|
HB1811
|
Helmer |
Virginia Public Procurement Act; preference for energy-efficient and water-efficient goods. |
|
Summary:
Virginia Public Procurement Act; preference for energy-efficient and water-efficient goods.
Provides that in the course of procuring goods, if a public body receives two or more bids for products that are Energy Star certified, meet Federal Energy Management Program (FEMP) designated efficiency requirements, appear on FEMP's Low Standby Power Product List, or are WaterSense certified, such public body may only select among those bids.
|
|
Fiscal Impact
|
|
Last Five Actions:
1/26/2021 - Read third time and passed House (55-Y 44-N) 1/26/2021 - VOTE: Passage (55-Y 44-N) 1/27/2021 - Constitutional reading dispensed 1/27/2021 - Referred to Committee on General Laws and Technology 2/5/2021 - Continued to 2021 Sp. Sess. 1 in General Laws and Technology (14-Y 0-N)
|
|
Senate Committee Actions:
1/27/2021 - Constitutional reading dispensed 1/27/2021 - Referred to Committee on General Laws and Technology 2/5/2021 - Continued to 2021 Sp. Sess. 1 in General Laws and Technology (14-Y 0-N)
|
|
HB1931
|
Levine |
Virginia Freedom of Information Act; public body authorized to conduct electronic meetings. |
|
Summary:
Virginia Freedom of Information Act; electronic meetings.
Authorizes a public body to conduct through electronic communication means a meeting for which, on or before the day of the meeting, a member of the public body holding the meeting notifies the chair that such member is unable to attend the meeting due to a family member's medical condition that requires the member to provide care for such family member, thereby preventing the member's physical attendance. The bill also clarifies that participation in an electronic meeting by a member of a public body due to the inability to attend because of a personal matter is limited each calendar year to two such meetings, which is current law, or 25 percent of the meetings held that calendar year rounded up to the next whole number, whichever is greater. This bill is a recommendation of the Virginia Freedom of Information Advisory Council.
|
|
Fiscal Impact
|
|
Last Five Actions:
1/26/2021 - Read third time and passed House BLOCK VOTE (99-Y 0-N) 1/26/2021 - VOTE: Block Vote Passage (99-Y 0-N) 1/27/2021 - Constitutional reading dispensed 1/27/2021 - Referred to Committee on General Laws and Technology 2/5/2021 - Continued to 2021 Sp. Sess. 1 in General Laws and Technology (14-Y 0-N)
|
|
Senate Committee Actions:
1/27/2021 - Constitutional reading dispensed 1/27/2021 - Referred to Committee on General Laws and Technology 2/5/2021 - Continued to 2021 Sp. Sess. 1 in General Laws and Technology (14-Y 0-N)
|
|
HB1996
|
Murphy |
Va Public Procurement Act; determination of responsibility, etc. |
|
Summary:
Virginia Public Procurement Act; determinationof responsibility; local option to include criteria in Invitationto Bid.
Allows localities to include in the Invitation to Bidcriteria that may be used in determining whether any bidder, notjust any bidder who is not prequalified by the Virginia Departmentof Transportation as under current law, is a responsible bidder.
|
|
Fiscal Impact
|
|
Last Five Actions:
1/26/2021 - Read third time and passed House (56-Y 44-N) 1/26/2021 - VOTE: Passage (56-Y 44-N) 1/27/2021 - Constitutional reading dispensed 1/27/2021 - Referred to Committee on General Laws and Technology 2/5/2021 - Continued to 2021 Sp. Sess. 1 in General Laws and Technology (14-Y 0-N)
|
|
Senate Committee Actions:
1/27/2021 - Constitutional reading dispensed 1/27/2021 - Referred to Committee on General Laws and Technology 2/5/2021 - Continued to 2021 Sp. Sess. 1 in General Laws and Technology (14-Y 0-N)
|
|
HB2001
|
Helmer |
State and local buildings, certain; building standards. |
|
Summary:
Building standards for certain state and local buildings.
