| LOCAL ISSUES |
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I have been a proud citizen of Fayetteville for over 27
years. I took my first job here in 1981, and raised my family here. I’ve taught
as a volunteer instructor at Westover High School, an adjunct instructor at FTCC and now as
visiting professor at Fayetteville State, and Campbell
Law School.
I also led Sunday school classes here for many years. This is my home, and I am
dedicated to bringing smart, sustainable economic development, excellence in
education and the preservation of the extraordinary natural resources of our
community. The future is bright for Cumberland
County, and I pledge to
continue fighting to make this the best possible place to live, work and raise
a family.
House Bill
1761/Senate Bill 1041, Job Maintenance and Capital Development Fund – Provided
$60 million to encourage several businesses, including the Goodyear plant in
Fayetteville, to maintain high–paying jobs in North Carolina and requires these
businesses invest at least $200 million in capital upgrades to their facilities,
maintain a work force of at least 2000 full–time employees and provide them
with quality health care benefits, while abiding by stringent environmental
standards.
House
Bill 1191, Incorporation of Eastover – At the request of the citizens of
Eastover, this bill made possible the incorporation of the Town of Eastover, allowed for self–governance
and the creation of a town council and mayoral position. Eastover serves as
both a wonderful gateway community for North Carolina
into Fayetteville and an attractive residential
choice for Cumberland
County residents.
House
Bill 2520, North Carolina Veterans Park
– As part of the 2008 budget, provides $15 million to the City of Fayetteville to create a Veteran’s Park which will provide
a place for meaningful reflection and inspiration in a community setting that
is beautiful, bold, and unique to honor the lives, service, and pride of North Carolina veterans.
House
Bill 1008/Senate Bill 586, Additions to State Parks System – Created
Carvers Creek State Park in Cumberland County, which represents an excellent
example of the natural features of the Sandhills Region of North Carolina, with
rolling hills, ravines, and narrow stream bottoms, includes endangered red–cockaded
woodpeckers, rare plants, high quality longleaf pine forests, wetlands, and
other natural communities characteristic of the Sandhills, and has been found
to possess biological, scenic, and recreational resources of statewide
significance.
House
Bill 2731/Senate Bill 2038 – Defense and Security Technology Accelerator –
Appropriated $1.5 million dollars for the creation of the Defense and Security
Technology Accelerator (DSTA), a thought leader in business
acceleration, located in downtown Fayetteville.
The program is designed to create collaborations with the military,
entrepreneurs and innovators while fostering the rapid development of defense
and security technology solutions to meet military needs and private industry
demands (click here to visit the DSTA Website).
Hope
Mills Lake – In 2006, I requested and secured $2.17 million from the
Governor’s Emergency Response Account for the restoration and preservation of the
Hope Mills Lake, helping to initiate the recently completed efforts to return
this spectacular natural treasure to the town of Hope Mills, and for the
enjoyment of all who visit this beautiful lake and enjoy its many resources. (Click here to visit the Friends
of the Hope Mills Lake website).
| EDUCATION |
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As an educator, former school board
member and Chairman, and as the husband of a teacher, education is the issue
closest to my heart. My children attended Cumberland
public schools and state Universities. As the Chairman of the House
Appropriations Committee on Education, it is my privilege and my challenge to
oversee House spending priorities for education throughout the state. I am
proud of the many achievements of our public schools and the progress we have
made toward the goal of an excellent global education for every child, one that
prepares them for college and a dynamic and innovative workforce. There is
still much work to be done to fully realize this goal, and I am dedicated to
continuing to fight to make North
Carolina’s education system the best in the
country.
House Bill
150, Every Child Ready to Learn – Modifies school admission requirements to
ensure all children are ready to enter kindergarten, helping to promote
lifelong learning and preventing dropouts in later grades.
Joint
Legislative Study Committee on Public School Funding Formulas – I sponsored
the legislation that created this committee and serve as a co–chair. This
committee is tasked with undertaking a full and comprehensive review of the
best available formulas for the funding of every aspect of public education in North Carolina, in an
effort to maximize benefits, enhance student achievement and increase both the
graduation rates and the quality of education for each student in our schools.
