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This is a roundup of FOIA legislation in the 2006 session – plus
miscellany of interest. New FOIA amendments and other key bills are
underlined; please notify us of omissions or errors. (updated 4.30.2006) Click here to learn who represents your district
To find out contact information for your Delegate or Senator, you can go to http://legis.state.va.us and click on "Who's My Legislator" on the right side of the page under "Quick Links."
SJ51 O'Brien Proposes study to determine adequacy of the security of state government databases and data communications. Approved.
SJ170 Houck Reaffirms support of March 16 as Freedom of Information Day
SJ173 Houck (all other senators are co-patrons) Commends VCOG on its 10th anniversary; companion to House Resolution 206)
SB18 Marsh Mandates outpatient psychiatric treatment; creates far-reaching rules for confidentiality. Carried over to 2007.
SB34 Reynolds Amended
in subcommittee to continue requirement that Standards of Learning
assessments be publicly available "in a timely manner and
as soon as practicable" following the administration of such tests. The
State Board of Education wanted to keep records confidential up to 3
years. SB39 Reynolds Creates
new record exemption for records, notes, other correspondence during an
active review conducted by the Board of Education pursuant to §
22.1-16.§ 22.1-16. Bylaws and regulations generally; exemption does not
block access to records that do not reveal individual identities or
compromise security of test results
SB 76 Houck Revises
FOIA exemption for PPTA and PPEA projects. Formalizes the earmarking
process for the protection of trade secrets, financial records, and
other records submitted by a private entity, by requiring a written
request for an exclusion from disclosure by the private entity and for
a written determination by the responsible public entity that such
records will be protected from disclosure under certain circumstances.
The bill also amends the PPTA and PPEA to require a public entity to
post all accepted conceptual proposals, whether solicited or not.. The
bill also requires at least one copy of the proposals shall be made
available for public inspection. The bill also requires the responsible
public entity to provide an opportunity for public comment 30 days
before the execution of an interim or comprehensive agreement. The bill
provides that once the process of bargaining of all phases or aspects
of an interim or comprehensive agreement is complete, but before an
interim or a comprehensive agreement is entered into, a responsible
public entity shall post the proposed agreement. Once an interim or
comprehensive agreement has been executed, all procurement records,
excluding trade secrets, financial information, and cost estimates, are
available to the public upon request. The bill is a recommendation of
the Freedom of Information Advisory Council. Approved unanimously in
the House and Senate. Governor Kayne asked for amendments to permit
more secrecy for VDOT negoations. An April 17 compromise permits these amendments for one year only, while allowing further study by the FOIA Council.
SB141 O’Brien Enacts
a new campaign finance disclosure act; reorganizes and clarifies
provisions in the act; amends various cross-references to the act; and
repeals the existing act. The bill is the result of a review of the Act
undertaken by the State Board of Elections pursuant to House Joint
Resolution 667 (2005).
SB150
Deeds
Requires that direct recording electronic devices be equipped to
produce a paper record of each vote that can be verified by the voter
and used in recounts. Provides for audits of a percentage of the
equipment. Combined with SB424
SB157 (Companion to HB68) Norment Creates a special fund to be administered by the Supreme Court of
Virginia, funded by increased fees. Money in the fund is to be
allocated at the direction of the Supreme Court to staff, advance,
update, maintain, replace, repair and support telecommunications and
technology systems of the judicial system. Amended, approved.
SB 174
Wampler
Required review by “the appropriating body “ of the terms and
conditions of interim or comprehensive agreements under the
Public-Private Transportation and Public-Private Education Facilities
and Infrastructure Acts. Stricken by patron. See SB541.
SB208
Edwards
Evidence received by the proposed Office of Children's Services
Ombudsman shall be confidential and not subject to FOIA. Sent to Youth Commission
SB334 Obenshain Requireed filtering at libraries receiving state aid; amended and approved in committee, 9-5; killed in Senate Finance
SB383
McDougle
Companion to Frederick's HB842; Carried over for a year at patron's request, Senate Courts of Justice Committee
SB436
Devolites Davis
As amended, requires disclosure of political contributions exceeding
$10,000 by out-of-state 527s. Companion to Chris Jones' HB291. See
conference report.
SB443
Lambert
Confidentiality
provision for applicant-related information given to the Brown v. Board
of Education Scholarship Awards Committee. Amended to include tighter FOIA exemption.
SB461 Devolites Davis As
amended and approved, requires that new records be destroyed within 6
months after retention schedules expire. Older records to be destroyed
in a timely manner. (Companion House measure stricken by patron, Del.
Kirk Cox.)
SB465 Edwards Amends
Freedom of Information Act, permitting electronic meetings for all
political subdivisions other than units of local government; bill would
allow electronic meetings for overseers of Roanoke's higher ed center.
Referred to FOIA Council for study.
SB559
Stolle
Toughens
online registry requirements and penalties for sex offenders. Sponsored
by the State Crime Commission. Includes criminal records exemption for Records of the Sex Offender and Crimes
Against Minors Registry maintained by the Department of State Police, unless the information is required to be posted on the
internet. Approved.
SB560
Stolle
Requires minimum standards, policies and procedures for campus security
officers; requires uniform record-keeping and establishment of
databases for campus safety and security information sharing.Approved.
SB628
Deeds
Requires
the filing of special reports to disclose the source of funds for large
PAC contributions ($100,000 for statewide candidates and $25,000 for
General Assembly candidates). Large penalties are proposed for
violators. Combined with SB436.
SB635 (companion to HB969)
Howell
Record exemption for Adult Fatality Review teams, matching existing
exemption for Child Fatality Review teams; approved in Rehabilitation
and Social Services referred to Finance; carried over.
SB641 Reynolds Prohibits in-session gifts to legislators. Killed in committee.
SB693 Norment Mandates that the legislature's Capitol Square Council follow FOIA open-meeting rules. Tabled in House Rules Committee.
SB702
Devolites Davis
If
an individual files a written complaint against a physician licensed by
the Board of Medicine that is investigated but does not result in
disciplinary action, the Director of the Department of Health
Professions must give the person an explanation of the Board's decision
that disciplinary action was not warranted. Approved.
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HJ2 Armstrong Required
that no later than the first
day of the 2007 Regular Session, rules would be in place for a video
and audio feed of the daily sessions of the House of Delegates
to public television and other broadcast entities (currently available
in 40 states). As in past years, killed on show of hands in Rules
Committee; foes included the speaker, the majority leader, Kilgore,
Wardrup and Putney. Del. Steve Landis, R-Augusta, was the only
Republican supporting the measure. A majority of Democrats also backed
the measure. There was no recorded vote.
HJ206
Griffith
Resolution commending VCOG on its 10th anniversary
HB16
Lingamfelter
Directs the governor to initiate, within 120 days of taking office, a
financial and management review of governor-selected executive branch
state agencies, except public institutions of higher education, with
total agency appropriations of two percent or more of the total
state-appropriated funds. Within 18 months of completion of the study,
the governor must make the report available to the General Assembly and
the Council on Virginia's Future. Killed in Appropriations Committee.
HB21 Fralin Provides for victim notification when accused is released on bail. Approved.
HB209 Cox Udates
the Public Records Act to include provisions relating to the management
and archiving of electronic records. The notable changes for clerks
pursuant to this bill are two: developing plans for record recovery in
the wake of disasters, and increased authority to the Library of
Virginia to set standards for record maintenance. The bill creates new
definitions for electronic records, lifecycle, metadata, conversion, and migration, and amends the powers and duties of the Library Board to be medium-neutral and to allow the Library to issue regulations and guidelines related to the lifecycle of records, generally. The bill requires the custodians of records to convert and migrate electronic data as necessary to maintain access to these records. Finally, the bill allows the Library to conduct audits of the record keeping practices of agencies subject to the act, and to file the audit reports with the Governor and the General Assembly. The bill also includes numerous technical amendments. This bill is a recommendation of the HJR 6 study (2004). Approved.
HB210
Cox Amends
the State Publications Depository Program to include electronic
publications, and clarifies that the requirements of the Program apply
to all state agencies in any branch of government. The bill creates a
new reporting requirement for The Library of Virginia to annually
report which agencies do not send The Library of Virginia the
publications required under the Depository Program. Approved, signed by
governor.
HB 291 Chris Jones Requires
the filing of special reports to disclose the source of funds for large
contributions made by out-of-state and federal PACS. Approved; see
conference report Related proposals: * HB 292 Campaign finance disclosure; definitions; exemptions. * HB 293 Campaign finance disclosure; definitions; reporting requirements. * HB 294 Campaign finance disclosure; definitions; independent expenditures. * HB 295 Campaign finance disclosure; statements of organization; petty cash funds; depository requirements. * HB 296 Campaign finance; valuation of certain campaign contributions. * HB 297 Campaign finance; special reports of large pre-election contributions. * HJ 32 Campaign Finance Disclosure Act; Board of Elections to continue its review thereof.
HB348 / Companion to SB39 Hamilton HB 362 Lingamfelter Amended
DGIF bill; requires that (i) the minute books and other records of the
agency be open to examination by members of the General Assembly and
(ii) term limits for board chairman. Approved. with amendment by
governor. (Related bills: HB938, HB939, HB979, HB1130)
HB400 Wittman Allows
use of governor's economic-development funds to be used for high-speed
or broadband internet for new businesses in rural or underserved areas.
Approved.
HB542 Griffith
Makes several amendments so the General Assembly and State
and Local Government Conflict of Interest Acts include (i) clarifying that
individual stocks and amounts should be listed, (ii) requiring net rather than
gross amounts regarding disclosure of business interests, (iii) requiring
disclosure of previously deferred compensation when the filer has begun to
receive such compensation, (iv) requiring disclosure of payments made by a
filer to a lobbyist for representation, (v) adding definitions for
"deferred compensation," "deferred compensation plan," and
"contingent liability," and (vi) revising the definition of
"close financial association." The bill also provides an extension for
filing deadlines under the Acts that may fall on a weekend or a legal holiday.
The bill is the recommendation of the HJR 186 (2004) Joint Subcommittee
Studying Conflicts of Interests and Lobbyist Disclosure Filings. Approved.
HB543 Griffith Makes several
amendments to registration and disclosure provisions for lobbyists including (i)
raising the threshold for reporting any single entertainment event from $50 to
$100, (ii) clarifying provisions for exempting uncompensated lobbyists from
registration and disclosure requirements, (iii) adding a definition of
"fair market value," and (iv) adding persons employed by a member or
member-elect of the General Assembly to provide legislative support to the
definition of "legislative official." The bill is the recommendation
of the HJR 186 (2004) Joint Subcommittee Studying Conflicts of Interests and
Lobbyist Disclosure Filings. Amended, pproved.
HB563 Nixon Removes
the sunset provision on prohibiting certain information from being put
on a court-controlled website. Amended by the patron in House Science
and Technology; extends on-line target date to 2007; provides for
one-year period to look at new software that removes SSNs from
subscriber-accessed documents. Approved unanimously in the House;
Senate amendment accepted.
HB564 Nixon Clarifies
where minutes of state boards, commissions and other public bodies in
the executive branch of state government must post their meeting
minutes. Currently, meeting minutes must be posted on the Internet. The
bill stipulates that postings are to be at the website of the public
body, if any. The bill, as amended, also requires minutes to be posted
on the Commonwealth Calendar and the Regulatory Town Hall site.
Approved.
HB570 Nixon Required
filtering by library board or governing body of a library that receives
state funding for any purpose. Requirement removed in Senate committee.
Amended measure died on last day of session.
HB597 Sherwood Proposes a new FOIA exemption for municipal dams. Exemption stricken by patron.
HB 610 O’Bannon Confidentiality provision for the Office of Emergency Medical Services and regional emergency medical services councils
HB687
Brink
Provides an alternative office expense allowance arrangement for
General Assembly members. Members may continue the present nonvouchered
arrangement or change to an accountable plan within IRS regulations.
Under the alternative plan, members will be required to substantiate
their business expenditures on a quarterly basis and return any amount
in excess of the substantiated expenses. The bill also provides a
separate office equipment allowance not to exceed $2,000 during a
two-year period. Members will be required to submit a voucher and
accompanying receipts prior to receiving payment for equipment
expenses. Killed in Rules.
HB842 Frederick Prohibits
remote access to any document that contains (i) an actual signature,
(ii) a social security number, (iii) a date of birth identified with a
particular person, (iv) the maiden name of a person’s parent so as to
be identified with a particular person, (v) any financial account
number or numbers, or (vi) the name and age of any minor child; removes
deadline for clerks to begin remote-access service. Killed in House Science and Technology by rolling into Nixon's HB563
HB845 Albo Allows
the Forensic Science Board or the Scientific Advisory Committee to meet
in a closed meeting when discussing or considering confidential
records. Approved.
HB852 O’Bannon Amends
the current FOIA exemptions for hospital authorities; adds a FOIA
exemption for records related to utilization review, credentialing,
quality assurance by hospital authorities and other entities; also adds
an open meeting exemption concerning discussion of those records.
Approved in House General Laws, 16-6 (Del. McQuigg's motion to send the
issue to the FOIA Council for further study was rejected on a voice
vote, 10-9.) Substitute amendment offered on House floor, removing FOIA exemption. Passed by the House, 96-3. NOTE: A "nay" vote on final committee action was a pro-access vote: YEAS--Reid,
Cox, Albo, McQuigg, Suit, Rapp, Wright, Oder, Marshall, D.W., Cosgrove,
Abbitt, Phillips, Armstrong, Hull, Dance, Bulova--16. NAYS--Jones, S.C., Saxman, Gear, Barlow, Ward, Tyler--6.
HB881
Kilgore
Verizon bill allowing phone companies to compete with local-franchise cable systems (see HB1404 for compromise)
HB953 Joannou Requires
Virginia International Terminals to open its records and
meetings to the public - in what would be a dramatic shift for an
organization that has kept many of its operations secret for 25 years.
Stricken by patron (Joannou wants the measure studied by the FOIA
Council.)
HB995 Brink Requires
Virginia notification when there is a breach of security involving
personal information in computerized data. Carried over a year. HB1069 Hall Department of Minority Business: Includes FOIA exemption for "proprietary records." Tighter language proposed. See HB122.
HB1089 Scott Requires
independent audits of statewide-campaign spending and random audits of
1 in every 10 legislative races. Approved in committee; rereferred to
House Appropriations; carried over a year.
HB1154 Lingamfelter Requires
Virginia notification when there is a breach of security involving
personal information in computerized data. Provides recovery of triple
actual damages from violators of notice requirements; also provides for
possible action by the attorney general. Carried over a year.
HB1364 Wardrup Repeals
long-standing exemption that newspapers, magazines and other
publications currently have from imposition of a business and
professional occupational license (BPOL) tax. Killed in House Finance subcommittee (related media tax bill HB578 shelved by Wardrup)
HB1404
Griffith
Cable industry/telephone company compromise. Approved, signed by governor.
HB1458
Kilgore
Record exemption for the Tobacco Indemnification and Community Revitalization Commission. Approved.
HB1467
Chris Jones
Meeting exemption for Virginia Ports Authority, for discussion of records already exempt from disclosure. Approved.
HB1502 Callahan Charter university legislation; includes reaffirmation of FOIA rules. Approved.
HB1510 Plum Restricts use of Social Security number over the Internet. Carried over, referred to Joint Committee on Technology and Science.
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