North Carolina Health Care Protection Act immediately!

Click here to compose an email to your NC Legislators.

North Carolina Democratic Governor Vetoes GOP Challenge to Health Care Law

Democratic Gov. Beverly Perdue has vetoed a Republican-backed challenge to the federal health care overhaul that North Carolina’s attorney general argues is unenforceable.

Perdue announced Saturday her rejection of the measure, which attempts to block a provision requiring most people in 2014 to buy health insurance or face a penalty. The challenge was a GOP fall campaign platform plank.

Perdue had sounded willing to let the bill become law without her signature. She changed her mind when Attorney General Roy Cooper wrote that the federal law trumped state legislation and suggested the language could harm state health programs.

General Assembly leaders must decide whether to attempt an override. It’s Perdue second veto in under two weeks.

JLF Experts, Outside Groups Rebut N.C. Attorney General in New Letters

Cooper’s analysis of House Bill labeled ‘incomplete,’ concerns called ‘unfounded’

By CJ Staff

March 01, 2011

RALEIGH — The John Locke Foundation, Center for Constitutional Litigation, and a scholar with the libertarian Cato Institute have submitted letters to N.C. Gov. Beverly Perdue that bolster the legal case for a bill protecting North Carolinians from federal government overreach on health care.

The letters specifically target N.C. Attorney General Roy Cooper’s Feb. 23 memo arguing that House Bill 2, the North Carolina Health Care Protection Act, is unconstitutional. That bill is designed to exempt North Carolinians from the individual health insurance mandate tied to the March 2010 federal health care reform law. Cooper’s memo urges Perdue to veto H.B. 2.

“[Cooper’s] concerns are unfounded and therefore do not provide a valid reason for vetoing H.B. 2,” according to the letter (PDF link) from Daren Bakst, JLF Director of Legal and Regulatory Studies, and Joseph Coletti, Director of Health and Fiscal Policy Studies.

Bakst and Coletti’s letter specifically challenges Cooper’s assertions about the potential conflict between state law and the federal Constitution, along with Cooper’s prediction that H.B. 2 could threaten state Medicaid funding.

Clint Bolick of the Center for Constitutional Litigation, a program of the Arizona-based Goldwater Institute, also rebuts (PDF link) Cooper’s arguments. “House Bill 2 is a version of the Health Care Freedom Act, which we helped draft,” Bolick writes. “Different versions of the Act have been adopted as constitutional amendments or statutes in several states. In no state has the constitutionality of the Act been challenged, nor to our knowledge has Medicaid funding been threatened in any state that has enacted the Act.”

Ilya Shapiro, Cato Institute senior fellow in constitutional studies, focuses (PDF link) on H.B. 2’s protection of two “essential rights.” “First, it protects a person’s right to participate or not in any health care system and prohibits the government from imposing fines or penalties on that person’s decision,” Shapiro writes. “Second, it protects the right of individuals to purchase — and the right of doctors to provide — lawful medical services without government fine or penalty.”

The N.C. House approved H.B. 2 with a 69-49 vote Feb. 22, less than a week after the Senate endorsed the measure 30-18. Lawmakers presented the bill to Perdue Thursday. She has a total of 10 days to decide whether to sign it, veto it, or allow it to become law without her signature.

Perdue had signaled she would allow H.B. 2 to become law without her signature. Then Cooper submitted his memo. In addition to labeling H.B. 2 unconstitutional, Cooper argued the bill “could create other problems for the state,” according to the JLF letter.

Cooper’s memo argues one piece of H.B. 2 could jeopardize state Medicaid funding by prohibiting the state from assessing a new federally mandated fee designed to help combat Medicaid fraud and abuse.

“H.B. 2 does not prohibit a fee for the purposes of fighting fraud and abuse,” Bakst and Coletti counter. “The Attorney General is reading the bill to mean that no fee can ever be imposed on a person who contracts with a public health care system, unrelated to why the fee is being imposed. This ignores the language of the bill.”

The JLF experts also tackle Cooper’s “incomplete” analysis of the supremacy of federal law over a state law such as H.B. 2. “States often enact laws that conflict with federal laws,” he explains. “This by itself does not make the state law unconstitutional.”

The attorney general’s memo is “100 percent backward” when it suggests the state and its residents must comply with the 2010 federal health care reform law until and unless a court orders otherwise, Bakst and Coletti write. “The state and its residents have every right to not comply with the law until a court orders otherwise. North Carolina does not have to pre-emptively strike down its own laws.”

Bolick’s letter concludes by addressing the significance of the Feb. 23 memo from Cooper and N.C. Solicitor General Christopher Browning.

“It is troubling that the Attorney General and Solicitor General would conclude in advance that House Bill 2 is unconstitutional,” Bolick writes. “Their incomplete analysis of applicable constitutional principles and precedents will serve the State of North Carolina poorly in any future defense of the state’s rights under the U.S. Constitution.

