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

Sep 26, 2025, 10:20 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: In this Issue: 1. From the Macro to the Micro 2. Congress Approaches Funding Deadline 3. Trump hikes tariffs on heavy trucks, pharma and kitchen cabinets 4. Braddock District special election planned for December 5. Loudoun transmission line debate tees up SCC response to data center needs, resident concerns

 

From the Macro to the Micro

By CHARLIE COOK, The Cook Political Report

Republicans have good reason to be frantically trying to change existing congressional-district boundaries. The September Gallup Poll released Monday showed President Trump’s approval rating both low and unchanged from August: 40 percent approve and 56 percent disapprove, just 1 point higher than his three-month average of 39 percent approval.

 

Congress Approaches Funding Deadline

By ERIN STACKLEY, Washington Report

Government funding is set to expire on September 30th, and Congress has yet to agree on any funding measures to keep the government open.

 

Trump hikes tariffs on heavy trucks, pharma and kitchen cabinets

By ARI HAWKINS, Politico

President Donald Trump on Thursday said the U.S. will hike tariffs on heavy trucks, kitchen cabinets and pharmaceuticals starting Oct 1., the latest in a steady series of trade actions aimed at protecting domestic industry from lower-priced imports.

 

Braddock District special election planned for December

By JARED WENSELBURGER, Fairfax County Times

A new supervisor will be selected for Fairfax County’s Braddock District this year, following a petition from the county board to schedule a special election. The Board of Supervisors voted unanimously on Sept. 16 to ask the Fairfax Circuit Court to set a special election for Dec. 9 to fill the vacancy left by James Walkinshaw, who resigned after winning Virginia’s 11th Congressional District seat.

 

Loudoun transmission line debate tees up SCC response to data center needs, resident concerns

By SHANNON HECKT, Virginia Mercury

“Property values are going to go down, utility bills are going to go up as a result. And I think there’s a huge issue when it comes to, one, putting these lines through communities,” U.S. Rep. Suhas Subramanyam, D-Loudoun, told the State Corporation Commissioners and a packed school auditorium of local residents Thursday night at the first SCC public hearing about Dominion Energy’s proposed high-powered transmission lines, which slated to cut through Northern Virginia neighborhoods. Hundreds of community members in the three Loudoun Valley Estates neighborhoods showed up to the hearing to push back against plans for the 500kv lines to be built in their backyards.