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Topic: Alice Bordsen


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In the News (Thu 31 Dec 09)

  
  Latest News - Bill Would Lighten Youthful Offender Penalties
Bordsen said that her proposal wouldn't be available to repeat or violent offenders.
Bordsen had hoped that the Legislative Research Commission, an organization that studies changes to state laws while the General Assembly is not in session, would take up the issue in the interim between the closing of the 2004 short session in July and the opening of the 2005 regular session.
Bordsen said that she would push hard for the change next year.
www.november.org /stayinfo/breaking2/YouthBill.html   (683 words)

  
 Times-News   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Alice Bordsen, a law school student and member of the Mebane City Council, said this week she is close to a decision on the new 54th House District in Alamance County.
Bordsen, who won her first term on the Mebane council in 1999, said she has formed a steering committee and is close to deciding whether to get in the race.
Bordsen said she is interested in making government more open and accessible.
www.thetimesnews.com /2002/02-01/02-01-19/region-2.html   (663 words)

  
 newsobserver.com
Bordsen said the law, which has been on the books since at least 1919, makes no sense in today's world.
Bordsen is concerned with the lifelong hurdles a criminal conviction causes for teenagers.
Some of Bordsen's colleagues might not agree, though, with a recommendation to raise the adult age.
www.newsobserver.com /102/v-print/story/386274.html   (815 words)

  
 Police Oppose Youth Bill   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
In his letter, Perry cautioned lawmakers about standards set for law enforcement officers in the state, noting that one standard is that a criminal justice officer cannot have been convicted of a felony.
Bordsen's bill "would not only allow such applicants to have a single felony conviction expunged, but multiple felony convictions could be expunged if the person is convicted in the same session of court," Perry's letter says.
Bordsen said that in 47 states, where 16- and 17-yearolds are not treated as adults in the court system, such records are already expunged.
www.mapinc.org /drugnews/v05/n867/a03.html   (465 words)

  
 NC Office of The Governor News Release
Bordsen represents District 63 (Alamance County) in the N.C. State House.
She is chair of the House Committee on Aging, vice chair of the House Judiciary II Committee and a member of the University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill Board of Visitors and the N.C. Progress Board.
Bordsen was named Freshman Legislator of the year by the Association of Home and Hospice Care of North Carolina in 2004 and served as a delegate to the White House Conference on Aging in 2005.
www.governor.state.nc.us /News_FullStory.asp?id=2825   (161 words)

  
 UNC-TV ONLINE: Legislative Week in Review - Transcripts
Bordsen: And our law, therefore, has different—all laws have public policy underlying them, and the public policy that underlies youth crime says that you look first at the offender, because they are considered salvageable.
Bordsen: But if we don’t do this, if we don’t do this, only North Carolina’s 16 and 17-year-olds are disadvantaged because most other states have a provision with this age group to either seal or expunge.
Bordsen: And that’s a hard thing to figure out, where is that pivot point where you give them an incentive that will allow them to catch up with their peers.
www.unctv.org /legweek/transcript071505.html   (8340 words)

  
 Project Vote Smart - Representative Bordsen - Interest Group Ratings
2005 Representative Bordsen supported the interests of the Conservation Council of North Carolina 89 percent in 2005.
2003-2004 Representative Bordsen supported the interests of the Conservation Council of North Carolina 100 percent in 2003-2004.
2003 On the votes that the Conservation Council of North Carolina considered to be the most important in 2003, Representative Bordsen voted their preferred position 100 percent of the time.
www.vote-smart.org /issue_rating_category.php?can_id=MNC54626?q=print   (467 words)

  
 News 14 Carolina | 24 Hour Local News | TOP STORIES   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
But those states allow 16- and 17-year-old defendants to petition to be treated as youthful offenders, according to state Rep. Alice Bordsen, D-Alamance, who asked the commission to study the statute.
The state law also requires defendants as young as 13 to be considered adults in first-degree murder cases.
Teenagers convicted as adults can be rejected by public schools and universities, employers and the military, limiting their options for a law-abiding life, Bordsen said.
www.news14charlotte.com /content/top_stories/default.asp?ArID=110698   (611 words)

  
 UNC-TV ONLINE: Legislative Week in Review - Transcripts
Bordsen: It seemed to be almost a knee-jerk process to repel amendments that were thoughtfully done and had good intentions.
Bordsen: I think that we are leaving out some consumer protections that would not hurt this bill at all.
It makes me sad but I am going to vote against the bill and I would urge those of you who are sort of on the fence to consider doing likewise.
www.unctv.org /legweek/transcript062306.html   (8760 words)

  
 Times-News   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Alice Bordsen is serving her first term on the Mebane City Council.
“Alamance County continues to experience exciting economic activity and population growth despite the current economic slowdown,” Bordsen said in a press release.
Bordsen, 54, is a recent law school graduate.
www.thetimesnews.com /2002/02-02/02-02-06/region-5.html   (107 words)

  
 John Glenn: ZoomInfo Business People Information
Her bill would allow some 16- and 17-year-olds with non-violent felonies to have their records expunged once they complete their sentence, perform community service and keep their subsequent records clean.
But Glenn said that he has qualms with some of the other expunction bills in the General Assembly.
Alice Bordsen, D-Alamance, sponsored one that he has trouble with.
www.zoominfo.com /people/glenn_john_26164237.aspx   (461 words)

  
 Tell a Friend   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Appropriates $60,000 to DENR to establish an executive director for the NC Paddle Trails Association.
Authorize the issuance of $1 billion in general obligation bonds over 4 years, subject to a ballot referendum, to be used for wastewater projects and public water system projects.
H1531, Mercury Reduction and Education, Rep. Pricey Harrison (Guilford-D), Rep. Alice Bordsen (Alamance-D), Rep. Grier Martin (Wake-D), Rep. Susan Fisher (Buncombe-D), in House Environment.
www.appvoices.org /index.php?/avforum/friend/451   (1631 words)

  
 John William Pope Civitas Institute   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Members present: Representatives Grady, Underhill, Holliman, L. Allen, B. Allen, Tucker, Tolson, Justus, McAllister, Coates, McLawhorn, Hollo, Current, Walker, Carney, Bordsen, McGee, Goforth, Weiss, Wilkins, Setzer, Ross, Adams, Pate, Fisher, Gulley, Insko, Church, Haire, Crawford, Walend, Howard, Dickson, Sutton, Rapp, Michaux, Culp, Coleman, Farmer-Butterfield, (Hackney in audience).
Bruce Goforth, Rep. Alice Bordsen, Rep. Robert Grady, Rep.
Update on Department of Insurance Small Group Law Project update by Barbara Morales Burke: This is a new program (Dec. 2005) making a comprehensive review of laws and regulations that they hope will improve market conditions.
www.jwpcivitasinstitute.org /legupdates/houseselect/healthcare.html   (7070 words)

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