About Realtor® Advocacy

About Realtor® Advocacy

Your Realtor® advocacy team ensures that our members’ voices are heard as decisions are made about the laws and regulations that shape our industry.

Through NVRPAC, NVAR is able to advocate on the local level, ensuring that the interests of Northern Virginia Realtors® are known to lawmakers and representatives and that the magnitude of Realtor® impact on Northern Virginia's economy and communities is recognized. NVAR collaborates with Virginia REALTORS® to advocate in Richmond, along with the National Association of REALTORS®, located steps away from the United States Capitol.  

Together, we also advocate on behalf of the consumers — representing the interests of homebuyers, sellers, and renters, and the commercial tenants who are directly impacted by changes in things like affordability, taxation, and ordinances. 

Explore Realtor® Advocacy Resources

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Watch this video for a recap of the 2024 Realtor® Lobby Day in Richmond, VA!

About NVRPAC

RPAC

The REALTORS® Political Action Committee (RPAC) has promoted the election of pro-Realtor® candidates across the United States since 1969. The purpose of RPAC is clear: voluntary contributions made by Realtors® are used to help elect candidates who understand and support their interests.

These are not members’ dues; this is money given freely by Realtors® in recognition of the importance of the political process. The REALTORS® Political Action Committee and other political fundraising are the keys to protecting and promoting the real estate industry. 

NVRPAC results in meaningful local Realtor® advocacy wins such as the passing of Virginia Realtors® Health Insurance Legislation, Federal Homeowner and Rental Assistance Funding, and more.

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Latest Advocacy News: Town Hall Notes Blog

FIVE FOR FRIDAY: A Weekly Roundup of Public Policy News

Jan 3, 2025, 08:53 by Hannah Jane Costilow
Welcome to FIVE FOR FRIDAY: A weekly roundup of public policy issues and headlines from around the Northern Virginia Region, the Commonwealth, and Capitol Hill.

by Danielle Finley, Associate Director of Political Engagement


Welcome to FIVE FOR FRIDAY: A weekly roundup of Public Policy Issues and Headlines. In this Issue: 1. Defense, intel veterans reject Tysons casino as acute health and national security risk 2. George Mason opens $254M hub as Virginia aims to draw in more tech 3. What to expect from the 2025 Virginia General Assembly 4. State Leaders Grapple with Infrastructure, Generation Costs of Data Centers 5. Virginia Republicans’ questions on solar siting bill preview 2025 legislative fight

 

Defense, intel veterans reject Tysons casino as acute health and national security risk

By SAMIR ALI NOMANI, Fauquier Times

As some Virginia lawmakers position themselves to support new legislation to bring a controversial casino to Tysons, a Who’s Who of 109 national security leaders – including 57 former CIA officials, two former members of the U.S. Congress, and 18 former Defense Department officials – sent a letter to the Virginia General Assembly and Gov. Glenn Youngkin, admonishing the casino plan as “an unacceptable health and national security hazard, whose socioeconomic costs significantly outweigh any short-term increase in revenue.”

George Mason opens $254M hub as Virginia aims to draw in more tech

By DAN ROSENZWEIG-ZIFF, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

Anuj Pokhrel came to George Mason University to study off-road robotics. But as the Virginia school experienced rapid growth in enrollment in recent years, the lab he worked in became increasingly crammed. No longer. This month, the fourth-year PhD student was in a new two-story open space that could accommodate more students — as well as drones, wheeled robots navigating staged rocky terrain and even doglike machines that easily pushed open and walked through a door.

By MASON ADAMS, Virginia Business

The General Assembly enters the fourth year in the gubernatorial cycle with even more gridlock than usual. Democrats hold narrow majorities in both the House of Delegates and Senate, but are vulnerable to vetoes by Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin, who begins the final year of his constitutionally mandated single term. Hopes for bipartisan compromise were dealt an additional blow by last year’s spat between Youngkin and Democrats in which the legislature killed the governor’s plan to build a $2 billion arena in Alexandria for the NBA’s Washington Wizards and the NHL’s Washington Capitals — mockingly dismissed by Democratic Sen. Louise Lucas as the “Glenn Dome.” Youngkin retaliated by vetoing legislation to establish a state- regulated marketplace for marijuana and to raise the commonwealth’s minimum wage.

 

State Leaders Grapple with Infrastructure, Generation Costs of Data Centers

By HANNA PAMPALONI, Loudoun Now

Just a week after a state study panel released a comprehensive report on data centers and their impacts within the commonwealth, the State Corporation Commission convened for an all-day technical conference to tackle the same issue and learn what role the panel should have in the industry’s future within Virginia. The General Assembly’s Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission released its report Dec. 9. While documenting the important role data centers play in local and state economies, the reported raised concerns that unconstrained growth of the industry would result in a massive need for additional power infrastructure, imports and generation.

 

Virginia Republicans’ questions on solar siting bill preview 2025 legislative fight

By BRAD KUTNER, WVTF-FM

The Virginia Clean Economy Act (VCEA) says 100% of Virginia’s electricity must come from carbon-free sources by 2050, but local pushback on projects like solar farms has slowed that success. Democrats in the House and Senate have tried to push bills that would revoke some local authority to deny such projects. But they were met with bitterness from even those in their own ranks. At a recent meeting of the Commission on Electric Utility Regulation, or CEUR, Republicans offered their own feedback on a new version of the bill.