Keith Clark Lee County North Carolina
The Raleigh Report
Supplemental

From the Office of Representative Jimmy L. Love, Sr.
April 29, 2009
      Senate Bill 287 regarding the State Health Plan was enacted by the General Assembly on April 22, 2009, and signed by the Governor on April 23, 2009.  Below is an informational explanation as well as a summary of the changes to the State Health Plan.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What caused the losses in the State Health Plan? 
Last year, the State Health Plan transitioned entirely from an indemnity plan to a preferred provider plan. A preferred provider plan sets up a network of health care professionals who provide care at a negotiated rate that’s lower than the standard rate. In addition to paying premiums, the insured make co-payments for services to help offset the costs.  
Inaccurate information about the costs of the transition resulted in the losses. The actual cost of the plan and the frequency with which plan members went to the doctor after the move to the new plan was higher than the former plan administrators estimated. While they were reporting a surplus of several million dollars last summer, the plan was already running a deficit.
2. How was it supposed to work? 
Very few states still use an indemnity plan, which requires the insured to pay a fixed percentage of all of their health care costs. Preferred provider plans are now the industry standard because they result in increased availability of health care, better preventative care, less emergency care and generally lower costs.  
3. Why didn't it work? 
The legislators who oversee the plan were given overly optimistic estimates of the plan’s projected finances. The discounts from health care providers were half as much as projected, more people than expected went to the doctor after their out-of-pocket costs were reduced and both premiums and out-of-pocket cost-sharing for plan members still brought in less than expected. Some of the numbers are difficult to quantify because the former administrators didn’t leave complete records. 
Legislators discovered the shortfall only after the plan was negotiated and in place because the former State Health Plan director did not share accurate information. He has since been fired and replaced.  
4. What did we do to close the gap? 
Once the problems were discovered, the legislative committee that oversees the plan asked that the plan director be replaced. The oversight committee began meeting weekly to carefully monitor the plan’s finances and to begin developing a strategy to keep the plan solvent while we learned the extent of the issues. Recent actions taken by General Assembly to address some of the issues associated with the Plan include (1) a one time appropriation of $250 million to support the Plan for the duration of the current fiscal year, (2) elimination of the high cost 90/10 PPO option, (3) increase in premiums, co-pays and deductibles, (4) appropriation of $527 million over the 09-11 biennium to finance the 8.9% premium increase for state employees and retirees. While there have been complaints about the state trying to finance the plan on the backs of workers, about two-thirds of the cost of this plan comes from state money, not employees.
5. What is our long-term plan? 
A significant provision in the recently ratified Health Plan legislation requires the establishment of a Blue Ribbon Task Force. The task force will review all aspects of the plan’s operations and make recommendations for changes that will ensure the ongoing financial stability of the plan. Included among the issues the task force will study are: governance and operations of the plan; ways to increase dependent coverage; tiered premium rates based on ability to pay; and transfer of the day-to-day oversight of the plan to an independent agency. The law also requires an independent audit of the plan’s operations, including its claims processor, pharmacy benefits manager and disease management contractor. The new law creates a better plan that strengthens monthly reporting requirements to the plan’s oversight committee and provides additional transparency in the plan’s dealings with its contractors. All of these requirements were added by House members and will address many of the administrative shortcomings that led to the existing problems with the health plan.
We have also added efforts to encourage plan participants to adopt healthier lifestyles. The plan is authorized to implement a wellness initiative to encourage members to quit smoking and to lose weight. The plan will provide assistance to each member in achieving his/her smoking/weight loss objectives. Success in these two areas should result in lower health care costs, which will contribute to the long-term financial viability of the plan.
Through the recent fixes, we were successful in continuing to provide free health care coverage to all state employees and retirees. Very few employers still provide such a benefit.
Following is a summary of the substantive provisions of Senate Bill 287. 
Funding:
Section 1:
    • Appropriates $250,000,000 for the 2008-2009 fiscal year to cover the current year shortfall.
