North Carolina prohibits sanctuary policies under NCGS 153A-145.5 and 160A-205.2, requiring local governments to cooperate with federal immigration enforcement and honor lawful immigration detainers.
House Bill 318 enacted NCGS 153A-145.5 for counties and NCGS 160A-205.2 for municipalities, barring local governments from adopting any policy that limits or restricts cooperation with federal immigration authorities or restricts gathering of immigration status information. NCGS 15A-306 further requires that any person confined in a local jail be checked for immigration status and that lawful Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainers be honored. Local governments cannot prohibit officers from communicating with ICE, cannot restrict acceptance of consular IDs in a way that conflicts with state law, and cannot create sanctuary jurisdictions. The law applies statewide and overrides any conflicting local resolution or ordinance.
Local sanctuary policies are void and unenforceable; local officials may face civil action and loss of certain state funds, and noncompliant detainer policies expose jurisdictions to liability.
Charlotte, NC
Charlotte's Unified Development Ordinance (UDO) Article 17 caps residential fences at 5 feet in front setbacks, 6 feet in side setbacks, and 8 feet in rear s...
Charlotte, NC
The Mecklenburg County Animal Care and Control Ordinance, applied countywide including Charlotte, requires every dog off the owner's property to be under suf...
Charlotte, NC
Charlotte has no city ordinance regulating year-round lawn ornaments, statuary, or religious displays at single-family properties. UDO Article 12 (Signs) exe...
Charlotte, NC
Charlotte has no zoning, building, or sign-code rule specifically targeting residential inflatable holiday displays. UDO Article 12 (Signs) exempts seasonal ...
Charlotte, NC
Charlotte has no city ordinance restricting when residents may install or must remove holiday lights at single-family homes. The Charlotte UDO Article 12 (Si...
Charlotte, NC
Built-in outdoor kitchens in Charlotte require permits for gas lines, electrical, plumbing, and any roofed structure under NC General Statute 160D-1110, with...
See how Charlotte's sanctuary policy preemption rules stack up against other locations.
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