The Virginia Register OF
REGULATIONS is an official state publication issued every other week
throughout the year. Indexes are published quarterly, and are cumulative for
the year. The Virginia Register has several functions. The new and
amended sections of regulations, both as proposed and as finally adopted, are
required by law to be published in the Virginia Register. In addition,
the Virginia Register is a source of other information about state
government, including petitions for rulemaking, emergency regulations,
executive orders issued by the Governor, and notices of public hearings on
regulations.
ADOPTION,
AMENDMENT, AND REPEAL OF REGULATIONS
An
agency wishing to adopt, amend, or repeal regulations must first publish in the
Virginia Register a notice of intended regulatory action; a basis,
purpose, substance and issues statement; an economic impact analysis prepared
by the Department of Planning and Budget; the agency’s response to the economic
impact analysis; a summary; a notice giving the public an opportunity to
comment on the proposal; and the text of the proposed regulation.
Following
publication of the proposal in the Virginia Register, the promulgating agency
receives public comments for a minimum of 60 days. The Governor reviews the proposed
regulation to determine if it is necessary to protect the public health, safety
and welfare, and if it is clearly written and easily understandable. If the
Governor chooses to comment on the proposed regulation, his comments must be
transmitted to the agency and the Registrar no later than 15 days following the
completion of the 60-day public comment period. The Governor’s comments, if
any, will be published in the Virginia Register. Not less than 15 days
following the completion of the 60-day public comment period, the agency may
adopt the proposed regulation.
The
Joint Commission on Administrative Rules (JCAR) or the appropriate standing
committee of each house of the General Assembly may meet during the
promulgation or final adoption process and file an objection with the Registrar
and the promulgating agency. The objection will be published in the Virginia
Register. Within 21 days after receipt by the agency of a legislative
objection, the agency shall file a response with the Registrar, the objecting
legislative body, and the Governor.
When
final action is taken, the agency again publishes the text of the regulation as
adopted, highlighting all changes made to the proposed regulation and
explaining any substantial changes made since publication of the proposal. A
30-day final adoption period begins upon final publication in the Virginia
Register.
The
Governor may review the final regulation during this time and, if he objects,
forward his objection to the Registrar and the agency. In addition to or in
lieu of filing a formal objection, the Governor may suspend the effective date
of a portion or all of a regulation until the end of the next regular General
Assembly session by issuing a directive signed by a majority of the members of
the appropriate legislative body and the Governor. The Governor’s objection or
suspension of the regulation, or both, will be published in the Virginia
Register. If the Governor finds that changes made to the proposed
regulation have substantial impact, he may require the agency to provide an
additional 30-day public comment period on the changes. Notice of the
additional public comment period required by the Governor will be published in
the Virginia Register.
The
agency shall suspend the regulatory process for 30 days when it receives
requests from 25 or more individuals to solicit additional public comment,
unless the agency determines that the changes have minor or inconsequential
impact.
A
regulation becomes effective at the conclusion of the 30-day final adoption
period, or at any other later date specified by the promulgating agency, unless
(i) a legislative objection has been filed, in which event the regulation,
unless withdrawn, becomes effective on the date specified, which shall be after
the expiration of the 21-day objection period; (ii) the Governor exercises his
authority to require the agency to provide for additional public comment, in
which event the regulation, unless withdrawn, becomes effective on the date
specified, which shall be after the expiration of the period for which the
Governor has provided for additional public comment; (iii) the Governor and the
General Assembly exercise their authority to suspend the effective date of a
regulation until the end of the next regular legislative session; or (iv) the
agency suspends the regulatory process, in which event the regulation, unless
withdrawn, becomes effective on the date specified, which shall be after the
expiration of the 30-day public comment period and no earlier than 15 days from
publication of the readopted action.
A
regulatory action may be withdrawn by the promulgating agency at any time
before the regulation becomes final.
FAST-TRACK
RULEMAKING PROCESS
Section
2.2-4012.1 of the Code of Virginia provides an exemption from certain
provisions of the Administrative Process Act for agency regulations deemed by
the Governor to be noncontroversial. To use this process, Governor's
concurrence is required and advance notice must be provided to certain
legislative committees. Fast-track regulations will become effective on the
date noted in the regulatory action if no objections to using the process are
filed in accordance with § 2.2-4012.1.
EMERGENCY
REGULATIONS
Pursuant
to § 2.2-4011 of the Code of Virginia, an agency, upon consultation
with the Attorney General, and at the discretion of the Governor, may adopt
emergency regulations that are necessitated by an emergency situation. An
agency may also adopt an emergency regulation when Virginia statutory law or
the appropriation act or federal law or federal regulation requires that a
regulation be effective in 280 days or less from its enactment. The emergency regulation becomes operative upon its
adoption and filing with the Registrar of Regulations, unless a later date is
specified. Emergency regulations are limited to no more than 18 months in
duration; however, may be extended for six months under certain circumstances
as provided for in § 2.2-4011 D. Emergency regulations are published as
soon as possible in the Register.
During
the time the emergency status is in effect, the agency may proceed with the
adoption of permanent regulations through the usual procedures. To begin
promulgating the replacement regulation, the agency must (i) file the Notice of
Intended Regulatory Action with the Registrar within 60 days of the effective
date of the emergency regulation and (ii) file the proposed regulation with the
Registrar within 180 days of the effective date of the emergency regulation. If
the agency chooses not to adopt the regulations, the emergency status ends when
the prescribed time limit expires.
STATEMENT
The
foregoing constitutes a generalized statement of the procedures to be followed.
For specific statutory language, it is suggested that Article 2 (§ 2.2-4006
et seq.) of Chapter 40 of Title 2.2 of the Code of Virginia be examined
carefully.
CITATION
TO THE VIRGINIA REGISTER
The Virginia
Register is cited by volume, issue, page number, and date. 29:5 VA.R. 1075-1192
November 5, 2012, refers to Volume 29, Issue 5, pages 1075 through 1192 of
the Virginia Register issued on
November 5, 2012.
The
Virginia Register of Regulations is
published pursuant to Article 6 (§ 2.2-4031 et seq.) of Chapter 40 of Title 2.2
of the Code of Virginia.
Members
of the Virginia Code Commission: John
S. Edwards, Chair; James M. LeMunyon, Vice Chair; Gregory D.
Habeeb; Ryan T. McDougle; Robert L. Calhoun; Carlos L. Hopkins; Leslie
L. Lilley; E.M. Miller, Jr.; Thomas M. Moncure, Jr.; Christopher R. Nolen;
Timothy Oksman; Charles S. Sharp; Mark J. Vucci.
Staff
of the Virginia Register: Jane
D. Chaffin, Registrar of Regulations; Karen Perrine, Assistant
Registrar; Anne Bloomsburg, Regulations Analyst; Rhonda Dyer, Publications
Assistant; Terri Edwards, Operations Staff Assistant.
PUBLICATION SCHEDULE AND DEADLINES
Vol. 33 Iss. 6 - November 14, 2016
November 2016 through November 2017
Volume: Issue
|
Material Submitted By Noon*
|
Will Be Published On
|
33:6
|
October 26, 2016
|
November 14, 2016
|
33:7
|
November 9, 2016
|
November 28, 2016
|
33:8
|
November 22, 2016 (Tuesday)
|
December 12, 2016
|
33:9
|
December 7, 2016
|
December 26, 2016
|
33:10
|
December 19, 2016 (Monday)
|
January 9, 2017
|
33:11
|
January 4, 2017
|
January 23, 2017
|
33:12
|
January 18, 2017
|
February 6, 2017
|
33:13
|
February 1, 2017
|
February 20, 2017
|
33:14
|
February 15, 2017
|
March 6, 2017
|
33:15
|
March 1, 2017
|
March 20, 2017
|
33:16
|
March 15, 2017
|
April 3, 2017
|
33:17
|
March 29, 2017
|
April 17, 2017
|
33:18
|
April 12, 2017
|
May 1, 2017
|
33:19
|
April 26, 2017
|
May 15, 2017
|
33:20
|
May 10, 2017
|
May 29, 2017
|
33:21
|
May 24, 2017
|
June 12, 2017
|
33:22
|
June 7, 2017
|
June 26, 2017
|
33:23
|
June 21, 2017
|
July 10, 2017
|
33:24
|
July 5, 2017
|
July 24, 2017
|
33:25
|
July 19, 2017
|
August 7, 2017
|
33:26
|
August 2, 2017
|
August 21, 2017
|
34:1
|
August 16, 2017
|
September 4, 2017
|
34:2
|
August 30, 2017
|
September 18, 2017
|
34:3
|
September 13, 2017
|
October 2, 2017
|
34:4
|
September 27, 2017
|
October 16, 2017
|
34:5
|
October 11, 2017
|
October 30, 2017
|
34:6
|
October 25, 2017
|
November 13, 2017
|
34:7
|
November 8, 2017
|
November 27, 2017
|
*Filing deadlines are Wednesdays
unless otherwise specified.
NOTICES OF INTENDED REGULATORY ACTION
Vol. 33 Iss. 6 - November 14, 2016
TITLE 22. SOCIAL SERVICES
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
Notice of Intended Regulatory Action
Notice is hereby given in accordance with § 2.2-4007.01 of the
Code of Virginia that the State Board of Social Services intends to consider
amending 22VAC40-601, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. The
purpose of the proposed action is to reduce the amount of countable income used
in determining eligibility for supplemental nutrition assistance program (SNAP)
benefits for applicants and recipients paying child support pursuant to a court
or administrative order. The proposal is to change how child support payments
are evaluated from the income deduction option to the income exclusion option.
Changing the method in which child support payments are allowed could
potentially result in higher SNAP benefit amounts for households that pay
support. The goal is to create an incentive to keep child support payments
current.
The agency does not intend to hold a public hearing on the
proposed action after publication in the Virginia Register.
Statutory Authority: § 63.2-217 of the Code of Virginia.
Public Comment Deadline: December 14, 2016.
Agency Contact: Celestine Jackson, Department of Social
Services, 801 East Main Street, Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804) 726-7376,
FAX (804) 726-7356, TTY (800) 828-1120, or email
celestine.jackson@dss.virginia.gov.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4595; Filed October 14, 2016, 1:11 p.m.
REGULATIONS
Vol. 33 Iss. 6 - November 14, 2016
TITLE 4. CONSERVATION AND NATURAL RESOURCES
MARINE RESOURCES COMMISSION
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
Marine Resources Commission is claiming an exemption from the Administrative
Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4006 A 11 of the Code of Virginia;
however, the commission is required to publish the full text of final
regulations.
Title of Regulation: 4VAC20-252. Pertaining to the
Taking of Striped Bass (amending 4VAC20-252-130).
Statutory Authority: § 28.2-201 of the Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: November 2, 2016.
Agency Contact: Alicia Nelson, Fisheries Management,
Marine Resources Commission, 2600 Washington Avenue, 3rd Floor, Newport News,
VA 23607, telephone (757) 247-8155, or email alicia.nelson@mrc.virginia.gov.
Summary:
The amendments streamline the striped bass buyer reporting
requirements by modifying the required information and eliminating the call-in
system.
4VAC20-252-130. Entry limits, permits, and reports.
A. There is established a special permit for engaging in either
the Chesapeake area commercial fishery for striped bass or the coastal area
commercial fishery for striped bass, and it shall be unlawful for any person to
engage in either commercial fishery for striped bass without first having
obtained the permit from the commission and meeting the following conditions:
1. The person shall be a licensed registered commercial
fisherman.
2. The person shall have reported all prior fishing activity
in accordance with 4VAC20-610 and shall not be under any sanction by the Marine
Resources Commission for noncompliance with the regulation.
B. Permits for the commercial harvest of striped bass in the
Chesapeake area or coastal area shall be issued to any registered commercial
fishermen holding striped bass quota shares issued under the provisions of
4VAC20-252-150 and 4VAC20-252-160.
C. Permits shall be in the possession of the permittee while
catching, harvesting, selling or possessing striped bass. Failure to have the
appropriate permit in possession shall be a violation of this chapter.
D. It shall be unlawful for any person, business, or
corporation, except for licensed restaurants, to purchase from the harvester
any quantity of striped bass greater than 10 pounds in total weight taken from
Virginia's tidal waters for the purpose of resale without first obtaining a
striped bass buyer's permit from the commission, except as described in
subsection E of this section. Such permit shall be completed in full by the
permittee and kept in possession of the permittee while selling or possessing
striped bass. Failure to have the appropriate permit in possession shall be a
violation of this chapter.
E. Restaurants shall not be required to obtain a striped bass
buyer's permit from the commission but shall be required to certify and
maintain a record of any striped bass purchased from any harvester for a period
of not less than one year.
F. All permitted commercial harvesters of striped bass shall
report to the commission in accordance with 4VAC20-610. In addition to the
reporting requirements of 4VAC20-610, all permitted commercial harvesters of
striped bass shall record and report daily striped bass harvest by specifying
the number of tags used on striped bass harvested for each day in either the
Chesapeake area or coastal area and reporting the daily total whole weight of
striped bass harvested in either the Chesapeake area or coastal area. Daily
striped bass tag use on harvested striped bass and daily total whole weight of
harvested striped bass from either the Chesapeake area or coastal area, within
any month, shall be recorded on forms provided by the commission and shall
accompany the monthly catch report submitted no later than the fifth day of the
following month.
G. Any permitted commercial harvester of striped bass who self
markets his striped bass to a restaurant, individual, or out-of-state market
shall be required to prepare a receipt describing each sale greater than 10
pounds in total weight. Each receipt shall be a record and report of the date
of transaction, name and signature of buyer, address and phone number of buyer,
number and total weight of striped bass sold, and name and signature of
harvester. Copies of each receipt shall be forwarded to the commission in
accordance with 4VAC20-610.
H. Any buyer permitted to purchase striped bass harvested
from Virginia tidal waters shall provide written reports to the commission of
daily purchases and harvest information on forms provided by the Marine
Resources Commission. Such information shall include the date of the purchase,
buyer's and harvester's striped bass permit numbers name, and
harvester's Commercial Fisherman Registration License number. In addition, for
each different purchase of striped bass harvested from Virginia waters, the
buyer shall record the gear type, water area fished, city or county of
landing, weight of whole fish, and number and type of tags
(Chesapeake area or coastal area) that applies to that harvest. These reports
shall be completed in full and submitted monthly to the Marine Resources
Commission no later than the fifth day of the following month. In addition,
during the month of December, each permitted buyer shall call the Marine
Resources Commission interactive voice recording system on a daily basis to
report his name and permit number, date, pounds of Chesapeake area striped bass
purchased and pounds of coastal area striped bass purchased.
I. Failure of any person permitted to harvest, buy, or sell
striped bass, to submit the required written report for any fishing day shall
constitute a violation of this chapter.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4966; Filed November 2, 2016, 12:40 p.m.
TITLE 4. CONSERVATION AND NATURAL RESOURCES
MARINE RESOURCES COMMISSION
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
Marine Resources Commission is claiming an exemption from the Administrative
Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4006 A 11 of the Code of Virginia;
however, the commission is required to publish the full text of final
regulations.
Title of Regulation: 4VAC20-490. Pertaining to Sharks (amending 4VAC20-490-41, 4VAC20-490-42).
Statutory Authority: § 28.2-201 of the Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: November 2, 2016.
Agency Contact: Alicia Nelson, Fisheries Management,
Marine Resources Commission, 2600 Washington Avenue, 3rd Floor, Newport News,
VA 23607, telephone (757) 247-8155, or email alicia.nelson@mrc.virginia.gov.
Summary:
The amendments clarify the offshore processing of smooth
dogfish and increase the commercial smooth dogfish vessel possession limit for
the 2016-2017 season.
4VAC20-490-41. Commercial catch limitations.
A. Beginning January 1 of any given year it shall be unlawful
for any person to possess on board a vessel or to land in Virginia more than a
combined total of 36 commercially permitted aggregated large coastal sharks and
commercially permitted hammerhead sharks in one 24-hour period, unless the
Marine Resources Commission has posted notice of any change to possession
limits on its website at http://mrc.virginia.gov/Regulations/VA-commercial-shark-possession-limits.shtm.
The person who owns or operates the vessel is responsible for compliance with
the provisions of this subsection.
B. It shall be unlawful for any person to fillet a shark
until that shark is offloaded at the dock or on shore, except smooth dogfish as
provided in subsection C of this section. A licensed commercial fisherman may
eviscerate and remove the head of any shark, but the tail and all fins of any
shark, except smooth dogfish as provided in subsection C of this section, shall
remain naturally attached to the carcass through landing. The fins of any shark,
except smooth dogfish, may be partially cut but some portion of the fin shall
remain attached, until the shark is landed.
C. Virginia licensed commercial fishermen may completely
process smooth dogfish at sea prior to landing when the harvest of smooth
dogfish comprises at least 25% by weight of the total retained harvest,
except that it shall be unlawful for anyone to land or possess on board any
vessel any amount of processed smooth dogfish whereby the total weight of fins
exceeds 12% of the total dressed weight of any smooth dogfish.
D. It shall be unlawful to possess, on board a vessel, or to
land in Virginia any species of shark, after the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Fisheries has closed the fishery for that
species in federal waters.
E. There are no commercial trip limits or possession limits
for smooth dogfish or sharks on the lists of commercially permitted pelagic
species or commercially permitted nonblacknose species.
F. Except as described in this section, it shall be unlawful
for any person to take, harvest, land, or possess in Virginia any blacktip,
bull, great hammerhead, lemon, nurse, scalloped hammerhead, silky, smooth
hammerhead, spinner, or tiger shark from May 15 through July 15. These sharks
may be transported by vessel, in Virginia waters, during the closed season
provided the sharks were caught in a legal manner consistent with federal
regulations outside Virginia waters and:
1. The vessel does not engage in fishing in Virginia waters
while possessing the species listed in this subsection; and
2. All fishing gear aboard the vessel is stowed and not
available for immediate use.
G. It shall be unlawful for any person to retain, possess, or
purchase any commercially prohibited shark or any research only shark, except
as provided in subsection I of this section.
H. All sharks harvested from state waters or federal waters,
for commercial purposes, shall only be sold to a federally permitted shark
dealer.
I. The commissioner may grant exemptions from the seasonal
closure, quota, possession limit, size limit, gear restrictions, and prohibited
species restrictions. Exemptions shall be granted only for display or research
purposes. Any person granted an exemption for the harvest of any shark for
research or display shall report the species, weight, location caught, and gear
used for each shark collected within 30 days. Any person granted a permit to
possess any shark for research or display shall provide the commissioner on an
annual basis information on the location and status of the shark throughout the
life of the shark.
4VAC20-490-42. Spiny dogfish commercial quota and catch
limitations.
A. For the 12-month period of May 1, 2016, through April 30,
2017, the spiny dogfish commercial landings quota shall be limited to 4,356,944
pounds.
B. It shall be unlawful for any person to take, harvest, or
possess aboard any vessel or to land in Virginia any spiny dogfish harvested
from federal waters for commercial purposes after it has been announced that
the federal quota for spiny dogfish has been taken.
C. It shall be unlawful for any person to take, harvest, or
possess aboard any vessel or to land in Virginia more than 5,000 5,250
pounds of spiny dogfish per day for commercial purposes. However, if
landings are less than 80% of the quota specified in subsection A of this
section by February 15, 2017, it shall be unlawful to take, harvest, or possess
aboard any vessel or to land in Virginia more than 6,000 pounds of spiny
dogfish per day for commercial purposes.
D. It shall be unlawful for any person to harvest or to land
in Virginia any spiny dogfish for commercial purposes after the quota specified
in subsection A of this section has been landed and announced as such.
E. Any spiny dogfish harvested from state waters or federal
waters, for commercial purposes, shall only be sold to a federally permitted
dealer.
F. It shall be unlawful for any buyer of seafood to receive
any spiny dogfish after any commercial harvest or landing quota described in
this section has been attained and announced as such.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4965; Filed November 2, 2016, 12:37 p.m.
TITLE 4. CONSERVATION AND NATURAL RESOURCES
MARINE RESOURCES COMMISSION
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
Marine Resources Commission is claiming an exemption from the Administrative
Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4006 A 11 of the Code of Virginia;
however, the commission is required to publish the full text of final
regulations.
Title of Regulation: 4VAC20-620. Pertaining to Summer
Flounder (amending 4VAC20-620-40).
Statutory Authority: § 28.2-201 of the Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: November 2, 2016.
Agency Contact: Alicia Nelson, Fisheries Management,
Marine Resources Commission, 2600 Washington Avenue, 3rd Floor, Newport News,
VA 23607, telephone (757) 247-8155, or email alicia.nelson@mrc.virginia.gov.
Summary:
The amendments set the vessel landing and possession limit
for the fall 2016 season.
4VAC20-620-40. Commercial vessel possession and landing
limitations.
A. It shall be unlawful for any person harvesting summer
flounder outside of Virginia's waters to do any of the following, except as
described in subsections B, C, D, and E of this section:
1. Possess aboard any vessel in Virginia waters any amount of
summer flounder in excess of 10% by weight of Atlantic croaker or the combined
landings, on board a vessel, of black sea bass, scup, squid, scallops and
Atlantic mackerel.
2. Possess aboard any vessel in Virginia waters any amount of
summer flounder in excess of 1,500 pounds landed in combination with Atlantic
croaker.
3. Fail to sell the vessel's entire harvest of all species at
the point of landing.
B. Nothing in this chapter shall preclude a vessel from
possessing any North Carolina vessel possession limit of summer flounder in
Virginia; however, no vessel that possesses the North Carolina vessel
possession limit of summer flounder shall offload any amount of that possession
limit, except as described in subsection J of this section.
C. From the second Wednesday in March through June 6, it
shall be unlawful for any person harvesting summer flounder outside of Virginia
waters to do any of the following:
1. Possess aboard any vessel in Virginia waters any amount of
summer flounder in excess of the combined total of the Virginia landing limit
described in subdivisions 3 and 4 of this subsection and the amount of the
legal North Carolina landing limit or trip limit.
2. Land summer flounder in Virginia for commercial purposes
more than twice during each consecutive period, with the initial period
beginning on the second Wednesday in March.
3. Land in Virginia more than a total of 7,500 pounds of
summer flounder during the initial 30-day period beginning on the second
Wednesday in March.
4. Land in Virginia more than a total of 5,000 pounds of
summer flounder during the 60-day period beginning on April 8.
5. Land in Virginia any amount of summer flounder more than
once in any consecutive five-day period.
D. From November 1 through December 31 of each year, or
until it has been projected and if it has not been announced that
85% of the allowable landings have been taken, it shall be unlawful for any
person harvesting summer flounder outside of Virginia waters to do any of the
following:
1. Possess aboard any vessel in Virginia waters any amount of
summer flounder in excess of the combined total of the Virginia landing limit
described in subdivisions 3 and 4 subdivision 2 of this
subsection and the amount of the legal North Carolina landing limit or trip
limit.
2. Land summer flounder in Virginia for commercial purposes
more than twice during each consecutive 30-day period, with the first 30-day
period beginning on November 1.
3. 2. Land in Virginia more than a total of 10,000
7,500 pounds of summer flounder during the first 30-day period, with
the first 30-day period beginning on November 1.
4. Land in Virginia more than a total of 5,000 pounds of
summer flounder during the second 30-day period with the second 30-day period
beginning on December 1.
5. 3. Land in Virginia any amount of summer
flounder more than once in any consecutive five-day period.
