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NC House approves Disaster Recovery Act for hurricane relief in Western Carolina
NC House approves Disaster Recovery Act for hurricane relief in Western Carolina

Yahoo

time19-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

NC House approves Disaster Recovery Act for hurricane relief in Western Carolina

RALEIGH, NC (WNCT) — Tuesday, Mar. 18, 2025, legislators from the North Carolina House of Representatives approved the fourth-round of hurricane relief measures. The 'Disaster Recovery Act of 2025,' House Bill 47, allocates $524 million for the hurricane relief efforts in Western North Carolina, which brings more than $1.4 billion total relief funding from the General Assembly across all four legislative packages. Key funding provisions in House Bill 47 include: $200 million to Helene-specific crop-loss and farm restoration $120 million for rebuilding and repairing homes $100 million for repairing private roads and bridges $55 million for small business infrastructure grants $20 million to remove millions of cubic yards of debris $10 million to support essential volunteer organizations $10 million for volunteer fire departments $9 million for learning recovery for students in Helene-affected counties $4 million for travel and tourism marketing $217 million to close out home rebuilding operations in Eastern NC $110 million to assist farmers with non-Helene-related crop loss 'We are proud to have worked alongside the Senate to craft and approve this vital relief legislation that continues Western North Carolina's recovery from Hurricane Helene,' Helene Select Committee Co-Chair Dudley Greene said. Alongside hurricane relief, the bill includes $217 million to complete rebuilding homes in Eastern North Carolina and nearly $110 million in state-wide relief for farmers in addition to Helene-specific agriculture funding. 'This bill is a needed helping hand to farmers across our state who have fallen victim to the devastating impact of natural disasters,' House Agriculture and Environment Committee Senior Chair Jimmy Dixon said. The final bill includes additional education funding for Western North Carolina and increased funding for farm relief across the state. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

NC House & Senate at odds on Helene aid, with $535M relief package on brink of passage
NC House & Senate at odds on Helene aid, with $535M relief package on brink of passage

Yahoo

time11-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

NC House & Senate at odds on Helene aid, with $535M relief package on brink of passage

The North Carolina Legislative Building (Photo: Clayton Henkel) The North Carolina House and Senate are out of step on the legislature's newest Hurricane Helene relief package, sending the bill to joint negotiations as it sits one step away from the governor's desk. House Bill 47, the legislature's $535 million aid deal, will head to a conference committee. The House voted to reject the Senate's changes to the bill on Tuesday, forcing members from both chambers to sit down and hammer out a compromise. 'When the bill came back … we feel like there's some additional language added, some things taken away that we need to discuss further,' said Rep. Dudley Greene (R-Avery). The House originally passed the bill in late February. By the time it made it through the Senate, several major changes had been made. Among them: the removal of money for state park repairs, and an extension of relaxed building codes. Rep. Eric Ager (D-Buncombe) said he supported the move to reject Senate changes, but urged lawmakers to move swiftly. 'I think the most important thing is that we get this money out there quickly,' Ager said. Greene said members of both chambers would be going to conference 'as quickly as possible.' The bill lays out $535 million in new state spending for Helene recovery efforts. And it sends $217 million to ReBuild NC, the long-struggling homebuilding program, to finish construction projects from post-Hurricanes Matthew and Florence. After passing the Senate, the bill included $192 million in agricultural relief, $140 million for a homebuilding program, and $100 million for private road and bridge repairs, among a number of other line-items.