House
Bill 749, Implement Efficiencies in the University System – Implemented the
recommendations of UNC President Bowles’ Advisory Committee on Efficiency and
Effectiveness to make the best use of taxpayer’s money within the state
University System.
House
Bill 12, Students with Disabilities and Special Ed Changes; House
Bill 13, Alternative Programs for Students with Disabilities; House
Bill 14, Homebound Instruction for Disabled Students, House
Bill 18, Defining Residence for Students with Special Needs; House
Bill 20, Homebound Instruction Standards – A series of bills that implemented
recommendations of the House Select Committee on Children with Disabilities,
which I chaired, ensuring students with disabilities and students receiving
homebound instruction are given access to quality educational choices and the
most appropriate and effective educational delivery is available to all
students.
House
Bill 1366, School Violence Protection Act (passed the House) – Intended to
prevent all forms of violence in schools, to protect the most vulnerable
children and provide guidelines for teachers, administrators and parents on how
to prevent and protect children from bullying and harassment.
House
Bill 1908, Rewrite Special Education Laws – A total overhaul of the Special
Education laws in North Carolina, “ensures that all children with disabilities
ages three through 21 have available to them a free appropriate public education
that emphasizes special education and related services designed to meet their
unique needs and prepares them for further education, employment, and
independent living, ensures that the rights of these children and their parents
are protected and enables the State Board of Education and local educational
agencies to provide for the education of all children with disabilities”.
House
Bill 911, Streamline School Testing Program – Recognizing that a student is
more than a test score, eliminated the High School exit exam in North Carolina’s public
schools. Required that the Sate Board of Education “develop a comprehensive
plan to revise content standards in reading, writing, mathematics, science, history,
geography, and civics” and that “a full review of available and relevant
academic content standards that are rigorous, specific, sequenced, clear,
focused, and measurable, whenever possible, be a part of the process of the
development of content standards”.
House
Bill 2273, Funds for Academically Gifted Children – Appropriated $3.5
million for FY 2008–09 to provide for the needs of academically or
intellectually gifted children, helping to ensure these children receive the
enhanced educational resources and opportunities necessary for them to earn the
highest educational achievements possible.
House
Bill 58 & House Bill 2641, Funds for Science Competitions; House
Bill 231, Foreign Language In Schools Funding; House
Bill 2169, Exceptional Children’s Funding; House
Bill 225, Disadvantaged Student Funding – Appropriated $300,000 for science
competitions for Middle and High school students, $500,000 for the development
of High school courses in critical foreign language training, helping to ensure
a globally competitive and dynamic student population and $6 million each for
Exceptional Children and Disadvantaged Student services and programs
House
Bill 2130, Increase Community College Faculty Salaries; House
Bill 2146, Community College Allied Health Funds – These bills,
respectively, increased Community College faculty salaries, moving North
Carolina toward the goal of national average for faculty pay, and increased
substantially the state’s commitment to crucial allied health training and
degree programs, such as nursing, radiology and biomedicine.
| MILITARY FAMILIES |
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The men and women of our armed
services and their families have pledged themselves and their lives to
protecting our country, and we owe them nothing less than our solemn promise to
do all in our power to honor, aid and support them. Cumberland County benefits
tremendously from having two of our nation’s most important military bases as
part of our community, and I am committed to the passage of legislation that
provides support for our military members, our veterans and their families. In
addition to the introduction and passage of the legislation below, I worked to
protect our servicemen and women by helping to defeat the legalization of predatory
lending practices that take advantage of military members and their
families.
House
Bill 1515/Senate Bill 1058, UNC and Comm. College Tuition/Military Students – Provides in–state tuition for members of the active–duty military, the North
Carolina National Guard and their dependent relatives at State Universities and
Community Colleges, and clarified laws prohibiting discrimination against
persons who serve in the North Carolina National Guard.
House Bill
942/Senate Bill 1117, the 2005 Military Support Act – Extends in–state
tuition at state universities and colleges for retired service personnel and
their families, makes children of active–duty service personnel eligible for
admission to the NC School of Science and Mathematics, allows for early termination of rental
agreements for deployed service members, provides $2 million for conservation
easement purchases around military installations,
and supports quality–of–life and morale programs for the military and their
families.
