Priority Issues

Priority Issues

Read about NVAR's work on several legislative and regulatory policy goals, including current priority issues, on-going 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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2023-2024 NVAR Legislative Agenda

Download the 2023-2024 LEGISLATIVE AGENDA
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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.

An important component of the issues we look at is your voice. 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

Mar 11, 2022, 10:20 AM by Josh Veverka
1. N.Va. officials fear grocery tax repeal will derail region’s transportation funding 2. Parking Reimagined - Updating Fairfax County’s Parking Regulations 3. Metro’s Yellow Line bridge over Potomac will close for about eight months beginning this fall 4. Part of Columbia Pike to close next year as cemetery expansion project ramps up 5. Senate passes bill to avert shutdown, extend $14 billion in Ukraine aid
FIVE FOR FRIDAYWelcome to FIVE FOR FRIDAY: A weekly roundup of Public Policy Issues and Headlines from around the Northern Virginia Region, the Commonwealth and on Capitol Hill.

1. N.Va. officials fear grocery tax repeal will derail region’s transportation funding

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) has made repealing the tax a key part of his agenda, and it is all but a certainty in the state budget.

2. Parking Reimagined - Updating Fairfax County’s Parking Regulations

Fairfax County’s Parking Reimagined project is reviewing and updating regulations for off street parking and loading, in an effort to modernize parking and loading requirements and create greater flexibility in the provision of parking for current and future land uses. While some changes to off street parking and loading regulations have occurred over the years, overall rates and regulations have not been comprehensively reviewed since 1988. Parking Reimagined includes an in depth evaluation of off street parking and loading rates and regulations. Community participation is an important part of the Parking Reimagined project and your thoughts are welcome! To learn more about this project, get details for upcoming community engagement opportunities, and watch previous meetings, please visit the Parking Reimagined webpage.

3. Metro’s Yellow Line bridge over Potomac will close for about eight months beginning this fall 

Metro will shut down a four-decade-old tunnel and the Yellow Line bridge spanning the Potomac River for about eight months this fall to repair and rebuild the infrastructure.

4. Part of Columbia Pike to close next year as cemetery expansion project ramps up

A portion of Columbia Pike near Pentagon City is set to be closed and re-routed to side streets early next year due to work to expand Arlington National Cemetery. The work, which will add 60,000 burial sites and space for the 9/11 Pentagon Memorial Visitor Education Center, will also involve moving Columbia Pike closer to I-395, so that gravesites can be placed where it currently curves around the Air Force Memorial. Grading work along the new planned path of the Pike has already started, as have some occasional lane closures.

5. Senate passes bill to avert shutdown, extend $14 billion in Ukraine aid

The measure now goes to President Biden for enactment. It would fund U.S. government operations through September and provide new humanitarian assistance to Ukraine. Democrats and Republicans secured the money in tandem with a $1.5 trillion bill to fund key federal agencies and operations. Its successful advance after months of bipartisan talks marked a significant legislative victory in its own right, averting a shutdown that would have occurred after midnight Friday in the absence of congressional action. The House approved the spending package a day earlier.