North Carolina
Proposed North Carolina budget would exempt legislators from public records disclosures
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Republican state lawmakers in North Carolina are attempting to exempt themselves from public records laws meant to safeguard transparency with a budget provision allowing them to keep any legislative document private — even after they leave office.
Tucked into the 625-page state budget that legislators have begun voting on fewer than 24 hours after its release is a section that First Amendment experts say would enable the General Assembly to conduct much of the public’s work in secret.
Current and former state legislators would no longer be required to reveal any document, drafting request or information request they make or receive while in office. They would also have broad discretion to determine whether a record should be made public, archived, destroyed or sold.
“I think the way it’s written, I’m told, is structured in a way that’s fair, that makes sense,” Republican House Speaker Tim Moore said of the provision.
Moore defended the policy to reporters on Thursday, noting that lawmakers often field unreasonably broad or cumbersome records requests that bog down government offices and cost taxpayers money. The changes, he said, would eliminate confusion and allow legislators to filter out those requests.
Once the budget measure gets two affirmative votes in the House and Senate — second round votes are expected Friday morning — it will go to Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper, who will decide whether Medicaid expansion and other funding programs outweigh the many provisions he finds undesirable. Republican lawmakers hold narrow veto-proof majorities, meaning any veto would likely be overridden.
But critics like Brooks Fuller, director of the nonpartisan North Carolina Open Government Coalition, say Republicans have inserted into the budget “a broad and sweeping legislative privilege” that would allow elected officials to sidestep the law at the expense of their constituents.
“We’re only going to be able to get a selected and curated narrative of the legislative process at the whims of legislative leadership,” he said.
While North Carolina legislators are already considered the custodians of their own records, the current law only allows them to withhold those records if they claim a specific exemption, said Mike Tadych, a First Amendment lawyer in Raleigh.
Certain caucus meetings and affiliated records are not open to the public, and a legislator’s communications with staff during the bill drafting process can stay private, he explained. The new policy would eliminate the need for lawmakers to claim one of those exemptions to decline a records request.
Public records are defined by law as all documents made or received by the state government concerning the “transaction of public business.” State law considers those records “the property of the people” and says they may obtain them for free or at minimal cost.
The North Carolina Department of Administration maintains that these records are the property of the people and should be provided to them for free or at minimal cost.
Journalists and the public rely on North Carolina’s public records law — which Tadych said is “one of the strongest in the country in practice” — to learn behind-the-scenes details about the legislative process.
“I can’t think of a more crippling blow to the press’s ability to gather information about the General Assembly than what the General Assembly appears to be doing to exempt themselves from access laws,” Fuller said. “It’s a terribly slippery slope and a dangerous step toward total secrecy in government.”
Journalists and civic groups could be stonewalled from doing their jobs and would lose access to an essential accountability tool, said Phil Lucey, executive director of the North Carolina Press Association.
Several Senate Democrats raised concern Thursday during floor debate that the policy would invite shady behavior and undermine public trust. Sen. Brent Jackson, a Sampson County Republican, responded that the changes are less drastic than Democrats have made them out to be.
“This final version is just codifying what is common practice, and then the legislators or the lawmakers, they’re not hiding anything more than they have in the past,” Jackson said.
Another budget provision would repeal a state law that gives the public access to legislative records and communications related to redistricting as soon as the new maps are adopted.
North Carolina legislators have scheduled public hearings next week as they plan to convene in October to redraw boundaries for the state’s congressional and legislative seats that would be used for the 2024 elections.
___
Hannah Schoenbaum is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.
North Carolina
North Carolina fans should embrace the Bill Belichick experience and not worry how long it lasts
Bill Belichick’s longevity at UNC doesn’t matter. He was hired to get the Tar Heels really good, really fast, and he might pull it off.
Bill Belichick introduced as new UNC head football coach
Bill Belichick is officially the new head coach at UNC and addressed the media where he discussed his deep roots in college football.