House
Bill 773, Protect Military Personnel/Life Insurance – Protects military
members from predatory and dishonest life insurance and annuity sales
practices.
House
Bill 2768 – A combined bill that I helped to champion, introduced by Rep.
Faison of Orange County, that allows disabled military
veterans to take advantage of the North Carolina Disabled Sportsman program.
House
Bill 2683/Senate Bill 1981, Interstate Compact on the Education of Military Children – Streamlines the process of transferring children of military families who
have been relocated from or to North
Carolina’s public schools. Requires that students are
not disadvantaged in their grade, class or school designation and those parents
may carry official school records or be given unofficial records to expedite
the transfer process.
| ETHICS |
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The ethical practice of legislating
is an issue I take very seriously – honoring the trust our constituents have
placed in us with their votes is our highest calling, and I have fought for
tougher limits on outside influence in elections and at the General Assembly. As
the Chairman of the Joint Legislative Ethics Committee, I am tasked with
upholding the ethical standards on the Legislature and am proud of the work we
have done to restore public faith in government.
House
Bill 1517, Voter Owned Elections Pilot – Created a pilot program for
Council of State positions to provide alternative source of campaign financing
for candidates who obtain a sufficient number of qualifying contributions from
registered voters and who voluntarily accept strict fund–raising and spending
limits.
House Bill
6/Senate Bill 612, Amend Lobbying Laws – A comprehensive reform of lobbying
laws, helps to reduce the influence of lobbyists and special interests in
legislative business and hold legislators and lobbyists accountable.
House
Bill 2542, Clarify Ethics and Lobbying Laws – Provides clarification and
increased restrictions to further reduce undue influence of lobbyists and
special interest groups and to hold all participants in the legislative process
to a clear, comprehensive and transparent standard of conduct.
| RELIEF FOR WORKING FAMILIES |
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In our challenging economic climate,
providing relief for working families who are struggling is essential. Ensuring
those most vulnerable to the uncertainties we all face have access to health
care, and reward those small businesses that provide health care helps keep
workers, businesses and our economy healthy. We have also succeeded creating
protections for families from unfair foreclosure practices as they struggle to
keep their homes, and creating a North
Carolina Earned Income Tax Credit for working
families.
House
Bill 265, Establish North Carolina High–Rick Insurance Pool – Provides
affordable health insurance coverage for North Carolinians who face high
insurance premiums because of prior issues with their health or who have lost
their coverage due to unaffordable premiums because of debilitating illness or
chronic disease.
House
Bill 1374, Protect Homeowners/Reduce Foreclosure and House
Bill 947, NC Foreclosure/Landlord Tenant Laws – Protect homeowners at risk
of foreclosure by requiring that the homeowner’s rights and obligations are clearly
delineated and enforce and protecting tenants of buildings sold in foreclosure
by requiring notice of the sale and allowing for early termination of rental
agreements.
Earned Income Tax Credit – I was an early champion of establishing a state Earned
Income Tax Credit for working families and fought to ensure the inclusion of
this important provision in the last two state budgets, ensuring even in a
challenging economic climate our state’s workers and their families are
protected from undue financial burden.
House
Bill 2174, Raise Minimum Wage – I cosponsored the historic legislation
raising North Carolina’s
state minimum wage from $5.15 to $6.15 per hour in 2006 (since raised to $6.55).
| CRIMINAL JUSTICE |
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As an attorney, former public
defender and legislator, I consider criminal justice one of the most important
issues we face as a state and a community. To live in safety and peace, to be
protected by a well funded and supported police force, to be served by the most
responsive, equitable and effective criminal justice system possible – I
consider these the inherent rights of citizenship, and am proud of the work we
have done to respond to the complex and ever changing challenges we face. I am
committed to continue working with local and state police and justice officials
to make this the safest possible place to live, work and grow for every one of
our citizens.
House
Bill 2747, Firearms/Mental Incompetence
– Prevents those who have been involuntarily committed for mental health
issues from buying or possessing a firearm, based on safety recommendations
made in the aftermath of the Virginia Tech shooting tragedy.
