[Durham INC] How to respond to bad bills from the General Assembly

Pat Carstensen pats1717 at hotmail.com
Wed Apr 24 17:28:49 EDT 2013


Last night at the delegate meeting, we had a lively discussion of a bill that is part of what Senator Woodard called the "attack on local government" from the General Assembly.  The question is how to respond to issues in a timely way without losing the representative character of our organization -- that is, to make sure that neighborhood sentiment is what shapes our policy.
I believe that unless or until the Responsible-Government Republicans (the party in which I was raised) reclaim their party from the people who treat the General Assembly as a weapon of mass destruction, we will be facing a steady drip of bad bills that we will want to respond to (see the e-mail below for information on an attack on our ability to regulate storm water).  
What I think we need to do:Pass an enabling resolution that lays out the principles on which INC would react to bad bills from the General Assembly and what those reactions would be.Form yet another committee to keep an eye on what is going on.  This committee might set up a list-serve on which to share legislative news, and when there is some agreement that it is time to react, let the general list-serve know what the threat is and what to do about it.  
Regards, pat

Date: Wed, 24 Apr 2013 16:32:55 -0400
From: ed.harrison at mindspring.com
Subject: Re: SB612 - Relaxing Stormwater Rules
To: NC-CONS-FORUM at LISTS.SIERRACLUB.ORG

This was the most cited bill by participants in a legislative forum that I facilitated last Friday for Triangle-area elected officials and water resource professionals (mostly the latter). Panelists were Erin Wynia of the NC League of Municipalities and Grady McCallie of the NC Conservation Network. The concept that "local ordinances cannot be more restrictive than state or federal regulations" means that stopping this bill as written is a top priority for both organizations, and for many allied organizations (such as the regional council that hosted the forum). Have to assume the source for this is the Homebuilders Association. 
Thanks for highlighting this bill, one of the worst of the dozens of anti-city/anti-environment bills introduced this session. 

Ed H

On Apr 24, 2013, at 3:48 PM, Bill Gupton wrote:
  

    
  
  
    If you have ordinances in place  like Charlotte, they could be at
    risk. We have fought hard for years against the Builders on this
    issue. Let's keep an eye on this one. 

    

    NC bill could reduce Charlotte’s stormwater, erosion
      regulations
Charlotte city officials are keeping a close eye on state
        Senate Bill 612, which proposes fast-tracking environmental
      permitting and rolling back local rules that mitigate flooding and
      stream erosion.SB 612 was introduced this month by state Sens. Harry
        Brown (R-Jones), Brent
        Jackson (R-Duplin) and Andrew
        Brock (R-Iredell).The bill — titled
        the Regulatory Reform Act of 2013 — wants to mandate that
      local ordinances cannot be more restrictive than state or federal
      regulations. It also would allow for stormwater management and
      erosion-control plans to be “self-permitted,” according to the
      city.That means, if a permit application includes plans sealed by a
      professional engineer stating the plans comply with predefined
      minimum design criteria, then the permit must be accepted without
      a technical review by the local government staff, according to the
      city.
http://www.bizjournals.com/charlotte/blog/going_green/2013/04/nc-bill-charlotte-stormwater-erosion.html?page=all

    -- 

      
      
      Reduce, Reuse, Recycle &
            Rethink... 

      
        
          
            
              
                
                  Bill 

                        Bill Gupton

                              704-367-0068The
                                  Constitution of the State of
                                  North Carolina

                                Article XIV, Section 5 

                                “It shall be the policy of this State to
                                conserve and protect its lands and
                                waters for the benefit of all its
                                citizenry, 

                                and to this end it shall be a proper
                                function of the State of North Carolina
                                and its political subdivisions to
                                acquire and preserve 

                                park, recreational, and scenic areas, to
                                control and limit the pollution of our
                                air and water, to control excessive
                                noise, 

                                and in every other appropriate way to
                                preserve as a part of the common
                                heritage of this State 

                                its forests, wetlands, estuaries,
                                beaches, historical sites, open lands,
                                and places of beauty.”  

                              
                  
                
              
            
          
          
          
            
              
                
                  
                    
                       
                    
                  
                
              
            
          
        
      
    
  

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