June is the last month the North Carolina General Assembly is expected to meet this session—and that means we have just weeks left to push our most important pro-life, pro-family, and pro-religious freedom bills through the legislative process.

Six of our priority bills made it through the May crossover deadline. Now, they must be heard and passed in the opposite chamber before the end of session. The other two of our bills can be passed, despite not making crossover, by adding the language to another bill. If that doesn’t happen, they risk being shelved for the year. That’s why this month is critical—and why we urgently need your help.

We’ve created short, informative videos to walk you through each bill and explain why they matter. After watching, you can use our click-to-contact  tools to quickly email your legislators and ask them to support these important proposals.

👉 Watch the videos and take action now:

Watch: Parents Medical Bill of Rights / Minors Health Protection Act
(HB 519/SB 759)


This bill aims to restore parental authority in North Carolina by requiring parental consent for minors to receive diagnosis, treatment, or prevention for sexually transmitted diseases, substance abuse, and emotional disturbances. The bills also require medical providers allow parents access to all medical records for their minor children.

Watch: Ensuring Safety for Mail-Order Medications Act

(HB 553)

This bill strengthens North Carolina’s laws by making it a felony to illegally ship abortion pills into the state, holding out-of-state abortion pill distributors accountable, and creating civil remedies for those harmed. With an estimated 2,000 illegal shipments per month, this bill ensures only FDA-approved drugs are distributed, requires entities shipping abortion pills to register as NC businesses, and empowers women and families to pursue justice against dangerous, unlawful practices.

Watch: Civil Procedure Amendment

(HB 606)


The Civil Procedure Amendment would extend the statute of limitations for medical malpractice while facilitating or perpetuating gender transition. The bill will ensure that those permanently harmed by medical gender transition—like Prisha Mosley—can hold the medical industry accountable. Holding medical professionals liable is the only way to stop chemical and surgical castration and mutilation resulting from gender transitioning.

Watch: Parents Protection Act
(HB 560/SB 442)


This essential bill shields parents from losing custody of their children simply for raising their child consistent with their biological sex and refusing to affirm their child’s harmful gender identity. It reinforces a parent’s fundamental right to make medical decisions aligned with their beliefs and their child’s best interests. The bill also prohibits making prospective parents’ affirmation of gender identity a litmus test for adoption or foster care.

Watch: Promoting Wholesome Content for Students Act
(HB 636)


The Promoting Wholesome Content for Students Act (HB 636) solves the urgent problem of pornographic materials in NC public schools. The bill sets statewide standards for identifying and removing sexually explicit and pervasively vulgar materials from public school libraries. Ultimately, it protects students from early sexualization and harmful psychological impacts of pornography exposure.

Watch: Women’s Safety and Protection Act
(HB 791/SB 516)


The Women’s Safety and Protection Act (HB 791/SB 516) is a common-sense bill that defines “male,” “female,” “man,” “woman,” and “sex” by biology in North Carolina law and protects women and girls by ensuring that private spaces—such as restrooms, changing facilities, and sleeping quarters within a  prison, local confinement facility, domestic violence center, rape crisis center, juvenile detention facility, or public school, remain single-sex.

Watch: Newborn Safety Devices Act
(HB 139/SB 91)


The Newborn Safety Devices Act (HB 139/SB 91) would extend legal protections to parents who use baby boxes and the first responders who receive surrendered infants, just like current law does for in-person surrender. With no state funding required, this is a simple, life-saving solution.

Prevent Sexual Exploitation of Women and Minors
(HB 805)

The “Prevent Sexual Exploitation of Women and Minors Act” (HB 805) targets pornography’s harmful exploitation of children and women. It requires an online pornography operator to verify that each individual appearing in the pornographic image was not less than 18 years of age when the image was created, has provided explicit written consent for each sexual act depicted, and has provided explicit written consent for the distribution of the specific pornographic image.

You can also track all of the bills we’re working on during this legislative session at ncvalues.org/legislation.  

Thank you for taking action today. With your help, we can ensure that the voices of parents, families, and values-minded citizens are heard in Raleigh.