E. From January 1 through December 31 of each year, any boat
or vessel issued a valid federal summer flounder moratorium permit and owned
and operated by a legal Virginia Commercial Hook-and-Line Licensee that
possesses a Restricted Summer Flounder Endorsement shall be restricted to a
possession and landing limit of 200 pounds of summer flounder, except as
described in 4VAC20-620-30 F.
F. Upon request by a marine police officer, the seafood buyer
or processor shall offload and accurately determine the total weight of all
summer flounder aboard any vessel landing summer flounder in Virginia.
G. Any possession limit described in this section shall be
determined by the weight in pounds of summer flounder as customarily packed,
boxed and weighed by the seafood buyer or processor. The weight of any summer
flounder in pounds found in excess of any possession limit described in this
section shall be prima facie evidence of violation of this chapter. Persons in
possession of summer flounder aboard any vessel in excess of the possession
limit shall be in violation of this chapter unless that vessel has requested
and been granted safe harbor. Any buyer or processor offloading or accepting
any quantity of summer flounder from any vessel in excess of the possession
limit shall be in violation of this chapter, except as described by subsection
J of this section. A buyer or processor may accept or buy summer flounder from
a vessel that has secured safe harbor, provided that vessel has satisfied the
requirements described in subsection J of this section.
H. If a person violates the possession limits described in
this section, the entire amount of summer flounder in that person's possession
shall be confiscated. Any confiscated summer flounder shall be considered as a
removal from the appropriate commercial harvest or landings quota. Upon
confiscation, the marine police officer shall inventory the confiscated summer
flounder and, at a minimum, secure two bids for purchase of the confiscated
summer flounder from approved and licensed seafood buyers. The confiscated fish
will be sold to the highest bidder and all funds derived from such sale shall
be deposited for the Commonwealth pending court resolution of the charge of
violating the possession limits established by this chapter. All of the
collected funds will be returned to the accused upon a finding of innocence or
forfeited to the Commonwealth upon a finding of guilty.
I. It shall be unlawful for a licensed seafood buyer or
federally permitted seafood buyer to fail to contact the Marine Resources
Commission Operation Station prior to a vessel offloading summer flounder
harvested outside of Virginia. The buyer shall provide to the Marine Resources
Commission the name of the vessel, its captain, an estimate of the amount in
pounds of summer flounder on board that vessel, and the anticipated or
approximate offloading time. Once offloading of any vessel is complete and the
weight of the landed summer flounder has been determined, the buyer shall
contact the Marine Resources Commission Operations Station and report the
vessel name and corresponding weight of summer flounder landed. It shall be
unlawful for any person to offload from a boat or vessel for commercial
purposes any summer flounder during the period of 9 p.m. to 7 a.m.
J. Any boat or vessel that has entered Virginia waters for
safe harbor shall only offload summer flounder when the state that licenses
that vessel requests to transfer quota to Virginia, in the amount that
corresponds to that vessel's possession limit, and the commissioner agrees to
accept that transfer of quota.
K. After any commercial harvest or landing quota as described
in 4VAC20-620-30 has been attained and announced as such, any boat or vessel
possessing summer flounder on board may enter Virginia waters for safe harbor
but shall contact the Marine Resources Commission Operation Center in advance
of such entry into Virginia waters.
L. When it is projected and announced that 85% of the
allowable landings have been taken, it shall be unlawful to land summer
flounder in Virginia, except as described in subsection A of this section.
M. It shall be unlawful for any person harvesting
summer flounder outside of Virginia waters to possess aboard any vessel, in
Virginia, any amount of summer flounder, once it has been projected and
announced that 100% of the quota described in 4VAC20-620-30 A has been taken.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4968; Filed November 2, 2016, 3:09 p.m.
TITLE 4. CONSERVATION AND NATURAL RESOURCES
MARINE RESOURCES COMMISSION
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
Marine Resources Commission is claiming an exemption from the Administrative
Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4006 A 11 of the Code of Virginia;
however, the commission is required to publish the full text of final
regulations.
Title of Regulation: 4VAC20-720. Pertaining to
Restrictions on Oyster Harvest (amending 4VAC20-720-15).
Statutory Authority: § 28.2-201 of the Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: November 2, 2016.
Agency Contact: Alicia Nelson, Fisheries Management,
Marine Resources Commission, 2600 Washington Avenue, 3rd Floor, Newport News,
VA 23607, telephone (757) 247-8155, or email alicia.nelson@mrc.virginia.gov.
Summary:
The amendments clarify transfer eligibility of the oyster
resource user fee.
4VAC20-720-15. Control date, license moratorium,
transferability, and agents.
A. The commission hereby establishes July 1, 2014, as the
control date for management of all public oyster fisheries in Virginia.
Participation by any individual in any public oyster fishery after the control
date may not be considered in the calculation or distribution of oyster fishing
rights should entry limitations be established. Any individual entering the
public oyster fishery after the control date will forfeit any right to future
participation in the public oyster fishery should further entry limitations be
established by the commission.
B. Beginning February 23, 2016, only individuals who have
paid the oyster resource user fee described in clause (ii) of subsection A of § 28.2-541
of the Code of Virginia in previous years may pay that fee for the current
year. Those individuals who are eligible to pay the oyster resource user fee
described in clause (ii) of subsection A of § 28.2-541 of the Code of
Virginia shall do so by April 30, 2017, in 2017 and by January 1 in subsequent
years in order to maintain their eligibility.
C. Should the number of people eligible to pay the oyster
resource user fee described in clause (ii) of subsection A of § 28.2-541
of the Code of Virginia in any given year fall below 600, a random drawing
shall be held to award eligibility to pay that oyster resource user fee to
individuals who were not previously eligible until the number of persons
eligible to pay the fee reaches 600. Any Commercial Fisherman Registration
Licensee may apply for the random drawing.
D. Any person eligible to pay the oyster resource user fee
described in clause (ii) of subsection A of § 28.2-541 of the Code of
Virginia, or such person's legal representative, may transfer the
eligibility to pay such user fee, provided to:
1. The A transferee who is the
transferor's spouse, sibling, parent, child, grandparent, or grandchild and who
possesses a current Commercial Fisherman Registration License and intends to
participate in the public oyster fishery.
2. The A transferee other than a person described in
subdivision 1 of this subsection if the transferor shall have has
documented by mandatory reporting and buyers reports 40 days or more of
public oyster harvest during the previous calendar year. All transfers shall
be documented on a form provided by Marine Resources Commission.
3. In the case of death or incapacitation, the licensee may
transfer such eligibility to an individual who meets the requirements found in
subdivision 1 or 2 of this subsection.
All transfers under this subsection shall be documented on
a form provided by the Marine Resources Commission.
E. Exceptions to subsection B of this section shall only
apply to those individuals who previously paid the oyster resource user fee
described in clause (ii) of subsection A of § 28.2-541 of the Code of
Virginia and shall be based on documented medical hardships or active military
leave that prevented the fisherman from fully satisfying the requirements of
subsection B of this section.
F. No person shall serve as an agent for any public oyster
gear licensee.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4937; Filed November 2, 2016, 11:38 a.m.
TITLE 12. HEALTH
DEPARTMENT OF MEDICAL ASSISTANCE SERVICES
Emergency Regulation
Title of Regulation: 12VAC30-135. Demonstration
Waiver Services (amending 12VAC30-135-400, 12VAC30-135-420,
12VAC30-135-430).
Statutory Authority: § 32.1-325 of the Code of
Virginia; § 1115 of the Social Security Act.
Effective Dates: October 28, 2016, through December 29,
2016.
Agency Contact: Victoria Simmons, Regulatory
Coordinator, Department of Medical Assistance Services, 600 East Broad Street,
Suite 1300, Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804) 371-6043, FAX (804) 786-1680,
TTY (800) 343-0634, or email victoria.simmons@dmas.virginia.gov.
Preamble:
Section 2.2-4011 A of the Code of Virginia states that
agencies may adopt regulations in emergency situations after the agency submits
a written request stating the nature of the emergency and the Governor approves
the emergency action. The Department of Medical Assistance Services (DMAS)
submitted a request to the Governor stating in writing the nature of this
emergency, and on October 28, 2016, the Governor specifically authorized this
action to amend the previous emergency action for the Governor's Access Plan
(GAP) Demonstration Waiver for Individuals with Serious Mental Illness, which
was published in 31:10 VA.R. 864 January 12, 2015,
and 31:23 VA.R. 2128 July 13, 2015,
to be promulgated as an emergency action.
Item 306 XXX 1 b of Chapter 780 of the 2016 Acts of
Assembly directed DMAS to amend the GAP Demonstration Waiver by increasing the
household income level to 80% of the federal poverty level. The amendments
conform the emergency regulation to this requirement.
Part III
Governor's Access Plan Demonstration Waiver for Individuals with Serious Mental
Illness
12VAC30-135-400. Establishment of program.
A. The Commonwealth through the Department of Medical
Assistance Services (DMAS), the single state Medicaid agency, establishes a
§ 1115 demonstration waiver, the Virginia Governor's Access Plan (GAP) for
the Seriously Mentally Ill (SMI). With federal approval, Virginia will offer a
limited yet targeted benefit package of services that builds on a successful
model of using existing partnerships to provide and integrate basic medical and
behavioral health care services for individuals who have a serious mental
illness (SMI) and have incomes less than 60% or equal to 80% of
the federal poverty limit (plus a 5.0% household income disregard) level
using the modified adjusted gross income eligibility methodology.
B. Enabling persons with SMI to access both behavioral health
and primary health services will enhance the treatment they can receive, allow
their care to be coordinated among providers, and potentially significantly
decrease the severity of their condition. The three goals of this program are:
1. Improve access to health care for a segment of the
uninsured population in Virginia that has significant behavioral and medical
needs;
2. Improve health and behavioral health outcomes of
demonstration participants; and
3. Serve as a bridge to closing the coverage gap for uninsured
Virginians.
12VAC30-135-420. Administration; authority; waived provisions.
A. DMAS shall cover a targeted set of services as set forth
in 12VAC30-135-450 for currently uninsured individuals who have diagnoses of
serious mental illnesses with incomes below 60% less than or equal to
80% of the federal poverty line level (FPL) (plus a 5.0%
household income disregard) using the modified adjusted gross income
(MAGI) eligibility methodology. All individuals enrolled in this Medicaid
demonstration project with incomes between 61% and 100% of the FPL as of May
15, 2015, who continue to meet other program eligibility rules shall maintain
enrollment in the demonstration until their next eligibility renewal period or
July 1, 2016, whichever comes first.
B. Consistent with § 1115 of the Social Security Act
(42 USC § 1315), the department covers certain limited services
specified in 12VAC30-135-450 for certain targeted individuals specified in
12VAC30-135-430.
C. The Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Resources has waived compliance for the department with the following for the
purpose of this demonstration waiver program:
1. Consistent with § 1902(a)(10)(B) of the Act, the
amount, duration, and scope of services covered in the State Plan for Medical
Assistance shall be waived. The department shall cover a specified set of
benefits for the individuals who are determined to be eligible for this
program.
2. Consistent with § 1902(a)(23)(A) of the Act, the
participating individuals' freedom of choice of providers of services shall be
waived for peer supports and GAP case management.
3. Consistent with § 1902(a)(23) of the Act, the services
shall be provided by a different delivery system than otherwise used for full
State Plan services for peer supports and GAP case management.
4. Consistent with § 1902(a)(4) of the Act, insofar as it
incorporates 42 CFR 431.53 permitting the Commonwealth to waive providing
nonemergency transportation to and from participating providers for eligible,
participating individuals.
5. Consistent with § 1902(a)(35) of the Act, permitting
the Commonwealth to waiver offering eligible, participating individuals
retroactive eligibility for this demonstration program.
D. This demonstration program shall operate statewide.
E. This demonstration program shall operate for at least two
years beginning January 2015 through January 2017 or until the Commonwealth
implements an alternative plan to provide health care coverage to all
individuals having incomes up to 60% less than or equal to 80% of
the FPL using the MAGI eligibility methodology.
F. This demonstration program shall not affect or modify, or
both, components of the Commonwealth's existing medical assistance or
children's health insurance programs.
12VAC30-135-430. Individual eligibility; limitations.
A. The GAP eligibility determination process shall have two
parts: (i) a determination of whether or not the individual meets the GAP SMI
criteria and (ii) a determination of whether or not the individual meets the
GAP financial and nonfinancial eligibility criteria.
1. A person may apply through Cover Virginia for GAP by phone
or through a provider-assisted web portal.
2. If an individual is found not to meet GAP eligibility
rules, either the GAP financial/nonfinancial criteria or the GAP SMI criteria,
then the individual shall be sent an adverse determination letter with appeal
rights. Such individuals shall be assessed and referred for eligibility through
Medicaid, FAMIS MOMS, and the federal marketplace for private health insurance.
B. Individuals shall have a screening conducted by a
DMAS-approved GAP screening entity for the determination of eligibility for GAP
SMI services.
C. In order to be eligible for this program, individuals
shall be assessed to determine whether their diagnosed condition is a serious
mental illness. The serious mental illness shall be diagnosed according to
criteria defined in the DSM-IV-TR or DSM-5. LMHPs, including LMHP-supervisees,
LMHP-residents, and LMHP-residents in psychology, shall conduct the clinical
screening required to determine the individual's diagnosis if one has not
already been made. At least one of the following diagnoses shall be documented
for the individual to be approved for GAP SMI services:
1. Schizophrenia spectrum disorders and other psychotic
disorders with the exception of substance/medication induced psychotic
disorders;
2. Major depressive disorder;
3. Bipolar and related disorders with the exception of
cyclothymic disorder;
4. Post-traumatic stress disorder; or
5. Obsessive compulsive disorder, panic disorder, agoraphobia,
anorexia nervosa, or bulimia nervosa.
D. In order to be eligible for this program, individuals
shall meet at least one of the following criteria to reflect the duration of
illness:
1. The individual is expected to require treatment and
supportive services for the next 12 months;
2. The individual has undergone psychiatric treatment more
intensive than outpatient care, such as crisis response services, alternative
home care, partial hospitalization, or inpatient hospitalization for a
psychiatric condition, more than once in his lifetime; or
3. The individual has experienced an episode of continuous,
supportive residential care, other than hospitalization, for a period long
enough to have significantly disrupted the normal living situation. A
significant disruption of a normal living situation means the individual has
been unable to maintain his housing or had difficulty maintaining his housing
due to being in a supportive residential facility or program that was not a
hospital. This includes group home placement as an adolescent and assisted
living facilities but does not include living situations through the Department
of Social Services.
E. In order to be eligible for this program, individuals
shall demonstrate a significant level of impairment on a continuing or
intermittent basis. There shall be evidence of severe and recurrent impairment
resulting from mental illness. The impairment shall result in functional
limitation in major life activities. Due to the mental illness, the person
shall meet at least two of the following:
1. The person is either unemployed or employed in a sheltered
setting or a supportive work situation, has markedly limited or reduced
employment skills, or has a poor employment history;
2. The person requires public and family financial assistance
to remain in his community;
3. The person has difficulty establishing or maintaining a
personal social support system;
4. The person requires assistance in basic living skills such
as personal hygiene, food preparation, or money management; or
5. The person exhibits inappropriate behavior that often
results in intervention by the mental health or judicial system.
F. The individual shall require assistance to consistently
access and to utilize needed medical or behavioral, or both, health services
and supports due to the mental illness.
G. In addition, the individuals shall:
1. Be adults ages 21 through 64 years of age;
2. Be United States citizens or lawfully residing immigrants;
3. Be residents of the Commonwealth;
4. Be uninsured;
5. Be ineligible for any state or federal full benefits health
insurance program including, but not necessarily limited to Medicaid,
Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP/FAMIS), Medicare, or TriCare Federal
Military benefits;
6. Have household incomes below 60% less than or
equal to 80% of the federal poverty level (FPL) plus a 5.0% household
income disregard using the modified adjusted gross income (MAGI)
eligibility methodology, which shall be verified via pay stubs or other
readily available and reliable electronic sources. All individuals enrolled in
this Medicaid demonstration project with incomes between 61% and 100% of the
FPL (plus a 5.0% household income disregard) using the MAGI eligibility
methodology as of May 15, 2015, who continue to meet other program
eligibility rules shall maintain enrollment in the demonstration until their
next eligibility renewal period or July 1, 2016, whichever comes first.
Pursuant to DMAS federal authority under the § 1115 waiver, should
expenditures for the GAP demonstration waiver compromise the program's budget
neutrality, DMAS may amend the waiver to maintain budget neutrality by reducing
income eligibility levels to below 60% 80% of the FPL; and
7. Not be current residents of a long-term care facility,
mental health facility, or penal institution.
H. Individuals who are enrolled in this GAP demonstration
waiver program who require hospitalization shall not be disenrolled from the
GAP demonstration waiver program during their hospitalization.
I. If a GAP-eligible individual secures Medicare or
Medicaid/FAMIS MOMS coverage, his GAP program eligibility shall be terminated
consistent with the effective date of the Medicare or Medicaid coverage.
Individuals who gain other sources of health insurance shall not be disenrolled
from the GAP demonstration waiver program during their 12 months of
eligibility; however, in such instances, the GAP program shall be the payer of
last resort.
J. DMAS or its contractor shall verify income data via
existing electronic data sources, such as Virginia Employment Commission and
TALX. Citizenship and identity shall be verified through the monthly file
exchange between DMAS and the Social Security Administration. The individual's
age, residency, and insurance status shall be verified through
self-attestation. Applicants shall be permitted 90 days to resolve any
citizenship discrepancies resulting from Social Security Administration
matching process, in any of the information provided, and in the DMAS or the
contractor verification process findings.
VA.R. Doc. No. R15-4171; Filed October 28, 2016, 4:52 p.m.
TITLE 19. PUBLIC SAFETY
DEPARTMENT OF STATE POLICE
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
Department of State Police is claiming an exemption from the Administrative
Process Act pursuant to § 2.2-4002 B 6 of the Code of Virginia, which
exempts agency action relating to customary military, naval, or police
functions.
Title of Regulation: 19VAC30-70. Motor Vehicle Safety
Inspection Rules and Regulations (amending 19VAC30-70-10).
Statutory Authority: § 46.2-1165 of the Code of
Virginia.
Effective Date: November 15, 2016.
Agency Contact: Lt. Colonel Tracy Russillo, Agency
Regulatory Coordinator, Department of State Police, P.O. Box 27472, Richmond,
VA 23261-7472, telephone (804) 674-4606, FAX (804) 674-2936, or email
tracy.russillo@vsp.virginia.gov.
Summary:
The amendments include (i) clarifying the use of inspection
lanes and (ii) allowing inspection stations to maintain a copy of the
regulations at the inspection site in either electronic or paper form.
Part II
Inspection Requirements
19VAC30-70-10. Official inspection station requirements.
A. Official inspection stations, except private appointments,
shall be open at least eight hours of each normal business day, and
shall be able to perform inspections 12 months throughout the year, except during
illness of limited duration or normal vacation.
1. Normal business hours, Monday through Friday, are defined
as an eight-hour period of time between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m.
2. Stations are not prohibited from performing inspections at
times other than during normal business hours.
3. A station that advertises inspections beyond normal
business hours shall be able to perform such inspections.
4. If a station desires to maintain business hours that are
different from those defined in this section, written permission must be
obtained from the safety officer and a sign setting forth the inspection hours
must be posted conspicuously at the station where it can be observed by a
person desiring to have a vehicle inspected.
B. At least one full-time safety inspector to perform
inspections and one inspection lane meeting the minimum requirements shall be
available for inspection at all times during the normal business day. All
inspections must be made only at the locations and in the inspection lane
approved by the Department of State Police. All stations shall have other
lanes, bays, or areas in which repairs can be made so the inspection lane can
remain available.
The designated inspection areas, including any location where
customers are permitted to enter when submitting vehicles for inspection, must
be kept clean, and free from excessive dirt, grease, and loose
materials. If requested, customers presenting vehicles for inspection shall be
allowed to observe the inspection process from a safe location designated by
the station.
C. Inspection station facilities must be properly maintained
and must present a businesslike appearance to the general public. Property
adjacent to the inspection station that is owned or controlled by the station
must be free of debris, litter, used parts and junk vehicles. Vehicles properly
contained within fenced storage areas shall be deemed to comply with this
requirement.
D. Inspections shall be performed on a first-come,
first-served basis. "First-come, first-served" means a procedure
whereby customers seeking an inspection shall be attended to in the order that
they arrive to the station. Motorists shall not be required to make an
appointment to obtain an inspection, except that those
appointments required by subdivision A 12 of § 46.2-1158.01 of the
Code of Virginia shall be made. Businesses Stations that
take in motorists' vehicles for inspection at the beginning of the work
day shall not be required to stop the work already taken in inspecting
those vehicles to provide an inspection for a drive-in motorist request,
provided inspections are actually currently being performed at
the time and will continue through throughout the day. Stations
must maintain a procedure to validate when vehicles were brought to the station
for inspection. Inspections shall begin concurrently with repair lanes during
the station's normal business hours, without delay. Stations may suggest to
motorists a timeframe of no greater than three hours during which it may be anticipated
that an inspection may be provided. Stations shall cooperate fully with
Department of State Police personnel regarding any issues detailed in this
section, as with all other investigations.
Stations shall make every effort to keep the designated
inspection lanes available. Stations with more than one repair bay shall not
perform work in the designated inspection lanes when customers are waiting for
an inspection. This will not apply to minor adjustments that require minimal
time to perform. Stations shall not let vehicles occupy the designated
inspection lanes while awaiting parts or customer authorization to complete the
inspection pursuant to 19VAC30-70-60.
A station may inquire about accepting safety inspections by
appointment. If the requirements are met, then the official inspection station
may, in addition to having one lane for the first-come, first-served customers,
also have a second inspection lane designated for customers who have made
appointments for a designated time slot. An additional certified safety
inspector shall be available to perform those inspections that are made by an
appointment. If interested, stations should first contact their supervising
trooper for specific requirements and guidelines.
E. Safety inspectors, managers who supervise inspection
activities, and business owners, through participation in the Official Motor
Vehicle Inspection Program, are representatives of the Department of State
Police and should conduct themselves in a manner to avoid controversy in dealing
with customers presenting vehicles for inspection. The use of profanity or
verbal abuse directed at customers presenting their vehicles for inspection
will be grounds for suspension from participation in the inspection program and
will be considered a Class IV offense as set forth in 19VAC30-70-6.
Controversy that cannot be calmly resolved by the safety
inspector, managers, and owners should be referred to the supervising trooper
for handling.
F. The "Certificate of Appointment" must be framed
under glass or clear plastic and posted in the customer waiting area where it
can be observed and read by a person submitting a vehicle for inspection.
Inspection stations must have garage liability insurance in
the amount of at least $500,000 with an approved surplus lines carrier or
insurance company licensed to write such insurance in this Commonwealth. This
requirement shall not apply to inspection stations that only inspect their
company-owned, government-owned, or leased vehicles.
G. The required "Official Inspection Procedure"
sheet and the "Direct Inquiries" sheet furnished to each station must
both be framed under glass or clear plastic and posted conspicuously in the
customer waiting area where they can be observed and read by a person submitting
a vehicle for inspection.
H. The poster designating the station as an official
inspection station shall be posted in a prominent location, outside or visible
outside the station, to alert passersby that inspection services are available.
Private inspection stations shall not display an outside poster.