“Especially given that two federal courts have invalidated the individual mandate, the question of the constitutionality of House Bill 2 is very much an open question,” he adds. Bolick writes there is “no constitutional impediment” to Perdue signing the bill, allowing it to become law without her signature, or enforcing it after enactment.

 

Carolina Journal Online

State tries to quell sea level policy concerns

NEWS-TIMES

BY BEN HOGWOOD
Published: Sunday, February 20, 2011 2:05 AM EST

MOREHEAD CITY — The chairman of a state rule-making board sent a letter to the county this month hoping to ease concerns it has with a sea-level rise draft policy.

Bob Emory, the chairman of the N.C. Coastal Resources Commission, wrote to Doug Harris, chairman of the County Board of Commissioners, to assure him the county’s concerns would be taking into consideration, and that the draft policy could still be reworked.

The board has told the N.C. Division of Coastal Management, which is drafting the proposal that will be considered by the CRC, that if the policy goes into effect, it will have a devastating effect on coastal areas. The draft policy states the sea level will go up by a meter by 2110, a figure the county believes is inflated.

While policies to not enact any rules, they are used as a basis for future regulations.

The county, which first heard about the proposal during a meeting in December, has also sent letters to other coastal counties seeking allies to prevent the policy from being implemented.

“The general purpose of policy development is to establish management objectives to provide guidance for CRC decisions,” Mr. Emory wrote in the letter dated Feb. 7. He added that this is not something the CRC has done often recently and there can be some confusion over the implications.

“The draft policy presented at your meeting is the result of recognition that sea-level rise, like erosion and storms, is a natural hazard indigenous to the shoreline.

The commission’s objective for managing coastal hazards is to minimize unreasonable danger to life and property and to achieve a balance between the financial, safety and social factors that are involved with development in the coastal areas.”

The county has said the data on which the 1-meter estimate is based is flawed, and that if the policy goes through, it would impact where and how public and private development takes place on the coast.

Mr. Emory stated the CRC would take the county’s concerns into account. “The input of stakeholders, particularly local governments is an important consideration for the commission,” he wrote.

He continued, “The commission is committed to incorporating the concerns of local government into the development of a sea-level rise policy that reflects the seriousness of the issue as well as any economic effects that may be associate with its adoption.”

The letter did little to ease the worry. A letter signed by Chairman Harris and dated Feb. 17 states: “The scale of economics involved with this proposal is so ubiquitous, that it becomes difficult for local governments to essentially tell our constituency, ‘Not to worry. It’s only a draft, and trust us, the CRC is in no rush to adopt anything without additional input. Also the end outcome will likely be different.’ ”

It closes, “I hope this letter is not perceived as defensive or antagonistic, but rather characterizes the perspective many of the local governments have concerning the draft sea-level rise policy and its practical implementation. We look forward to working with the CRC and NCDCM staff concerning this important issue.”

http://www.tidelandnews.com/articles/2011/02/20/news-times/news/doc4d6056ce836bb339636467.txt

GOP, counties unhappy with Perdue's N.C. budget

The Associated Press
© February 18, 2011

By Gary D. Robertson

RALEIGH, N.C.

Gov. Beverly Perdue unveiled a spending plan Thursday that would eliminate 10,000 employee positions next year and keep mostly in place a temporary sales tax to close a $2.4 billion gap, saying it would make North Carolina government more efficient and protect teacher jobs.

The $19.9 billion spending plan for the year starting July 1 tracks a previously announced plan to narrow 14 agencies and departments into eight, while cutting or eliminating 139 additional programs. If Perdue’s bill became law, school bus replacement would shift to local districts and all highway welcome centers and most state parks would be closed two days a week.

While her two-year budget proposal to the Legislature would pay for all teachers and teacher assistants currently funded by the state, other public employees wouldn’t be as protected. As many as 3,000 of the positions designated for elimination are currently filled, Perdue’s budget office said. There are currently about 266,000 state-funded positions.

“I don’t sleep well at night, worried about (workers), but at the end of the day, I do know, quite frankly as the governor, that this is the right decision as we move forward with a leaner state government,” Perdue said at a news conference.

GOP leaders newly in charge of the General Assembly and forming their own spending plan said there were positive steps in the incumbent Democrat’s proposal which spends less than the current budget year when $1.6 in federal stimulus funds are added. But they said it doesn’t cut far enough and breaks a promise by keeping intact through mid-2013 three-quarters of a penny of the one-cent sales tax set to expire June 30.

While the measure would lower the base tax most consumers currently pay from 7.75 percent to 7.5 percent, and still generate $827 million next year, the change is still a tax increase, said Senate leader Phil Berger, R-Rockingham, who had pledged with other Republicans to let the one-cent sales tax expire.

