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

Jan 24, 2025, 10:45 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. House of Delegates passes data center transparency bill 2. A look at rent-control legislation in the General Assembly 3. State lawmakers want to create a new rent relief program, but it comes with a hefty price tag 4. Controversial Tysons casino bill clears Senate committee 5. Bill aimed at helping Prince William Digital Gateway landowners cut their higher tax bills advances. 

 

By SÉBASTIEN KRAFT, Inside NOVA  

The Virginia House of Delegates on Thursday passed a bill aimed at increasing transparency in the data center siting process. House Bill 1601, championed by Del. Josh Thomas, D-Prince William, passed by a vote of 57-40. The new legislation would require sound profiling and information regarding electrical information infrastructure from data center applicants and utilities. The bill would also delegate additional authority to localities, empowering them to seek additional information pertaining to agricultural land, water usage, parks and historical sites and forests. 

 

By DAVE RESS, Richmond Times-Dispatch   

Jana Hobbs says it was not too long after her landlord, who’d been promising not to raise her monthly rent by more than $100, boosted it by $150 one year and $150 the next, that she hit a deer on her 20-mile drive to work. Then came news that renewing the lease on her $940 a month Chamberlayne Avenue apartment would mean a boost in rent to $1,299 a month. “I just couldn’t afford it,” she told a House of Delegates Counties Cities and Towns panel on Wednesday. “Please help.” 

 

By MICHAEL POPE, WVTF-FM  

Members of the General Assembly are about to start trying to balance the books, and they are hearing from interest groups seeking money. One group is asking for help addressing housing insecurity. The housing crisis is red hot, even when the temperatures drop below freezing and many families are out on the streets. 

 

By DREW WILDER, WRC-TV  

A Virginia Senate committee voted Wednesday in favor of moving the Tysons casino bill forward. The committee voted 9-3 in favor of the casino, with Sen. Adam Ebbin, D-Alexandria, abstaining. The bill would allow a Las Vegas-style casino resort in Tysons near the mall and Metro's Silver Line. So far, the Tysons casino bill has cleared subcommittee and committee votes by a two-thirds margin or better. If that level of support were to hold the rest of the way, it would be veto-proof. 

 

By CHER MUZYK, Prince William Times  

Western Prince William County landowners stuck with exponentially higher tax bills as they wait to sell their land to data centers won their first victory in Richmond on Monday. A bill written to address their dilemma advanced on a 13-2 vote. State Sen. Jeremy McPike, a Democrat who represents much of the county but not the Prince William Digital Gateway corridor, drafted SB 1305 with those landowners in mind.