House
Bill 1896, Protect North Carolina's Children/Sex Offender Law Changes – created
one of the most comprehensive sex–offender prevention and protection
statutes in the nation, including longer
prison sentences and expanded GPS monitoring for offenders and enforcement for
expanded residency restrictions.
House
Bill 27, Duty to Report Child Pornography – Protects North Carolina’s
children from abuse, and helps police track down and prosecute those who posses
or distribute child pornography.
House
Bill 1323, Establish North Carolina Innocence Inquiry Commission – Created
the nation’s first Actual Innocence Commission, an independent Commission to
investigate credible claims of actual innocence. Based on eight recent cases of
exoneration in North Carolina,
in which innocent men were freed after years of incarceration for crimes they
did not commit. The commission recognizes justice is not served for anyone when
the innocent are jailed and the real criminals are left free to commit further
crimes.
House Bill
248, Methamphetamine Lab Prevention Act of 2005 – Restricts access to the
most common ingredients used to produce methamphetamines, and was credited by
the State Bureau of Investigation with a 35% reduction in meth labs in the
first year of its enforcement (read more), and created
one of the most comprehensive and effective anti–meth statutes in force in the
nation today.
House
Bill 1625, Eyewitness ID Reform Act, and House
Bill 1626, Enhance Reliability of Interrogations – Based on recommendations
from the Actual Innocence Commission, enhances reliability of eyewitness
testimony, protects investigators from false claims of abuse during
interrogations, and protects the innocent from false accusation and
imprisonment.
House
Bill 214, Children’s Advocacy Center Funds - Provides $335,000 for the 22
Child Advocacy Centers on North
Carolina to assist in the prosecution of child sexual
assault cases and to provide treatment and support for the victims of these
horrific crimes.
| PUBLIC HEALTH |
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Threats to the public health of our
citizens have many sources; infectious diseases, food source contaminations,
natural disasters and secondhand smoke just a few among them. I have worked
hard to introduce legislation that provides immediate, reasonable and
comprehensive responses to these threats, and have been successful in getting
effective legislation passed that increases protections for all North Carolinians.
House
Bill 1738, Advisory Committee/Hospital Infection Rates –Requires public
disclosure of hospital infection rates and creates an Advisory Committee to
assist State agencies, hospitals and the public in preparing for the law to
take effect. Hospital–acquired infections kill 90,000 people nationwide and
cost $5 million a year, most of which is passed on to taxpayers and insurance
customers. This law will protect the public’s health, help reduce preventable
infections and save North Carolinians money.
House
Bill 1113, Designate General Assembly Buildings Nonsmoking – Banned smoking
in the General Assembly Buildings, protecting the members, staff, pages and the
44,000 North Carolina
students who visit the General Assembly each year.
House
Bill 24, Smoking in State Govt. Buildings/Prohibition – Banned smoking in
all State owned or leased buildings, and restored local control so that
municipalities could regulate smoking in buildings and vehicles owned or leased
by local government.
Senate
Bill 1086, Smoke Free Schools (An important bill introduced in the Senate
last year that I helped to pass in the House) – Protects North Carolina
students from the dangers of second–hand smoke by banning smoking on all public
school campuses, school buses and school–sponsored trips.
House
Bill 2252/Senate Bill 1681, Smoke–Free Motor Fleet; House
Bill 2254, Community Colleges Smoke Free – Additional protections passed
this year designate any vehicle owned or leased by the State smoke–free, and
allow Community Colleges to declare their campuses smoke–free as they see fit.
House
Bill 748/Senate Bill 712, Insurers Cover Prescriptions in an Emergency –
Requires Insurance companies to provide victims of natural disasters a cost–free
re–supply of prescription medications during disaster recovery, as recommended
by the Hurricane Katrina task force.
House
Bill 2200, Enhance Embargo Authority to Protect Food Supply – In response
to recent cases of food contamination, enhances the embargo authority of the
Secretary of Environment and Natural Resources and local health directors, and directs
the development of a State plan to protect North Carolina’s food supply from
international contamination.
Senate
Bill 582, Public Health Preparedness and Response – The Senate version of a
bill I introduced in the House in 2004, expands the quarantine and isolation
authority of the state Public Health Director, provides the necessary authority
to respond to nuclear, biological and chemical threats to public safety.
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