Bladen County commissioners approve Vectrotech incentive, authorize support letters and set budget hearing
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At their Jan. meeting the Bladen County Board of Commissioners approved a five-year incentive for Vectrotech USA, authorized broad letters urging state/federal cost-sharing for food and nutrition administration changes, approved the FY 2026–27 budget calendar and passed a resolution opposing a water-transfer certificate request.
The Bladen County Board of Commissioners approved several key actions at its Jan. 20, 2026 meeting, including a five‑year incentive agreement for Vectrotech USA, authorization for letters seeking state and federal help to offset a proposed reduction in federal food‑and‑nutrition administrative reimbursement, adoption of a FY 2026–27 budget calendar with a Feb. 16 public hearing, and a resolution asking the state to deny a water‑transfer certificate request.
Economic development director Chuck Eustis introduced the Vectrotech USA incentive, describing the company as an Australian engineering and manufacturing firm expanding into the United States. Eustis said the project will operate in the Elizabethtown incubator and initially produce oyster float beds and medical‑grade plastics. Commissioners discussed hiring timing and logistics; the board approved the incentive agreement by voice vote after a motion and second.
A Department of Social Services representative warned the board of a potential change in federal rules that could reduce Food and Nutrition Administration reimbursement from 50% to 25% beginning Oct. 2026, increasing county costs. The DSS speaker provided draft letters meant for NC House Representative William Brisson, U.S. Representative David Rausser and Sen. Brent Jackson and asked the board to authorize county officials to sign and send letters supporting state‑level cost‑sharing. The board authorized the letters and asked staff to distribute them widely.
The board approved the FY 2026–27 budget calendar and scheduled a public hearing for 6:30 p.m. on Feb. 16, 2026 to receive budget comments. Commissioners also approved the reappointment of Heather to the Nursing Home Advisory Committee and tabled remaining advisory vacancies until the next meeting.
Finally, the board passed a resolution opposing a transfer certificate application (referred to in the transcript as the "Figueroa" request). A commissioner expressed concern that the project would draw an estimated 2–3 million gallons of water and return treated water to the Cape Fear River; the resolution asks the North Carolina Environmental Management Commission to deny the request. The board closed public comment and prepared to enter closed session.
Votes were taken by voice in the meeting record; formal roll‑call tallies were not read into the transcript.