“The people of North Carolina in November sent a strong message, and that message was balance the budget and don’t raise taxes. The governor sent a message back to the people today: ‘I’m balancing the budget by raising your taxes,'” Berger said.

Perdue defended the sales tax, saying it helped her avoid eliminating funds for an additional combined 12,500 teachers and teacher assistants. Democrats in charge of the Legislature in 2009 and Perdue agreed to the penny sales-tax increase to help close shortfalls during the Great Recession.

“North Carolina, as we speak, has 5,000-plus K-12 students. Somebody has to pay for those students,” Perdue told reporters.

She also took heat from local government leaders who said her budget would reduce public education funding by $350 million, shifting more responsibility to the districts and the counties.

Funding for clerical and custodial positions would be reduced by 15 percent, or 1,700 positions, and for school bus transportation by 10 percent, or 1,900 positions. Local governments also would be required to replace their own school buses. County commissioners are worried the changes could lead to local property tax increases.

“We hear ‘we are not going to touch the classroom,'” said Joe White, a Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education member and president of the North Carolina School Boards Association. “Unfortunately, those of us who are in the (education) business know that when you cut so many people that support the classroom … you have literally had a great impact on the classroom.”

Perdue said it was time to reconsider the delineation of responsibilities between state and local governments on school funding. House Speaker Thom Tillis, R-Mecklenburg, said he was concerned about putting that kind of burden on counties all at once.

The proposal didn’t contain an effort to revive the video poker industry through heavy regulation. Perdue earlier had sounded intrigued by the idea, which could have generated several hundred million dollars annually.

“I didn’t want the next six months, quite frankly when so much is at stake for North Carolina … to be distracted by this philosophical and moral debate over gambling and other video poker and the lottery,” she said.

The two-year budget would place cuts of 7 percent to 15 percent on most state programs compared to last year’s recurring funding levels, while the public schools and higher education would see 4 to 6 percent reductions.

State employees and teachers would get not pay raises for the third year in a row and give up to $20,000 early retirement bonuses. Some workers would be required to pay a monthly premium for their own health insurance for the first time.

“The governor has outlined a budget plan that will throw North Carolina into a race to the bottom,” said Dana Cope, executive of the State Employees Association of North Carolina, which offered ideas this week that would have protected jobs. “She could have implemented enough of them so that she’d prevent any North Carolinian from being in the unemployment line.”

As previously announced, Perdue said she wants the Legislature to reduce the corporate income tax rate from 6.9 percent to 4.9 percent. She also wants to provide an unemployment tax credit for 135,000 small businesses, spend $75 million on improvements to university and government buildings and set aside $150 million for the state’s rainy-day reserve fund.

Highlights of Gov. Beverly Perdue’s $19.9 billion budget released Tuesday for the 2011-12 fiscal year. For tax changes, figures are for the amount of revenue generated or lost. For spending changes, figures are for amount spent or saved compared to what was projected to maintain current services.

Taxes, reserves or salaries
— extend 0.75 cents of the temporary penny sales tax for another two years: $827 million.
— reduce corporate income tax rate from 6.9 percent to 4.9 percent: -$115 million.
— repeal law giving portion of corporate income tax for public school construction: $72 million.
— provide unemployment insurance tax credit for 135,000 small businesses: -$65 million.
— no salary increases for state employees, teachers.
— cover expected 7.1 percent premium increase for state employee health insurance plan: $117.1 million.
— require state employees on more generous health insurance plan to pay $21.50-per-month premium for individual coverage: -$89 million.
— provide $10,000-$20,000 incentive bonus for eligible workers to retire, allocated in limited amounts throughout state government.
— set aside $75 million from year-end credit balance for repairs, renovations of government buildings.
— contribute more to state retirement system: $115 million.
— severance reserve for laid-off state workers: $30 million.
— rainy-day reserve fund: $150 million.
— set aside $25 million from year-end credit balance to help local governments and nonprofits interested in consolidating or regionalizing services.

K-12 education
— require local school district to pay for workers’ compensation claims: -$34.7 million.
— make payments of tort claims a local responsibility: -$4.6 million.
— reduce allotment for local central office staff by 10 percent, potentially eliminating 140 positions: -$10.8 million.
— reduce instructional support allotment by 5 percent, potentially eliminating 290 positions: -$23 million.
— reduce school building administration funds by 7.5 percent, potentially eliminating 380 positions: -$24.6 million.
— 35 percent allotment reduction for textbooks: -$40 million.
— reduce allotment to districts for custodial and clerical positions by 15 percent, or 1,700 positions: -$59.6 million.
— reduce school bus transportation allotment by 10 percent, or potentially 1,900 positions: -$40.3 million.
— make school bus replacement a local responsibility: -$56.9 million.
— direct 10 percent reduction in Department of Public Instruction, or 40 positions: -$4.4 million.
— eliminate dropout prevention grants: -$13 million.
— pay for instruction supplies and positions to teach an extra 5,323 students in 2011-12 school year: $38.3 million.

