(Photo: NC Department of Agriculture 2018 Pesticide Report)
The Senate Agriculture, Energy, and Environment Committee approved one bill and discussed two others during its hearing on Tuesday.
Lawmakers voted to pass House Bill 126, titled “Revise Voluntary Ag. District Laws,” without any discussion or testimony.
This measure would require government agencies considering condemning or rezoning property within a voluntary agricultural district to hold a public hearing. There would be 45 days to set up the hearing and 120 days for the local agricultural advisory board to submit its findings and recommendations to the agency.
“At this point, I’ve heard no opposition to this bill,” primary sponsor Rep. Jimmy Dixon (R-Duplin, Wayne) said.
The bill now heads to the Senate Rules Committee.
Legislators also reviewed two bills for discussion only: House Bill 247 (“8-1-1 Amendments“) and House Bill 694 (“Study Water/Wastewater Regionalization“).
Sen. Michael Lazzara (R-Onslow) presented HB 247 to the panel, explaining the language would be replaced with text from Senate Bill 328, which updates the Underground Utility Safety and Damage Prevention Act.
“We just made the corrections to some of the language, but essentially, it’s a consensus,” he said.
Sen. Tom McInnis (R-Cumberland, Moore) said he appreciated the bill, seeing as he’s had a lot of complaints about 8-1-1. That’s the number individuals should call prior to excavating to ensure they don’t encounter any buried utilities.
“We can’t move forward in our state unless we have a cohesive unit of construction,” McInnis said.
If this bill passes the panel, it will proceed to the Senate Rules Committee.
It’s the same case for HB 694, which would direct the Environmental Finance Center at the University of North Carolina to study wastewater and water regionalization efforts.
Sen. David Craven (R-Anson, Montgomery, Randolph, Richmond, Union) presented the legislation.
Sen. Lisa Grafstein (D-Wake) asked about the Department of Environmental Quality’s role in the process of transferring water between basins.
“This starts with a notice, then DEQ works with the water applicant to develop a draft environmental statement that looks at environmental impacts, it looks at alternatives to the water withdrawal, as well as several other things of that nature,” legislative analysis Kyle Evans said.
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