Priority Issues

Read about NVAR's work on several legislative and regulatory policy goals, including current priority issues, ongoing issues, standing Public Policy Positions, and recent Realtor® Advocacy Wins. Make your voice heard by submitting feedback for the annual NVAR Legislative Program, submitted every spring. 

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2024–2025 NVAR Legislative Agenda

Download the 2023-2024 LEGISLATIVE AGENDA (2)
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On-Going Issues

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NVAR Legislative Program

Legislative Program

Every spring, NVAR compiles legislative and regulatory policy goals for the coming year into a document called the NVAR Legislative Program.

The Legislative Program is developed over several months based on feedback given by NVAR members. The process begins in March, when NVAR committees and forums are asked to submit issues to the NVAR Public Policy Committee for consideration. Individual Realtors® may also submit issues to the committee. A task force researches these issues and recommends pertinent ones for inclusion in the Legislative Program.

Once a draft program has been developed, the Public Policy Committee reviews it and sends a final draft to NVAR’s Board of Directors for consideration. Following approval by the Board, NVAR forwards the program to the Virginia Association of Realtors® for inclusion in the statewide list of legislative priorities.

Your voice is important to us. If you have suggestions for items we should be looking into please email us at govaffairs@nvar.com OR fill out this quick form.

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Town Hall Notes Blog

FIVE FOR FRIDAY: A Weekly Roundup of Public Policy News

Dec 13, 2024, 13:07 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. Progress on inflation stalled in November as prices rose 2. Report confirms: Data centers in Virginia pose enormous power demands 3. JBG Smith Plans to Develop More Than 750 New Housing Units in Potomac Yard 4. Fairfax County leaders press state legislators to increase K-12 education funding 5. A new version of Missing Middle zoning changes may be studied. 

By ANDREW ACKERMAN, The Washington Post 

Inflation remained stubborn this fall, signaling a potentially bumpy road to vanquishing higher prices, which could complicate President-elect Donald Trump’s policy ambitions. The consumer price index increased 2.7% in November from a year earlier, according to Labor Department data released Wednesday, hotter than a 2.6% annual rise in October, although in line with what economists expected. It was also above September’s 2.4% year-over-year rise. 

By WHITNEY PIPKIN, Bay Journal 

If the data center industry continues to grow at an unconstrained pace in Virginia, the state will struggle to supply enough power to meet local energy demands, and ratepayers will help foot the bill for the new infrastructure the industry’s buildout requires. 

By MAGGIE ROTH, Northern Virginia Magazine 

Developer JBG Smith has submitted new plans to the City of Alexandria to develop a mix of multifamily homes, townhouses, and affordable housing units in Potomac Yard. Altogether, the plan would create more than 750 new housing units in the neighborhood where the failed Monumental Sports arena was once proposed.   

By SCOTT MCCAFFREY, Ffxnow 

By the Fairfax County government’s math, residents are being shortchanged nearly $570 million annually in education funding by the state government. Facing a $292.7 million gap between expected revenues and expenses projected for the coming fiscal year, county leaders would like their state lawmakers to leave from Richmond next year with some of that funding in hand. 

By SCOTT MCAFFREY, Arlnow 

The Arlington Housing Commission is considering whether to study possible ways to revive Missing Middle zoning changes. The Expanded Housing Option is currently off the books following a circuit court judge’s ruling this summer. The Arlington County Board is appealing that decision, but has argued that adopting a revised ordinance “is not feasible … based on the legal construction and substance of the judge’s ruling.”