Council previews state and federal legislative agenda with public‑safety focus

Charlotte City Council · February 10, 2026

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Council reviewed a BGIR committee legislative package that elevates public safety priorities — mental‑health investments, officer recruitment/retention, justice system resources, reestablishing a local juvenile detention center, and transit‑operator protections — and plans to adopt the agenda ahead of federal advocacy and the NC short session.

Councilmember Ashmira presented the BGIR committee’s state and federal legislative agenda during the Feb. 9 meeting, emphasizing public safety as the centerpiece of the package. The committee established tiered priorities: tier 1 highlights urgent requests to state lawmakers (mental‑health resources for crisis response, law‑enforcement recruitment and retention support, additional justice‑system resources including the district attorney and public defender offices, and reestablishing a local juvenile detention facility), while tier 2 includes other safety and planning items.

Ashmira said the agenda was shaped by broad stakeholder input, including the county, DA’s office and community groups, and noted timing pressures: federal advocacy meetings are scheduled in March and North Carolina’s short session begins in April. Councilmembers discussed several additions or clarifications — for example, support for aging‑in‑place legislation (Senate bill 349 referenced in committee conversation), concern about IOLTA funding for legal aid being withheld, and a request to consider more specific red‑light camera language. Staff said the legislative packet can be refined before the Feb. 23 vote to reflect council priorities.

Next step: staff will finalize the legislative agenda for council adoption at the upcoming meeting so the city can present unified policy asks at federal and state meetings.