    • Appropriates $138,384,774 from General Fund/Highway Fund for the 2009-2010 fiscal year, and $289,068,095 for the 2010-2011 fiscal year.
Benefit changes
Section 2:
    • Eliminates the PPO Plus (90/10) option effective July 1, 2009.
    • Wellness Initiatives on Smoking Cessation and Weight Management.  These initiatives are being developed.  Smoking cessation will go into effect July 1, 2010, and weight management will go into effect July 1, 2011.
    • Prescription drug changes:
            Generic copay remains at $10.
            Preferred brand w/o generic = $35 (up from $30)
            Nonpreferred brand = $55 (up from $40)
            Brand w/generic equivalent = $10 plus the difference between the Plan's gross   allowed cost for the generic and the Plan's cost for the brand.
      If a pharmacy offers to the general public a drug covered by the Plan at a price that is less than the co-payment under the Plan, the pharmacy must charge the lesser of the general public's cost and the Plan's co-payment.
    • Specialty medications: Specialty medications must be purchased from a specialty vendor under contract with the Plan.  Co-payment for specialty drug will be 25% of the Plan's cost, not to exceed $100.  Specialty medication requirements do not apply to cancer medications. Specialty medications are those that, among other things, exceed $400 per prescription cost to the Plan.
    • Routine eye-examinations will not be covered on and after January 1, 2010.
    • Deductibles and co-payments. Effective July 1, 2009, the following deductibles, co-payments, and co-insurance apply. The aggregate maximum deductible and coinsurance for employee-child and employee-family coverage is three times the member-only coverage:
            Basic Plan (70/30 coverage):
            In-network deductible = $800.  Out-of-Network = $1600.
            In-network coinsurance maximum = $3,250. Out-of-network=$6,500.
            In-network primary care co-pay = $30 per covered individual.
      In-network specialist co-pay = $70 per covered individual, except that mental health  and substance abuse providers, chiropractors, and physical, occupational, and speech therapist co-pay = $55 per covered individual.
            Inpatient co-pay = $250 per covered individual
            Deductibles and Co-payments (continued):
            Standard Plan (80/20 coverage):
            In-network deductible = $600.  Out-of-network = $1,200.
            In-network coinsurance maximum = $2,750.  Out-of-network = $5,500.
            In-network urgent care = $75 per covered individual.
            In-network primary care = $25 per covered individual
      In-network specialist = $60, except for mental health, substance abuse, chiropractic and physical, occupational, and speech therapy providers = $45 per covered individual.
            Inpatient = $200 per covered individual.
      Dependent coverage premium is increased by 8.9% in 2009-2010.  An additional 8.9% increase will be applied for 2010-2011.
      Pharmacies have agreed to achieve savings of $18,000,000 in pharmacy benefit costs to the Plan in 2009-2010, and $20,000,000 in 2010-2011.
Technical and conforming changes:
Sections 3, 4, and 6:
    • Clarifies step-child's eligibility for coverage as a Plan member's dependent.
    • Clarifies eligibility for full-time students age 19+ as member's dependent.
    • Conforms waiting periods and pre-existing conditions to applicable federal law.
    • Requires verification of a dependent's eligibility for coverage.
    • Makes clarifying and conforming changes to NC Health Choice coverage.
    • Makes conforming changes to employer contribution rates for Plan coverage.
Other changes.
Sections 5-7:
    • Adds to the duties and responsibilities of the Executive Administrator.
    • Clarifies that State Hospitals that provide mental health and chemical dependency treatment must be accredited
    • No visit limit on physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech therapy extended to July 1, 2011.
    • Makes certain terms of the contracts between the Plan and its claims processing contractor and other contracting entities a public record.  Excluded are terms that contain proprietary, confidential, or trade secret information.
    • Requires an independent audit of the Plan.  The audit will be put out for bid and will address such things as governance structure of the Plan, claims data, role of the Board of Directors, overpayments, over-utilization, and fraud and abuse.
    • Requires that Plan contracts with other entities contain detailed billing information, transactional data information, and administrative costs to the Plan.
    • Establishes a Blue Ribbon Task Force to review governance of the Plan and to make recommendations for changes that will ensure ongoing financial stability of the Plan, increase and maintain high participation rates for dependent coverage, and other specific tasks.  Task Force reports to the General Assembly, the Governor, and the Committee on Employee Hospital and Medical Benefits.
    Effective date:  Except for appropriations and benefit changes that become effective 7/1/09, the remainder of the act is effective when it becomes law (signed by Governor). 
Prepared with the assistance of the Speaker’s Office of Communications

