House Bill 142 (Session 2017 of the North Carolina General Assembly)

House Bill 142 (HB 142) is a 2017 law that was enacted in the state of North Carolina that repealed House Bill 2. The bill states that all "state agencies, boards, offices, departments, institutions, branches of government, including The University of North Carolina and the North Carolina Community College System, and political subdivisions of the State, are preempted from regulation of access to multiple occupancy restrooms, showers, or changing facilities, except in accordance with an act of the General Assembly." It also enacted that no local government in this state may enact or amend an ordinance regulating private employment practices or regulating public accommodations until December 1, 2020.[1]

Passage edit

House Bill 142
North Carolina House of Representatives North Carolina Senate
Ayes Noes Excused absents Total Ayes Noes Excused absents Total
# % # % # % # % # % # % # % # %
Republican caucus 40 54.05% 33 44.59% 1 1.35% 118 100% 23 65.71% 10 28.57% 2 5.71% 48 100%
Democratic caucus 30 65.22% 15 32.61% 1 2.17% 9 60% 6 40% 0 0%
Total 70 59.32% 48 40.68% 2 1.69% 32 66.67% 16 33.34% 2 4.17%

On March 30, 2017, the North Carolina Senate passed HB 142, with 32 ayes, 16 noes, and 2 excused absents. That same day, the North Carolina House of Representatives passed HB 142, with 70 ayes, 48 noes, and 2 excused absents, which Governor Roy Cooper signed into law that very day, becoming Ch. SL 2017-4.[2]

Lawsuits edit

Carcaño v. Cooper edit

On July 21, 2017, the Lambda Legal and the ACLU expanded Carcaño v. Cooper to include more legal challenges and plaintiffs to House Bill 142 (HB 142). On October 18, 2017, the Lambda Legal and the ACLU announced a proposed legal settlement with the state of North Carolina.[3]

United States v. State of North Carolina edit

On April 14, 2017, the United States Department of Justice issued a two-sentence court filing that said it had dropped its lawsuit against the state of North Carolina over House Bill 2, which was filed in 2016 by the Obama administration, because the North Carolina legislature had replaced House Bill 2 with House Bill 142.[4]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "HB 142 (SL 2017-4)". www.ncleg.net.
  2. ^ "House Bill 142 / S.L. 2017-4 (2017-2018 Session) - North Carolina General Assembly". www.ncleg.net.
  3. ^ "Carcaño v. Cooper (formerly Carcaño v. McCrory)".
  4. ^ Editorial, Reuters (14 April 2017). "Trump administration drops North Carolina 'bathroom bill' lawsuit". Reuters. {{cite news}}: |first= has generic name (help)