Realtor® Advocacy Wins

Your Realtor® advocacy team works tirelessly to protect the real estate industry. Although not an exhaustive list, check out recent victories that Realtors® can be proud of, including legislative, executive, and judiciary branch wins.  

Affordable Housing - Realtor® Advocacy Wins

Affordable Housing Programs:

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Rural Housing

State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds:

Agency Confirmations - Realtor® Advocacy Wins

FHA Commissioner

FHA Director

Anti-Money Laundering - Realtor® Advocacy Wins

Beneficial Ownership Rule

FinCEN Funding

Commercial Real Estate - Realtor® Advocacy Wins

Adaptive Reuse Bills

EB-5 Regional Center Program:

Energy Efficiency - Realtor® Advocacy Wins

New Energy Efficiency Tax Credit and Rebate Programs for Property Owners

Fair Housing - Realtor® Advocacy Wins

Increased Funding

Federal Tax - Realtor® Advocacy Wins

Inflation Reduction Act

Flood Insurance - Realtor® Advocacy Wins

Disaster mitigation and flood mapping

National Flood Insurance Program

Housing Finance and Assistance - Realtor® Advocacy Wins

Homeless Assistance Program

Housing Counseling

LIBOR Transition

Rental Housing - Realtor® Advocacy Wins

CARES Act Notice-to-Vacate Requirement:

Emergency Rental Assistance Program (ERAP)

Rental Assistance Funding

Violence Against Women Act

Small Business - Realtor® Advocacy Wins

SBA Programs

State and Local - Realtor® Advocacy Wins

Rent Control

Student Loan Debt - Realtor® Advocacy Wins

Fixes to Existing Programs

Relief for Borrowers at Fraudulent For-Profit Institutions

Technology - Realtor® Advocacy Wins

Broadband Funding

SECURE Notarization Act

Transportation and Infrastructure - Realtor® Advocacy Wins

Bipartisan Infrastructure Framework Funding

Coming soon: Brand New NV/RPAC Live from Richmond Series!

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Government Affairs Blog

FIVE FOR FRIDAY: A Weekly Roundup of Public Policy News

Jul 26, 2024, 09:09 by Chris Barranco
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. Counties and states are ending single-family zoning. Homeowners are suing 2. Racial equity arguments raised in NAACP filing on Missing Middle lawsuit 3. County supervisors forward plan to eliminate by-right data center zoning 4. U.S. Expanding Crackdown On Foreign Real Estate Deals Near Military Bases 5. Virginia is America’s Top State for Business in 2024, with the nation’s best schools and solid infrastructure. 

By TEA ARMUS, The Washington Post 

With the future of single-family-only zoning in Arlington on the line, their lawsuit points to how the push-and-pull over this suburban vision for land use — long considered gospel in many communities — is moving from city halls and state legislatures to the courts. Arlington’s “missing middle” plan, which follows similar efforts in Minneapolis, California and Portland, Ore., was initially proposed to create denser housing options in this expensive locality. (The median home price in Arlington was about $760,000 over the past year.) 

By DANIEL EGITTO, Arlington Now 

As the much-anticipated Missing Middle trial began this week, the Arlington NAACP is arguing that the case has wide-ranging implications for racial equity. In a 55-page amicus brief filed in advance of opening statements on Monday, the local NAACP chapter argued that single-family zoning has racist origins and that undoing Missing Middle would be a step backward for racial progress. 

“Plaintiffs claim that Arlington County’s decision to reform its exclusionary zoning scheme was arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable,” the organization wrote. “In light of the history and harms of Arlington’s prior zoning policies, and the benefits of making them less restrictive and more inclusive, the County’s decision is reasonable beyond any fair debate.” 

By JESS KIRBY, Loudoun Times-Mirror 

The data center capital of the world may enact new restrictions on data center development as soon as February 2025. 

By KAYLA CARMICHEAL, Bis Now 

Foreign real estate activity near military installations could be put under more scrutiny, according to a new proposal set forth by the Biden administration. The Proposal by the Treasury Department is intended to block land acquisitions from foreign investors that could be deemed a national security threat. 

By SCOTT COHN, CNBC 

With the nation’s best education system and policies that give companies room — both literally and figuratively — to grow, Virginia is America’s Top State for Business in 2024. This is the Old Dominion’s sixth time at the top of CNBC’s rankings, and its third win in five years — a record unmatched by any other state since the study began in 2007. In a rare feat this year, Virginia finishes in the top half or better in each of the study’s 10 categories.