I. Each official inspection station shall display a list with
the name(s) names and license expiration date dates
of all employees licensed to inspect at that station, adjacent to the
certificate of appointment. The Official Motor Vehicle Safety Inspection Manual
will be kept at or near the point of inspection for ready reference. The
manual may be kept in written or electronic form.
J. Important -- Any change in name, ownership or location of
any official inspection station cancels the appointment of that station,
and the Department of State Police must be notified immediately. The department
shall be notified when an official inspection station discontinues operation.
K. All inspection supplies, inspection binders and manual,
unused stickers, duplicates of certificates issued, bulletins and other forms
are the property of the Department of State Police and must be safeguarded
against loss.
L. Inspection supplies issued to an inspection station can be
used only by that station and are not to be loaned or reissued to any other
station with the exception of inserts.
1. Stations must maintain a sufficient supply of approval
stickers, trailer and motorcycle approval stickers, rejection stickers and
inserts. When reordering supplies, station owners/managers owners or
managers shall request sufficient supplies to sustain their business for at
least six months. However, it is realized that a few stations will not be able
to comply with the six-month requirement since there is a maximum of 100 books
per order limit. Also, when ordering supplies, the following information should
be considered so that the station does not order an excessive amount of
supplies: each book of approval stickers contains 25 stickers, the rejection
book contains 50 stickers, the month inserts are packaged in strips of 50 each,
and trailer and motorcycle decals are five per strip. In December of each year,
a supply of year inserts will be shipped to each station based on their the
station's previous year's usage. In November, each station shall check its
stock of month inserts and order what is needed for the months of January
through June. In May, the same should be done for the months of July through
December.
2. Inspection stations that exhaust their supply of approval
stickers, trailer and motorcycle approval stickers, rejection stickers, and
inserts shall immediately stop performing new inspections and contact their
supervising trooper or the nearest Safety Division Area Office.
M. All losses of stickers must be reported immediately to the
supervising inspection trooper or the nearest Safety Division Area Office.
N. Every precaution against the loss of stickers must be
taken. If the loss occurs through carelessness or neglect, a suspension of the
station may result.
O. Manuals, bulletins, other regulations and lists of
approved equipment must be available at all times for reference and may be
kept in written or electronic form. Revisions to the Motor Vehicle Safety
Inspection Manual will be sent to each station electronically through the MVIP
system. Revisions to the inspection manual must be inserted in the
manual at the proper location promptly after being received by the inspection
station. Bulletins of temporary interest and pages of bulletins containing the
synopsis of manual revisions will be retained in the front of each station's
inspection manual for 24 months. Each safety inspector shall review the
material contained in each inspection bulletin and manual revision within 15
days of its receipt. The safety inspector shall certify that the revisions have
been reviewed by signing his name and placing the date reviewed by the
signature on the bottom or reverse side of the bulletin or manual revision
cover sheet. Station management shall be responsible to see that each
safety inspector is familiar with all bulletins and manual revisions and shall
be required to furnish evidence to the department that all bulletins and manual
revisions have been reviewed by each licensed inspector.
A copy of the diagram drawn by the investigating trooper,
showing the approved inspection lane or lanes, will be inserted in a
plastic page protector and inserted as the last page of the official inspection
manual at each official inspection station. The name of the station and the
date will be inserted in the top right corner maintained for review and
kept available with the station's inspection supplies.
P. Private appointment may be made of company stations or
government stations that own and operate a minimum of 20 vehicles and they may
inspect only company-owned or government-owned vehicles respectively. When
authorized by the department, they may inspect vehicles of a wholly-owned
subsidiary or leased vehicles.
1. A private station may perform inspections during each month
of the year or may elect to inspect only during certain designated months.
2. A private station not electing to inspect vehicles every
month of the year that finds it necessary to inspect a vehicle during a month
other than those selected for inspection may issue a sticker to the vehicle
from the nearest past inspection month.
Q. All official inspection station owners, managers, and
certified safety inspectors shall comply with the Virginia inspection laws and
the inspection rules and regulations and will adhere to all instructions given
by the supervising trooper or the Safety Division. Reports of violations will
be investigated and, if found to be valid, may result in the suspension of the
station, suspension of the inspector, possible court action, or other
appropriate action, or any combination of these actions. Repeated violations or
serious violations may result in a revocation of the station appointment by the
superintendent.
R. The arrest of any person associated with the inspection program
for a criminal offense of a nature that would tend to immediately reflect upon
the integrity and reputation of the Department of State Police may be grounds
for an immediate suspension and the conviction for such an offense may result
in a revocation of the station's appointment.
S. When a station has been suspended or revoked, it must
release to an employee of the Department of State Police all inspection
supplies, posters, and papers including the certificate of appointment. Failure
to do so is a violation of § 46.2-1172 of the Code of Virginia.
T. The authority of the superintendent to suspend the
designation or appointment of an official inspection station as provided in §
46.2-1163 of the Code of Virginia, or to suspend the certification of an inspector
designated to perform inspections at an official inspection station, and, in
keeping with the provisions of § 46.2-1166 of the Code of Virginia, is hereby
delegated to any of the following supervisory ranks of the Department of State
Police: Lieutenant Colonel, Major, Captain, Lieutenant, First Sergeant and
Sergeant.
U. Each station must purchase and keep in proper operating
condition the following equipment: computer, printer, internet connection,
paper hole punch, black ball point pen or pens or black marker or markers,
sticker scraper with replacement razor blades, tire tread depth gauge, amp
meter, headlight and auxiliary lamp adjustment tools, 12" ruler, 25'
measuring tape, torque wrench or torque sticks, brake pads/shoes/disc/drum measuring
device, dial indicator, micrometer, pry bars, roller jack (at least 4-ton), and
an approved type optical headlight aiming device. Each station that requests an
additional inspection lane that is not in close proximity to the originally
approved inspection lane must purchase an additional approved headlight machine
for each lane that meets the minimum requirements. Stations are required to
have one of the following headlight aiming devices effective January 1, 2013:
the Hopkins Vision1, Hopkins Vision 100, American Aimers Vision 100, American
Aimers Vision 2 Pro, or the Symtech (former L.E.T.) HBA-5, PLA-11, and PLA-12.
This shall not apply to "trailer-only" inspection stations.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4923; Filed October 26, 2016, 7:03 a.m.
TITLE 19. PUBLIC SAFETY
DEPARTMENT OF STATE POLICE
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
Department of State Police is claiming an exemption from the Administrative
Process Act pursuant to § 2.2-4002 B 6 of the Code of Virginia, which
exempts agency action relating to customary military, naval, or police
functions.
Title of Regulation: 19VAC30-110. Regulations
Governing the Creation of a Criminal Firearms Clearinghouse (repealing 19VAC30-110-10 through 19VAC30-110-70).
Statutory Authority: §§ 9.1-102 and 52-25.1 of the
Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: November 15, 2016.
Agency Contact: Kirk Marlowe, Bureau of Administrative
and Support Services, Department of State Police, P.O. Box 27472, Richmond, VA
23261-7472, telephone (804) 674-4606, FAX (804) 674-2936, or email
kirk.marlowe@vsp.virginia.gov.
Summary:
Chapter 214 of the 2016 Acts of Assembly replaced the
requirement that law-enforcement agencies report information regarding
confiscated firearms to the Department of State Police with a requirement that
such information be reported to a firearms tracing system maintained by the
U.S. Department of Justice. In accordance with Chapter 214, this regulatory
action repeals 19VAC30-110, which contains the regulatory requirements
regarding reporting to the Department of State Police. A new chapter,
19VAC30-115 is being adopted in a separate action to implement reporting to the
U.S. Department of Justice.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4913; Filed October 26, 2016, 7:04 a.m.
TITLE 19. PUBLIC SAFETY
DEPARTMENT OF STATE POLICE
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
Department of State Police is claiming an exemption from the Administrative
Process Act pursuant to § 2.2-4002 B 6 of the Code of Virginia, which
exempts agency action relating to customary military, naval, or police functions.
Title of Regulation: 19VAC30-115. Reporting and Tracing
Firearms Confiscated or Recovered by Law-Enforcement Agencies (adding 19VAC30-115-10).
Statutory Authority: § 52-25.1 of the Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: November 15, 2016.
Agency Contact: Kirk Marlowe, Bureau of Administrative
and Support Services, Department of State Police, P.O. Box 27472, Richmond, VA
23261-7472, telephone (804) 674-4606, FAX (804) 674-2936, or email
kirk.marlowe@vsp.virginia.gov.
Summary:
Chapter 214 of the 2016 Acts of Assembly replaced the
requirement that law-enforcement agencies report information regarding
confiscated firearms to the Department of State Police with a requirement that
such information be reported to a firearms tracing system maintained by the
U.S. Department of Justice. In accordance with Chapter 214, this regulatory
action promulgates 19VAC30-115 to implement reporting to the U.S. Department of
Justice. In a separate regulatory action, the department is repealing
19VAC30-110, which contains the regulatory requirements regarding reporting to
the Department of State Police.
CHAPTER 115
REPORTING AND TRACING FIREARMS CONFISCATED OR RECOVERED BY LAW-ENFORCEMENT
AGENCIES
19VAC30-115-10. Reporting.
A. A law-enforcement agency of the Commonwealth or of a
political subdivision of the Commonwealth shall report information regarding
firearms seized, forfeited, found, or otherwise coming into the law-enforcement
agency's possession that are believed to have been used in the commission of a
crime to the National Tracing Center of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms and Explosives, U.S. Department of Justice.
B. A law-enforcement agency shall request, concurrent with
reporting the information pursuant to subsection A of this section, a trace of
the reported firearm from the National Tracing Center.
C. A law-enforcement agency shall make the report and
request the trace required by subsections A and B of this section forthwith
upon taking possession of the firearm. If making the report and request could
jeopardize an ongoing criminal investigation, the law-enforcement agency shall
make the report and request prior to the conclusion of the investigation.
D. To comply with subsections A and B of this section, a
law-enforcement agency may report information or request a trace by:
1. Using eTrace, which is the paperless firearms trace
submission system of the National Tracing Center (https://www.atf.gov/firearms/national-tracing-center);
or
2. Completing and submitting a National Tracing Center
Trace Request form (ATF E-form 3312.1).
NOTICE: The following
form used in administering the regulation was filed by the agency. The form is
not being published; however, online users of this issue of the Virginia
Register of Regulations may click on the name of the form to access it. The
form is also available from the agency contact or may be viewed at the Office
of the Registrar of Regulations, General Assembly Building, 2nd Floor,
Richmond, Virginia 23219.
FORMS (19VAC30-115)
National
Tracing Center Trace Request, ATF E-Form 3312.1, OMB No. 1140-0043 (rev.
8/2016)
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4914; Filed October 26, 2016, 7:04 a.m.
TITLE 21. SECURITIES AND RETAIL FRANCHISING
STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION
Proposed Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
State Corporation Commission is claiming an exemption from the Administrative
Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4002 A 2 of the Code of Virginia,
which exempts courts, any agency of the Supreme Court, and any agency that by
the Constitution is expressly granted any of the powers of a court of record.
Titles of Regulations: 21VAC5-20. Broker-Dealers,
Broker-Dealer Agents and Agents of the Issuer (amending 21VAC5-20-280).
21VAC5-45. Federal Covered Securities (adding 21VAC5-45-30).
Statutory Authority: §§ 12.1-13 and 13.1-523 of the Code
of Virginia.
Public Hearing Information: A public hearing will be
held upon request.
Public Comment Deadline: December 1, 2016.
Agency Contact: Timothy O'Brien, Manager, Securities
Division, State Corporation Commission, Tyler Building, 9th Floor, P.O. Box
1197, Richmond, VA 23218, telephone (804) 371-9415, FAX (804) 371-9911, or
email timothy.o'brien@scc.virginia.gov.
Summary:
The proposed amendments (i) provide for a notice filing for
a securities issuer that is using federal Regulation A for offerings up to $50
million in a 12-month period, which allows monitoring of the offerings; (ii)
require the filing of a short form with basic information about the issuer and
the offering; and (iii) establish a filing fee of $500 and a renewal fee of
$250. The proposed amendments also clarify that high quality foreign issuers
are not subject to the prohibited business conduct rule in subdivision D 6 of
21VAC5-20-280.
AT RICHMOND, OCTOBER 14, 2016
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA, ex rel.
STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION
CASE NO. SEC-2016-00051
Ex Parte: In the matter of
Adopting a Revision to the Rules
Governing the Virginia Securities Act
ORDER TO TAKE NOTICE
Section 12.1-13 of the Code of Virginia ("Code")
provides that the State Corporation Commission ("Commission") shall
have the power to promulgate rules and regulations in the enforcement and
administration of all laws within its jurisdiction. Section 13.1-523 of the
Virginia Securities Act ("Act"), § 13.1-501 et seq. of the Code,
provides that the Commission may issue any rules and regulations necessary or
appropriate for the administration and enforcement of the Act.
The rules and regulations issued by the Commission pursuant
to the Act are set forth in Title 21 of the Virginia Administrative Code. A
copy also may be found at the Commission's website, www.scc.virginia.gov/case.
Proposed Revision to Chapter 45 of 21 VAC 5-45 - Notice Filing
for Issuers Using Federal Regulation A-Tier 2 Exemption Offerings:
The proposed amendment to Chapter 45 by adding Section 30 (21 VAC 5-45-30)
provides for a notice filing for securities issuers that are using federal
Regulation A ("Regulation A") for offerings up to $50 million in a
12-month period. This amendment will allow Virginia to monitor these offerings.
The proposed notice filing exemption follows a uniform exemption developed by
the states' trade association, the North American Securities Administrators
Association, Inc. ("NASAA"), to use for these notice filings. NASAA
developed the model rule in large part due to a rule recently implemented in
the state of Washington.
The proposed rule requires the filing of a short form with
basic information about the issuer and the offering. Because Regulation A
permits the offering to continue past the initial period of 12 months in some
cases, an issuer would be required to renew the notice filing in order to
continue to offer and sell their securities in Virginia. The proposed filing
fees are $500 for an initial filing and a $250 renewal fee.
Proposed Revision to Chapter 20 of 21 VAC 5-20-280 - the
Prohibited Business Conduct Rules Governing Broker-dealers, as it Applies to
Foreign Issuers:
The Division of Securities and Retail Franchising (the
"Division") was made aware by the Securities and Financial Markets
Association ("SIFMA") and the Financial Services Institute
("FSI"), both of which are securities trade associations, that one of
the prohibited business conduct rules that was intended to cover broker-dealer
activities in the offer and sale of penny stock was creating questions
regarding the issuance of securities by certain world class foreign issuers.
The Commission never intended that these high quality foreign
issuers be subject to Subsection D 6 of 21 VAC 5-20-280; therefore, the
Division is requesting that the Commission consider a revision to the
subsection to make it clear that such companies do not fall under this
requirement.
The Division recommends that the Commission consider adoption
of the proposed revisions. The Division also recommends that a hearing be held
only if requested by those interested parties who specifically indicate that a
hearing is necessary and the reasons therefore.
Interested parties may request a copy of the proposed
revisions from the Division by telephone, regular mail or e-mail request, and a
copy of the proposed revisions also can be found at the Division's website:
www.scc.virginia.gov/srf. Any comments to the proposed rules must be received
by December 1, 2016.
Accordingly, IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED THAT:
(1) The proposed revisions are appended hereto and made a
part of the record herein.
(2) On or before December 1, 2016, comments or requests for
hearing on the proposed revisions must be submitted in writing to Joel H. Peck,
Clerk of the Commission, c/o Document Control Center, P.O. Box 2118, Richmond,
Virginia 23218. Requests for hearing shall state why a hearing is necessary and
why the issues cannot adequately be addressed in written comments. All
correspondence shall reference Case No. SEC-2016-00051. Interested persons
desiring to submit comments electronically may do so by following the instructions
available at the Commission's website: http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case.
(3) The proposed revisions shall be posted on the
Commission's website at http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case and on the Division's
website at http://www.scc.virginia.gov/srf. Interested persons also may request
a copy of the proposed revisions from the Division by telephone, regular mail,
or e-mail.
AN ATTESTED COPY HEREOF, together with a copy of the proposed
revisions, shall be sent to the Registrar of Regulations for publication in the
Virginia Register of Regulations.
AN ATTESTED COPY HEREOF shall be sent to the Director of the
Division of Securities and Retail Franchising, who shall forthwith provide
notice of this Order via U.S. mail or e-mail a copy of this Order to any interested
persons as he may designate.
21VAC5-20-280. Prohibited business conduct.
A. Every broker-dealer is required to observe high standards
of commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade in the conduct
of its business. The acts and practices described below in this
subsection are considered contrary to such standards and may constitute
grounds for denial, suspension, or revocation of registration or such other
action authorized by the Act. No broker-dealer who is registered or required to
be registered shall:
1. Engage in a pattern of unreasonable and unjustifiable
delays in the delivery of securities purchased by any of its customers or in
the payment upon request of free credit balances reflecting completed
transactions of any of its customers, or take any action that directly or
indirectly interferes with a customer's ability to transfer his account;
provided that the account is not subject to any lien for moneys owed by the
customer or other bona fide claim, including, but not limited to, seeking a
judicial order or decree that would bar or restrict the submission, delivery or
acceptance of a written request from a customer to transfer his account;
2. Induce trading in a customer's account which is excessive
in size or frequency in view of the financial resources and character of the
account;
3. Recommend to a customer the purchase, sale or exchange of
any security without reasonable grounds to believe that the recommendation is
suitable for the customer. The reasonable basis to recommend any such
transaction to a customer shall be based upon the risks associated with a
particular security, and the information obtained through the diligence and
inquiry of the broker-dealer to ascertain the customer's investment profile. A
customer's investment profile includes, but is not limited to, the customer's
investment objectives, financial situation, risk tolerance and needs, tax
status, age, other investments, investment experience, investment time horizon,
liquidity needs, and any other relevant information known by the broker-dealer
or of which the broker-dealer is otherwise made aware in connection with such
recommendation;
4. Execute a transaction on behalf of a customer without
authority to do so or, when securities are held in a customer's account, fail
to execute a sell transaction involving those securities as instructed by a
customer, without reasonable cause;
5. Exercise any discretionary power in effecting a transaction
for a customer's account without first obtaining written discretionary
authority from the customer, unless the discretionary power relates solely to
the time or price for the execution of orders;
6. Execute any transaction in a margin account without
securing from the customer a properly executed written margin agreement promptly
after the initial transaction in the account, or fail, prior to or at the
opening of a margin account, to disclose to a noninstitutional customer the
operation of a margin account and the risks associated with trading on margin
at least as comprehensively as required by FINRA Rule 2264;
7. Fail to segregate customers' free securities or securities
held in safekeeping;
8. Hypothecate a customer's securities without having a lien
thereon unless the broker-dealer secures from the customer a properly executed
written consent promptly after the initial transaction, except as permitted by
Rules of the SEC;
9. Enter into a transaction with or for a customer at a price
not reasonably related to the current market price of a security or receiving
an unreasonable commission or profit;
10. Fail to furnish to a customer purchasing securities in an
offering, no later than the date of confirmation of the transaction, either a
final prospectus or a preliminary prospectus and an additional document, which
together include all information set forth in the final prospectus, either by
(i) hard copy prospectus delivery or (ii) electronic prospectus delivery;
11. Introduce customer transactions on a "fully
disclosed" basis to another broker-dealer that is not exempt under §
13.1-514 B 6 of the Act;
12. a. Charge unreasonable and inequitable fees for services
performed, including miscellaneous services such as collection of moneys due
for principal, dividends or interest, exchange or transfer of securities,
appraisals, safekeeping, or custody of securities and other services related to
its securities business;
b. Charge a fee based on the activity, value or contents (or
lack thereof) of a customer account unless written disclosure pertaining to the
fee, which shall include information about the amount of the fee, how
imposition of the fee can be avoided and any consequence of late payment or
nonpayment of the fee, was provided no later than the date the account was
established or, with respect to an existing account, at least 60 days prior to
the effective date of the fee;
13. Offer to buy from or sell to any person any security at a
stated price unless the broker-dealer is prepared to purchase or sell at the
price and under such conditions as are stated at the time of the offer to buy
or sell;
14. Represent that a security is being offered to a customer
"at a market" or a price relevant to the market price unless the
broker-dealer knows or has reasonable grounds to believe that a market for the
security exists other than that made, created or controlled by the
broker-dealer, or by any person for whom he is acting or with whom he is
associated in the distribution, or any person controlled by, controlling or
under common control with the broker-dealer;
15. Effect any transaction in, or induce the purchase or sale
of, any security by means of any manipulative, deceptive or fraudulent device,
practice, plan, program, design or contrivance, which may include but not be
limited to:
a. Effecting any transaction in a security which involves no
change in the beneficial ownership thereof;
b. Entering an order or orders for the purchase or sale of any
security with the knowledge that an order or orders of substantially the same
size, at substantially the same time and substantially the same price, for the
sale of any security, has been or will be entered by or for the same or
different parties for the purpose of creating a false or misleading appearance
of active trading in the security or a false or misleading appearance with
respect to the market for the security; however, nothing in this subdivision
shall prohibit a broker-dealer from entering bona fide agency cross
transactions for its customers; or
c. Effecting, alone or with one or more other persons, a
series of transactions in any security creating actual or apparent active
trading in the security or raising or depressing the price of the security, for
the purpose of inducing the purchase or sale of the security by others;
16. Guarantee a customer against loss in any securities
account of the customer carried by the broker-dealer or in any securities
transaction effected by the broker-dealer with or for the customer;
17. Publish or circulate, or cause to be published or
circulated, any notice, circular, advertisement, newspaper article, investment
service, or communication of any kind which purports to report any transaction
as a purchase or sale of any security unless the broker-dealer believes that
the transaction was a bona fide purchase or sale of the security; or which
purports to quote the bid price or asked price for any security, unless the
broker-dealer believes that the quotation represents a bona fide bid for, or
offer of, the security;
18. Use any advertising or sales presentation in such a
fashion as to be deceptive or misleading. An example of such practice would be
a distribution of any nonfactual data, material or presentation based on
conjecture, unfounded or unrealistic claims or assertions in any brochure,
flyer, or display by words, pictures, graphs or otherwise designed to
supplement, detract from, supersede or defeat the purpose or effect of any
prospectus or disclosure;
19. Fail to make reasonably available upon request to any
person expressing an interest in a solicited transaction in a security, not
listed on a registered securities exchange or quoted on an automated quotation
system operated by a national securities association approved by regulation of
the commission, a balance sheet of the issuer as of a date within 18 months of
the offer or sale of the issuer's securities and a profit and loss statement
for either the fiscal year preceding that date or the most recent year of
operations, the names of the issuer's proprietor, partners or officers, the
nature of the enterprises of the issuer and any available information
reasonably necessary for evaluating the desirability or lack of desirability of
investing in the securities of an issuer. All transactions in securities
described in this subdivision shall comply with the provisions of § 13.1-507 of
the Act;
20. Fail to disclose that the broker-dealer is controlled by,
controlling, affiliated with or under common control with the issuer of any
security before entering into any contract with or for a customer for the
purchase or sale of the security, the existence of control to the customer, and
if disclosure is not made in writing, it shall be supplemented by the giving or
sending of written disclosure at or before the completion of the transaction;
21. Fail to make a bona fide public offering of all of the
securities allotted to a broker-dealer for distribution, whether acquired as an
underwriter, a selling group member, or from a member participating in the
distribution as an underwriter or selling group member;
22. Fail or refuse to furnish a customer, upon reasonable
request, information to which the customer is entitled, or to respond to a
formal written request or complaint;
23. Fail to clearly and separately disclose to its customer,
prior to any security transaction, providing investment advice for compensation
or any materially related transaction that the customer's funds or securities
will be in the custody of an investment advisor or contracted custodian, in a
manner that does not provide Securities Investor Protection Corporation
protection, or equivalent third-party coverage over the customer's assets;
24. Market broker-dealer services that are associated with
financial institutions in a manner that is misleading or confusing to customers
as to the nature of securities products or risks;
25. In transactions subject to breakpoints, fail to:
a. Utilize advantageous breakpoints without reasonable basis
for their exclusion;
b. Determine information that should be recorded on the books
and records of a member or its clearing firm, which is necessary to determine the
availability and appropriateness of breakpoint opportunities; or
c. Inquire whether the customer has positions or transactions
away from the member that should be considered in connection with the pending
transaction and apprise the customer of the breakpoint opportunities;
26. Use a certification or professional designation in
connection with the offer, sale, or purchase of securities that indicates or
implies that the user has special certification or training in advising or
servicing senior citizens or retirees in such a way as to mislead any person.
a. The use of such certification or professional designation
includes, but is not limited to, the following:
(1) Use of a certification or designation by a person who has
not actually earned or is otherwise ineligible to use such certification or
designation;
(2) Use of a nonexistent or self-conferred certification or
professional designation;
(3) Use of a certification or professional designation that
indicates or implies a level of occupational qualifications obtained through
education, training, or experience that the person using the certification or
professional designation does not have; or
(4) Use of a certification or professional designation that
was obtained from a designating or certifying organization that:
(a) Is primarily engaged in the business of instruction in
sales or marketing;
(b) Does not have reasonable standards or procedures for
assuring the competency of its designees or certificants;
(c) Does not have reasonable standards or procedures for
monitoring and disciplining its designees or certificants for improper or
unethical conduct; or
(d) Does not have reasonable continuing education requirements
for its designees or certificants in order to maintain the designation or
certificate.
b. There is a rebuttable presumption that a designating or
certifying organization is not disqualified solely for purposes of subdivision
26 a (4) of this subsection, when the organization has been accredited by:
(1) The American National Standards Institute;
(2) The Institute for Credentialing Excellence (formerly the
National Commission for Certifying Agencies); or
(3) An organization that is on the United States U.S.
