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LEGISLATIVE PRIORITIES 2024
The League, like many grass roots organizations, annually sets Legislative Priorities for the Virginia General Assembly. Read and compare our priorities for 2024 to those of James City County and the City of Williamsburg.
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LWV of VA Priorities
LWV of VA Priorities

A. Voting & Elections

  1.  Campaign Finance Reform (Money & Politics)
  2.  Ensuring the Right to Vote
  3.  Ranked Choice Voting
  4.  Amending the so called “Zuckerbucks” --- to allow easier coordination with registrars
  5.  National Popular Vote
  6.  Protecting election officials – including registrars

Bills

  • HJ 2 Constitutional amendment; qualifications of voters, right to vote, persons not entitled to vote.
  • HB 26 Voter identification; accepted forms of identification, private entities licensed or certified.
  • HB 40 Campaign finance; prohibited personal use of campaign funds, complaints, hearings, civil penalty.
  • HB 56 Voter registration by political party affiliation; partially closed primary elections.
  • HB 43 Polling place; assistance for certain voters, expands definition of disability.
  • HB 44 Absentee voting; absentee voting in person, available beginning 30 days prior to election.
  • HB 126 Candidates for office; persons entitled to have name printed on ballot; required campaign finance.
  • SJ 2 Constitutional amendment; qualifications of voters, right to vote, persons not entitled to vote.
  • SB 32 Voter registration; verification of social security numbers, provisional registration status.
  • SB 42 Absentee voting; availability of voting in person.
  • SB 45 Voter identification; identification containing a photograph required.

B. Education

  1.  No Diversion of Funds from Public to Private Schools
  2.  State Equity in Funding Formulas and for Capital Projects.
  3.  Change to Virginia Constitution ---- stating that the Commonwealth “will ensure”(not seek to ensure full funding.)
  4. SJ 9 Teacher retention, etc.; JLARC to study effect of salaries, employment benefits, etc.

C. Gun Violence Prevention

  1.  Secure storage in Vehicles/ and Homes 
  2. Micro-Stamping (Partnership with the Police)
  3. Ban/Limitation-High-Capacity Magazines/Assault
  4. Weapons/Ghost Guns

Bills

  • HB 12 Handguns; firearm locking device required for sale or transfer, child safety warning required.
  • HB 35 Firearm safety device; expands definition of device.
  • HB 36 Owner of firearm; use of firearm by minor in an unlawful manner or to cause bodily injury.
  • HB 46 Firearm; transfers to another person from a prohibited person.
  • HB 113 Possession, purchase, or transportation of handgun by persons convicted of certain drug offenses.
  • HB 158 Firearm locking device required for sale or transfer of firearm.
  • SB 2 Assault firearms & certain ammunition, etc.; purchase, possession, sale, transfer, etc., prohibited.
  • SB 44 Owner of firearm; use of firearm by minor in an unlawful manner or to cause bodily injury.
  • SB 47 Firearm; transfers to another person from a prohibited person
  • SB 55 Purchase of firearms; waiting period; penalty.

D. Transparency

Promoting in Government

E. Criminal Justice & Behavioral Health

  1.  Minimizing solitary confinement
  2.  Second Look Sentencing
  3. Department of Corrections Oversight

F. Reproductive Health

  1. No abortion bans; support contraception, no tracking menstrual cycles, no ascribing personhood to fetuses
  2. Infant Mortality Rate Reduction Especially for Black Women
  3. No Workplace harassment

Bills

  1. HB 78 Search warrants; menstrual health data prohibited, definition.
  2. SJ 1 Constitutional amendment; fundamental right to reproductive freedom (first reference).
  3. HJ 1 Constitutional amendment; fundamental right to reproductive freedom (first reference).
  4. SB 15 Reproductive health care services; prohibitions on extradition for certain crimes.
  5. SB 16 Search warrants; menstrual health data prohibited, definition.

G. Domestic Violence

Red Flag Laws

H. Childcare

  1.  Fund subsidy at current rates and eligibility rates
  2.  Fund Direct Support to Providers
  3.  Tax-Credit
  4. Expansion of VPI (VA Preschool Initiative)

Bills

  • SB 54 Early childhood care and education system; publicly funded providers, funding formula.