NC House passes $500M in Helene aid, $100 boost to weekly unemployment checks
NC House passes $500M in Helene aid, $100 boost to weekly unemployment checks

Yahoo

time26-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

NC House passes $500M in Helene aid, $100 boost to weekly unemployment checks

North Carolina Rep. Dudley Greene (R-Avery) urges the House to support a bill sending $500 million in aid to western North Carolina after Hurricane Helene on Feb. 25, 2025. (Photo: Galen Bacharier/NC Newsline) The North Carolina House approved a pair of key bills Tuesday, passing the next round of Hurricane Helene relief and an increase in the state's weekly unemployment payouts. Both measures received bipartisan support; the Helene aid bill now heads to the Senate, where leaders have been quiet about their exact plans. The unemployment bill requires one more vote to pass the House. House Bill 47, state lawmakers' third round of aid for western North Carolina, sends $500 million in new spending to the mountains. It passed the House unanimously. The relief bill includes $150 million for a new homebuilding program, $150 million for agricultural relief and $100 million to repair private roads and bridges in the region. Efforts by the legislature to get new money flowing have taken on a new sense of urgency with questions plentiful and mounting at the federal level, months after the storm. Officials had already expected months-long delays on money to rebuild homes. And reported White House cuts to key offices could further complicate another bundle of money arriving on time. Rep. Dudley Greene (R-Avery), one of the lead sponsors of the bill, said it would address 'immediate needs' in the mountains. 'We all hope that that money will start flowing soon,' said Greene. 'But I fully expect that this won't be the last that will be needed. In this or future sessions.' The bill marks the General Assembly's largest investment in Helene relief since mid-October, when it approved a $600 million aid bill. And it brings the state's total spending on Helene to about $1.1 billion. Gov. Josh Stein and his fellow Democrats have continued to urge, without success, higher levels of spending in the latest round of aid. Stein requested $1 billion earlier this month, including money for a small business grant program and for schools to fund summer classes. 'We are five months out from this storm,' said Rep. Lindsey Prather (D-Buncombe). 'We've got to move quicker, and we've got to spend more. We have a rainy day fund for a reason. Let's use it.' House Speaker Destin Hall (R-Caldwell) told reporters Tuesday that the current approach to sending aid allowed for further transparency on how the money has spent. Republicans remain wary of disaster relief after one of the offices leading recovery efforts in eastern North Carolina in response to past hurricanes ran up a major deficit. 'Instead of just passing one bill and sending all of that money to the governor in one go, we're going to have oversight of it over time,' Hall said. It remains to be seen whether the Senate will make major changes to the aid bill. Senate President Pro Tem Phil Berger (R-Rockingham) said earlier this month that the chamber could either take up the House bill or begin moving its own. The House also gave initial approval to a bill boosting the state's weekly unemployment payouts by $100 on Tuesday. House Bill 48 would raise North Carolina's maximum weekly payment from the current $350 to $450. It earned initial approval in the House on a 115-1 vote. The bill would mark the first increase in unemployment benefits since they were slashed almost a decade ago. Facing with repaying a federal loan from in the aftermath of the Great Recession, lawmakers in 2013 dramatically cut the total length of unemployment eligibility and capped the weekly payment at $350. Since then, North Carolina's unemployment benefits have been among the least generous in the country. When first introduced, the bill increased the weekly payment to $400. A Democratic-led push to boost it further, to $450, found bipartisan support during the committee process. The increase, if it becomes law, would spend around $584 million from the state's unemployment fund over the next five years, according to legislative staff's analysis. But the staff still expects the fund to 'continue to increase,' even with increased benefits. After Hurricane Helene, former Gov. Roy Cooper issued an executive order increasing the maximum weekly unemployment check to $600. That order expires March 1. The bill both ratifies that executive order while also declaring that the governor did not have the authority to issue it in the first place. Democrats have expressed concerns that the language could stop governors from moving to respond to future disasters effectively. Rep. Deb Butler (D-New Hanover), the sole 'no' vote, said the bill was 'just another step in a rather calculated effort to undermine the balance of power in this state.' 'Let's allow our governor to use his best judgement during emergencies,' Butler said. House Republicans have signaled that their party colleagues in the Senate may be less enthusiastic about the $450 figure. Berger told reporters earlier this month that 'we probably need to raise' the payment — but declined to commit to a specific amount.

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