Department of Education's list entitled "Accrediting Agencies Recognized
for Title IV Purposes" and the designation or credential issued therefrom
does not primarily apply to sales or marketing.
c. In determining whether a combination of words (or an
acronym standing for a combination of words) constitutes a certification or
professional designation indicating or implying that a person has special
certification or training in advising or servicing senior citizens or retirees,
factors to be considered shall include:
(1) Use of one or more words such as "senior,"
"retirement," "elder," or like words, combined with one or
more words such as "certified," "chartered,"
"adviser," "specialist," "consultant,"
"planner," or like words, in the name of the certification or
professional designation; and
(2) The manner in which those words are combined.
d. For purposes of this section, a certification or
professional designation does not include a job title within an organization
that is licensed or registered by a state or federal financial services
regulatory agency when that job title:
(1) Indicates seniority within the organization; or
(2) Specifies an individual's area of specialization within
the organization.
For purposes of this subdivision d, "financial services
regulatory agency" includes, but is not limited to, an agency that
regulates broker-dealers, investment advisers, or investment companies as
defined under § 3 (a)(1) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (15 USC
§ 80a-3(a)(1)).
e. Nothing in this regulation shall limit the commission's
authority to enforce existing provisions of law;
27. Represent that securities will be listed or that
application for listing will be made on a securities exchange or the National
Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations (NASDAQ) system or other
quotation system without reasonable basis in fact for the representation;
28. Falsify or alter so as to make false or misleading any
record or document or any information provided to the commission;
29. Negotiate, facilitate, or otherwise execute a transaction
on behalf of an investor involving securities issued by a third party pursuant
to a claim for exemption under subsection B of § 13.1-514 of the Act
unless the broker-dealer intends to report the securities owned and the value
of such securities on at least a quarterly basis to the investor;
30. Offer or sell securities pursuant to a claim for exemption
under subsection B of § 13.1-514 of the Act without having first verified the
information relating to the securities offered or sold, which shall include,
but not be limited to, ascertaining the risks associated with investing in the
respective security;
31. Allow any person to represent or utilize its name as a
trading platform without conspicuously disclosing the name of the registered
broker-dealer in effecting or attempting to effect purchases and sales of
securities; or
32. Engage in any conduct that constitutes a dishonest or
unethical practice including, but not limited to, forgery, embezzlement,
nondisclosure, incomplete disclosure or material omissions or untrue statements
of material facts, manipulative or deceptive practices, or fraudulent course of
business.
B. Every agent is required to observe high standards of
commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade in the conduct of
his business. The acts and practices described below in this
subsection are considered contrary to such standards and may constitute
grounds for denial, suspension, or revocation of registration or such other
action authorized by the Act. No agent who is registered or required to be
registered shall:
1. Engage in the practice of lending or borrowing money or
securities from a customer, or acting as a custodian for money, securities or
an executed stock power of a customer;
2. Effect any securities transaction not recorded on the
regular books or records of the broker-dealer which the agent represents,
unless the transaction is authorized in writing by the broker-dealer prior to
execution of the transaction;
3. Establish or maintain an account containing fictitious
information in order to execute a transaction which would otherwise be unlawful
or prohibited;
4. Share directly or indirectly in profits or losses in the
account of any customer without the written authorization of the customer and
the broker-dealer which the agent represents;
5. Divide or otherwise split the agent's commissions, profits
or other compensation from the purchase or sale of securities in this state
Commonwealth with any person not also registered as an agent for the
same broker-dealer, or for a broker-dealer under direct or indirect common
control;
6. Engage in conduct specified in subdivision A 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,
10, 15, 16, 17, 18, 23, 24, 25, 26, 28, 30, 31, or 32 of this section;
7. Fail to comply with the continuing education requirements
under 21VAC5-20-150 C; or
8. Hold oneself out as representing any person other than the
broker-dealer with whom the agent is registered and, in the case of an agent
whose normal place of business is not on the premises of the broker-dealer,
failing to conspicuously disclose the name of the broker-dealer for whom the
agent is registered when representing the dealer in effecting or attempting to
effect the purchases or sales of securities.
C. No person shall publish, give publicity to, or circulate
any notice, circular, advertisement, newspaper article, letter, investment
service or communication which, though not purporting to offer a security for
sale, describes the security, for a consideration received or to be received,
directly or indirectly, from an issuer, underwriter, or dealer, without fully
disclosing the receipt, whether past or prospective, of such consideration and
the amount thereof.
D. The purpose of this subsection is to identify practices in
the securities business that are generally associated with schemes to
manipulate and to identify prohibited business conduct of broker-dealers or
sales agents who are registered or required to be registered.
1. Entering into a transaction with a customer in any security
at an unreasonable price or at a price not reasonably related to the current market
price of the security or receiving an unreasonable commission or profit.
2. Contradicting or negating the importance of any information
contained in a prospectus or other offering materials with intent to deceive or
mislead or using any advertising or sales presentation in a deceptive or
misleading manner.
3. In connection with the offer, sale, or purchase of a
security, falsely leading a customer to believe that the broker-dealer or agent
is in possession of material, nonpublic information that would affect the value
of the security.
4. In connection with the solicitation of a sale or purchase
of a security, engaging in a pattern or practice of making contradictory
recommendations to different investors of similar investment objective for some
to sell and others to purchase the same security, at or about the same time,
when not justified by the particular circumstances of each investor.
5. Failing to make a bona fide public offering of all the
securities allotted to a broker-dealer for distribution by, among other things,
(i) transferring securities to a customer, another broker-dealer, or a
fictitious account with the understanding that those securities will be
returned to the broker-dealer or its nominees or (ii) parking or withholding
securities.
6. Although nothing in this subsection precludes a.
In addition to the application of the general anti-fraud provisions against
anyone for practices similar in nature to the practices discussed below in
this subdivision 6, the following subdivisions a (1) through f
(6) specifically apply only in connection with the solicitation of a
purchase or sale of over the counter (OTC) unlisted non-NASDAQ equity
securities except those exempt from registration under 21VAC5-40-50:
a. (1) Failing to advise the customer, both at
the time of solicitation and on the confirmation, of any and all compensation
related to a specific securities transaction to be paid to the agent including
commissions, sales charges, or concessions.
b. (2) In connection with a principal transaction,
failing to disclose, both at the time of solicitation and on the confirmation,
a short inventory position in the firm's account of more than 3.0% of the
issued and outstanding shares of that class of securities of the issuer;
however, subdivision 6 of this subsection shall apply only if the firm is a
market maker at the time of the solicitation.
c. (3). Conducting sales contests in a
particular security.
d. (4) After a solicited purchase by a customer,
failing or refusing, in connection with a principal transaction, to promptly
execute sell orders.
e. (5) Soliciting a secondary market transaction
when there has not been a bona fide distribution in the primary market.
f. (6) Engaging in a pattern of compensating an
agent in different amounts for effecting sales and purchases in the same
security.
b. Although subdivisions D 6 a (1) through (6) of this
section do not apply to OTC unlisted non-NASDAQ equity securities exempt from
registration under 21VAC5-40-50, nothing in this subsection precludes application
of the general anti-fraud provisions against anyone for practices similar in
nature to the practices discussed in subdivisions D 6 a (1) through (6) of this
section in connection with such securities.
7. Effecting any transaction in, or inducing the purchase or
sale of, any security by means of any manipulative, deceptive, or other
fraudulent device or contrivance including but not limited to the use of boiler
room tactics or use of fictitious or nominee accounts.
8. Failing to comply with any prospectus delivery requirements
promulgated under federal law or the Act.
9. In connection with the solicitation of a sale or purchase
of an OTC unlisted non-NASDAQ security, failing to promptly provide the most
current prospectus or the most recently filed periodic report filed under § 13
of the Securities Exchange Act when requested to do so by a customer.
10. Marking any order tickets or confirmations as unsolicited
when in fact the transaction was solicited.
11. For any month in which activity has occurred in a
customer's account, but in no event less than every three months, failing to
provide each customer with a statement of account with respect to all OTC
non-NASDAQ equity securities in the account, containing a value for each such
security based on the closing market bid on a date certain; however, this
subdivision shall apply only if the firm has been a market maker in the
security at any time during the month in which the monthly or quarterly
statement is issued.
12. Failing to comply with any applicable provision of the
FINRA Rules or any applicable fair practice, privacy, or ethical standard
promulgated by the SEC or by a self-regulatory organization approved by the
SEC.
13. In connection with the solicitation of a purchase or sale
of a designated security:
a. Failing to disclose to the customer the bid and ask price,
at which the broker-dealer effects transactions with individual, retail
customers, of the designated security as well as its spread in both percentage
and dollar amounts at the time of solicitation and on the trade confirmation
documents; or
b. Failing to include with the confirmation, the notice
disclosure contained under 21VAC5-20-285, except the following shall be exempt
from this requirement:
(1) Transactions in which the price of the designated security
is $5.00 or more, exclusive of costs or charges; however, if the designated
security is a unit composed of one or more securities, the unit price divided
by the number of components of the unit other than warrants, options, rights,
or similar securities must be $5.00 or more, and any component of the unit that
is a warrant, option, right, or similar securities, or a convertible security
must have an exercise price or conversion price of $5.00 or more.
(2) Transactions that are not recommended by the broker-dealer
or agent.
(3) Transactions by a broker-dealer (i) whose commissions,
commission equivalents, and mark-ups from transactions in designated securities
during each of the preceding three months, and during 11 or more of the
preceding 12 months, did not exceed 5.0% of its total commissions,
commission-equivalents, and mark-ups from transactions in securities during
those months; and (ii) who has not executed principal transactions in
connection with the solicitation to purchase the designated security that is
the subject of the transaction in the preceding 12 months.
(4) Any transaction or transactions that, upon prior written
request or upon its own motion, the commission conditionally or unconditionally
exempts as not encompassed within the purposes of this section.
c. For purposes of this section, the term "designated
security" means any equity security other than a security:
(1) Registered, or approved for registration upon notice of
issuance, on a national securities exchange and makes transaction reports
available pursuant to 17 CFR 11Aa3-1 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934;
(2) Authorized, or approved for authorization upon notice of
issuance, for quotation in the NASDAQ system;
(3) Issued by an investment company registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940;
(4) That is a put option or call option issued by The Options
Clearing Corporation; or
(5) Whose issuer has net tangible assets in excess of $4
million as demonstrated by financial statements dated within no less than 15
months that the broker-dealer has reviewed and has a reasonable basis to
believe are true and complete in relation to the date of the transaction with
the person, and
(a) In the event the issuer is other than a foreign private
issuer, are the most recent financial statements for the issuer that have been
audited and reported on by an independent public accountant in accordance with
the provisions of 17 CFR 210.2-02 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; or
(b) In the event the issuer is a foreign private issuer, are
the most recent financial statements for the issuer that have been filed with
the SEC; furnished to the SEC pursuant to 17 CFR 240.12g3-2(b) under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934; or prepared in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles in the country of incorporation, audited in
compliance with the requirements of that jurisdiction, and reported on by an
accountant duly registered and in good standing in accordance with the
regulations of that jurisdiction.
21VAC5-45-30. Federal Regulation A Tier 2 offerings.
A. An issuer planning to offer and sell securities in this
Commonwealth in an offering exempt under Tier 2 of federal Regulation A (17 CFR
230.251 through 17 CFR 230.263) and § 18(b)(3) or 18(b)(4) of the Securities
Act of 1933 (15 USC § 77a) shall submit the following at least 21 calendar
days prior to the initial sale in this Commonwealth:
1. A completed Regulation A – Tier 2 notice filing form or
copies of all documents filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission;
2. A consent to service of process on Form U-2 if not
filing on the Regulation A – Tier 2 notice filing form; and
3. A filing fee of $500 payable the Treasurer of Virginia.
B. The initial notice filing is effective for 12 months
from the date of the filing with this Commonwealth. For each additional
12-month period in which the same offering is continued, an issuer conducting a
Tier 2 offering under federal Regulation A may renew its notice filing by
filing the following on or before the expiration of the notice filing:
1. The Regulation A – Tier 2 notice filing form marked
"renewal" or a cover letter or other document requesting renewal; and
2. A renewal fee in the amount of $250 payable to the
Treasurer of Virginia.
C. An issuer may increase the amount of securities offered
in this Commonwealth by submitting a Regulation A – Tier 2 notice filing form
marked "amendment" or other document describing the transaction.
NOTICE: The following
forms used in administering the regulation were filed by the agency. The forms
are not being published; however, online users of this issue of the Virginia
Register of Regulations may click on the name of a form with a hyperlink to
access it. The forms are also available from the agency contact or may be
viewed at the Office of the Registrar of Regulations, General Assembly
Building, 2nd Floor, Richmond, Virginia 23219.
FORMS (21VAC5-45)
Form D, Notice of Exempt Offering of Securities,
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, SEC1972 (rev. 2/12).
Uniform
Consent to Service of Process, Form U-2 (7/1981)
Uniform
Notice of Regulation A - Tier 2 Offering (undated, filed 10/2016)
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4869; Filed October 17, 2016, 3:22 p.m.
TITLE 21. SECURITIES AND RETAIL FRANCHISING
STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION
Proposed Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
State Corporation Commission is claiming an exemption from the Administrative
Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4002 A 2 of the Code of Virginia,
which exempts courts, any agency of the Supreme Court, and any agency that by
the Constitution is expressly granted any of the powers of a court of record.
Titles of Regulations: 21VAC5-20. Broker-Dealers,
Broker-Dealer Agents and Agents of the Issuer (amending 21VAC5-20-280).
21VAC5-45. Federal Covered Securities (adding 21VAC5-45-30).
Statutory Authority: §§ 12.1-13 and 13.1-523 of the Code
of Virginia.
Public Hearing Information: A public hearing will be
held upon request.
Public Comment Deadline: December 1, 2016.
Agency Contact: Timothy O'Brien, Manager, Securities
Division, State Corporation Commission, Tyler Building, 9th Floor, P.O. Box
1197, Richmond, VA 23218, telephone (804) 371-9415, FAX (804) 371-9911, or
email timothy.o'brien@scc.virginia.gov.
Summary:
The proposed amendments (i) provide for a notice filing for
a securities issuer that is using federal Regulation A for offerings up to $50
million in a 12-month period, which allows monitoring of the offerings; (ii)
require the filing of a short form with basic information about the issuer and
the offering; and (iii) establish a filing fee of $500 and a renewal fee of
$250. The proposed amendments also clarify that high quality foreign issuers
are not subject to the prohibited business conduct rule in subdivision D 6 of
21VAC5-20-280.
AT RICHMOND, OCTOBER 14, 2016
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA, ex rel.
STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION
CASE NO. SEC-2016-00051
Ex Parte: In the matter of
Adopting a Revision to the Rules
Governing the Virginia Securities Act
ORDER TO TAKE NOTICE
Section 12.1-13 of the Code of Virginia ("Code")
provides that the State Corporation Commission ("Commission") shall
have the power to promulgate rules and regulations in the enforcement and
administration of all laws within its jurisdiction. Section 13.1-523 of the
Virginia Securities Act ("Act"), § 13.1-501 et seq. of the Code,
provides that the Commission may issue any rules and regulations necessary or
appropriate for the administration and enforcement of the Act.
The rules and regulations issued by the Commission pursuant
to the Act are set forth in Title 21 of the Virginia Administrative Code. A
copy also may be found at the Commission's website, www.scc.virginia.gov/case.
Proposed Revision to Chapter 45 of 21 VAC 5-45 - Notice Filing
for Issuers Using Federal Regulation A-Tier 2 Exemption Offerings:
The proposed amendment to Chapter 45 by adding Section 30 (21 VAC 5-45-30)
provides for a notice filing for securities issuers that are using federal
Regulation A ("Regulation A") for offerings up to $50 million in a
12-month period. This amendment will allow Virginia to monitor these offerings.
The proposed notice filing exemption follows a uniform exemption developed by
the states' trade association, the North American Securities Administrators
Association, Inc. ("NASAA"), to use for these notice filings. NASAA
developed the model rule in large part due to a rule recently implemented in
the state of Washington.
The proposed rule requires the filing of a short form with
basic information about the issuer and the offering. Because Regulation A
permits the offering to continue past the initial period of 12 months in some
cases, an issuer would be required to renew the notice filing in order to
continue to offer and sell their securities in Virginia. The proposed filing
fees are $500 for an initial filing and a $250 renewal fee.
Proposed Revision to Chapter 20 of 21 VAC 5-20-280 - the
Prohibited Business Conduct Rules Governing Broker-dealers, as it Applies to
Foreign Issuers:
The Division of Securities and Retail Franchising (the
"Division") was made aware by the Securities and Financial Markets
Association ("SIFMA") and the Financial Services Institute
("FSI"), both of which are securities trade associations, that one of
the prohibited business conduct rules that was intended to cover broker-dealer
activities in the offer and sale of penny stock was creating questions
regarding the issuance of securities by certain world class foreign issuers.
The Commission never intended that these high quality foreign
issuers be subject to Subsection D 6 of 21 VAC 5-20-280; therefore, the
Division is requesting that the Commission consider a revision to the
subsection to make it clear that such companies do not fall under this
requirement.
The Division recommends that the Commission consider adoption
of the proposed revisions. The Division also recommends that a hearing be held
only if requested by those interested parties who specifically indicate that a
hearing is necessary and the reasons therefore.
Interested parties may request a copy of the proposed
revisions from the Division by telephone, regular mail or e-mail request, and a
copy of the proposed revisions also can be found at the Division's website:
www.scc.virginia.gov/srf. Any comments to the proposed rules must be received
by December 1, 2016.
Accordingly, IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED THAT:
(1) The proposed revisions are appended hereto and made a
part of the record herein.
(2) On or before December 1, 2016, comments or requests for
hearing on the proposed revisions must be submitted in writing to Joel H. Peck,
Clerk of the Commission, c/o Document Control Center, P.O. Box 2118, Richmond,
Virginia 23218. Requests for hearing shall state why a hearing is necessary and
why the issues cannot adequately be addressed in written comments. All
correspondence shall reference Case No. SEC-2016-00051. Interested persons
desiring to submit comments electronically may do so by following the instructions
available at the Commission's website: http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case.
(3) The proposed revisions shall be posted on the
Commission's website at http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case and on the Division's
website at http://www.scc.virginia.gov/srf. Interested persons also may request
a copy of the proposed revisions from the Division by telephone, regular mail,
or e-mail.
AN ATTESTED COPY HEREOF, together with a copy of the proposed
revisions, shall be sent to the Registrar of Regulations for publication in the
Virginia Register of Regulations.
AN ATTESTED COPY HEREOF shall be sent to the Director of the
Division of Securities and Retail Franchising, who shall forthwith provide
notice of this Order via U.S. mail or e-mail a copy of this Order to any interested
persons as he may designate.
21VAC5-20-280. Prohibited business conduct.
