Sen. Kay Hagan is seeking more than $48 million in state spending.
The Democratic nominee for U.S. Senate has sponsored one bill and co-sponsored 16 bills seeking appropriations in the upcoming state budget. As a longtime state senator, she is serving an advisory role on the budget in the short session.
Hagan is the primary sponsor of a bill that would give the Joint School of Nanoscience and Nanoengineering run by UNC-Greensboro and N.C. A&T University $2.9 million in the budget.
Among the larger appropriations bills she is cosponsoring: $12 million for the N.C. Housing Trust Fund, $9.5 million to the UNC system for 4-H camps, and $8.1 million to buy a building for a student services center at N.C. A&T.
She is also asking for $3 million for Boys & Girls Club programs targeting dropouts and teen pregnancy, $3 million for an International Civil Rights Center and Museum in Greensboro, $2.6 million for promoting the semiannual furniture market in High Point, $2.5 million for minority financial literacy programs, $2 million for arts programs and $1 million for a parental school involvement pilot program.
Among the appropriations under $1 million: Money for a literacy program in Wake County public schools, an electronic health information study commission, Kids Voting programs, a John Coltrane Music Hall in Greensboro, job training for the homeless and former inmates, a male-oriented teen pregnancy prevention program, and housing for recovering substance abusers in Greensboro.
State Sen. John Snow has joined the blogosphere.
The Murphy Democrat may be the first state legislator to start his own blog — let us know if he's not — about his daily doings in the capital.
So far, he's written about recent bills on virtual learning, vegetable-oil diesel and emergency prescription drugs. He's highlighted upcoming visits by North Carolina Voters for Clean Elections and the 4-H and he's linked to an NPR interview.
In other words, the standard stuff a legislator might note in a letter to constituents.
Still, the blog is an interesting idea, and he's got a pretty clean design for the site. It'll be interesting to see if the comments function attracts more feedback.