Sports Pulse
By any measure, Bill Belichick’s first five weeks as North Carolina’s football coach have been unusual.
The way he got the job practically out of nowhere was weird.
The justification for taking the job — largely because he believed NFL teams were no longer interested in him — was weird.
Seeing him on the road recruiting, meeting with kids in high schools and embracing social media has been kinda weird.
Watching him every week on the Pat McAfee Show, where he’s still asked about everything going on in the NFL, is also pretty weird.
And even as he hires assistant coaches and insists North Carolina is where he’s going to be next season, the speculation that he might bail if the right NFL offer comes along — spurred on by his murky contract status — is extremely weird.
You know it has been frustrating for North Carolina and Belichick’s new staff that every day during the NFL’s silly season seems to come with a new report that one team or the other might gauge his interest. Michael Lombardi, Belichick’s right-hand man and general manager, has twice this week gone on social media to shoot down the chatter, going so far as to say, “The NFL isn’t a option so please stop making it one.” And Belichick’s girlfriend posted an Instagram picture of the two of them Thursday with the caption: “Two people who are overtly committed to @uncfootball.”
For better or worse, this is going to be the Belichick experience as long as he stays at North Carolina. Every month, maybe even every week, is going to bring a new rumor. Every chatty agent or NFL general manager is going to whisper his name to reporters who know that his potential return to the league would be a massive story. And every mention of his contract, which apparently isn’t signed yet, is going to emphasize how easy it would be for him to abandon college football should he be tempted by one last shot in the NFL.
For better or worse, that’s what North Carolina signed up for. It’s what Belichick signed up for, too. The narrative that he’s only doing this until something better comes along is mostly the product of his own history and the strangeness of taking on a college program for the first time at age 72.
Belichick almost certainly understood that better than anyone going into this, and it’s not going to change as long as he’s wearing that Carolina baby blue.
At this point, we have to take Belichick’s people at their word that his entire focus right now is building a roster and getting the Tar Heels ready for the 2025 season. Despite the reports and rumors, the odds of him bailing on North Carolina before he even gets started seem remarkably low.
But because of how unconventional all of this is, you have to at least allow for the possibility that North Carolina’s administration will wake up one day and feel used by a coach who never really unpacked his suitcase. Maybe in a year, maybe in a month. Who knows.
Rather than worry about how long Belichick will stay, though, or the potentially devastating circumstances under which he might leave, North Carolina and its fan base should lean into the experimental nature of this pairing. Embrace the uncertainty of how long it might last.
Every athletics director hopes the football coach they hire stays 10 years. But Belichick’s tenure has to be judged by a different standard.
His longevity just doesn’t matter. He was hired to get North Carolina really good, really fast — and when you consider how weak the ACC has been, there’s a chance he might just pull it off.
If SMU and 41-year-old coach Rhett Lashlee can come directly from the American Athletic Conference to the ACC and make the College Football Playoff right away, a similar leap is not outside the capability of a six-time Super Bowl champion.
Maybe Belichick is exactly where he needs to be. Sure, the idea of Belichick working for Jerry Jones or coaching the Raiders is media catnip. The narrative that he longs for 15 more coaching wins to overtake Don Shula as the NFL’s all-time leader is easy and obvious.
But think of it this way. What would actually enhance Belichick’s coaching legacy more: Doing something he’s already done a whole bunch of times or coming into a situation where he has no history or experience and elevating a college program to a place it’s never been before?
The answer is easy. For all Belichick has accomplished in the game of football, even getting North Carolina to the CFP just once would add more to his legend than another Super Bowl ever could.
So why do so many people think he isn’t serious about North Carolina? Why is the NFL rumor mill working overtime to pull him back after rejecting him completely as a coaching candidate last year?
Belichick may not have envisioned himself on a college sideline a few months ago, but he’s there now. And his tenure will be judged by quality, not quantity.
North Carolina had nothing to lose here. It was an underachieving program stuck in the middle of the ACC without the kind of financial backing it needed to compete at the highest level. Even if Belichick bounces back to the NFL next year, the entire mentality of North Carolina has changed. It’s gone all-in on football in a way it never did before.
