North Carolina lawmakers take up coastal rules, elections, E-Verify and juvenile law changes
RALEIGH — North Carolina lawmakers are scheduled to take up a range of policy issues Wednesday, June 10, including coastal regulation, election timing, E-Verify, ferry operations and laws governing minors.
The Senate is scheduled to convene at 9:30 a.m., and the House is scheduled to convene at 10:30 a.m., according to the N.C. General Assembly legislative calendar.
The Senate Agriculture, Energy and Environment Committee is scheduled to meet at 10 a.m. The committee agenda includes House Bill 376, Various On-Site Wastewater & Well Provisions, and House Bill 369, Parking Lot Reform/Stormwater Control. The committee is also scheduled to discuss Senate Bill 1001, Coastal Regulatory Reform; Senate Bill 1008, Pilot for Shoreline Stabilization Projects; and Senate Bill 1009, Repeal Hardened Structure Ban.
The House Higher Education Committee is also scheduled for 10 a.m. Its agenda includes House Bill 1203, Family Support for Those Who Serve Act.
At 11 a.m., the Senate Elections Committee is scheduled to consider House Bill 1035, Even-Yr Elections/Pink Hill. The House Agriculture and Environment Committee is scheduled to meet at the same time with Senate Bill 59, Revise Voluntary Ag. District Laws, and House Bill 1214, Make E-Verify Great Again, on its agenda.
The Senate Transportation Committee is scheduled for noon. Its agenda includes House Bill 1094, Ferry Division Performance Audit, listed as a proposed committee substitute for discussion only.
The Senate Pensions and Retirement and Aging Committee is also scheduled for noon, with House Bill 481, GSC Technical Corrections 2025 Part 2, and House Bill 1126, 2026 DST Admin/Technical/Clarifying Changes, on its agenda.
The Senate Judiciary Committee is scheduled to meet at 2 p.m. Its agenda includes House Bill 83, Revise Laws Governing Minors, and House Bill 437, Establish Drug-Free Homeless Service Zones.
The calendar reflects scheduled meetings and agenda items as posted by the General Assembly. Committee agendas can change, and bills may be amended, delayed or removed before action is taken.
Editor’s note: This article was drafted with the assistance of artificial intelligence and was reviewed and fact-checked by a member of the NC Political News editorial team before publication.