From the Office of Representative Jimmy L. Love, Sr. - April 23, 2009

We clearly live in challenging economic times and the outlook for our state budget this year reflects the downturn we’ve seen nationally.

State budget experts predict North Carolina will collect about $3 billion less in taxes in the coming fiscal year than originally anticipated. That means the General Assembly will have to cut services and find efficiencies if we are to balance the budget as constitutionally required.

In our effort to gather as much information as possible as we go through this difficult process, House budget writers will hold a hearing next week to gather public comments about the budget. The hearing will be from 6-9 p.m. on Tuesday, April 28, at the North Carolina Museum of History. Ten community colleges across the state will host interactive broadcasts of the hearing and it will also be streamed live on the Internet.

The community colleges closest to Lee and Harnett Counties are Johnston Community College in Smithfield and Fayetteville Technical Community College in Fayetteville.

Please visit www.nccommunitycolleges.edu/colleges_map.aspx for contact information and driving directions to each campus.

Members of the public are invited to come to one of the sites to offer suggestions and comments about the budget. Each speaker will have two minutes to share information. Other rules may also be established and will be available online at www.ncleg.net closer to the date of the hearing. Information about how to submit written comments and how to access the online broadcast will also be available at the site. I hope you will attend one of the sites if you are able.

We continue to consider other bills that will help our state move forward and that give municipalities more authority to make local decisions about transportation and campaign financing. We also negotiated a compromise with the Senate to address the immediate financial shortcomings in the State Health Plan while we work out a long-term solution.

Transportation

_ The House has approved legislation that would allow counties to raise more money for mass transit projects, including rail service and buses. The bill (HB 148) would let residents of Durham, Forsyth, Guilford, Orange and Wake counties vote on whether to increase local sales taxes by ½ cent and car registration fees by up to $2. Other counties could increase sales taxes by a ¼ cent for such projects. The money would be dedicated to public transportation. The legislation is based on a plan Mecklenburg County used to finance its new downtown rail line. The proposal now goes to the Senate.

Campaign Finance

_ The largest cities in North Carolina may soon have the ability to decide whether they want to embrace public campaign financing. The House approved a bill (HB 120) this week to create a pilot program through 2016 that would allow cities with more than 50,000 people to use tax money to help pay for political campaigns. Typically, candidates who accept public money agree to accept limited contributions from other donors. Supporters say public campaign financing reduces the amount of money spent on campaigns and the influence of big donors. Critics contend that it’s unfair to ask taxpayers to subsidize candidates with whom they may not agree. Races for the state’s appellate courts, auditor, insurance commissioner and school superintendent are already eligible for public campaign financing. The bill now goes to the Senate.

Health

_ The General Assembly has negotiated a bill that will result in smaller rate increases than originally projected for members of the State Health Plan while also increasing the plan’s transparency. The bill (SB 287) reduces the premium rate increase for the next two years from 10 percent to 8.9 percent. It also adds coverage for treatment by chiropractors, mental health and substance abuse professionals and speech therapists and includes provisions to encourage plan members to stop smoking and to lose weight.

The bill retains language added in the House that calls for an independent audit of the plan, more detailed billing information and increased disclosure of transactional data and administrative costs. The proposal also calls for monthly financial reports and establishes a 15-member Blue Ribbon Task Force that will examine the plan’s rate structure and governance, among other things. The bill now goes to the governor for her signature.

