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NC Gov Signs Hurricane Relief Bill     10/11 06:15

   

   RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -- North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper on Thursday signed the 
state's first relief package to address Hurricane Helene's devastation, 
allocating $273 million for immediate needs and giving flexibility to agencies 
and displaced residents.

   The Democrat signed the measure, approved unanimously Wednesday by the 
Republican-dominated General Assembly. Nearly all the money will serve as the 
state's share that is needed to meet the federal government's match for state 
and local disaster assistance programs. Other money will be used in part to 
ensure public-school nutrition employees at closed schools get paid and to help 
officials administer elections in the coming weeks in the battleground state.

   "Recovery for Western North Carolina will require unprecedented help from 
state and federal sources and this legislation is a strong first step," Cooper 
said in a news release. The legislature also agreed separately Wednesday to 
return to Raleigh on Oct. 24, when action on additional recovery legislation is 
expected.

   The $273 million in Wednesday's bill originates from the state's savings 
reserve, which contained $4.75 billion. The enacted measure also waived fees 
for people in western counties to replace lost driver's licenses and 
identification cards, as well as permitting requirements for some highway 
repairs and open burning of storm debris.

   The General Assembly expanded rule alterations for conducting elections and 
turning in ballots from 13 hard-hit counties as approved by the State Board of 
Elections earlier this week to 25 counties with close to 1.3 million registered 
voters. The 25 cover nearly all of the counties under the federal disaster 
declaration.

   Election officials are in the final stages of assessing the extent of 
damages at the 540 Election Day polling places in the region, State Board of 
Elections Executive Director Karen Brinson Bell told reporters on Thursday. 
Some of these voting locations may be replaced with tents, trailers or motor 
coaches, Bell said.

   Under the new rules, voters registered in the 25 counties, for example, can 
request an absentee ballot in person at their county election office up until 
the day before Election Day -- providing them with several more days for access.

   The legislation also changed the options that displaced people in the region 
have for turning in absentee ballots. The law says absentee ballots received by 
voters in the 25 counties can be turned in to any open early voting site or 
county election office in the state, as well as to the State Board of Elections 
office in Raleigh.

   The legislation blocked an additional option approved by the state board 
this week that would have let these voters drop off absentee ballots at 
Election Day polling places within their home county when open on Election Day, 
board attorney Paul Cox said Thursday.

   The first absentee ballots were sent by mail to those who requested them a 
few days before Helene arrived in North Carolina, raising the threat that 
floodwaters destroyed some ballots. Mail service disruptions also could make 
in-person requests and returns preferable.

   Friday's statewide registration deadline to vote by mail or on Election Day 
remains in place, but voters already can simultaneously register to vote and 
cast their ballot in their home county at early voting sites open from Oct. 17 
to Nov. 2.

   Seventy-five of the 80 early voting sites approved for use in the 25 
counties before the storm will be operating next week, Brinson Bell said. 
Portable restrooms, generators and internet access are still needed for a 
handful of sites, she added.

   Brinson Bell, who lived in the mountains for 20 years, pointed out the state 
has operated past elections following other natural disasters and during the 
COVID-19 epidemic.

   "To carry out this election through such devastation certainly is harder. 
But our processes are working, and we are just exercising what we know to do," 
she said. "And that's why we're going to be able to deliver voting to all North 
Carolinians."

 
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