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North Carolina Faces Budget Crisis as Thousands Protest, State Economy Booms with Infrastructure Growth

North Carolina Faces Budget Crisis as Thousands Protest, State Economy Booms with Infrastructure Growth

Published 12 hours ago
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Thousands gathered across North Carolina over the weekend for the nationwide No Kings protests, with large crowds in Raleigh, Charlotte, and Apex demonstrating against recent policies amid ongoing budget stalemates, WRAL reports. WRAL coverage highlighted the State Capitol event drawing thousands, while WCNC noted marches in Charlotte linked to lawmakers struggles over a partial government shutdown.

In politics, Senate Minority Leader Sydney Batch urged inclusion in budget talks, offering Democratic support for a House proposal after 268 days without a new budget, which has stalled teacher raises despite 2026 cost pressures, according to ABC11. Governor Josh Stein warned of an impending fiscal cliff from preprogrammed tax cuts threatening schools, law enforcement, healthcare, and infrastructure, as detailed in his March 25 column on the governors website. Revenue forecasts predict lower personal income taxes but potential deficits, per the Fiscal Research Division.

Economically, North Carolina holds top rankings for business, economic development, and workforce, fueled by influxes of people and businesses, Governor Steins office states. Construction booms in data centers, manufacturing, and infrastructure, with over $10 billion from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law sustaining projects amid a C-grade infrastructure report card, per ABC Carolinas. The Triangle region sees mega-projects supercharging growth, as Triangle Business Journal reports.

Community efforts advance with Governor Stein announcing $26 million in Stop-Gap Solutions funding to bring high-speed internet to 5,161 rural homes, businesses, and anchors in 66 counties by years end, NCDIT confirms. University of North Carolina plans a Carolina North campus extension groundbreaking in 2027 to expand enrollment, following recent medical training facilities funded by the 2016 Connect NC bond.

No major recent weather events reported.

Looking Ahead: The General Assemblys short session starts in April, with renewed budget negotiations expected; canvass of the March 3 primary continues via the State Board of Elections.

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