Domestic Violence

_ The House has passed legislation that renames the North Carolina Council for Women/Domestic Violence Commission and clarifies its mission (HB 115). The group will now be called the North Carolina Center for Women, Families, and Domestic Violence. The commission will be asked to consider issues related to sexual assault, domestic violence, employment, education, health, pay equity, housing and child care. The proposal was recommended by the Joint Legislative Committee on Domestic Violence. For more information please visit: http://www.nccadv.org/.

Miscellaneous

_ A new proposal would require the words “National Guard” to be capitalized in the state statutes as a sign of respect for our military. The bill (HB 632) passed unanimously and now goes to the Senate.

Notes

_ One of my colleagues, Sen. Vernon Malone, a longtime leader in education for Wake County and our state, died this past weekend. Sen. Malone was serving his fourth term in the General Assembly, but had spent several decades as a school administrator, a school board member and a county commissioner. Services for Sen. Malone were held in Raleigh on Thursday. He was 77.

_ The House of Representatives has elected Samuel Powell of Burlington, and K. Ray Bailey of Fairview, to the State Board of Community Colleges. Powell is chairman of the Alamance Community College Board of Trustees and was formerly a Burlington City Council member and Alamance County commissioner. Bailey was president of Asheville-Buncombe Technical Community College until 2007 and was elected a Buncombe County commissioner in November.

Please remember that you can listen to each day’s session, committee meetings and press conferences on the General Assembly’s website at www.ncleg.net. Once on the site, select "audio," and then make your selection – House Chamber, Senate Chamber, Appropriations Committee Room or Press Conference Room.

From the Office of Representative Jimmy L. Love, Sr. - April 16, 2009

There was a lot of important legislation that passed through the House this week that is likely to impact your lives. We spent several hours discussing a bill that would give parents more say in what their children learn about sex in schools and we passed our version of a bill that would shore up the State Health Plan. We also worked to make our streets and highways safer by endorsing a proposal that would outlaw texting while driving.

We also remain hard at work on our budget proposal and continue looking for ways to preserve the programs that are most vital to our state.

The following information highlights a few bills of interest that the House has taken up this week.

As always, I welcome any thoughts or ideas you may have to share with me, and I hope you will let me know if I can be of any service.


Health

_Legislation that would appropriate money for the State Health Plan for Teachers and State Employees and make other changes related to the plan passed the House on Tuesday (SB 287). The House version of the plan would require a Blue Ribbon Task Force to study the plan and to undergo an independent financial audit. The intention of the General Assembly is that savings and overpayments identified by the audit be used to help support the plan and keep premiums low. The bill now goes to a conference committee that will negotiate a final proposal.

_ Parents would have more say about what their children are taught in sex education classes under a bill approved in the House this week. The Healthy Youth Act (HB 88) allows parents to choose an abstinence-only program, a comprehensive sex education curriculum or to opt out of sexual education entirely. The bill was approved after a lengthy floor debate with supporters saying the bill will give parents more choices. Opponents argued that the existing curriculum provides students with all the information they need. The bill will now go to the Senate.


Safety/Consumer Protection

_Legislation that would make text messaging while driving illegal is headed to the Senate. Before passing the House, the bill (HB 9) was amended to direct the Joint Legislative Transportation Oversight Committee to identify and study the leading causes of driver inattention or distraction, the risks posed by driver inattention or distraction, and any methods that might be used to manage those distractions and promote highway safety. Law officers, firefighters and ambulance drivers would be exempted if they are texting as part of their official duties. A violation of this law would be punishable by a fine of $100 plus court costs. The bill now goes to the Senate.

_Telephone companies could use email or direct mail to notify subscribers who want to stop unwanted solicitations by using the “Do Not Call” registry. The bill (HB 686) allows the Attorney General, in consultation with the Public Staff of the Public Utilities Commission, to create a message that local companies would send to consumers. The bill has now gone to the Senate.


