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Budget

North Carolina is more than eight months into the current fiscal year without an enacted state budget, the only state in the country in that position.

“But folks may not fully appreciate that when the General Assembly returns to session next month, it will have been more than two and a half years since the state last passed a comprehensive budget,” Governor Josh Stein said in a press conference Monday to call for action on the budget. Republicans in the legislature are in the middle of a prolonged stalemate, largely because of disagreements about tax rates.

The state continues operating without a budget because of a law that allows for ongoing spending at last year’s levels. But that approach freezes key decisions about a wide range of policies, and leaves state employees like teachers without raises or cost-of-living adjustments they may have expected.

FAQ

Why doesn’t the state have a budget yet?

Because Republicans hold a majority of seats in the House and a supermajority in the Senate, they direct budget negotiations.

As NC Local has previously reported, North Carolina’s budget process calls for a two-year spending plan to pass before July first in odd-numbered years. In 2025, Republican lawmakers in each chamber failed to agree on issues like tax cuts, how much to pay teachers, and funding for state programs like Medicaid. They missed the deadline.

What have lawmakers done instead?

The House and Senate have held nearly empty sessions roughly once a month in which no debate happens and no votes are taken.

In place of a comprehensive two-year spending plan, lawmakers have approved targeted bills often referred to as “mini budgets.” They allow lawmakers to override parts of the law that simply call for last year’s spending levels when there is consensus on a limited issue.

For example, the mini budgets provided raises for some – but not all – state employees, as NC Newsline reported. Others set aside more money for Helene recovery in western North Carolina.

Who is pushing for a budget?

Calls to finish the budget are coming from both sides of the aisle.

The conservative John Locke Foundation publicly urged lawmakers to pass a full budget, arguing that prolonged uncertainty harms businesses and state employees.

“North Carolinians do not care about intraparty rivalries or procedural excuses,” wrote Joseph Harris, fiscal policy analyst at the Locke Foundation. “They care about whether the government performs its most basic functions.”

Members of the North Carolina Council of State, a bipartisan group of North Carolina’s top elected officials, also called on lawmakers to pass what they emphasized as an overdue budget.

How does this affect me?

State law keeps the government operating at previous spending levels if there’s no budget in place. State agencies can spend this year what they spent last year. But with continuously rising costs for everything from health care to education, past spending is not enough to cover some expenses.

It also makes it difficult for state agencies to recruit new employees if they can not offer higher wages or pay adjustments.

What’s next?

There are no new deadlines that would force lawmakers to reach an agreement. North Carolina’s continuation law allows agencies to operate at last year’s levels indefinitely.

Republican leaders in the House and Senate have said they do not expect to make a deal before this year’s short session starts on April 21.

Editor’s note: This post was updated to include statements from Gov. Josh Stein.

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