Politics & Government

NC lawmakers could restrict LGBTQ+ books in elementary school libraries

Key Takeaways
Key Takeaways

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  • The bill specifies elementary school libraries are covered by the K–4 ban on instruction.
  • The bill would require parental consent before a student uses a different name or pronoun.
  • The bill lets parents seek legal action with $5,000 penalties per violation.

North Carolina Republican lawmakers want to add further limits on teaching about gender and sexuality in elementary schools, including creating a way to fine schools that violate the ban.

State Rep. Brenden Jones filed legislation on Thursday that would expand the current ban on instruction about gender identity, sexuality or sexual activity in kindergarten through fourth grade to include materials in elementary school libraries.

The legislation also requires parental consent before student can use a different name or pronoun and creates financial penalties for violating the 2023 law known as the Parents’ Bill of Rights.

The bill was filed the same day that Jones, a Columbus County Republican, chaired a House oversight committee hearing questioning the books in Chapel Hill-Carrboro school libraries. House Bill 1043 is called the Curriculum Honesty, Compliance and Child Safety (CHCCS) Act and has the same abbreviation used for the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools.

“When a district chooses not to follow the law, it should not expect to continue receiving taxpayer dollars without accountability,” Jones said during the hearing. “Public funds have a public obligation. If those obligations are ignored, there will be consequences.”

State lawmakers billed the Parents’ Bill of Rights as a way to give parents more control over their children’s education.

Critics charged the bill discriminated against LGBTQ+ students and families.

Can the bill pass?

Democratic Gov. Josh Stein has vetoed similar bills in the past, and House Republicans are one vote shy of the supermajority needed to override a veto on their own.

So, for Jones’ proposal to become law, he’d likely need to gain the support of at least one Democrat in the House.

Last summer, Democratic Rep. Nasif Majeed became the decisive vote in enacting a controversial bill surrounding sexuality and religion in schools.

Majeed lost his Democratic primary election last month, but he’s still serving out the rest of his term in the House, meaning he could once again cast a decisive vote on a veto override.

N.C. House Majority Leader Brenden Jones tosses a book he finds offensive over his shoulder while questioning Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Superintendent Rodney Trice and School Board Chair George Griffin during a sometimes tense House committee hearing on Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2025, in the Legislative Building auditorium in Raleigh. During the hearing, Jones cited and tossed several children’s books from a third-party list that had previously appeared on the district’s website.
N.C. House Majority Leader Brenden Jones tosses a book he finds offensive over his shoulder while questioning Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Superintendent Rodney Trice and School Board Chair George Griffin during a sometimes tense House committee hearing on Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2025, in the Legislative Building auditorium in Raleigh. During the hearing, Jones cited and tossed several children’s books from a third-party list that had previously appeared on the district’s website. Travis Long tlong@newsobserver.com

What’s in the new bill

Provisions of the bill include:

  • Expands the current requirement that schools notify parents before their child uses a different name or pronoun. Parental consent would now also be required before the different name or pronoun is used.
  • Parental consent must also be given before a student receives counseling services related to sexuality or gender identity or is referred to outside service providers for sexuality or gender identity.
  • Spells out that elementary school libraries are covered in the ban on instruction about gender identity, sexual activity or sexuality in kindergarten through fourth grade.
  • Creates a process in which parents who say the Parents’ Bill of Rights is being violated can seek legal action, with penalties of $5,000 per violation against schools.
  • Authorizes the state Department of P

Staff writer Tammy Grubb contributed.

This story was originally published April 23, 2026 at 1:46 PM.

T. Keung Hui
The News & Observer
T. Keung Hui has covered K-12 education for the News & Observer since 1999, helping parents, students, school employees and the community understand the vital role education plays in North Carolina. His primary focus is Wake County, but he also covers statewide education issues.
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