Education

_ Schools would be required to provide specific information to parents when recommending that students receive a long-term suspension or expulsion under the bill that passed the House this week (HB 218). If enacted, local school boards would have to give written notice to the student's parent, guardian, caregiver, or other person legally responsible for the child. The notice would have to describe the incident leading to the recommendation and the specific provisions of the student conduct policy or rule alleged to have been violated. The bill now goes to the Senate.


Transportation

_The House Finance Committee has approved a bill that would establish a Congestion Relief and Intermodal Transportation 21st Century Fund (HB 148). The proposal would allow residents of Forsyth, Guilford, Wake, Durham and Orange counties to vote on levying up to a half-cent sales tax exclusively for mass transit. The bill is based on legislation Mecklenburg County used to finance its downtown light rail system and to supplement the operation of its buses. It now goes to the full House for a vote.




Miscellaneous

_The General Assembly’s Program Evaluation Division may be asked to study programs that directly or indirectly benefit children and youth in this state. A bill that passed the House on Wednesday (HB 659) would require the division to identify such programs and their sources of funding and to determine whether the programs have clear goals, indicators, or benchmarks by which to measure the programs' success. The bill now goes to the Senate.


Notes

_Members of the House officially honored late North Carolina State women’s basketball coach Kay Yow during session Monday night (HJR 303). During her 34 years at NCSU, Kay Yow developed an outstanding basketball program that brought great distinction to the university, the state and women's athletics. Yow had the distinction of becoming the first women's basketball coach in the ACC to reach 650 career wins and one of six coaches in women's collegiate basketball with more than 700 wins. She was selected National Coach of the Year eight times and received numerous honors and awards for her outstanding contributions to athletics. She died on January 24 after fighting breast cancer for many years.

Please remember that you can listen to each day’s session, committee meetings and press conferences on the General Assembly’s website at www.ncleg.net. Once on the site, select "audio," and then make your selection – House Chamber, Senate Chamber, Appropriations Committee Room or Press Conference Room.






Prepared with the assistance of the Speaker's Office of Communications

From the Office of Representative Jimmy Love, April 9, 2009

Our work in Raleigh this week touched on a great many issues, from education to campaign reform and emergency planning. Our daily floor sessions are stretching out to several hours on some days and the pace of our committee work continues to increase.

Next week will be a pivotal one in the General Assembly. We are due to receive the latest tax revenue projections and that information will shape the budget that is now in our hands. Our colleagues in the Senate approved their spending plan this week, but additional cuts or increased revenue may be needed to balance the plan depending on what we hear about tax collections.

I am also including some information below about bills of interest that are moving through the House.

As always, I welcome any thoughts or ideas you may have to share with me and I hope you will let me know if I can be of any service.


Education

_ A bill that would give parents more say about the kind of sex education they want for their children has been approved in committee and is heading to the House floor. The Healthy Youth Act (HB 88) gives parents the ability to choose an abstinence-only program, a comprehensive sex education curriculum or to opt out of sexual education entirely. The bill passed in both the Health Committee and the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Education.

_Six-year olds would have to attend school under a bill that made it through the House Committee on Education on Thursday (HB 161). Under existing law, children are not required to attend school until the age of 7. The bill now goes to the Appropriations Committee.

_An act that would set a minimum filing fee for candidates for local boards of education passed its second reading in the House on Thursday (HB 76). If enacted, the legislation would set the filing fee as 1 percent of the annual salary of the office sought or a minimum of $25. The bill is intended to add uniformity to the filing fees across the state. It must now receive approval on third reading.


Emergency Management

_ Legislation that would expand the ability of counties and municipalities to form joint emergency management agencies is now headed to the Senate. Currently, counties can only form joint agencies with municipalities within its borders. This proposal (HB 380) would allow counties to also work with other counties, as well as municipalities within the partnering county.

_The Division of Emergency Management is a step closer to establishing a Voluntary Emergency Management Certification Program. The proposal (HB 377) is intended to strengthen and enhance the professional abilities of emergency management personnel by setting up educational and training standards for both state and local emergency management agencies. The bill now goes to the Senate.