University of North Carolina system
— direct University of North Carolina system to reduce combined spending in operating budget by 9.5 percent, with 1,900 positions to be eliminated, partially offset by tuition increases: -$252.6 million.
— reduce legislative aid to residents who attend private college by 6.5 percent: -$12.2 million.
— reduce 25 percent charity care subsidy to UNC Hospitals: -$11 million.
— operation and maintenance of new system building coming online next year, including 283 positions: $18.5 million.
— pay for instruction of additional 2,337 students in 2011-12 school year: $23.3 million.
— consolidate research stations and farms at N.C. State University: $8.7 million.
— use N.C. Education Lottery Funds to help pay for need-based financial aid: $34.9 million.

Community colleges
— eliminate eight specialized centers and programs: -$3.8 million.
— raise tuition by $5.50 per credit hour, or $176 per year: -$25.3 million.
— direct 3 percent reduction in state aid budget to community college system, with as many as 620 position eliminated: -$32.3 million.
— pay for instruction of additional 9,712 full-time equivalent students in 2011-12 school year: $17.9 million.

Health and Human Services
— find efficiencies in department budget to reduce 25 positions: -$1 million.
— reduce Smart Start early childhood initiative by 10 percent: -$9.4 million.
— create up to 5.5 percent assessment on hospital and other Medicaid providers as a way to draw down more federal funds: -$60.2 million.
— adjusting Medicaid provide reimbursement rates, for private duty nursing, imaging and ultrasounds: -$8.4 million.
— modify Medicaid pharmacy services to find efficiencies: -$15.9 million.
— modify optional and mandatory Medicaid services: -$16.5 million.
— set aside $75 million in year-end credit balance for mental health trust fund.
— reduce administrative funds to operate local mental health management offices: -$3.3 million.

Justice and Public Safety
— consolidate Departments of Juvenile Justice, Correction and Crime Control and Public Safety into one Department of Public Safety. Sixty positions would be eliminated.
— reduce administrative functions in judicial branch by 16 percent, or 54 positions: -$9.1 million.
— reduce funds for family and drug treatment courts, dispute resolution and other programs: -$1.9 million.
— reduce courthouse operations expenses by 1 percent, or 71 positions: -$3.3 million.
— shift requirement that sheriffs check whereabouts of registered sex offenders by first-class mail, not certified mail: -$93,000.
— close Woodson Wilderness Camp for juvenile offenders, eliminate 20 positions: -$970,000.
— close Swannanoa Youth Development Center, affecting 26 positions: -$1.4 million.
— eliminate 77 correction positions: -$2.9 million.
— find $12.4 million in savings, eliminate 237 positions from Justice Reinvestment recommendations.
— fund operations and staffing for four new prisons, including 280 positions: $10 million.

Natural and Economic Resources
— merge Employment Security Commission into Department of Commerce, resulting in 53 position eliminations.
— close welcome centers two days a week, privatize them in 2012-13 fiscal year: -$600,000
— One North Carolina Fund economic incentives initiative: $10 million.
— Job Maintenance and Capital Development Program: $8.5 million.
— direct reductions at Department of Agriculture at agency’s discretion: -$5.2 million.
— reduce Department of Environment and Natural Resources by 68 positions, largely in permitting offices: -$418,000.
— close Rendezvous and Turnbull Creek educational state forests due to low attendance: -$131,000.
— reduce Division of Parks and Recreation budget by 10 percent, requiring most parks to close two days a week: -$3.1 million.
— matching money for clean and drinking water revolving funds: $14.5 million.
— Clean Water Management Trust Fund: -$50 million.

Transportation
— reduce public transportation, aviation and ferry funds: -$6.9 million.
— repair, replace and maintain ferry vessels: -$2.1 million.

Other state agencies
— consolidate Department of Administration, State Controller’s Office, Office of Information Technology Services and Office of State Personnel into a new Department of Administration and Management, reducing 21 positions and other human resources jobs.
— delay filling intern positions at the General Assembly: -$1.25 million.
— eliminate four positions from the Officer of the Governor: -$433,000.
— purchase land buffers for military installations: $1 million.
— reduce six positions in State Auditor’s Office: -$784,000.
— increase Department of Insurance company and insurance adjuster licensing fees: -$4.5 million.
— pay for new Department of Revenue tax computer system: $3 million.
— reduce grants for arts, libraries, NC Symphony by 10 percent: -$2.3 million.
— consolidate, reduce management layers at North Carolina State Library, eliminating nine positions: -$500,000.
— centralize human resources functions, cutting 92 positions: -$2.8 million.

Source: Office of State Budget and Management / The Associated Press