The Oklahoman

A year later, House Bill 2 has cost North Carolina millions — and more

- BY JIM MORRILL, KATHERINE PERALTA AND STEVE HARRISON The Charlotte Observer

House Bill 2 has cost North Carolina a year of lost NCAA and ACC championsh­ips, an NBA All-Star Game, jobs and economic developmen­t. Now the state can brace for more.

As North Carolina marks the first anniversar­y of House Bill 2 next week, an ongoing political stalemate is making a prolonged economic backlash — and future anniversar­ies — likely.

The law, widely criticized as anti-LGBT, has cost North Carolinian­s jobs, money, performanc­es and events.

“The longer it stays on our books, the more difficulty we will have repairing the damage,” Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper said last week. “It’s hard to quantify the damage.”

It’s also hard to predict what the ultimate cost will be — so far, it’s estimated that the controvers­ial bill has cost the state more than half a billion dollars, and thousands of jobs.

An NAACP boycott over the Confederat­e flag in South Carolina lasted more than 15 years, causing the loss of NCAA tournament games and other events. An NFL boycott over Arizona’s decision not to recognize the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday cost that state a Super Bowl.

Lawmakers tried to repeal the law in December but Democrats and many Republican­s turned back a proposal from GOP Senate leader Phil Berger. Democrats said the proposal reneged on a deal for outright repeal.

Other attempts have since failed. Last week lawmakers faced a reported deadline from the NCAA, which is choosing championsh­ip venues through 2022. Charlotte, Raleigh and Greensboro are among the cities bidding for over 130 NCAA events.

The NCAA declined to confirm any deadline. But in a statement, it said, “Our constituti­on and values commit us to respecting the dignity of every person … (O)ur principles have not changed.”

Some fear that without a deadline, any sense of urgency will fade.

“This place operates on deadlines,” said House Minority Leader Darren Jackson of Raleigh. “Without that deadline, we’re just afraid it will fall through the cracks and people will move on to the next issue.”

Michael Bitzer, a Catawba College political scientist, said he finds it unlikely that any side will be willing to compromise on such a “hyperpolar­ized” issue.

“If something isn’t resolved probably by the courts fairly soon, this could be North Carolina’s new environmen­t,” Bitzer said.

It also could continue to exacerbate tensions between urban and rural North Carolina, with implicatio­ns for other policies.

Metro areas, typically more socially progressiv­e, have lost the most business over HB2. Animosity toward Charlotte, in particular, was evident during the December special session that resulted in the failed attempt to repeal the law. Republican Sen. Buck Newton of Wilson said he had “no faith in the city of Charlotte,” calling its City Council “the lunatic left.”

And the economic backlash is likely to continue.

The NBA moved its All-Star Game from Charlotte. The ACC, like the NCAA, has moved events including the football championsh­ip once scheduled for Charlotte’s Bank of America Stadium — though conference officials have said they don’t plan to move its headquarte­rs from Greensboro. Cooper said economic developmen­t experts have told him that “a number” of Fortune 500 companies have taken the state off their lists.

Through research and interviews with economists, Politifact estimates that HB2 has cost North Carolina between $450 million and $630 million. But in perspectiv­e, that accounts for 0.1 percent of the state’s annual gross domestic product, notes Michael Walden, a North Carolina State University economist.

“So we know that it’s hundreds of millions of dollars and thousands of jobs, but it could be worse than that because what we’re not getting is what we don’t know,” Cooper said. “I’ll just have to spend that extra 15 to 20 minutes that I have to spend in most of my recruiting sessions answering questions from companies about House Bill 2 and why it’s still on the books.”

In the 2017 legislativ­e session, lawmakers in 15 states have introduced some version of a “bathroom bill” that requires people to use the restroom and locker room in public facilities that correspond­s with the gender on their birth certificat­e, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

Last week Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe cited HB2 in a tweet designed to lure companies to his state.

“To NC companies and families tired of antiLGBT attacks like #HB2 — Virginia welcomes you, no matter whom you love,” he tweeted.

The statewide economic impact of HB2 is difficult to measure. It’s not known how many companies crossed North Carolina off their lists for expansion before making their interest public, experts say.

In Charlotte alone, direct spending only for event-related cancellati­ons in Charlotte over HB2 totals $83.9 million, estimates the Charlotte Regional Visitors Authority. That figure takes into account canceled events like the ACC Championsh­ip football game, the NBA All-Star Game and annual convention­s.

It does not, however, take into account other cancellati­ons. Less than two weeks after HB2 was signed, Lionsgate pulled production for a new Hulu show that was supposed to be filmed in Charlotte. The next day, PayPal scrapped plans for a new operations center in Charlotte, costing the city at least 400 new jobs. In October, a real estate research firm called CoStar also decided against a 730-job expansion here because of HB2.

If the state wants to see how a prolonged HB2 boycott might play out, it doesn’t have to look far.

South Carolina, facing national pressure, moved the Confederat­e battle flag from the statehouse dome to the Capitol grounds in 2000. But the NAACP called a boycott. The NCAA refused to hold championsh­ips in the state. The United Auto Workers and other groups honored it as well.

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