Written by GARY D. ROBERTSON
North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper signed 11 bills on his desk into law Thursday, including legislation that addresses sexual assault, domestic violence and alcohol sales.
The signed bills were among more than three dozen that the General Assembly sent Cooper in the last two days of its work session, which ended Friday.
One signed measure makes clear that hospitals or medical offices can’t attempt to bill victims of sexual assault or their insurance companies for forensic medical examinations, leaving it to a special state fund that’s already been in place to cover the payment.
The bill, which also expands the number of criminal offenses for which a conviction requires a defendant to provide a DNA sample, came amid reports that dozens of medical facilities may have been sending such bills to insurance companies. The bill also raises the maximum amounts that the fund will pay the hospitals and medical offices to perform the exams.
“Victims of sexual assault deserve access to a rape kit without being further victimized by being charged for it,” Cooper said in a news release. “This new law will also strengthen the state’s DNA database used to catch criminals by including domestic violence and assault crimes.”
With another signed bill, patrons of North Carolina’s standalone bars no longer have to become paid members of the establishments first to get a drink.
State Alcoholic Beverage Control laws have for decades regulated what is commonly known as “private bars.”
But the designation meant the establishments’ owners had to charge a usually nominal fee so a potential patron could become a member and get beer, wine or a mixed drink. Operators complained that required them to check everyone coming through the door and keep membership lists.
Under the new rules, contained in a broader alcoholic beverage law approved by wide margins in the House and Senate, private bars will now be known in state law as bars that primarily sell alcoholic beverages and don’t serve prepared food.
Other measures signed Thursday also would:
- clarify the rules for recently created “social districts” and “common area entertainment permits,” in which customers of establishments that sell alcoholic beverages can take their drinks on the street or to shared seating areas and consume them.
- allow judges to extend domestic violence protective orders temporarily should a hearing to renew the order be scheduled after the current order expires.
Cooper has until Sunday night or Monday night — depending on the bill — to act on the remaining measures on his desk, which include the legislature’s proposed adjustments to the state budget. A bill becomes law without his signature if he doesn’t sign or veto it by the deadline.
Photo via Photo via the North Carolina Department of Public Safety.
Related Stories
‹

Astronauts Answer CHCCS Students Questions From Space to Help Promote STEMSome Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools students taped questions and heard live responses from the International Space Station on Wednesday.
![]()
Nobel Win for Swede Who Unlocked Secrets of Neanderthal DNAWritten by DAVID KEYTON, FRANK JORDANS and LAURA UNGAR Swedish scientist Svante Paabo won the Nobel Prize in medicine Monday for his discoveries on human evolution that provided key insights into our immune system and what makes us unique compared with our extinct cousins, the award’s panel said. Paabo spearheaded the development of new techniques […]

Anti-Science Bills Hit Statehouses, Stripping Away Public Health Protections Built Over a CenturyMore than 420 anti-science bills attacking longstanding public health protections have been introduced in states across the U.S. this year.

Europe Launches a Drive To Attract Scientists and Researchers After Trump Freezes US FundingThe European Union launched a drive to attract American scientists and researchers to Europe with offers of grants and new policy plans.

When RFK Jr. Was Presented With the Science on Vaccines He Said He Needed To See, He Dismissed ItRobert F. Kennedy Jr. spent insisted to senators that he’s not anti-vaccine. But he repeatedly refused to acknowledge scientific consensus.

AI Is Having Its Nobel Moment. Do Scientists Need the Tech Industry To Sustain It?The tech industry has now made it easier for AI scientists to pursue their ideas even as it has challenged them with new ethical questions.

Gene Therapy May Cure Rare Diseases. But Drugmakers Have Few Incentives, Leaving Families DesperateThere’s little commercial incentive to develop or bring to market one-time therapies to fix faulty genes or replace them with healthy ones.

Orange County Sheriff's Office Identifies Murder Victim in 33-Year-Old Cold CaseIn September 1990, a road crew was working along Interstate 40 in Orange County when its workers spotted something near the eastbound New Hope Church Road exit: a human body. The victim, a woman, went unidentified despite local law enforcement’s efforts across three decades. Now, however, the Orange County Sheriff’s Office says it knows the […]

Fight To Curb Food Waste Increasingly Turns to ScienceWritten by DEE-ANN DURBIN Hate mealy apples and soggy french fries? Science can help. Restaurants, grocers, farmers and food companies are increasingly turning to chemistry and physics to tackle the problem of food waste. Some are testing spray-on peels or chemically-enhanced sachets that can slow the ripening process in fruit. Others are developing digital sensors […]

NC Governor Signs Bills Addressing Sexual Assaults, AlcoholWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper signed 11 bills on his desk into law Thursday, including legislation that addresses sexual assault, domestic violence and alcohol sales. The signed bills were among more than three dozen that the General Assembly sent Cooper in the last two days of its work session, which ended […]
›