RALEIGH — This fall’s elections in about three dozen North Carolina municipalities will now occur in early 2022 due to census data delays in legislation that Gov. Roy Cooper announced on Friday will became law without his signature.

The measure emerged after it became clear towns and cities where certain residents vote in district-specific races could not redraw district boundaries in time for usual municipal election dates. That’s because the 2020 census information necessary for redistricting won’t be available until late summer or early fall.

There are no Bladen County towns in the legislation. Those in it are Ahoskie, Cary, Charlotte, Clinton, Edenton, Elizabeth City, Enfield, Erwin, Fayetteville, Greensboro, Greenville, Henderson, Hickory, Jacksonville, Kings Mountain, Laurinburg, Lexington, Longview, Lumberton, Mooresville, Mt. Olive, New Bern, Plymouth, Princeville, Raleigh, Roanoke Rapids, Rocky Mount, Sanford, Siler City, Smithfield, St. Pauls, Statesville, Tarboro, Whiteville and Wilson.

The legislation tells these towns and cities to complete the redistricting either by Nov. 17 or Dec. 17. These municipalities would have elections on March 8, 2022 — the date for state and federal primaries. Some municipalities also would have additional elections in April or May. These communities have the option to hold elections in 2021 for at-large offices like mayor if they wish.

Cooper had until late Saturday to sign the bill or veto it. The bill will now become law with his inaction.

“While delays to census data caused by the pandemic necessitate changes to local elections, decisions about local elections like these should involve more open discussion and public input,” Cooper wrote in explaining his decision. Some voting-rights activists had wanted requirements that the public have opportunities to be involved in redistricting within the affected towns and cities.

And while Raleigh was among the affected municipalities, their local senators had complained about a late addition to the bill in the House and sought by Raleigh city leaders that permanently moves their municipal elections to even-numbered years starting with November 2022. Election runoffs in Raleigh also would end, meaning the top vote-getter wins regardless of the percentage of votes the person received. The senators were unhappy that council members in the state’s second-largest city pushed for the changes without citizen input or public hearings.

The upcoming law also moves the Charlotte-Mecklenburg and Lexington schools board’s 2021 elections to November 2022, but those even-year changes also would not be permanent. The other municipalities affected by the law would revert to odd-numbered-year elections after the one-time change in 2022.

Hundreds of other municipalities that have only citywide elections aren’t subject to the changes, and will hold their fall elections as scheduled.