Sure, every time an NFL job opens, Tar Heel fans are going to be nervous because Belichick’s name is going to get thrown in the mix. Get used to it. It’s better than the comfortable alternative North Carolina had under Mack Brown and most of its previous coaches: Irrelevant and ignored.
As long as Belichick is there, that’s not going to be the case. And even if it doesn’t last a long time, this is still an experiment without a downside — NFL rumors and all.
North Carolina
Registered sex offender facing new charges after escaping in North Carolina, officials say
NEWPORT, N.C. (WBTV) – A registered sex offender is facing more charges after he allegedly escaped while on a work release assignment in North Carolina on Thursday.
State prison officials said 44-year-old Kevin Leonard Worsham Jr. was on work release when he left his assignment in the small town of Teachey in Duplin County.
He returned on his own to the work release location early Friday morning and was arrested, according to officials.
Worsham has a criminal history dating back to 2004, including a past conviction that required him to register as a sex offender.
His current sentence came after he – being a registered sex offender – failed to properly report an address change. Prison records show he was convicted of the offense in Gaston County, and was expected to be released in December 2025.
Now that he is back in custody, Worsham is facing new felony escape charges.
He was being held in the minimum-security Carteret Correctional Center in Newport, but after his escape, he will be housed at Central Prison in Raleigh.
Charlotte man accused of killing teen given bond after it was initially denied, records show
Copyright 2025 WBTV. All rights reserved.
North Carolina
Lexi Donarski, Alyssa Ustby lead No. 14 North Carolina women to 64-33 romp over SMU
DALLAS — Lexi Donarski had 15 points, Alyssa Ustby scored 12 and matched her career-high with 18 rebounds and No. 14 North Carolina rolled to a 64-33 victory over SMU on Thursday night.
Donarski did her damage from 3-point range, sinking 5 of 6 attempts for the Tar Heels (16-3, 3-2 Atlantic Coast Conference). Ustby collected her seventh double-double of the season with five of them coming in the last six games.
Indya Nivar had 11 points and Maria Gakdeng totaled 10 points and seven rebounds for North Carolina, which has won three in a row and 6 of 7.
Kaysia Woods scored 12 to lead the Mustangs (10-8, 2-4).
Nivar had nine points in the first half as North Carolina turned a 13-6 first-quarter lead into a 31-14 advantage at halftime. The Tar Heels shot just 39.4% from the floor before the break, but that looked red-hot compared to SMU, which shot 13.8% overall (4 for 29).
Donarski hit her only two shots of the third quarter — both from beyond the arc — and the Tar Heels led 44-22 heading to the fourth.
Woods had five points in the final period to help SMU top the 10-point mark in a quarter for the first time in the game.
SMU allowed the biggest comeback in NCAA women’s basketball history its last time out when the Mustangs saw a 32-point lead with 1:37 left in the first half turn into a 72-59 loss to Pittsburgh. SMU was outscored 28-0 in the third quarter and 26-10 in the fourth.
North Carolina travels to play Pittsburgh on Sunday. SMU travels to play No. 3 Notre Dame on Sunday.
-
Technology1 week ago
Meta is highlighting a splintering global approach to online speech
-
Science6 days ago
Metro will offer free rides in L.A. through Sunday due to fires
-
Technology1 week ago
Las Vegas police release ChatGPT logs from the suspect in the Cybertruck explosion
-
News1 week ago
Photos: Pacific Palisades Wildfire Engulfs Homes in an L.A. Neighborhood
-
Education1 week ago
Four Fraternity Members Charged After a Pledge Is Set on Fire
-
Politics1 week ago
Trump trolls Canada again, shares map with country as part of US: 'Oh Canada!'
-
Technology6 days ago
Amazon Prime will shut down its clothing try-on program
-
News1 week ago
Mapping the Damage From the Palisades Fire