_An act to statutorily establish the Division of Emergency Management within the Department of Crime Control and Public Safety passed the House on Thursday (HB 378). Previously the department only had authority primarily granted through executive orders issued by the governor. The legislation was recommended by the Joint Select Committee on Emergency Preparedness and Disaster Management Recovery.


Health and Safety

_ The Nicolas Adkins School Bus Safety Act unanimously passed the House on Wednesday and is now in the Senate (HB 440). The proposal would allow evidence from automated camera and video recording systems to be used to detect and prosecute drivers who pass stopped school buses. The bill is named for a 16-year-old student killed in Rockingham County earlier this year after a driver who passed his stopped school bus struck him with her car.

_Legislation that would appropriate money for the State Health Plan for Teachers and State Employees and make other changes related to the plan has been approved in two House committees and appears headed to the full chamber. The House Insurance and Appropriations committees both approved the bill (SB 287). Supporters of the bill argue that they need the proposal to pass so that they can immediately restore solvency to the plan. Some opponents argue that the plan doesn’t address long-term concerns about the health plan.



Miscellaneous

_A bill that would improve North Carolina’s absentee voting laws, especially the ability of military and overseas voters to cast timely ballots, received a favorable report this week from the House Committee on Election Law and Campaign Finance Reform (HB 614). If enacted, the legislation would provide that absentee ballots and envelopes be available for use not later than 60 days before the statewide general election in even-numbered years and not later than 50 days before the primary or any other election. The bill will now be taken up in the House Committee on Homeland Security, Military, and Veterans Affairs.


Notes

_Members of the Scottish Parliament were the guests of honor at the legislative session in the House on Wednesday. Alex Ferguson MSP, the presiding officer of the Scottish Parliament, spoke during both the House and Senate sessions. At a reception following session on Wednesday evening, representatives from North Carolina and Scotland came together to celebrate Scottish influence and heritage across the state.

_Members of the House honored Horace Kephart and the Seventy-Fifth anniversary of the Great Smoky Mountains with a House Joint Resolution on Thursday (HJR 637). During the 1920s, Horace Kephart joined the movement to preserve the Great Smoky Mountains as a national park. The park is now one of the most visited in the nation.

Please remember that you can listen to each day’s session, committee meetings and press conferences on the General Assembly’s website at www.ncleg.net. Once on the site, select "audio," and then make your selection – House Chamber, Senate Chamber, Appropriations Committee Room or Press Conference Room.


Prepared with the assistance of the Speaker’s Office of Communications

From the Office of Representative Jimmy L. Love, Sr. - April 2, 2009

The House had a particularly busy week, considering legislation to protect health, boost our state health insurance plan and improve our education system.

I am pleased with the progress we are making in these difficult times. There is little money to spend on new initiatives, but we continue to look for efficiencies and ways to improve the services the state offers. Some of these will come through the policies we are considering.

The bill we approved to limit smoking in public and in workplaces would limit exposure to secondhand smoke and the health problems with which it is associated. Our hope is that this change in the law would lower health care costs for many people. The bill now goes to the Senate.

We also elected new members to the University of North Carolina Board of Governors and remembered the late Reps. John Brown and Ted Kinney as part of a very full week.

As always, I welcome your comments and suggestions, and I hope that you will contact me if I can be of any assistance.


Education

_An act to make science safer in public schools has been unanimously approved in the House. One of the measures in the bill (HB 42) would direct each local board of education to certify to the State Board of Education that its high school and middle school science laboratories are equipped with appropriate personal protective equipment for students and teachers. The bill now goes to the Senate.

