North Carolina General Statutes
Article 1A - North Carolina Emergency Management Act.
§ 166A-19.61 - No private liability.

166A-19.61. No private liability.
Any person, firm, or corporation, together with any successors in interest, if any, owning or controlling real or personal property who, voluntarily or involuntarily, knowingly or unknowingly, with or without compensation, grants a license or privilege or otherwise permits or allows the designation or use of the whole or any part or parts of such real or personal property for the purpose of activities or functions relating to emergency management as provided for in this Chapter or elsewhere in the General Statutes shall not be civilly liable for the death of or injury to any person or the loss of or damage to the property of any persons where such death, injury, loss, or damage resulted from, through, or because of the use of the said real or personal property for any of the above purposes, provided that the use of said property is subject to the order or control of or pursuant to a request of the State government or any political subdivision thereof. (1957, c. 950, s. 3; 1977, c. 848, s. 2; 2012-12, s. 1(b); 2012-90, s. 9.)

Structure North Carolina General Statutes

North Carolina General Statutes

Chapter 166A - North Carolina Emergency Management Act

Article 1A - North Carolina Emergency Management Act.

§ 166A-19 - Short title.

§ 166A-19.1 - Purposes.

§ 166A-19.2 - Limitations.

§ 166A-19.3 - Definitions[Effective until January 1, 2023]

§ 166A-19.10 - Powers of the Governor.

§ 166A-19.11 - Powers of the Secretary of Public Safety.

§ 166A-19.12 - Powers of the Division of Emergency Management.

§ 166A-19.13 - Data collection, reporting, use of State and federal funds.

§ 166A-19.14 - Priority consideration of North Carolina-based companies when addressing public health emergencies; NC 2-1-1 system.

§ 166A-19.15 - County and municipal emergency management.

§ 166A-19.20 - Gubernatorial or legislative declaration of state of emergency[Effective until January 1, 2023]

§ 166A-19.21 - Gubernatorial disaster declaration.

§ 166A-19.22 - Municipal or county declaration of state of emergency.

§ 166A-19.23 - Excessive pricing prohibitions.

§ 166A-19.24 - Remote meetings during certain declarations of emergency.

§ 166A-19.30 - Additional powers of the Governor during state of emergency[Effective until January 1, 2023]

§ 166A-19.31 - Power of municipalities and counties to enact ordinances to deal with states of emergency.

§ 166A-19.40 - Use of contingency and emergency funds.

§ 166A-19.41 - State emergency assistance funds.

§ 166A-19.42 - State Emergency Response and Disaster Relief Fund.

§ 166A-19.60 - Immunity and exemption.

§ 166A-19.61 - No private liability.

§ 166A-19.62 - Civil liability of persons who willfully ignore a warning in an emergency.

§ 166A-19.70 - Ensuring availability of emergency supplies and utility services; protection of livestock, poultry, and agricultural crops.

§ 166A-19.70A - Facilitate critical infrastructure disaster relief.

§ 166A-19.71 - Accept services, gifts, grants, and loans.

§ 166A-19.72 - Establishment of mutual aid agreements.

§ 166A-19.73 - Compensation.

§ 166A-19.74 - Nondiscrimination in emergency management.

§ 166A-19.75 - Emergency management personnel.

§ 166A-19.76 - Leave options for voluntary firefighters, rescue squad workers, and emergency medical service personnel called into service.

§ 166A-19.77 - North Carolina Forest Service designated as emergency response agency.

§ 166A-19.77A - Agricultural Emergency Response Teams authorized.

§ 166A-19.78 - Governor's power to order evacuation of public building.

§ 166A-19.79 - Severability.