I. Environment

 Support RGGI 2. Climate Change Mitigation

J. Affordable Housing

  1. Virginia Housing Trust Fund Increase from $75M to $150M.
  2. State Housing Stability Fund: $73 million one-time appropriation for the biennium for a three-year pilot program to provide rental assistance to 4,800 very low-income Virginia households with priority given to families with children under 13 years old.
  3. Allow Localities to pass Mandatory Inclusionary Zoning Ordinance
  4. Manufactured Home Communities – Amend Notice to Residents to Purchase to increase tenant protections.
  5. Pay or Quit Extension: Extend the “pay or quit” time period from five to fourteen days, returning to the longer time period that was in place for most of the COVID pandemic.






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James City County Priorities
James City County Priorities
  1. Amend Virginia code section 24.2-604 to extend the 40-foot “no contact” rule to include the entire building, not just the entrances.
  2. Support efforts to add an additional circuit court judge in the 9th judicial district.
  3. Relax or eliminate maintenance and construction standards and regulations imposed upon low-hazard dams.
  4. Amend Virginia code section 15.2-934 to eliminate the five-year notice requirement in favor of a one-year notice.
  5. Fully remove the spending cap on school support positions.
  6. Decentralize the Hampton/Peninsula heath district into three separate, smaller districts.
  7. Impact fees - The County encourages the General Assembly to revise existing impact fee laws to encourage the use of statutorily-calculated impact fees in lieu of cash proffers.
  8. State funding - James City County requests that the state adequately fund for local road improvements, tourism, substance abuse and mental health treatment, public education, storm-water local assistance funds (“SLAF” funding), and public libraries.
  9. Grocery tax - The County encourages the General Assembly ensure that any reduction in the grocery tax includes permanent replacement funding for local governments and school divisions.
  10. Short term rentals - The County requests that the General Assembly reject any attempt to usurp local zoning control of short-term housing rentals.
  11. Virginia retirement system - The County recommends that the General Assembly amend VRS regulations to allow retired police officers and school resource officers to return from retirement without affecting their VRS status.
  12. Colonial behavioral health expansion - The County encourages the General Assembly to approve Colonial Behavioral Health’s request for funding to expand a building on its Merrimac campus to provide for crisis service operations.
  13. Legislative programs of VML/VACO/Virginia coalition of high growth communities/HRPDC/TPO - The County supports the legislative agendas of VML, VaCo, the Virginia Coalition of High Growth Communities, the HRPDC, and the HRTPO.
  • VML: Virginia Municipal League
  • VACO (or VaCo): Virginia Association of Counties
  • HRPDC: Hampton Roads Planning District Commission
  • HRTPO: Hampton Roads Transportation Planning Organization
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Williamsburg Priorities
Williamsburg Priorities

Protect Local Government’s Zoning Authority

Local Land Use Decisions Should Remain Local. Land use decisions are best implemented at the local level where elected officials know and experience directly the nuances, impacts and repercussions, both intended and unintended, of such decisions upon the locality and its residents. Localities must maintain control of local land use decisions, and neither the state nor the federal government should usurp or pre-empt a locality’s authority to make such decisions.


Public Notice

City supports further amendments to modernize state code requirements to publish lengthy and expensive written notices in local newspapers.


Connectivity, Asset Building & Tourism

Virginia 250

The City supports funding for legacy infrastructure and tourism projects as part of Williamsburg’s commemoration of America’s 250th Anniversary.

Birthplace of America Trail (BoAT)

The City requests state funding for the construction of the Birthplace of America Trail (BoAT) on the Peninsula (connecting the Capital Trail from Jamestown through Williamsburg to Fort Monroe).


Transportation

The City supports efforts and projects that promote higher speed and more reliable passenger rail service to Richmond and the Northeast Corridor, including a third train to Williamsburg and Newport News.


Strategic Partnerships

The City supports investment in William & Mary to include:

  • Construction funding to address critical deferred maintenance issues on William & Mary’s Historic Campus in advance of 2026 Commemoration events
  •  Creation of a state funding source to incentivize modernizing Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems
  • Renovate Ewell Hall to update life safety and other building systems to support health sciences, the Reves Center for International Studies, and the Arts & Sciences Dean’s Office


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