_Gifted students under the age of 16 could continue to attend community colleges under a bill (HB 65) that would re-enact a law that expired last September. The bill has moved through the House and is now in the Senate. The bill would also allow for students under the age of 14 to enroll in a Learn & Earn online course through a community college for college credit if that student has received appropriate approval. The intent of the bill is to serve the bright young people of North Carolina who want to get a head start on their college education.
_Members of the House elected eight members to the board that directs policy for the 16 campuses of the University of North Carolina system. Three of the eight members elected on Wednesday are new to the Board. The new members are Bill Daughtridge, a Rocky Mount businessman and former House member; Walter Davenport, a Raleigh accountant and trustee chairman at Elizabeth City State University; and James Deal Jr., a Boone attorney and trustee at Appalachian State University. The five re-elected members are Fred Mills Sr., a Raleigh construction executive; Dudley Flood, a public speaker and educational consultant from Raleigh; Charles Mercer Jr., a Raleigh attorney; Dr. Al Roseman, an endodontist from Wilmington; and David Young, an Asheville business owner and chairman of the state Democratic Party.


Health

_Legislation that would require more disclosure of medical malpractice judgments or settlements has received approval in the House and now heads to the Senate. The bill (HB 703) would require all physicians and physician assistants who are licensed or applying for licensure to report medical malpractice judgments or settlements to the North Carolina Medical Board. The board is now authorized to publish the information within the confines of medical and legal ethics.

_Smoking would be banned in restaurants and workplaces that employ or serve people under 18 years of age under a proposed law that has come through the House (HB 2). If the bill is approved in the Senate, North Carolina would join 35 other states with some sort of smoking ban. During several hours of debate on the bill, proponents argued that the smoking ban would improve the overall health of North Carolinians and limit unwanted exposure to dangerous secondhand smoke. Opponents of the bill claim that it infringes upon personal property rights of both individuals and business owners.


Economic Recovery

_North Carolina’s House and Senate Committees on Economic Recovery met this week to discuss tax provisions and transportation expenditures in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). ARRA is the federal stimulus package set in motion by President Obama to address the national economic downturn. North Carolina will receive about $6.1 billion from to help with our own economic recovery efforts. For more information on how the act will affect North Carolina, please visit the website at: www.ncrecovery.gov.

Environment

_ Governor Perdue signed a bill this week that establishes Grandfather Mountain State Park (SB 89). North Carolina’s newest state park is made up of about 2,500 acres of undeveloped land spanning Watauga, Avery and Caldwell counties. This spring, the state will formally purchase the land from the family of Hugh Morton, who developed the area as a tourist attraction in the 1950s. The purchase includes the nature center and a “mile-high” swinging bridge near Boone. The park will also include 12 miles of trails.
Miscellaneous

_Legislation that would allow Superior Court Judges to perform marriage ceremonies passed in the House on Monday (HB 494). The bill has now gone on to the Senate where it was referred to the Committee on Rules and Operations of the Senate.


Notes

_On Wednesday, members of the NC House honored former House member John Walter Brown with House Joint Resolution (HJR 53). During his tenure in the General Assembly, John Walter Brown served chair of the Committee on Agriculture and made significant contributions as a member of several other committees, including Finance, State Government, Transportation, and Wildlife Resources. Among his other accomplishments is helping to establish the prestigious School of Veterinary Science at North Carolina State University. John Walter Brown died on November 20, 2008 at the age of 90. He represented Wilkes, Alexander and Yadkin Counties for 13 terms.

_On Thursday, members of the NC House formally honored the memory of former House member Theodore James “Ted” Kinney with House Joint Resolution (HJR 224). For 21 years, Ted Kinney served his country as an active member of the United States Army. During his tenure in the General Assembly, Ted Kinney made contributions as Chair of the Committee on Military, Veterans, and Indian Affairs and the Appropriations Subcommittee on Justice and Public Safety, and as a member of several other committees, including Education and Transportation. He was also active in his community and served as executive director of the Cape Fear Community Development Corporation and chair of the Fayetteville Human Services Commission. Theodore James “Ted” Kinney died on November 2, 2008 at the age of 76 from complications relating to diabetes. He represented Cumberland County for three terms.

Please remember that you can listen to each day’s session, committee meetings and press conferences on the General Assembly’s website at www.ncleg.net. Once on the site, select "audio," and then make your selection – House Chamber, Senate Chamber, Appropriations Committee Room or Press Conference Room.









Prepared with the assistance of the Speaker’s Office of Communications