A. Every broker-dealer is required to observe high standards
of commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade in the conduct
of its business. The acts and practices described below in this
subsection are considered contrary to such standards and may constitute
grounds for denial, suspension, or revocation of registration or such other
action authorized by the Act. No broker-dealer who is registered or required to
be registered shall:
1. Engage in a pattern of unreasonable and unjustifiable
delays in the delivery of securities purchased by any of its customers or in
the payment upon request of free credit balances reflecting completed
transactions of any of its customers, or take any action that directly or
indirectly interferes with a customer's ability to transfer his account;
provided that the account is not subject to any lien for moneys owed by the
customer or other bona fide claim, including, but not limited to, seeking a
judicial order or decree that would bar or restrict the submission, delivery or
acceptance of a written request from a customer to transfer his account;
2. Induce trading in a customer's account which is excessive
in size or frequency in view of the financial resources and character of the
account;
3. Recommend to a customer the purchase, sale or exchange of
any security without reasonable grounds to believe that the recommendation is
suitable for the customer. The reasonable basis to recommend any such
transaction to a customer shall be based upon the risks associated with a
particular security, and the information obtained through the diligence and
inquiry of the broker-dealer to ascertain the customer's investment profile. A
customer's investment profile includes, but is not limited to, the customer's
investment objectives, financial situation, risk tolerance and needs, tax
status, age, other investments, investment experience, investment time horizon,
liquidity needs, and any other relevant information known by the broker-dealer
or of which the broker-dealer is otherwise made aware in connection with such
recommendation;
4. Execute a transaction on behalf of a customer without
authority to do so or, when securities are held in a customer's account, fail
to execute a sell transaction involving those securities as instructed by a
customer, without reasonable cause;
5. Exercise any discretionary power in effecting a transaction
for a customer's account without first obtaining written discretionary
authority from the customer, unless the discretionary power relates solely to
the time or price for the execution of orders;
6. Execute any transaction in a margin account without
securing from the customer a properly executed written margin agreement promptly
after the initial transaction in the account, or fail, prior to or at the
opening of a margin account, to disclose to a noninstitutional customer the
operation of a margin account and the risks associated with trading on margin
at least as comprehensively as required by FINRA Rule 2264;
7. Fail to segregate customers' free securities or securities
held in safekeeping;
8. Hypothecate a customer's securities without having a lien
thereon unless the broker-dealer secures from the customer a properly executed
written consent promptly after the initial transaction, except as permitted by
Rules of the SEC;
9. Enter into a transaction with or for a customer at a price
not reasonably related to the current market price of a security or receiving
an unreasonable commission or profit;
10. Fail to furnish to a customer purchasing securities in an
offering, no later than the date of confirmation of the transaction, either a
final prospectus or a preliminary prospectus and an additional document, which
together include all information set forth in the final prospectus, either by
(i) hard copy prospectus delivery or (ii) electronic prospectus delivery;
11. Introduce customer transactions on a "fully
disclosed" basis to another broker-dealer that is not exempt under §
13.1-514 B 6 of the Act;
12. a. Charge unreasonable and inequitable fees for services
performed, including miscellaneous services such as collection of moneys due
for principal, dividends or interest, exchange or transfer of securities,
appraisals, safekeeping, or custody of securities and other services related to
its securities business;
b. Charge a fee based on the activity, value or contents (or
lack thereof) of a customer account unless written disclosure pertaining to the
fee, which shall include information about the amount of the fee, how
imposition of the fee can be avoided and any consequence of late payment or
nonpayment of the fee, was provided no later than the date the account was
established or, with respect to an existing account, at least 60 days prior to
the effective date of the fee;
13. Offer to buy from or sell to any person any security at a
stated price unless the broker-dealer is prepared to purchase or sell at the
price and under such conditions as are stated at the time of the offer to buy
or sell;
14. Represent that a security is being offered to a customer
"at a market" or a price relevant to the market price unless the
broker-dealer knows or has reasonable grounds to believe that a market for the
security exists other than that made, created or controlled by the
broker-dealer, or by any person for whom he is acting or with whom he is
associated in the distribution, or any person controlled by, controlling or
under common control with the broker-dealer;
15. Effect any transaction in, or induce the purchase or sale
of, any security by means of any manipulative, deceptive or fraudulent device,
practice, plan, program, design or contrivance, which may include but not be
limited to:
a. Effecting any transaction in a security which involves no
change in the beneficial ownership thereof;
b. Entering an order or orders for the purchase or sale of any
security with the knowledge that an order or orders of substantially the same
size, at substantially the same time and substantially the same price, for the
sale of any security, has been or will be entered by or for the same or
different parties for the purpose of creating a false or misleading appearance
of active trading in the security or a false or misleading appearance with
respect to the market for the security; however, nothing in this subdivision
shall prohibit a broker-dealer from entering bona fide agency cross
transactions for its customers; or
c. Effecting, alone or with one or more other persons, a
series of transactions in any security creating actual or apparent active
trading in the security or raising or depressing the price of the security, for
the purpose of inducing the purchase or sale of the security by others;
16. Guarantee a customer against loss in any securities
account of the customer carried by the broker-dealer or in any securities
transaction effected by the broker-dealer with or for the customer;
17. Publish or circulate, or cause to be published or
circulated, any notice, circular, advertisement, newspaper article, investment
service, or communication of any kind which purports to report any transaction
as a purchase or sale of any security unless the broker-dealer believes that
the transaction was a bona fide purchase or sale of the security; or which
purports to quote the bid price or asked price for any security, unless the
broker-dealer believes that the quotation represents a bona fide bid for, or
offer of, the security;
18. Use any advertising or sales presentation in such a
fashion as to be deceptive or misleading. An example of such practice would be
a distribution of any nonfactual data, material or presentation based on
conjecture, unfounded or unrealistic claims or assertions in any brochure,
flyer, or display by words, pictures, graphs or otherwise designed to
supplement, detract from, supersede or defeat the purpose or effect of any
prospectus or disclosure;
19. Fail to make reasonably available upon request to any
person expressing an interest in a solicited transaction in a security, not
listed on a registered securities exchange or quoted on an automated quotation
system operated by a national securities association approved by regulation of
the commission, a balance sheet of the issuer as of a date within 18 months of
the offer or sale of the issuer's securities and a profit and loss statement
for either the fiscal year preceding that date or the most recent year of
operations, the names of the issuer's proprietor, partners or officers, the
nature of the enterprises of the issuer and any available information
reasonably necessary for evaluating the desirability or lack of desirability of
investing in the securities of an issuer. All transactions in securities
described in this subdivision shall comply with the provisions of § 13.1-507 of
the Act;
20. Fail to disclose that the broker-dealer is controlled by,
controlling, affiliated with or under common control with the issuer of any
security before entering into any contract with or for a customer for the
purchase or sale of the security, the existence of control to the customer, and
if disclosure is not made in writing, it shall be supplemented by the giving or
sending of written disclosure at or before the completion of the transaction;
21. Fail to make a bona fide public offering of all of the
securities allotted to a broker-dealer for distribution, whether acquired as an
underwriter, a selling group member, or from a member participating in the
distribution as an underwriter or selling group member;
22. Fail or refuse to furnish a customer, upon reasonable
request, information to which the customer is entitled, or to respond to a
formal written request or complaint;
23. Fail to clearly and separately disclose to its customer,
prior to any security transaction, providing investment advice for compensation
or any materially related transaction that the customer's funds or securities
will be in the custody of an investment advisor or contracted custodian, in a
manner that does not provide Securities Investor Protection Corporation
protection, or equivalent third-party coverage over the customer's assets;
24. Market broker-dealer services that are associated with
financial institutions in a manner that is misleading or confusing to customers
as to the nature of securities products or risks;
25. In transactions subject to breakpoints, fail to:
a. Utilize advantageous breakpoints without reasonable basis
for their exclusion;
b. Determine information that should be recorded on the books
and records of a member or its clearing firm, which is necessary to determine the
availability and appropriateness of breakpoint opportunities; or
c. Inquire whether the customer has positions or transactions
away from the member that should be considered in connection with the pending
transaction and apprise the customer of the breakpoint opportunities;
26. Use a certification or professional designation in
connection with the offer, sale, or purchase of securities that indicates or
implies that the user has special certification or training in advising or
servicing senior citizens or retirees in such a way as to mislead any person.
a. The use of such certification or professional designation
includes, but is not limited to, the following:
(1) Use of a certification or designation by a person who has
not actually earned or is otherwise ineligible to use such certification or
designation;
(2) Use of a nonexistent or self-conferred certification or
professional designation;
(3) Use of a certification or professional designation that
indicates or implies a level of occupational qualifications obtained through
education, training, or experience that the person using the certification or
professional designation does not have; or
(4) Use of a certification or professional designation that
was obtained from a designating or certifying organization that:
(a) Is primarily engaged in the business of instruction in
sales or marketing;
(b) Does not have reasonable standards or procedures for
assuring the competency of its designees or certificants;
(c) Does not have reasonable standards or procedures for
monitoring and disciplining its designees or certificants for improper or
unethical conduct; or
(d) Does not have reasonable continuing education requirements
for its designees or certificants in order to maintain the designation or
certificate.
b. There is a rebuttable presumption that a designating or
certifying organization is not disqualified solely for purposes of subdivision
26 a (4) of this subsection, when the organization has been accredited by:
(1) The American National Standards Institute;
(2) The Institute for Credentialing Excellence (formerly the
National Commission for Certifying Agencies); or
(3) An organization that is on the United States U.S.
Department of Education's list entitled "Accrediting Agencies Recognized
for Title IV Purposes" and the designation or credential issued therefrom
does not primarily apply to sales or marketing.
c. In determining whether a combination of words (or an
acronym standing for a combination of words) constitutes a certification or
professional designation indicating or implying that a person has special
certification or training in advising or servicing senior citizens or retirees,
factors to be considered shall include:
(1) Use of one or more words such as "senior,"
"retirement," "elder," or like words, combined with one or
more words such as "certified," "chartered,"
"adviser," "specialist," "consultant,"
"planner," or like words, in the name of the certification or
professional designation; and
(2) The manner in which those words are combined.
d. For purposes of this section, a certification or
professional designation does not include a job title within an organization
that is licensed or registered by a state or federal financial services
regulatory agency when that job title:
(1) Indicates seniority within the organization; or
(2) Specifies an individual's area of specialization within
the organization.
For purposes of this subdivision d, "financial services
regulatory agency" includes, but is not limited to, an agency that
regulates broker-dealers, investment advisers, or investment companies as
defined under § 3 (a)(1) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (15 USC
§ 80a-3(a)(1)).
e. Nothing in this regulation shall limit the commission's
authority to enforce existing provisions of law;
27. Represent that securities will be listed or that
application for listing will be made on a securities exchange or the National
Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations (NASDAQ) system or other
quotation system without reasonable basis in fact for the representation;
28. Falsify or alter so as to make false or misleading any
record or document or any information provided to the commission;
29. Negotiate, facilitate, or otherwise execute a transaction
on behalf of an investor involving securities issued by a third party pursuant
to a claim for exemption under subsection B of § 13.1-514 of the Act
unless the broker-dealer intends to report the securities owned and the value
of such securities on at least a quarterly basis to the investor;
30. Offer or sell securities pursuant to a claim for exemption
under subsection B of § 13.1-514 of the Act without having first verified the
information relating to the securities offered or sold, which shall include,
but not be limited to, ascertaining the risks associated with investing in the
respective security;
31. Allow any person to represent or utilize its name as a
trading platform without conspicuously disclosing the name of the registered
broker-dealer in effecting or attempting to effect purchases and sales of
securities; or
32. Engage in any conduct that constitutes a dishonest or
unethical practice including, but not limited to, forgery, embezzlement,
nondisclosure, incomplete disclosure or material omissions or untrue statements
of material facts, manipulative or deceptive practices, or fraudulent course of
business.
B. Every agent is required to observe high standards of
commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade in the conduct of
his business. The acts and practices described below in this
subsection are considered contrary to such standards and may constitute
grounds for denial, suspension, or revocation of registration or such other
action authorized by the Act. No agent who is registered or required to be
registered shall:
1. Engage in the practice of lending or borrowing money or
securities from a customer, or acting as a custodian for money, securities or
an executed stock power of a customer;
2. Effect any securities transaction not recorded on the
regular books or records of the broker-dealer which the agent represents,
unless the transaction is authorized in writing by the broker-dealer prior to
execution of the transaction;
3. Establish or maintain an account containing fictitious
information in order to execute a transaction which would otherwise be unlawful
or prohibited;
4. Share directly or indirectly in profits or losses in the
account of any customer without the written authorization of the customer and
the broker-dealer which the agent represents;
5. Divide or otherwise split the agent's commissions, profits
or other compensation from the purchase or sale of securities in this state
Commonwealth with any person not also registered as an agent for the
same broker-dealer, or for a broker-dealer under direct or indirect common
control;
6. Engage in conduct specified in subdivision A 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,
10, 15, 16, 17, 18, 23, 24, 25, 26, 28, 30, 31, or 32 of this section;
7. Fail to comply with the continuing education requirements
under 21VAC5-20-150 C; or
8. Hold oneself out as representing any person other than the
broker-dealer with whom the agent is registered and, in the case of an agent
whose normal place of business is not on the premises of the broker-dealer,
failing to conspicuously disclose the name of the broker-dealer for whom the
agent is registered when representing the dealer in effecting or attempting to
effect the purchases or sales of securities.
C. No person shall publish, give publicity to, or circulate
any notice, circular, advertisement, newspaper article, letter, investment
service or communication which, though not purporting to offer a security for
sale, describes the security, for a consideration received or to be received,
directly or indirectly, from an issuer, underwriter, or dealer, without fully
disclosing the receipt, whether past or prospective, of such consideration and
the amount thereof.
D. The purpose of this subsection is to identify practices in
the securities business that are generally associated with schemes to
manipulate and to identify prohibited business conduct of broker-dealers or
sales agents who are registered or required to be registered.
1. Entering into a transaction with a customer in any security
at an unreasonable price or at a price not reasonably related to the current market
price of the security or receiving an unreasonable commission or profit.
2. Contradicting or negating the importance of any information
contained in a prospectus or other offering materials with intent to deceive or
mislead or using any advertising or sales presentation in a deceptive or
misleading manner.
3. In connection with the offer, sale, or purchase of a
security, falsely leading a customer to believe that the broker-dealer or agent
is in possession of material, nonpublic information that would affect the value
of the security.
4. In connection with the solicitation of a sale or purchase
of a security, engaging in a pattern or practice of making contradictory
recommendations to different investors of similar investment objective for some
to sell and others to purchase the same security, at or about the same time,
when not justified by the particular circumstances of each investor.
5. Failing to make a bona fide public offering of all the
securities allotted to a broker-dealer for distribution by, among other things,
(i) transferring securities to a customer, another broker-dealer, or a
fictitious account with the understanding that those securities will be
returned to the broker-dealer or its nominees or (ii) parking or withholding
securities.
6. Although nothing in this subsection precludes a.
In addition to the application of the general anti-fraud provisions against
anyone for practices similar in nature to the practices discussed below in
this subdivision 6, the following subdivisions a (1) through f
(6) specifically apply only in connection with the solicitation of a
purchase or sale of over the counter (OTC) unlisted non-NASDAQ equity
securities except those exempt from registration under 21VAC5-40-50:
a. (1) Failing to advise the customer, both at
the time of solicitation and on the confirmation, of any and all compensation
related to a specific securities transaction to be paid to the agent including
commissions, sales charges, or concessions.
b. (2) In connection with a principal transaction,
failing to disclose, both at the time of solicitation and on the confirmation,
a short inventory position in the firm's account of more than 3.0% of the
issued and outstanding shares of that class of securities of the issuer;
however, subdivision 6 of this subsection shall apply only if the firm is a
market maker at the time of the solicitation.
c. (3). Conducting sales contests in a
particular security.
d. (4) After a solicited purchase by a customer,
failing or refusing, in connection with a principal transaction, to promptly
execute sell orders.
e. (5) Soliciting a secondary market transaction
when there has not been a bona fide distribution in the primary market.
f. (6) Engaging in a pattern of compensating an
agent in different amounts for effecting sales and purchases in the same
security.
b. Although subdivisions D 6 a (1) through (6) of this
section do not apply to OTC unlisted non-NASDAQ equity securities exempt from
registration under 21VAC5-40-50, nothing in this subsection precludes application
of the general anti-fraud provisions against anyone for practices similar in
nature to the practices discussed in subdivisions D 6 a (1) through (6) of this
section in connection with such securities.
7. Effecting any transaction in, or inducing the purchase or
sale of, any security by means of any manipulative, deceptive, or other
fraudulent device or contrivance including but not limited to the use of boiler
room tactics or use of fictitious or nominee accounts.
8. Failing to comply with any prospectus delivery requirements
promulgated under federal law or the Act.
9. In connection with the solicitation of a sale or purchase
of an OTC unlisted non-NASDAQ security, failing to promptly provide the most
current prospectus or the most recently filed periodic report filed under § 13
of the Securities Exchange Act when requested to do so by a customer.
10. Marking any order tickets or confirmations as unsolicited
when in fact the transaction was solicited.
11. For any month in which activity has occurred in a
customer's account, but in no event less than every three months, failing to
provide each customer with a statement of account with respect to all OTC
non-NASDAQ equity securities in the account, containing a value for each such
security based on the closing market bid on a date certain; however, this
subdivision shall apply only if the firm has been a market maker in the
security at any time during the month in which the monthly or quarterly
statement is issued.
12. Failing to comply with any applicable provision of the
FINRA Rules or any applicable fair practice, privacy, or ethical standard
promulgated by the SEC or by a self-regulatory organization approved by the
SEC.
13. In connection with the solicitation of a purchase or sale
of a designated security:
a. Failing to disclose to the customer the bid and ask price,
at which the broker-dealer effects transactions with individual, retail
customers, of the designated security as well as its spread in both percentage
and dollar amounts at the time of solicitation and on the trade confirmation
documents; or
b. Failing to include with the confirmation, the notice
disclosure contained under 21VAC5-20-285, except the following shall be exempt
from this requirement:
(1) Transactions in which the price of the designated security
is $5.00 or more, exclusive of costs or charges; however, if the designated
security is a unit composed of one or more securities, the unit price divided
by the number of components of the unit other than warrants, options, rights,
or similar securities must be $5.00 or more, and any component of the unit that
is a warrant, option, right, or similar securities, or a convertible security
must have an exercise price or conversion price of $5.00 or more.
(2) Transactions that are not recommended by the broker-dealer
or agent.
(3) Transactions by a broker-dealer (i) whose commissions,
commission equivalents, and mark-ups from transactions in designated securities
during each of the preceding three months, and during 11 or more of the
preceding 12 months, did not exceed 5.0% of its total commissions,
commission-equivalents, and mark-ups from transactions in securities during
those months; and (ii) who has not executed principal transactions in
connection with the solicitation to purchase the designated security that is
the subject of the transaction in the preceding 12 months.
(4) Any transaction or transactions that, upon prior written
request or upon its own motion, the commission conditionally or unconditionally
exempts as not encompassed within the purposes of this section.
c. For purposes of this section, the term "designated
security" means any equity security other than a security:
(1) Registered, or approved for registration upon notice of
issuance, on a national securities exchange and makes transaction reports
available pursuant to 17 CFR 11Aa3-1 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934;
(2) Authorized, or approved for authorization upon notice of
issuance, for quotation in the NASDAQ system;
(3) Issued by an investment company registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940;
(4) That is a put option or call option issued by The Options
Clearing Corporation; or
(5) Whose issuer has net tangible assets in excess of $4
million as demonstrated by financial statements dated within no less than 15
months that the broker-dealer has reviewed and has a reasonable basis to
believe are true and complete in relation to the date of the transaction with
the person, and
(a) In the event the issuer is other than a foreign private
issuer, are the most recent financial statements for the issuer that have been
audited and reported on by an independent public accountant in accordance with
the provisions of 17 CFR 210.2-02 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; or
(b) In the event the issuer is a foreign private issuer, are
the most recent financial statements for the issuer that have been filed with
the SEC; furnished to the SEC pursuant to 17 CFR 240.12g3-2(b) under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934; or prepared in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles in the country of incorporation, audited in
compliance with the requirements of that jurisdiction, and reported on by an
accountant duly registered and in good standing in accordance with the
regulations of that jurisdiction.
21VAC5-45-30. Federal Regulation A Tier 2 offerings.
A. An issuer planning to offer and sell securities in this
Commonwealth in an offering exempt under Tier 2 of federal Regulation A (17 CFR
230.251 through 17 CFR 230.263) and § 18(b)(3) or 18(b)(4) of the Securities
Act of 1933 (15 USC § 77a) shall submit the following at least 21 calendar
days prior to the initial sale in this Commonwealth:
1. A completed Regulation A – Tier 2 notice filing form or
copies of all documents filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission;
2. A consent to service of process on Form U-2 if not
filing on the Regulation A – Tier 2 notice filing form; and
3. A filing fee of $500 payable the Treasurer of Virginia.
B. The initial notice filing is effective for 12 months
from the date of the filing with this Commonwealth. For each additional
12-month period in which the same offering is continued, an issuer conducting a
Tier 2 offering under federal Regulation A may renew its notice filing by
filing the following on or before the expiration of the notice filing:
1. The Regulation A – Tier 2 notice filing form marked
"renewal" or a cover letter or other document requesting renewal; and
2. A renewal fee in the amount of $250 payable to the
Treasurer of Virginia.
C. An issuer may increase the amount of securities offered
in this Commonwealth by submitting a Regulation A – Tier 2 notice filing form
marked "amendment" or other document describing the transaction.
NOTICE: The following
forms used in administering the regulation were filed by the agency. The forms
are not being published; however, online users of this issue of the Virginia
Register of Regulations may click on the name of a form with a hyperlink to
access it. The forms are also available from the agency contact or may be
viewed at the Office of the Registrar of Regulations, General Assembly
Building, 2nd Floor, Richmond, Virginia 23219.
FORMS (21VAC5-45)
Form D, Notice of Exempt Offering of Securities,
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, SEC1972 (rev. 2/12).
Uniform
Consent to Service of Process, Form U-2 (7/1981)
Uniform
Notice of Regulation A - Tier 2 Offering (undated, filed 10/2016)
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4869; Filed October 17, 2016, 3:22 p.m.
TITLE 23. TAXATION
DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION
Fast-Track Regulation
Titles of Regulations: 23VAC10-20. General Provisions
Applicable to All Taxes Administered by the Department of Taxation (amending 23VAC10-20-180).
23VAC10-110. Individual Income Tax (repealing 23VAC10-110-70).
23VAC10-115. Fiduciary Income Tax (amending 23VAC10-115-110).
23VAC10-120. Corporation Income Tax (repealing 23VAC10-120-30).
Statutory Authority: § 58.1-203 of the Code of Virginia.
Public Hearing Information: No public hearings are
scheduled.
Public Comment Deadline: January 17, 2017.
Effective Date: February 1, 2017.
Agency Contact: Matthew Huntley, Senior Policy Analyst,
Department of Taxation, P.O. Box 27185, Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804)
786-2010, or email matthew.huntley@tax.virginia.gov.
Basis: Section 58.1-203 of the Code of Virginia provides
that the Tax Commissioner shall have the power to issue regulations relating to
the interpretation and enforcement of the laws of this Commonwealth governing
taxes administered by the Department of Taxation. The authority for the current
regulatory action is discretionary.
Purpose: This regulatory action amends the General
Provisions Applicable to All Taxes Administered by the Department of Taxation
regulations to strike provisions that are no longer accurate and to consolidate
certain provisions that are currently repeated within the Virginia
Administrative Code. This action has no impact on the public health, safety,
and welfare.
The affected provisions deal with the due dates for filing
amended tax returns, as well as the definition of a final determination for
purposes of determining when a taxpayer is required to file an amended return
based on a change in any federal tax. Section 58.1-1823 A of the Code of
Virginia provides deadlines regarding when a taxpayer may file an amended
return. Among such deadlines is a rule that a taxpayer has one year from the
final determination of any change or correction in the liability for the
taxpayer for any federal tax upon which the state tax is based to file an
amended return. In addition to this rule, § 58.1-311 of the Code of Virginia
specifically requires individuals, estates, trusts, and corporations to file an
amended Virginia income tax return reporting any change or correction in
federal taxable income made by the Internal Revenue Service within one year
after the final determination of such change or correction.
The regulation sections affected by this action were
promulgated prior to the enactment of legislation that modified the statutory
language. Repealing these provisions updates the regulations so that they are
consistent with the statute. In addition, the affected regulation sections
contain a definition of what constitutes a "final determination" for
purposes of determining the deadline for filing an amended return. Because the
same definition applies to multiple tax types, this action consolidates the
definition in one regulation.
This regulatory action does not reflect any change in current
tax policy and has no impact on the administration of any taxes.
Rationale for Using Fast-Track Rulemaking Process: The
fast-track rulemaking process is intended for proposed regulations that are
expected to be noncontroversial. As this regulatory action repeals regulatory
provisions that are duplicative of underlying statutory provisions and
consolidates the location of a regulatory definition, this action is not
expected to be controversial.
Substance: This regulatory action amends the General
Provisions Applicable to All Taxes Administered by the Department of Taxation
regulations to strike provisions that are no longer accurate and to consolidate
certain provisions that are currently repeated within the Virginia
Administrative Code.
The affected provisions deal with the due dates for filing
amended tax returns, as well as the definition of a final determination for
purposes of determining when a taxpayer is required to file an amended return
based on a change in any federal tax. Section 58.1-1823 A of the Code of
Virginia provides that any person filing a tax return or paying an assessment
for any tax administered by the department may file an amended return within
the later of:
• Three years from the last day prescribed by law for the
timely filing of the return;
• One year from the final determination of any change or
correction in the liability of the taxpayer for any federal tax upon which the
state tax is based, provided that the refund does not exceed the amount of the
decrease in Virginia tax attributable to such federal change or correction;
• Two years from the filing of an amended Virginia return
resulting in the payment of additional tax, provided that the amended return
raises issues relating solely to such prior amended return and that the refund
does not exceed the amount of the payment with such prior amended return;
• Two years from the payment of an assessment, provided that
the amended return raises issues relating solely to such assessment and that
the refund does not exceed the amount of such payment; or
• One year from the final determination of any change or
correction in the income tax of the taxpayer for any other state, provided that
the refund does not exceed the amount of the decrease in Virginia tax
attributable to such change or correction.
During the 1992, 1996, 1998, 2006, and 2010 Sessions, the
General Assembly made several modifications to § 58.1-1823 A of the Code of
Virginia. See 1992 House Bill 227 (1992 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 678), 1996
House Bill 583 (1996 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 654), 1996 Senate Bill 182 (1996
Acts of Assembly, Chapter 637), 1998 House Bill 629 (1998 Acts of Assembly,
Chapter 374), 1998 Senate Bill 543 (1998 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 358), 2006
Senate Bill 583 (2006 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 234), and 2010 House Bill 384
(2010 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 228). Because 23VAC10-20-180, 23VAC10-110-70,
23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 were promulgated prior to the enactment of
such legislation, the provisions in these regulation sections regarding the
deadlines for filing an amended return are incomplete and inaccurate. In
addition, these provisions are unnecessary because they are duplicative of the
information that is provided in § 58.1-1823 of the Code of Virginia. Therefore,
this regulatory action strikes the provisions of 23VAC10-20-180,
23VAC10-110-70, 23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 regarding deadlines for
filing an amended return.
Under § 58.1-311 of the Code of Virginia, if any individual,
estate, trust, or corporate taxpayer's federal taxable income reported on its
federal income tax return is changed or corrected by the Internal Revenue
Service, such taxpayer is required to file an amended Virginia income tax
return reporting such change or correction within one year after the final
determination of such change or correction. During the 2006 Session, the
General Assembly enacted Senate Bill 583, which extended the reporting deadline
from 90 days to one year. See 2006 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 234. Because
23VAC10-110-70, 23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 were promulgated prior to
the enactment of such legislation, the provisions in these regulation sections
regarding reporting changes or corrections of federal taxable income are
inaccurate. In addition, these provisions are unnecessary because they are duplicative
of the information that is provided in § 58.1-311 of the Code of Virginia.
Therefore, this regulatory action strikes the provisions of 23VAC10-110-70,
23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 regarding reporting changes or corrections
of federal taxable income.
23VAC10-110-70, 23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 each define
the term "final determination" by referencing the definition of such
term that is provided in 23VAC10-20-180. The regulatory definition of the term
"final determination" is important because it is not defined in the
underlying statute, § 58.1-311 of the Code of Virginia. Because it is
unnecessary to have four separate, but virtually identical, definitions of the
same term in the regulations, this regulatory action strikes the provisions of
23VAC10-110-70, 23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 that define "final
determination." This regulatory action also amends 23VAC10-20-180 to
include language stating that such definition applies for purposes of §§
58.1-311 and 58.1-1823 of the Code of Virginia.
23VAC10-115-110 provides information regarding due dates for
returns of estates and trusts and who is required to file returns of estates
and trusts. These provisions are unnecessary because they are duplicative of
the information that is provided in § 58.1-381 of the Code of Virginia.
Therefore, this regulatory action strikes such provisions.
This regulatory action does not reflect any change in current
tax policy and has no impact on the administration of any taxes.
Issues: The advantage to the public and the Commonwealth
is the repeal regulatory provisions that are duplicative of underlying
statutory provisions and the consolidation of the location of a regulatory
definition. There are no disadvantages to the public or the Commonwealth
associated with this regulatory action.
Department of Planning and Budget's Economic Impact
Analysis:
Summary of the Proposed Amendments to Regulation. The
Department of Taxation proposes to repeal provisions that are no longer
accurate due to statutory changes or duplicative of the statutory language and
to consolidate certain provisions in the regulation.
Result of Analysis. The benefits likely exceed the costs for
all proposed changes.
Estimated Economic Impact. This regulation contains general
provisions applicable to Individual Income, Fiduciary Income, and Corporation
Income Taxes. The proposed regulation will repeal deadlines for amended returns
and for reporting of changes or corrections to the federal taxable income.
Numerous statutory changes in the 1992, 1996, 1998, 2006, and 2010 Virginia
General Assembly sessions amended §§ 58.1-311 and 58.1-1823 of the Code of
Virginia and rendered the current regulatory language incomplete and
inaccurate. In addition, these regulatory provisions are unnecessary because they
are duplicative of the information provided in the statute. Similarly, the due
dates for returns of estates and trusts are duplicative of § 58.1-381 of the
Code of Virginia. Repealing these provisions would update the regulations so
that they are consistent with the statute. In addition, the definition of
"final determination" is identical for all taxes in this regulation
and will be consolidated to apply to all of them. Since this regulatory action
does not reflect any change in current tax policy or on the administration of
any taxes, no economic effect is expected other than eliminating conflicting
information between the Code of Virginia and the regulation that may cause
confusion.
Businesses and Entities Affected. This regulation applies to
individuals and businesses subject to Individual Income, Fiduciary Income, and
Corporation Income Taxes. In the 2013 taxable year, 3,765,669 individual tax
returns, 66,580 corporate income tax returns, and 67,637 fiduciary income tax
returns were filed. In addition, according to the 2013 North American Industry
Classification System, there were 1,154 certified public accountant (CPA)
establishments, 628 non-CPA tax preparation establishments, and 1,187 non-CPA
establishments offering accounting, bookkeeping, or billing services along with
payroll services in Virginia.
Localities Particularly Affected. The proposed changes apply
statewide.
Projected Impact on Employment. No impact on employment is
expected.
Effects on the Use and Value of Private Property. No impact on
the use and value of private property is expected.
Real Estate Development Costs. No impact on real estate
development costs is expected.
Small Businesses:
Definition. Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.04 of the Code of Virginia,
small business is defined as "a business entity, including its affiliates,
that (i) is independently owned and operated and (ii) employs fewer than 500
full-time employees or has gross annual sales of less than $6 million."
Costs and Other Effects. The Department of Taxation estimates
that there are about 143,612 small businesses with employees in Virginia. In
addition, almost all tax preparation or payroll service providers are small
businesses. The proposed amendments do not impose costs on these entities, but
will benefit them by elimination the inconsistencies between the statutes and
the regulation.
Alternative Method that Minimizes Adverse Impact. No adverse
impact on small businesses is expected.
Adverse Impacts:
Businesses. A small percentage of the entities this regulation
applies to is believed to be non-small businesses. The proposed amendments do
not impose any adverse impact on them.
Localities. The proposed amendments will not adversely affect
localities.
Other Entities. The proposed amendments will not adversely
affect other entities.
Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The
Department of Taxation agrees with the Department of Planning and Budget's
economic impact analysis.
Summary:
This regulatory action removes provisions that are no
longer accurate due to several statutory changes and consolidates certain
provisions that are currently repeated within the Virginia Administrative Code.
The affected provisions deal with the due dates for filing amended tax returns
and the definition of a final determination for purposes of determining when a
taxpayer is required to file an amended return based on a change in any federal
tax. This regulatory action does not reflect any change in current tax policy
and will have no impact on the administration of any taxes.
23VAC10-20-180. Amended returns claiming a refund.
A. Filing.
1. Amended returns claiming a refund of any tax administered
by the department Department of Taxation are governed by
§ 58.1-1823 of the Code of Virginia. Amended returns claiming a refund
must be filed within three years from the last day prescribed by law for the
timely filing of the original return or, if later, within 60 days from the
final determination of any change or correction in the liability of the
taxpayer for any federal tax upon which the Virginia tax is based.
2. The amended return shall supply all the information
required in an original return and, in addition, the taxpayer must attach a
statement explaining the changes made and the reasons for the changes. If the
refund claim is due to a change in federal taxable income or estate, the
taxpayer must furnish a copy of the Revenue Agent's Report or other appropriate
notice that the change has been accepted by the Internal Revenue Service.
a. When a dealer is applying for a refund of sales tax, the
dealer shall attach a list of the purchasers from whom the tax was collected
and to whom the refund and interest, if allowed, will be paid.
b. When a consumer is applying for a refund of sales or use
tax assessed against a dealer or contractor, the consumer shall identify the
dealer or contractor, explain the circumstances surrounding the payment by the
consumer, and explain why the claim for refund could not, or
would not, be made by the dealer or contractor.
3. The time limit specified above applies only to amended
returns claiming a refund and does not apply to amended returns showing a tax
due. The period for assessing taxes due may vary for each type of tax and may
also depend on circumstances such as fraud or failure to file a return.
4. 3. See § 58.1-9 of the Code of Virginia for
provisions relating to filing a return by mail.
B. Final determination. For the purposes of this
regulation §§ 58.1-311 and 58.1-1823 of the Code of Virginia,
any one of the following shall be deemed a final determination of a change in
liability for the federal tax:
1. Payment or refund of any federal income or estate tax,
not the subject of any other final determination described in subdivision 2, 3,
4, or 5 of this subsection B. The payment of a federal income or
estate tax is a final determination for Virginia purposes even though a refund
suit may be pending or contemplated which that could result in
another "final determination";
2. The receipt of an assessment or other notice that the
amount of deficiency or overassessment stated on federal Form 870 or similar
form has been agreed to by the IRS;
3. The expiration of the 90-day time period (150-day period in
the case of notice addressed to a person outside the states of the union and
the District of Columbia) within which a petition for redetermination may be
filed with the U.S. United States Tax Court with respect to a
statutory notice of deficiency issued by the Internal Revenue Service, if a
petition is not filed with that court within such time;
4. A closing agreement entered into with the Internal Revenue
Service under Section § 7121 of the Internal Revenue Code (26
USC § 1 et seq.). The "final determination" shall
occur when the taxpayer receives notice of the signing by the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue;
5. A decision by the U.S. United States Tax
Court, U.S. District Court a United States district court, the
U.S. Claims Court, U.S. Court of Appeals a United States court of
appeals, or the United States Supreme Court that has become final, or the
date the court approves a voluntary agreement stipulating disposition of the
case.
C. Assessment. The denial in whole or in part of taxpayers
a taxpayer's claim for refund, or the department's failure to act within
three months, is treated as an assessment for the purpose of permitting a
taxpayer to pursue other administrative and judicial remedies, but only as to
matters first raised by the amended return. Therefore an amended return should
not be filed if the claim for refund involves issues that were previously
considered in the course of an audit, application for correction, or
protective claim.
23VAC10-110-70. Report of change of federal taxable income.
(Repealed.)
A. Report. If the amount of any individual's federal
taxable income is changed or corrected by the Internal Revenue Service or other
competent authority or as the result of a renegotiation of a contract or
subcontract with the United States, such individual must report the change or
correction to the department within 90 days from the date of the final
determination of such change, correction, or renegotiation. In reporting a
change, correction or renegotiation, the individual shall either concede its
accuracy or state why such is erroneous.
B. Amended return. When any individual files an amended
federal income tax return for any taxable year, he must also file an amended
Virginia return for such taxable year. The amended return must be filed within
90 days of the filing of the complementary federal amended return, except that
any amended return claiming a refund for overpayment of tax must be filed
within 60 days of the final determination of any changes in his federal tax
liability. (See 23VAC10-20-180.)
C. Final determination. For purposes of this section a
"final determination" of a change in federal tax liability shall have
the same meaning as set forth in 23VAC10-20-180.
23VAC10-115-110. Returns of estates and trusts.
A. Filing requirements. 1. Every resident estate or trust
which that either is required to file a federal income tax return
for the taxable year or which that has any Virginia taxable
income for the taxable year must file an income tax return. If the return is
for a fractional part of a year, the due date shall be determined as if the
return were for a full 12-month period, that is, it shall be due by the 15th
day of the fourth month after the close of the taxable year.
2. B. Every nonresident estate or trust having
Virginia taxable income for the taxable year determined under 23VAC10-115-50
must file an income tax return.
3. C. The return must be accompanied by a copy
of any federal fiduciary tax return filed for such taxable year.
B. Due date.
1. The return is due on or before May 1 of each year for
fiduciaries filing on a calendar-year basis.
2. If the return is for a fiscal or fractional year, it is
due on or before the 15th day of the fourth month after the close of the
taxable year.
C. Who to file.
1. Deceased individual. The return for any deceased
individual shall be made and filed by his executor, administrator, or other
person charged with his property.
2. Fiduciary. The return for an estate or trust shall be
made and filed by the fiduciary.
3. Two or more fiduciaries. If two or more fiduciaries are
acting jointly, the return may be made by any one of them.
D. Report of change. If the amount of any fiduciary's
federal taxable income is changed or corrected by the Internal Revenue Service
or other competent authority or as the result of a renegotiation of a contract
or subcontract with the United States, such fiduciary must report the change or
correction to the department within 90 days from the date of the final
determination of such change, correction, or renegotiation. In reporting a
change, correction or renegotiation, the fiduciary shall either concede its
accuracy or state why such is erroneous.
E. Amended return. When any fiduciary files an amended
federal income tax return for any taxable year, it must also file an amended
Virginia return for such taxable year. The amended return must be filed within
90 days of the filing of the complementary federal amended return, except that
any amended return claiming a refund for overpayment of tax must be filed
within 60 days of the final determination of any changes in its federal tax
liability. (See 23VAC10- 20-180.)
F. Final determination. For purposes of this section a
"final determination" of a change in federal tax liability shall have
the same meaning as set forth in 23VAC10-20-180 B.
23VAC10-120-30. Report of change of federal taxable income.
(Repealed.)
A. Report. If the amount of any corporation's federal
taxable income is changed or corrected by the Internal Revenue Service or other
competent authority or as the result of a renegotiation of a contract or
subcontract with the United States, such corporation must report the change or
correction to the department within 90 days from the date of the final
determination of such change, correction, or renegotiation. In reporting a
change, correction or renegotiation, the corporation shall either concede its
accuracy or state why such is erroneous.
B. Amended return. When any corporation files an amended
federal income tax return for any taxable year, it must also file an amended
Virginia return for such taxable year. The amended return must be filed within
90 days of the filing of the complementary federal amended return, except that
any amended return claiming a refund for over-payment of tax must be filed
within 60 days of the final determination of any changes in its federal tax
liability. (See 23VAC10-20-180.)
C. Final determination. For purposes of this section a
"final determination" of a change in federal tax liability shall have
the same meaning as set forth in 23VAC10-20-180 B.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4737; Filed October 12, 2016, 2:24 p.m.
TITLE 23. TAXATION
DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION
Fast-Track Regulation
Titles of Regulations: 23VAC10-20. General Provisions
Applicable to All Taxes Administered by the Department of Taxation (amending 23VAC10-20-180).
23VAC10-110. Individual Income Tax (repealing 23VAC10-110-70).
23VAC10-115. Fiduciary Income Tax (amending 23VAC10-115-110).
23VAC10-120. Corporation Income Tax (repealing 23VAC10-120-30).
Statutory Authority: § 58.1-203 of the Code of Virginia.
Public Hearing Information: No public hearings are
scheduled.
Public Comment Deadline: January 17, 2017.
Effective Date: February 1, 2017.
Agency Contact: Matthew Huntley, Senior Policy Analyst,
Department of Taxation, P.O. Box 27185, Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804)
786-2010, or email matthew.huntley@tax.virginia.gov.
Basis: Section 58.1-203 of the Code of Virginia provides
that the Tax Commissioner shall have the power to issue regulations relating to
the interpretation and enforcement of the laws of this Commonwealth governing
taxes administered by the Department of Taxation. The authority for the current
regulatory action is discretionary.
Purpose: This regulatory action amends the General
Provisions Applicable to All Taxes Administered by the Department of Taxation
regulations to strike provisions that are no longer accurate and to consolidate
certain provisions that are currently repeated within the Virginia
Administrative Code. This action has no impact on the public health, safety,
and welfare.
The affected provisions deal with the due dates for filing
amended tax returns, as well as the definition of a final determination for
purposes of determining when a taxpayer is required to file an amended return
based on a change in any federal tax. Section 58.1-1823 A of the Code of
Virginia provides deadlines regarding when a taxpayer may file an amended
return. Among such deadlines is a rule that a taxpayer has one year from the
final determination of any change or correction in the liability for the
taxpayer for any federal tax upon which the state tax is based to file an
amended return. In addition to this rule, § 58.1-311 of the Code of Virginia
specifically requires individuals, estates, trusts, and corporations to file an
amended Virginia income tax return reporting any change or correction in
federal taxable income made by the Internal Revenue Service within one year
after the final determination of such change or correction.
The regulation sections affected by this action were
promulgated prior to the enactment of legislation that modified the statutory
language. Repealing these provisions updates the regulations so that they are
consistent with the statute. In addition, the affected regulation sections
contain a definition of what constitutes a "final determination" for
purposes of determining the deadline for filing an amended return. Because the
same definition applies to multiple tax types, this action consolidates the
definition in one regulation.
This regulatory action does not reflect any change in current
tax policy and has no impact on the administration of any taxes.
Rationale for Using Fast-Track Rulemaking Process: The
fast-track rulemaking process is intended for proposed regulations that are
expected to be noncontroversial. As this regulatory action repeals regulatory
provisions that are duplicative of underlying statutory provisions and
consolidates the location of a regulatory definition, this action is not
expected to be controversial.
Substance: This regulatory action amends the General
Provisions Applicable to All Taxes Administered by the Department of Taxation
regulations to strike provisions that are no longer accurate and to consolidate
certain provisions that are currently repeated within the Virginia
Administrative Code.
The affected provisions deal with the due dates for filing
amended tax returns, as well as the definition of a final determination for
purposes of determining when a taxpayer is required to file an amended return
based on a change in any federal tax. Section 58.1-1823 A of the Code of
Virginia provides that any person filing a tax return or paying an assessment
for any tax administered by the department may file an amended return within
the later of:
• Three years from the last day prescribed by law for the
timely filing of the return;
• One year from the final determination of any change or
correction in the liability of the taxpayer for any federal tax upon which the
state tax is based, provided that the refund does not exceed the amount of the
decrease in Virginia tax attributable to such federal change or correction;
• Two years from the filing of an amended Virginia return
resulting in the payment of additional tax, provided that the amended return
raises issues relating solely to such prior amended return and that the refund
does not exceed the amount of the payment with such prior amended return;
• Two years from the payment of an assessment, provided that
the amended return raises issues relating solely to such assessment and that
the refund does not exceed the amount of such payment; or
• One year from the final determination of any change or
correction in the income tax of the taxpayer for any other state, provided that
the refund does not exceed the amount of the decrease in Virginia tax
attributable to such change or correction.
During the 1992, 1996, 1998, 2006, and 2010 Sessions, the
General Assembly made several modifications to § 58.1-1823 A of the Code of
Virginia. See 1992 House Bill 227 (1992 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 678), 1996
House Bill 583 (1996 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 654), 1996 Senate Bill 182 (1996
Acts of Assembly, Chapter 637), 1998 House Bill 629 (1998 Acts of Assembly,
Chapter 374), 1998 Senate Bill 543 (1998 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 358), 2006
Senate Bill 583 (2006 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 234), and 2010 House Bill 384
(2010 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 228). Because 23VAC10-20-180, 23VAC10-110-70,
23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 were promulgated prior to the enactment of
such legislation, the provisions in these regulation sections regarding the
deadlines for filing an amended return are incomplete and inaccurate. In
addition, these provisions are unnecessary because they are duplicative of the
information that is provided in § 58.1-1823 of the Code of Virginia. Therefore,
this regulatory action strikes the provisions of 23VAC10-20-180,
23VAC10-110-70, 23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 regarding deadlines for
filing an amended return.
Under § 58.1-311 of the Code of Virginia, if any individual,
estate, trust, or corporate taxpayer's federal taxable income reported on its
federal income tax return is changed or corrected by the Internal Revenue
Service, such taxpayer is required to file an amended Virginia income tax
return reporting such change or correction within one year after the final
determination of such change or correction. During the 2006 Session, the
General Assembly enacted Senate Bill 583, which extended the reporting deadline
from 90 days to one year. See 2006 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 234. Because
23VAC10-110-70, 23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 were promulgated prior to
the enactment of such legislation, the provisions in these regulation sections
regarding reporting changes or corrections of federal taxable income are
inaccurate. In addition, these provisions are unnecessary because they are duplicative
of the information that is provided in § 58.1-311 of the Code of Virginia.
Therefore, this regulatory action strikes the provisions of 23VAC10-110-70,
23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 regarding reporting changes or corrections
of federal taxable income.
23VAC10-110-70, 23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 each define
the term "final determination" by referencing the definition of such
term that is provided in 23VAC10-20-180. The regulatory definition of the term
"final determination" is important because it is not defined in the
underlying statute, § 58.1-311 of the Code of Virginia. Because it is
unnecessary to have four separate, but virtually identical, definitions of the
same term in the regulations, this regulatory action strikes the provisions of
23VAC10-110-70, 23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 that define "final
determination." This regulatory action also amends 23VAC10-20-180 to
include language stating that such definition applies for purposes of §§
58.1-311 and 58.1-1823 of the Code of Virginia.
23VAC10-115-110 provides information regarding due dates for
returns of estates and trusts and who is required to file returns of estates
and trusts. These provisions are unnecessary because they are duplicative of
the information that is provided in § 58.1-381 of the Code of Virginia.
Therefore, this regulatory action strikes such provisions.
This regulatory action does not reflect any change in current
tax policy and has no impact on the administration of any taxes.
Issues: The advantage to the public and the Commonwealth
is the repeal regulatory provisions that are duplicative of underlying
statutory provisions and the consolidation of the location of a regulatory
definition. There are no disadvantages to the public or the Commonwealth
associated with this regulatory action.
Department of Planning and Budget's Economic Impact
Analysis:
Summary of the Proposed Amendments to Regulation. The
Department of Taxation proposes to repeal provisions that are no longer
accurate due to statutory changes or duplicative of the statutory language and
to consolidate certain provisions in the regulation.
Result of Analysis. The benefits likely exceed the costs for
all proposed changes.
Estimated Economic Impact. This regulation contains general
provisions applicable to Individual Income, Fiduciary Income, and Corporation
Income Taxes. The proposed regulation will repeal deadlines for amended returns
and for reporting of changes or corrections to the federal taxable income.
Numerous statutory changes in the 1992, 1996, 1998, 2006, and 2010 Virginia
General Assembly sessions amended §§ 58.1-311 and 58.1-1823 of the Code of
Virginia and rendered the current regulatory language incomplete and
inaccurate. In addition, these regulatory provisions are unnecessary because they
are duplicative of the information provided in the statute. Similarly, the due
dates for returns of estates and trusts are duplicative of § 58.1-381 of the
Code of Virginia. Repealing these provisions would update the regulations so
that they are consistent with the statute. In addition, the definition of
"final determination" is identical for all taxes in this regulation
and will be consolidated to apply to all of them. Since this regulatory action
does not reflect any change in current tax policy or on the administration of
any taxes, no economic effect is expected other than eliminating conflicting
information between the Code of Virginia and the regulation that may cause
confusion.
Businesses and Entities Affected. This regulation applies to
individuals and businesses subject to Individual Income, Fiduciary Income, and
Corporation Income Taxes. In the 2013 taxable year, 3,765,669 individual tax
returns, 66,580 corporate income tax returns, and 67,637 fiduciary income tax
returns were filed. In addition, according to the 2013 North American Industry
Classification System, there were 1,154 certified public accountant (CPA)
establishments, 628 non-CPA tax preparation establishments, and 1,187 non-CPA
establishments offering accounting, bookkeeping, or billing services along with
payroll services in Virginia.
Localities Particularly Affected. The proposed changes apply
statewide.
Projected Impact on Employment. No impact on employment is
expected.
Effects on the Use and Value of Private Property. No impact on
the use and value of private property is expected.
Real Estate Development Costs. No impact on real estate
development costs is expected.
Small Businesses:
Definition. Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.04 of the Code of Virginia,
small business is defined as "a business entity, including its affiliates,
that (i) is independently owned and operated and (ii) employs fewer than 500
full-time employees or has gross annual sales of less than $6 million."
Costs and Other Effects. The Department of Taxation estimates
that there are about 143,612 small businesses with employees in Virginia. In
addition, almost all tax preparation or payroll service providers are small
businesses. The proposed amendments do not impose costs on these entities, but
will benefit them by elimination the inconsistencies between the statutes and
the regulation.
Alternative Method that Minimizes Adverse Impact. No adverse
impact on small businesses is expected.
Adverse Impacts:
Businesses. A small percentage of the entities this regulation
applies to is believed to be non-small businesses. The proposed amendments do
not impose any adverse impact on them.
Localities. The proposed amendments will not adversely affect
localities.
Other Entities. The proposed amendments will not adversely
affect other entities.
Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The
Department of Taxation agrees with the Department of Planning and Budget's
economic impact analysis.
Summary:
This regulatory action removes provisions that are no
longer accurate due to several statutory changes and consolidates certain
provisions that are currently repeated within the Virginia Administrative Code.
The affected provisions deal with the due dates for filing amended tax returns
and the definition of a final determination for purposes of determining when a
taxpayer is required to file an amended return based on a change in any federal
tax. This regulatory action does not reflect any change in current tax policy
and will have no impact on the administration of any taxes.
23VAC10-20-180. Amended returns claiming a refund.
A. Filing.
1. Amended returns claiming a refund of any tax administered
by the department Department of Taxation are governed by
§ 58.1-1823 of the Code of Virginia. Amended returns claiming a refund
must be filed within three years from the last day prescribed by law for the
timely filing of the original return or, if later, within 60 days from the
final determination of any change or correction in the liability of the
taxpayer for any federal tax upon which the Virginia tax is based.
2. The amended return shall supply all the information
required in an original return and, in addition, the taxpayer must attach a
statement explaining the changes made and the reasons for the changes. If the
refund claim is due to a change in federal taxable income or estate, the
taxpayer must furnish a copy of the Revenue Agent's Report or other appropriate
notice that the change has been accepted by the Internal Revenue Service.
a. When a dealer is applying for a refund of sales tax, the
dealer shall attach a list of the purchasers from whom the tax was collected
and to whom the refund and interest, if allowed, will be paid.
b. When a consumer is applying for a refund of sales or use
tax assessed against a dealer or contractor, the consumer shall identify the
dealer or contractor, explain the circumstances surrounding the payment by the
consumer, and explain why the claim for refund could not, or
would not, be made by the dealer or contractor.
3. The time limit specified above applies only to amended
returns claiming a refund and does not apply to amended returns showing a tax
due. The period for assessing taxes due may vary for each type of tax and may
also depend on circumstances such as fraud or failure to file a return.
4. 3. See § 58.1-9 of the Code of Virginia for
provisions relating to filing a return by mail.
B. Final determination. For the purposes of this
regulation §§ 58.1-311 and 58.1-1823 of the Code of Virginia,
any one of the following shall be deemed a final determination of a change in
liability for the federal tax:
1. Payment or refund of any federal income or estate tax,
not the subject of any other final determination described in subdivision 2, 3,
4, or 5 of this subsection B. The payment of a federal income or
estate tax is a final determination for Virginia purposes even though a refund
suit may be pending or contemplated which that could result in
another "final determination";
2. The receipt of an assessment or other notice that the
amount of deficiency or overassessment stated on federal Form 870 or similar
form has been agreed to by the IRS;
3. The expiration of the 90-day time period (150-day period in
the case of notice addressed to a person outside the states of the union and
the District of Columbia) within which a petition for redetermination may be
filed with the U.S. United States Tax Court with respect to a
statutory notice of deficiency issued by the Internal Revenue Service, if a
petition is not filed with that court within such time;
4. A closing agreement entered into with the Internal Revenue
Service under Section § 7121 of the Internal Revenue Code (26
USC § 1 et seq.). The "final determination" shall
occur when the taxpayer receives notice of the signing by the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue;
5. A decision by the U.S. United States Tax
Court, U.S. District Court a United States district court, the
U.S. Claims Court, U.S. Court of Appeals a United States court of
appeals, or the United States Supreme Court that has become final, or the
date the court approves a voluntary agreement stipulating disposition of the
case.
C. Assessment. The denial in whole or in part of taxpayers
a taxpayer's claim for refund, or the department's failure to act within
three months, is treated as an assessment for the purpose of permitting a
taxpayer to pursue other administrative and judicial remedies, but only as to
matters first raised by the amended return. Therefore an amended return should
not be filed if the claim for refund involves issues that were previously
considered in the course of an audit, application for correction, or
protective claim.
23VAC10-110-70. Report of change of federal taxable income.
(Repealed.)
A. Report. If the amount of any individual's federal
taxable income is changed or corrected by the Internal Revenue Service or other
competent authority or as the result of a renegotiation of a contract or
subcontract with the United States, such individual must report the change or
correction to the department within 90 days from the date of the final
determination of such change, correction, or renegotiation. In reporting a
change, correction or renegotiation, the individual shall either concede its
accuracy or state why such is erroneous.
B. Amended return. When any individual files an amended
federal income tax return for any taxable year, he must also file an amended
Virginia return for such taxable year. The amended return must be filed within
90 days of the filing of the complementary federal amended return, except that
any amended return claiming a refund for overpayment of tax must be filed
within 60 days of the final determination of any changes in his federal tax
liability. (See 23VAC10-20-180.)
C. Final determination. For purposes of this section a
"final determination" of a change in federal tax liability shall have
the same meaning as set forth in 23VAC10-20-180.
23VAC10-115-110. Returns of estates and trusts.
A. Filing requirements. 1. Every resident estate or trust
which that either is required to file a federal income tax return
for the taxable year or which that has any Virginia taxable
income for the taxable year must file an income tax return. If the return is
for a fractional part of a year, the due date shall be determined as if the
return were for a full 12-month period, that is, it shall be due by the 15th
day of the fourth month after the close of the taxable year.
2. B. Every nonresident estate or trust having
Virginia taxable income for the taxable year determined under 23VAC10-115-50
must file an income tax return.
3. C. The return must be accompanied by a copy
of any federal fiduciary tax return filed for such taxable year.
B. Due date.
1. The return is due on or before May 1 of each year for
fiduciaries filing on a calendar-year basis.
2. If the return is for a fiscal or fractional year, it is
due on or before the 15th day of the fourth month after the close of the
taxable year.
C. Who to file.
1. Deceased individual. The return for any deceased
individual shall be made and filed by his executor, administrator, or other
person charged with his property.
2. Fiduciary. The return for an estate or trust shall be
made and filed by the fiduciary.
3. Two or more fiduciaries. If two or more fiduciaries are
acting jointly, the return may be made by any one of them.
D. Report of change. If the amount of any fiduciary's
federal taxable income is changed or corrected by the Internal Revenue Service
or other competent authority or as the result of a renegotiation of a contract
or subcontract with the United States, such fiduciary must report the change or
correction to the department within 90 days from the date of the final
determination of such change, correction, or renegotiation. In reporting a
change, correction or renegotiation, the fiduciary shall either concede its
accuracy or state why such is erroneous.
E. Amended return. When any fiduciary files an amended
federal income tax return for any taxable year, it must also file an amended
Virginia return for such taxable year. The amended return must be filed within
90 days of the filing of the complementary federal amended return, except that
any amended return claiming a refund for overpayment of tax must be filed
within 60 days of the final determination of any changes in its federal tax
liability. (See 23VAC10- 20-180.)
F. Final determination. For purposes of this section a
"final determination" of a change in federal tax liability shall have
the same meaning as set forth in 23VAC10-20-180 B.
23VAC10-120-30. Report of change of federal taxable income.
(Repealed.)
A. Report. If the amount of any corporation's federal
taxable income is changed or corrected by the Internal Revenue Service or other
competent authority or as the result of a renegotiation of a contract or
subcontract with the United States, such corporation must report the change or
correction to the department within 90 days from the date of the final
determination of such change, correction, or renegotiation. In reporting a
change, correction or renegotiation, the corporation shall either concede its
accuracy or state why such is erroneous.
B. Amended return. When any corporation files an amended
federal income tax return for any taxable year, it must also file an amended
Virginia return for such taxable year. The amended return must be filed within
90 days of the filing of the complementary federal amended return, except that
any amended return claiming a refund for over-payment of tax must be filed
within 60 days of the final determination of any changes in its federal tax
liability. (See 23VAC10-20-180.)
C. Final determination. For purposes of this section a
"final determination" of a change in federal tax liability shall have
the same meaning as set forth in 23VAC10-20-180 B.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4737; Filed October 12, 2016, 2:24 p.m.
TITLE 23. TAXATION
DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION
Fast-Track Regulation
Title of Regulation: 23VAC10-112. Declaration of
Estimated Income Tax by Individuals (repealing 23VAC10-112-40, 23VAC10-112-41).
Statutory Authority: § 58.1-203 of the Code of Virginia.
Public Hearing Information: No public hearings are
scheduled.
Public Comment Deadline: January 17, 2017.
Effective Date: February 1, 2017.
Agency Contact: James Savage, Tax Policy Analyst,
Department of Taxation, P.O. Box 27185, Richmond, VA 23261-7185, telephone
(804) 371-2301, or email james.savage@tax.virginia.gov.
Basis: Section 58.1-203 of the Code of Virginia provides
that the Tax Commissioner has the power to issue regulations relating to the
interpretation and enforcement of the laws of the Commonwealth governing taxes
administered by the Department of Taxation. The authority for the current
regulatory action is discretionary.
Purpose: This regulatory action is needed to repeal
23VAC10-112-40 and 23VAC10-112-41, which provide no additional guidance to
clear and unambiguous statutes. Repealing these sections does not reflect any
change in existing tax policy and has no impact on the administration of the
tax. As these sections of the regulation are unnecessary, this regulatory
action has no effect on the health, safety and welfare of citizens. This
regulatory action does not reflect a change in existing departmental policy.
Rationale for Using Fast-Track Rulemaking Process: The
fast-track rulemaking process is intended for proposed regulations that are
expected to be noncontroversial. As these sections of the regulation provide no
additional guidance to clear and unambiguous statutes, this action is not
expected to be controversial.
Substance: This action repeals two sections of the
Declaration of Estimated Income Tax by Individuals (23VAC10-112) that provide
no additional guidance to clear and unambiguous statutes. Repealing these
sections does not reflect any change in existing tax policy and has no impact
on the administration of tax.
23VAC10-112-40 sets forth the addition to tax applicable in the
case of any underpayment of estimated tax by an individual. 23VAC10-112-41 sets
forth the amount of the underpayment for the purposes of calculating the
addition to tax. Because these sections merely restate Section 58.1-492 A of
the Code of Virginia and provide no additional guidance, the repeal of these
sections is not expected to be controversial.
Issues: This regulatory action will ease voluntary
taxpayer compliance and the department's administration of the state tax laws
by eliminating unnecessary regulation sections. As these regulation sections
are unnecessary, their repeal will result in no disadvantage to the public or
the Commonwealth.
Department of Planning and Budget's Economic Impact
Analysis:
Summary of the Proposed Amendments to Regulation. The
Department of Taxation (Department) proposes to repeal sections 40 and 41 of
the regulation that governs individuals in declaring and paying their estimated
state income tax.
Result of Analysis. Benefits outweigh costs for all proposed
changes.
Estimated Economic Impact. Current regulation contains two
sections that govern the failure of individuals to pay estimated tax. The
Department proposes to eliminate these sections because they are completely
duplicative of unambiguous requirements in the Code of Virginia (COV). While
there is likely some small benefit that accrues to taxpayers from having the
rules that they must abide by in both regulation and the COV, that benefit is
lost when laws change and the regulation becomes obsolete and confusing because
it would be in conflict with the actual controlling legal requirement. Because
of this, the benefits of eliminating regulation not needed to interpret the COV
likely outweigh the costs of doing so.
Businesses and Entities Affected. This proposed regulatory
change will affect all individuals who are subject to paying estimated taxes.
Board staff reports that, for taxable year 2013, there were approximately
215,000 individuals who made estimated tax payments of Virginia individual
income tax.
Localities Particularly Affected. No locality will be
particularly affected by these proposed regulatory changes.
Projected Impact on Employment. These proposed regulatory
changes are unlikely to affect employment in the Commonwealth.
Effects on the Use and Value of Private Property. These
proposed changes will likely not affect the use or value of private property in
the Commonwealth.
Real Estate Development Costs. These proposed regulatory
changes are unlikely to affect real estate development costs in the
Commonwealth.
Small Businesses:
Definition. Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.04 of the Code of Virginia,
small business is defined as "a business entity, including its affiliates,
that (i) is independently owned and operated and (ii) employs fewer than 500
full-time employees or has gross annual sales of less than $6 million."
Costs and Other Effects. No small businesses are likely to
incur any additional costs on account of these clarifying changes.
Alternative Method that Minimizes Adverse Impact. No small
businesses are likely to incur any additional costs on account of these
clarifying changes.
Adverse Impacts:
Businesses. No businesses are likely to incur any additional
costs on account of these clarifying changes.
Localities. Localities in the Commonwealth are unlikely to see
any adverse impacts on account of these proposed regulatory changes.
Other Entities. No other entities are likely to be adversely
affected by these proposed changes.
Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The
Department of Taxation agrees with the Department of Planning and Budget's
economic impact analysis.
Summary:
This regulatory action repeals 23VAC10-112-40 and
23VAC10-112-41, which are unnecessary as they restate § 58.1-492 A of the Code
of Virginia and provide no additional requirements. The repeal of these
sections does not reflect a change in existing tax policy and has no impact on
the administration of the tax.
23VAC10-112-40. Failure by individual to pay estimated tax;
additions to the tax. (Repealed.)
In the case of any underpayment of estimated tax by an
individual, except as provided in 23VAC10-112-43, there shall be added to the
individual income tax for the taxable year an amount determined at the rate
established for interest, under § 58.1-15 of the Code of Virginia upon the
amount of the underpayment (determined under 23VAC10-112-41), for the period of
the underpayment (determined under 23VAC10-112-42). The amount of such addition
to the tax shall be reported and paid at the time of filing the individual
income tax return for the taxable year.
23VAC10-112-41. Failure by individual to pay estimated tax;
amount of underpayment. (Repealed.)
For purpose of 23VAC10-112-40, the amount of the
underpayment shall be the excess of:
1. The amount of the installment which would be required to
be paid if the estimated tax were equal to 90% (66-2/3% in the case of a
self-employed farmer or fisherman referred to in 23VAC10-112-23 B) of the tax
shown on the individual income tax return for the taxable year, or if no return
was filed, 90% (66-2/3% in the case of self-employed farmers or fishermen
referred to in 23VAC10-112-23 B) of the tax for such year, over
2. The amount, if any, of the installment paid on or before
the last date prescribed for such payment.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4721; Filed October 12, 2016, 2:50 p.m.
TITLE 23. TAXATION
DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION
Fast-Track Regulation
Titles of Regulations: 23VAC10-20. General Provisions
Applicable to All Taxes Administered by the Department of Taxation (amending 23VAC10-20-180).
23VAC10-110. Individual Income Tax (repealing 23VAC10-110-70).
23VAC10-115. Fiduciary Income Tax (amending 23VAC10-115-110).
23VAC10-120. Corporation Income Tax (repealing 23VAC10-120-30).
Statutory Authority: § 58.1-203 of the Code of Virginia.
Public Hearing Information: No public hearings are
scheduled.
Public Comment Deadline: January 17, 2017.
Effective Date: February 1, 2017.
Agency Contact: Matthew Huntley, Senior Policy Analyst,
Department of Taxation, P.O. Box 27185, Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804)
786-2010, or email matthew.huntley@tax.virginia.gov.
Basis: Section 58.1-203 of the Code of Virginia provides
that the Tax Commissioner shall have the power to issue regulations relating to
the interpretation and enforcement of the laws of this Commonwealth governing
taxes administered by the Department of Taxation. The authority for the current
regulatory action is discretionary.
Purpose: This regulatory action amends the General
Provisions Applicable to All Taxes Administered by the Department of Taxation
regulations to strike provisions that are no longer accurate and to consolidate
certain provisions that are currently repeated within the Virginia
Administrative Code. This action has no impact on the public health, safety,
and welfare.
The affected provisions deal with the due dates for filing
amended tax returns, as well as the definition of a final determination for
purposes of determining when a taxpayer is required to file an amended return
based on a change in any federal tax. Section 58.1-1823 A of the Code of
Virginia provides deadlines regarding when a taxpayer may file an amended
return. Among such deadlines is a rule that a taxpayer has one year from the
final determination of any change or correction in the liability for the
taxpayer for any federal tax upon which the state tax is based to file an
amended return. In addition to this rule, § 58.1-311 of the Code of Virginia
specifically requires individuals, estates, trusts, and corporations to file an
amended Virginia income tax return reporting any change or correction in
federal taxable income made by the Internal Revenue Service within one year
after the final determination of such change or correction.
The regulation sections affected by this action were
promulgated prior to the enactment of legislation that modified the statutory
language. Repealing these provisions updates the regulations so that they are
consistent with the statute. In addition, the affected regulation sections
contain a definition of what constitutes a "final determination" for
purposes of determining the deadline for filing an amended return. Because the
same definition applies to multiple tax types, this action consolidates the
definition in one regulation.
This regulatory action does not reflect any change in current
tax policy and has no impact on the administration of any taxes.
Rationale for Using Fast-Track Rulemaking Process: The
fast-track rulemaking process is intended for proposed regulations that are
expected to be noncontroversial. As this regulatory action repeals regulatory
provisions that are duplicative of underlying statutory provisions and
consolidates the location of a regulatory definition, this action is not
expected to be controversial.
Substance: This regulatory action amends the General
Provisions Applicable to All Taxes Administered by the Department of Taxation
regulations to strike provisions that are no longer accurate and to consolidate
certain provisions that are currently repeated within the Virginia
Administrative Code.
The affected provisions deal with the due dates for filing
amended tax returns, as well as the definition of a final determination for
purposes of determining when a taxpayer is required to file an amended return
based on a change in any federal tax. Section 58.1-1823 A of the Code of
Virginia provides that any person filing a tax return or paying an assessment
for any tax administered by the department may file an amended return within
the later of:
• Three years from the last day prescribed by law for the
timely filing of the return;
• One year from the final determination of any change or
correction in the liability of the taxpayer for any federal tax upon which the
state tax is based, provided that the refund does not exceed the amount of the
decrease in Virginia tax attributable to such federal change or correction;
• Two years from the filing of an amended Virginia return
resulting in the payment of additional tax, provided that the amended return
raises issues relating solely to such prior amended return and that the refund
does not exceed the amount of the payment with such prior amended return;
• Two years from the payment of an assessment, provided that
the amended return raises issues relating solely to such assessment and that
the refund does not exceed the amount of such payment; or
• One year from the final determination of any change or
correction in the income tax of the taxpayer for any other state, provided that
the refund does not exceed the amount of the decrease in Virginia tax
attributable to such change or correction.
During the 1992, 1996, 1998, 2006, and 2010 Sessions, the
General Assembly made several modifications to § 58.1-1823 A of the Code of
Virginia. See 1992 House Bill 227 (1992 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 678), 1996
House Bill 583 (1996 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 654), 1996 Senate Bill 182 (1996
Acts of Assembly, Chapter 637), 1998 House Bill 629 (1998 Acts of Assembly,
Chapter 374), 1998 Senate Bill 543 (1998 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 358), 2006
Senate Bill 583 (2006 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 234), and 2010 House Bill 384
(2010 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 228). Because 23VAC10-20-180, 23VAC10-110-70,
23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 were promulgated prior to the enactment of
such legislation, the provisions in these regulation sections regarding the
deadlines for filing an amended return are incomplete and inaccurate. In
addition, these provisions are unnecessary because they are duplicative of the
information that is provided in § 58.1-1823 of the Code of Virginia. Therefore,
this regulatory action strikes the provisions of 23VAC10-20-180,
23VAC10-110-70, 23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 regarding deadlines for
filing an amended return.
Under § 58.1-311 of the Code of Virginia, if any individual,
estate, trust, or corporate taxpayer's federal taxable income reported on its
federal income tax return is changed or corrected by the Internal Revenue
Service, such taxpayer is required to file an amended Virginia income tax
return reporting such change or correction within one year after the final
determination of such change or correction. During the 2006 Session, the
General Assembly enacted Senate Bill 583, which extended the reporting deadline
from 90 days to one year. See 2006 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 234. Because
23VAC10-110-70, 23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 were promulgated prior to
the enactment of such legislation, the provisions in these regulation sections
regarding reporting changes or corrections of federal taxable income are
inaccurate. In addition, these provisions are unnecessary because they are duplicative
of the information that is provided in § 58.1-311 of the Code of Virginia.
Therefore, this regulatory action strikes the provisions of 23VAC10-110-70,
23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 regarding reporting changes or corrections
of federal taxable income.
23VAC10-110-70, 23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 each define
the term "final determination" by referencing the definition of such
term that is provided in 23VAC10-20-180. The regulatory definition of the term
"final determination" is important because it is not defined in the
underlying statute, § 58.1-311 of the Code of Virginia. Because it is
unnecessary to have four separate, but virtually identical, definitions of the
same term in the regulations, this regulatory action strikes the provisions of
23VAC10-110-70, 23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 that define "final
determination." This regulatory action also amends 23VAC10-20-180 to
include language stating that such definition applies for purposes of §§
58.1-311 and 58.1-1823 of the Code of Virginia.
23VAC10-115-110 provides information regarding due dates for
returns of estates and trusts and who is required to file returns of estates
and trusts. These provisions are unnecessary because they are duplicative of
the information that is provided in § 58.1-381 of the Code of Virginia.
Therefore, this regulatory action strikes such provisions.
This regulatory action does not reflect any change in current
tax policy and has no impact on the administration of any taxes.
Issues: The advantage to the public and the Commonwealth
is the repeal regulatory provisions that are duplicative of underlying
statutory provisions and the consolidation of the location of a regulatory
definition. There are no disadvantages to the public or the Commonwealth
associated with this regulatory action.