Requires that any executive branch agency or institution or locality entering the design phase for the construction of a new building greater than 5,000 gross square feet in size or the renovation of a building where the cost of the renovation exceeds 50 percent of the value of the building ensure that such building has sufficient electric vehicle charging infrastructure, defined in the bill, and has features that permit the agency or institution to track the building's energy efficiency and carbon emissions. The bill authorizes the Director of the Department of General Services to grant exemptions to such standards, in writing and with certain terms. The bill requires agencies to annually report to the Governor the energy efficiency and carbon emissions metrics for each such building built or renovated. The bill requires localities to design such building projects according to the same or similar standards, or more stringent standards if adopted by ordinance. The bill also requires that localities incorporate appropriate resilience and distributed energy features. The bill requires that any exemption from the standards granted by resolution of the governing body of a locality be made in writing and explain the basis for granting the exemption.
|
|
Fiscal Impact
|
|
Last Five Actions:
1/28/2021 - Read third time and passed House (53-Y 45-N) 1/28/2021 - VOTE: Passage (53-Y 45-N) 1/29/2021 - Constitutional reading dispensed 1/29/2021 - Referred to Committee on General Laws and Technology 2/5/2021 - Continued to 2021 Sp. Sess. 1 in General Laws and Technology (14-Y 0-N)
|
|
Senate Committee Actions:
1/29/2021 - Constitutional reading dispensed 1/29/2021 - Referred to Committee on General Laws and Technology 2/5/2021 - Continued to 2021 Sp. Sess. 1 in General Laws and Technology (14-Y 0-N)
|
|
HB2004
|
Hurst |
Virginia Freedom of Information Act; law-enforcement criminal incident information, criminal files. |
|
Summary:
Virginia Freedom of Information Act; law-enforcementcriminal incident information; criminal investigative files.
Adds criminal investigative files, defined in the bill, relatingto a criminal investigation or proceeding that is not ongoing, alsodefined in the bill, to the types of law-enforcement and criminalrecords required to be released in accordance with the provisionsof the Virginia Freedom of Information Act. Under current law, therelease of criminal investigative files is discretionary. The billalso provides that the mandatory release of criminal incident informationrelating to felony offenses and criminal investigative files shallbe enjoined if a court finds by a preponderance of the evidence thatthe release of such information would likely effect certain results,outlined in the bill. The bill contains technical amendments. Thisbill is a recommendation of the Virginia Freedom of Information AdvisoryCouncil.
|
|
Fiscal Impact
|
|
Last Five Actions:
2/4/2021 - Read third time and passed House (56-Y 44-N) 2/4/2021 - VOTE: Passage (56-Y 44-N) 2/5/2021 - Constitutional reading dispensed 2/5/2021 - Referred to Committee on General Laws and Technology 2/5/2021 - Continued to 2021 Sp. Sess. 1 in General Laws and Technology (14-Y 0-N)
|
|
Senate Committee Actions:
2/5/2021 - Constitutional reading dispensed 2/5/2021 - Referred to Committee on General Laws and Technology 2/5/2021 - Continued to 2021 Sp. Sess. 1 in General Laws and Technology (14-Y 0-N)
|
|
HB2025
|
Gooditis |
Virginia FOIA; record exclusion for personal contact information provided to a public body. |
|
Summary:
Virginia Freedom of Information Act; recordexclusion for personal contact information provided to a public body.Provides that personal contact information provided to a publicbody or any of its members for the purpose of receiving electroniccommunications from the public body or any of its members is excludedfrom the mandatory disclosure provisions of FOIA, unless the recipient of such electronic communications indicates his approval for thepublic body to disclose such information.
Currently, the law providesprotections for personal contact information provided to a public body, not to its members; only applies to electronic mail; and requiresthe electronic mail recipient to request the public body not to disclose his personal contact information in order for the information to be exempt from mandatory disclosure. This bill is a recommendationof the Virginia Freedom of Information Advisory Council.
|
|
Fiscal Impact
|
|
Last Five Actions:
1/26/2021 - Read third time and passed House BLOCK VOTE (99-Y 0-N) 1/26/2021 - VOTE: Block Vote Passage (99-Y 0-N) 1/27/2021 - Constitutional reading dispensed 1/27/2021 - Referred to Committee on General Laws and Technology 2/5/2021 - Continued to 2021 Sp. Sess. 1 in General Laws and Technology (14-Y 0-N)
|
|
Senate Committee Actions:
1/27/2021 - Constitutional reading dispensed 1/27/2021 - Referred to Committee on General Laws and Technology 2/5/2021 - Continued to 2021 Sp. Sess. 1 in General Laws and Technology (14-Y 0-N)
|