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North Carolina Tackles Budget Stalemate, Economic Growth, and Healthcare Challenges in 2025
Published 2 months, 1 week ago
Description
North Carolina navigates budget delays and economic growth amid pressing health and recovery needs. The state remains the only one without an enacted 2025-2027 budget, with lawmakers unlikely to act until April due to disputes over teacher pay, capital projects, and tax cuts, according to WUNC and the NC Chamber. Individual income tax rates dropped to 4.25 percent in 2025 and will decline further in 2026, while corporate rates head to zero by 2030. Governor Josh Stein urged the General Assembly to pass a people-first budget, highlighting risks from expiring Affordable Care Act credits and new Medicaid and SNAP work requirements set for 2027, as reported by WLOS and North Carolina Health News.
Business thrives with Johnson & Johnson announcing a multibillion-dollar facility in Wilson County, creating 500 jobs in oncology and neurology medicines, following a $2 billion campus there in 2024 and another in Holly Springs, per the Economic Development Partnership of NC. The state earned Business Facilities' 2025 State of the Year for workforce and incentives, with over 33,000 job commitments by late 2025. Construction booms in healthcare, data centers, and schools, with Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools nearing completion of bond-funded projects like new elementary and middle schools.
Education advances as Yancey County Schools receive grants for career-technical programs in homebuilding, building tiny houses for Hurricane Helene recovery. The state secured $213 million in federal Rural Health Transformation funds to bolster workforce, tech, and mental health access in rural areas, praised by DHHS Secretary Devdutta Sangvai. Western NC recovery continues 16 months post-Helene's $60 billion damage, with Stein requesting $13.5 billion more in federal aid.
No major recent weather events reported.
Looking Ahead: Budget talks may heat up in the short session, rural health plans unfold with $1 billion potential, and infrastructure like NCDOT design-build projects advance mid-year.
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Business thrives with Johnson & Johnson announcing a multibillion-dollar facility in Wilson County, creating 500 jobs in oncology and neurology medicines, following a $2 billion campus there in 2024 and another in Holly Springs, per the Economic Development Partnership of NC. The state earned Business Facilities' 2025 State of the Year for workforce and incentives, with over 33,000 job commitments by late 2025. Construction booms in healthcare, data centers, and schools, with Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools nearing completion of bond-funded projects like new elementary and middle schools.
Education advances as Yancey County Schools receive grants for career-technical programs in homebuilding, building tiny houses for Hurricane Helene recovery. The state secured $213 million in federal Rural Health Transformation funds to bolster workforce, tech, and mental health access in rural areas, praised by DHHS Secretary Devdutta Sangvai. Western NC recovery continues 16 months post-Helene's $60 billion damage, with Stein requesting $13.5 billion more in federal aid.
No major recent weather events reported.
Looking Ahead: Budget talks may heat up in the short session, rural health plans unfold with $1 billion potential, and infrastructure like NCDOT design-build projects advance mid-year.
Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs
For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI