Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The North Carolina Department of Revenue was created in 1921 by the North Carolina General Assembly. The department is headed by a Secretary that is appointed by the Governor. The secretary is a member of the North Carolina Cabinet. Currently, the department is responsible for administering the collection of the North Carolina state income tax ...
The North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality (NCDEQ) is an agency of the government of North Carolina that focuses on the preservation and protection of natural resources and public health. The department is headed by the Secretary of Environmental Quality, who is appointed by the Governor of North Carolina and is a member of the ...
Essential Utilities (formerly Aqua America and Peoples Natural Gas) is an American utility company that has stakes in Illinois, Indiana, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas and Virginia. [2] The company provides drinking water and wastewater treatment infrastructure and services. [3]
Nearly 21 million people in the U.S. have already received their federal tax refunds, but North Carolina residents are still waiting on money from the state. That’s because the state just ...
29 North Carolina. 30 Ohio. 31 Oklahoma. 32 Oregon. 33 Pennsylvania. 34 South Carolina. 35 ... Baltimore Bureau of Water and Wastewater (serves City of Baltimore and ...
• Agriculture, North Carolina’s No. 1 industry forever, topped $111.1 billion in economic impact in 2024 with No. 1 in production rankings nationally for sweet potatoes, tobacco, and poultry ...
North Carolina Manual (PDF). Raleigh: North Carolina Department of the Secretary of State. 2011. OCLC 2623953. Orth, John V.; Newby, Paul M. (2013). The North Carolina State Constitution (second ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199300655. Parker, Adam C. (January 2013). "Still as Moonlight: Why Tax Increment Financing Stalled in North ...
North Carolina's townships were never legally appealed and thus continue to persist, mostly as geographic divisions without much legal significance. [7] They are presently used for administrative purposes such as categorizing land deeds, organizing tax collection and voting precincts, and informing the creation of fire and school districts. [8]