Department of Planning and Budget's Economic Impact
Analysis:
Summary of the Proposed Amendments to Regulation. The
Department of Taxation proposes to repeal provisions that are no longer
accurate due to statutory changes or duplicative of the statutory language and
to consolidate certain provisions in the regulation.
Result of Analysis. The benefits likely exceed the costs for
all proposed changes.
Estimated Economic Impact. This regulation contains general
provisions applicable to Individual Income, Fiduciary Income, and Corporation
Income Taxes. The proposed regulation will repeal deadlines for amended returns
and for reporting of changes or corrections to the federal taxable income.
Numerous statutory changes in the 1992, 1996, 1998, 2006, and 2010 Virginia
General Assembly sessions amended §§ 58.1-311 and 58.1-1823 of the Code of
Virginia and rendered the current regulatory language incomplete and
inaccurate. In addition, these regulatory provisions are unnecessary because they
are duplicative of the information provided in the statute. Similarly, the due
dates for returns of estates and trusts are duplicative of § 58.1-381 of the
Code of Virginia. Repealing these provisions would update the regulations so
that they are consistent with the statute. In addition, the definition of
"final determination" is identical for all taxes in this regulation
and will be consolidated to apply to all of them. Since this regulatory action
does not reflect any change in current tax policy or on the administration of
any taxes, no economic effect is expected other than eliminating conflicting
information between the Code of Virginia and the regulation that may cause
confusion.
Businesses and Entities Affected. This regulation applies to
individuals and businesses subject to Individual Income, Fiduciary Income, and
Corporation Income Taxes. In the 2013 taxable year, 3,765,669 individual tax
returns, 66,580 corporate income tax returns, and 67,637 fiduciary income tax
returns were filed. In addition, according to the 2013 North American Industry
Classification System, there were 1,154 certified public accountant (CPA)
establishments, 628 non-CPA tax preparation establishments, and 1,187 non-CPA
establishments offering accounting, bookkeeping, or billing services along with
payroll services in Virginia.
Localities Particularly Affected. The proposed changes apply
statewide.
Projected Impact on Employment. No impact on employment is
expected.
Effects on the Use and Value of Private Property. No impact on
the use and value of private property is expected.
Real Estate Development Costs. No impact on real estate
development costs is expected.
Small Businesses:
Definition. Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.04 of the Code of Virginia,
small business is defined as "a business entity, including its affiliates,
that (i) is independently owned and operated and (ii) employs fewer than 500
full-time employees or has gross annual sales of less than $6 million."
Costs and Other Effects. The Department of Taxation estimates
that there are about 143,612 small businesses with employees in Virginia. In
addition, almost all tax preparation or payroll service providers are small
businesses. The proposed amendments do not impose costs on these entities, but
will benefit them by elimination the inconsistencies between the statutes and
the regulation.
Alternative Method that Minimizes Adverse Impact. No adverse
impact on small businesses is expected.
Adverse Impacts:
Businesses. A small percentage of the entities this regulation
applies to is believed to be non-small businesses. The proposed amendments do
not impose any adverse impact on them.
Localities. The proposed amendments will not adversely affect
localities.
Other Entities. The proposed amendments will not adversely
affect other entities.
Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The
Department of Taxation agrees with the Department of Planning and Budget's
economic impact analysis.
Summary:
This regulatory action removes provisions that are no
longer accurate due to several statutory changes and consolidates certain
provisions that are currently repeated within the Virginia Administrative Code.
The affected provisions deal with the due dates for filing amended tax returns
and the definition of a final determination for purposes of determining when a
taxpayer is required to file an amended return based on a change in any federal
tax. This regulatory action does not reflect any change in current tax policy
and will have no impact on the administration of any taxes.
23VAC10-20-180. Amended returns claiming a refund.
A. Filing.
1. Amended returns claiming a refund of any tax administered
by the department Department of Taxation are governed by
§ 58.1-1823 of the Code of Virginia. Amended returns claiming a refund
must be filed within three years from the last day prescribed by law for the
timely filing of the original return or, if later, within 60 days from the
final determination of any change or correction in the liability of the
taxpayer for any federal tax upon which the Virginia tax is based.
2. The amended return shall supply all the information
required in an original return and, in addition, the taxpayer must attach a
statement explaining the changes made and the reasons for the changes. If the
refund claim is due to a change in federal taxable income or estate, the
taxpayer must furnish a copy of the Revenue Agent's Report or other appropriate
notice that the change has been accepted by the Internal Revenue Service.
a. When a dealer is applying for a refund of sales tax, the
dealer shall attach a list of the purchasers from whom the tax was collected
and to whom the refund and interest, if allowed, will be paid.
b. When a consumer is applying for a refund of sales or use
tax assessed against a dealer or contractor, the consumer shall identify the
dealer or contractor, explain the circumstances surrounding the payment by the
consumer, and explain why the claim for refund could not, or
would not, be made by the dealer or contractor.
3. The time limit specified above applies only to amended
returns claiming a refund and does not apply to amended returns showing a tax
due. The period for assessing taxes due may vary for each type of tax and may
also depend on circumstances such as fraud or failure to file a return.
4. 3. See § 58.1-9 of the Code of Virginia for
provisions relating to filing a return by mail.
B. Final determination. For the purposes of this
regulation §§ 58.1-311 and 58.1-1823 of the Code of Virginia,
any one of the following shall be deemed a final determination of a change in
liability for the federal tax:
1. Payment or refund of any federal income or estate tax,
not the subject of any other final determination described in subdivision 2, 3,
4, or 5 of this subsection B. The payment of a federal income or
estate tax is a final determination for Virginia purposes even though a refund
suit may be pending or contemplated which that could result in
another "final determination";
2. The receipt of an assessment or other notice that the
amount of deficiency or overassessment stated on federal Form 870 or similar
form has been agreed to by the IRS;
3. The expiration of the 90-day time period (150-day period in
the case of notice addressed to a person outside the states of the union and
the District of Columbia) within which a petition for redetermination may be
filed with the U.S. United States Tax Court with respect to a
statutory notice of deficiency issued by the Internal Revenue Service, if a
petition is not filed with that court within such time;
4. A closing agreement entered into with the Internal Revenue
Service under Section § 7121 of the Internal Revenue Code (26
USC § 1 et seq.). The "final determination" shall
occur when the taxpayer receives notice of the signing by the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue;
5. A decision by the U.S. United States Tax
Court, U.S. District Court a United States district court, the
U.S. Claims Court, U.S. Court of Appeals a United States court of
appeals, or the United States Supreme Court that has become final, or the
date the court approves a voluntary agreement stipulating disposition of the
case.
C. Assessment. The denial in whole or in part of taxpayers
a taxpayer's claim for refund, or the department's failure to act within
three months, is treated as an assessment for the purpose of permitting a
taxpayer to pursue other administrative and judicial remedies, but only as to
matters first raised by the amended return. Therefore an amended return should
not be filed if the claim for refund involves issues that were previously
considered in the course of an audit, application for correction, or
protective claim.
23VAC10-110-70. Report of change of federal taxable income.
(Repealed.)
A. Report. If the amount of any individual's federal
taxable income is changed or corrected by the Internal Revenue Service or other
competent authority or as the result of a renegotiation of a contract or
subcontract with the United States, such individual must report the change or
correction to the department within 90 days from the date of the final
determination of such change, correction, or renegotiation. In reporting a
change, correction or renegotiation, the individual shall either concede its
accuracy or state why such is erroneous.
B. Amended return. When any individual files an amended
federal income tax return for any taxable year, he must also file an amended
Virginia return for such taxable year. The amended return must be filed within
90 days of the filing of the complementary federal amended return, except that
any amended return claiming a refund for overpayment of tax must be filed
within 60 days of the final determination of any changes in his federal tax
liability. (See 23VAC10-20-180.)
C. Final determination. For purposes of this section a
"final determination" of a change in federal tax liability shall have
the same meaning as set forth in 23VAC10-20-180.
23VAC10-115-110. Returns of estates and trusts.
A. Filing requirements. 1. Every resident estate or trust
which that either is required to file a federal income tax return
for the taxable year or which that has any Virginia taxable
income for the taxable year must file an income tax return. If the return is
for a fractional part of a year, the due date shall be determined as if the
return were for a full 12-month period, that is, it shall be due by the 15th
day of the fourth month after the close of the taxable year.
2. B. Every nonresident estate or trust having
Virginia taxable income for the taxable year determined under 23VAC10-115-50
must file an income tax return.
3. C. The return must be accompanied by a copy
of any federal fiduciary tax return filed for such taxable year.
B. Due date.
1. The return is due on or before May 1 of each year for
fiduciaries filing on a calendar-year basis.
2. If the return is for a fiscal or fractional year, it is
due on or before the 15th day of the fourth month after the close of the
taxable year.
C. Who to file.
1. Deceased individual. The return for any deceased
individual shall be made and filed by his executor, administrator, or other
person charged with his property.
2. Fiduciary. The return for an estate or trust shall be
made and filed by the fiduciary.
3. Two or more fiduciaries. If two or more fiduciaries are
acting jointly, the return may be made by any one of them.
D. Report of change. If the amount of any fiduciary's
federal taxable income is changed or corrected by the Internal Revenue Service
or other competent authority or as the result of a renegotiation of a contract
or subcontract with the United States, such fiduciary must report the change or
correction to the department within 90 days from the date of the final
determination of such change, correction, or renegotiation. In reporting a
change, correction or renegotiation, the fiduciary shall either concede its
accuracy or state why such is erroneous.
E. Amended return. When any fiduciary files an amended
federal income tax return for any taxable year, it must also file an amended
Virginia return for such taxable year. The amended return must be filed within
90 days of the filing of the complementary federal amended return, except that
any amended return claiming a refund for overpayment of tax must be filed
within 60 days of the final determination of any changes in its federal tax
liability. (See 23VAC10- 20-180.)
F. Final determination. For purposes of this section a
"final determination" of a change in federal tax liability shall have
the same meaning as set forth in 23VAC10-20-180 B.
23VAC10-120-30. Report of change of federal taxable income.
(Repealed.)
A. Report. If the amount of any corporation's federal
taxable income is changed or corrected by the Internal Revenue Service or other
competent authority or as the result of a renegotiation of a contract or
subcontract with the United States, such corporation must report the change or
correction to the department within 90 days from the date of the final
determination of such change, correction, or renegotiation. In reporting a
change, correction or renegotiation, the corporation shall either concede its
accuracy or state why such is erroneous.
B. Amended return. When any corporation files an amended
federal income tax return for any taxable year, it must also file an amended
Virginia return for such taxable year. The amended return must be filed within
90 days of the filing of the complementary federal amended return, except that
any amended return claiming a refund for over-payment of tax must be filed
within 60 days of the final determination of any changes in its federal tax
liability. (See 23VAC10-20-180.)
C. Final determination. For purposes of this section a
"final determination" of a change in federal tax liability shall have
the same meaning as set forth in 23VAC10-20-180 B.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4737; Filed October 12, 2016, 2:24 p.m.
TITLE 23. TAXATION
DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION
Fast-Track Regulation
Titles of Regulations: 23VAC10-20. General Provisions
Applicable to All Taxes Administered by the Department of Taxation (amending 23VAC10-20-180).
23VAC10-110. Individual Income Tax (repealing 23VAC10-110-70).
23VAC10-115. Fiduciary Income Tax (amending 23VAC10-115-110).
23VAC10-120. Corporation Income Tax (repealing 23VAC10-120-30).
Statutory Authority: § 58.1-203 of the Code of Virginia.
Public Hearing Information: No public hearings are
scheduled.
Public Comment Deadline: January 17, 2017.
Effective Date: February 1, 2017.
Agency Contact: Matthew Huntley, Senior Policy Analyst,
Department of Taxation, P.O. Box 27185, Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804)
786-2010, or email matthew.huntley@tax.virginia.gov.
Basis: Section 58.1-203 of the Code of Virginia provides
that the Tax Commissioner shall have the power to issue regulations relating to
the interpretation and enforcement of the laws of this Commonwealth governing
taxes administered by the Department of Taxation. The authority for the current
regulatory action is discretionary.
Purpose: This regulatory action amends the General
Provisions Applicable to All Taxes Administered by the Department of Taxation
regulations to strike provisions that are no longer accurate and to consolidate
certain provisions that are currently repeated within the Virginia
Administrative Code. This action has no impact on the public health, safety,
and welfare.
The affected provisions deal with the due dates for filing
amended tax returns, as well as the definition of a final determination for
purposes of determining when a taxpayer is required to file an amended return
based on a change in any federal tax. Section 58.1-1823 A of the Code of
Virginia provides deadlines regarding when a taxpayer may file an amended
return. Among such deadlines is a rule that a taxpayer has one year from the
final determination of any change or correction in the liability for the
taxpayer for any federal tax upon which the state tax is based to file an
amended return. In addition to this rule, § 58.1-311 of the Code of Virginia
specifically requires individuals, estates, trusts, and corporations to file an
amended Virginia income tax return reporting any change or correction in
federal taxable income made by the Internal Revenue Service within one year
after the final determination of such change or correction.
The regulation sections affected by this action were
promulgated prior to the enactment of legislation that modified the statutory
language. Repealing these provisions updates the regulations so that they are
consistent with the statute. In addition, the affected regulation sections
contain a definition of what constitutes a "final determination" for
purposes of determining the deadline for filing an amended return. Because the
same definition applies to multiple tax types, this action consolidates the
definition in one regulation.
This regulatory action does not reflect any change in current
tax policy and has no impact on the administration of any taxes.
Rationale for Using Fast-Track Rulemaking Process: The
fast-track rulemaking process is intended for proposed regulations that are
expected to be noncontroversial. As this regulatory action repeals regulatory
provisions that are duplicative of underlying statutory provisions and
consolidates the location of a regulatory definition, this action is not
expected to be controversial.
Substance: This regulatory action amends the General
Provisions Applicable to All Taxes Administered by the Department of Taxation
regulations to strike provisions that are no longer accurate and to consolidate
certain provisions that are currently repeated within the Virginia
Administrative Code.
The affected provisions deal with the due dates for filing
amended tax returns, as well as the definition of a final determination for
purposes of determining when a taxpayer is required to file an amended return
based on a change in any federal tax. Section 58.1-1823 A of the Code of
Virginia provides that any person filing a tax return or paying an assessment
for any tax administered by the department may file an amended return within
the later of:
• Three years from the last day prescribed by law for the
timely filing of the return;
• One year from the final determination of any change or
correction in the liability of the taxpayer for any federal tax upon which the
state tax is based, provided that the refund does not exceed the amount of the
decrease in Virginia tax attributable to such federal change or correction;
• Two years from the filing of an amended Virginia return
resulting in the payment of additional tax, provided that the amended return
raises issues relating solely to such prior amended return and that the refund
does not exceed the amount of the payment with such prior amended return;
• Two years from the payment of an assessment, provided that
the amended return raises issues relating solely to such assessment and that
the refund does not exceed the amount of such payment; or
• One year from the final determination of any change or
correction in the income tax of the taxpayer for any other state, provided that
the refund does not exceed the amount of the decrease in Virginia tax
attributable to such change or correction.
During the 1992, 1996, 1998, 2006, and 2010 Sessions, the
General Assembly made several modifications to § 58.1-1823 A of the Code of
Virginia. See 1992 House Bill 227 (1992 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 678), 1996
House Bill 583 (1996 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 654), 1996 Senate Bill 182 (1996
Acts of Assembly, Chapter 637), 1998 House Bill 629 (1998 Acts of Assembly,
Chapter 374), 1998 Senate Bill 543 (1998 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 358), 2006
Senate Bill 583 (2006 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 234), and 2010 House Bill 384
(2010 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 228). Because 23VAC10-20-180, 23VAC10-110-70,
23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 were promulgated prior to the enactment of
such legislation, the provisions in these regulation sections regarding the
deadlines for filing an amended return are incomplete and inaccurate. In
addition, these provisions are unnecessary because they are duplicative of the
information that is provided in § 58.1-1823 of the Code of Virginia. Therefore,
this regulatory action strikes the provisions of 23VAC10-20-180,
23VAC10-110-70, 23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 regarding deadlines for
filing an amended return.
Under § 58.1-311 of the Code of Virginia, if any individual,
estate, trust, or corporate taxpayer's federal taxable income reported on its
federal income tax return is changed or corrected by the Internal Revenue
Service, such taxpayer is required to file an amended Virginia income tax
return reporting such change or correction within one year after the final
determination of such change or correction. During the 2006 Session, the
General Assembly enacted Senate Bill 583, which extended the reporting deadline
from 90 days to one year. See 2006 Acts of Assembly, Chapter 234. Because
23VAC10-110-70, 23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 were promulgated prior to
the enactment of such legislation, the provisions in these regulation sections
regarding reporting changes or corrections of federal taxable income are
inaccurate. In addition, these provisions are unnecessary because they are duplicative
of the information that is provided in § 58.1-311 of the Code of Virginia.
Therefore, this regulatory action strikes the provisions of 23VAC10-110-70,
23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 regarding reporting changes or corrections
of federal taxable income.
23VAC10-110-70, 23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 each define
the term "final determination" by referencing the definition of such
term that is provided in 23VAC10-20-180. The regulatory definition of the term
"final determination" is important because it is not defined in the
underlying statute, § 58.1-311 of the Code of Virginia. Because it is
unnecessary to have four separate, but virtually identical, definitions of the
same term in the regulations, this regulatory action strikes the provisions of
23VAC10-110-70, 23VAC10-115-110, and 23VAC10-120-30 that define "final
determination." This regulatory action also amends 23VAC10-20-180 to
include language stating that such definition applies for purposes of §§
58.1-311 and 58.1-1823 of the Code of Virginia.
23VAC10-115-110 provides information regarding due dates for
returns of estates and trusts and who is required to file returns of estates
and trusts. These provisions are unnecessary because they are duplicative of
the information that is provided in § 58.1-381 of the Code of Virginia.
Therefore, this regulatory action strikes such provisions.
This regulatory action does not reflect any change in current
tax policy and has no impact on the administration of any taxes.
Issues: The advantage to the public and the Commonwealth
is the repeal regulatory provisions that are duplicative of underlying
statutory provisions and the consolidation of the location of a regulatory
definition. There are no disadvantages to the public or the Commonwealth
associated with this regulatory action.
Department of Planning and Budget's Economic Impact
Analysis:
Summary of the Proposed Amendments to Regulation. The
Department of Taxation proposes to repeal provisions that are no longer
accurate due to statutory changes or duplicative of the statutory language and
to consolidate certain provisions in the regulation.
Result of Analysis. The benefits likely exceed the costs for
all proposed changes.
Estimated Economic Impact. This regulation contains general
provisions applicable to Individual Income, Fiduciary Income, and Corporation
Income Taxes. The proposed regulation will repeal deadlines for amended returns
and for reporting of changes or corrections to the federal taxable income.
Numerous statutory changes in the 1992, 1996, 1998, 2006, and 2010 Virginia
General Assembly sessions amended §§ 58.1-311 and 58.1-1823 of the Code of
Virginia and rendered the current regulatory language incomplete and
inaccurate. In addition, these regulatory provisions are unnecessary because they
are duplicative of the information provided in the statute. Similarly, the due
dates for returns of estates and trusts are duplicative of § 58.1-381 of the
Code of Virginia. Repealing these provisions would update the regulations so
that they are consistent with the statute. In addition, the definition of
"final determination" is identical for all taxes in this regulation
and will be consolidated to apply to all of them. Since this regulatory action
does not reflect any change in current tax policy or on the administration of
any taxes, no economic effect is expected other than eliminating conflicting
information between the Code of Virginia and the regulation that may cause
confusion.
Businesses and Entities Affected. This regulation applies to
individuals and businesses subject to Individual Income, Fiduciary Income, and
Corporation Income Taxes. In the 2013 taxable year, 3,765,669 individual tax
returns, 66,580 corporate income tax returns, and 67,637 fiduciary income tax
returns were filed. In addition, according to the 2013 North American Industry
Classification System, there were 1,154 certified public accountant (CPA)
establishments, 628 non-CPA tax preparation establishments, and 1,187 non-CPA
establishments offering accounting, bookkeeping, or billing services along with
payroll services in Virginia.
Localities Particularly Affected. The proposed changes apply
statewide.
Projected Impact on Employment. No impact on employment is
expected.
Effects on the Use and Value of Private Property. No impact on
the use and value of private property is expected.
Real Estate Development Costs. No impact on real estate
development costs is expected.
Small Businesses:
Definition. Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.04 of the Code of Virginia,
small business is defined as "a business entity, including its affiliates,
that (i) is independently owned and operated and (ii) employs fewer than 500
full-time employees or has gross annual sales of less than $6 million."
Costs and Other Effects. The Department of Taxation estimates
that there are about 143,612 small businesses with employees in Virginia. In
addition, almost all tax preparation or payroll service providers are small
businesses. The proposed amendments do not impose costs on these entities, but
will benefit them by elimination the inconsistencies between the statutes and
the regulation.
Alternative Method that Minimizes Adverse Impact. No adverse
impact on small businesses is expected.
Adverse Impacts:
Businesses. A small percentage of the entities this regulation
applies to is believed to be non-small businesses. The proposed amendments do
not impose any adverse impact on them.
Localities. The proposed amendments will not adversely affect
localities.
Other Entities. The proposed amendments will not adversely
affect other entities.
Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The
Department of Taxation agrees with the Department of Planning and Budget's
economic impact analysis.
Summary:
This regulatory action removes provisions that are no
longer accurate due to several statutory changes and consolidates certain
provisions that are currently repeated within the Virginia Administrative Code.
The affected provisions deal with the due dates for filing amended tax returns
and the definition of a final determination for purposes of determining when a
taxpayer is required to file an amended return based on a change in any federal
tax. This regulatory action does not reflect any change in current tax policy
and will have no impact on the administration of any taxes.
23VAC10-20-180. Amended returns claiming a refund.
A. Filing.
1. Amended returns claiming a refund of any tax administered
by the department Department of Taxation are governed by
§ 58.1-1823 of the Code of Virginia. Amended returns claiming a refund
must be filed within three years from the last day prescribed by law for the
timely filing of the original return or, if later, within 60 days from the
final determination of any change or correction in the liability of the
taxpayer for any federal tax upon which the Virginia tax is based.
2. The amended return shall supply all the information
required in an original return and, in addition, the taxpayer must attach a
statement explaining the changes made and the reasons for the changes. If the
refund claim is due to a change in federal taxable income or estate, the
taxpayer must furnish a copy of the Revenue Agent's Report or other appropriate
notice that the change has been accepted by the Internal Revenue Service.
a. When a dealer is applying for a refund of sales tax, the
dealer shall attach a list of the purchasers from whom the tax was collected
and to whom the refund and interest, if allowed, will be paid.
b. When a consumer is applying for a refund of sales or use
tax assessed against a dealer or contractor, the consumer shall identify the
dealer or contractor, explain the circumstances surrounding the payment by the
consumer, and explain why the claim for refund could not, or
would not, be made by the dealer or contractor.
3. The time limit specified above applies only to amended
returns claiming a refund and does not apply to amended returns showing a tax
due. The period for assessing taxes due may vary for each type of tax and may
also depend on circumstances such as fraud or failure to file a return.
4. 3. See § 58.1-9 of the Code of Virginia for
provisions relating to filing a return by mail.
B. Final determination. For the purposes of this
regulation §§ 58.1-311 and 58.1-1823 of the Code of Virginia,
any one of the following shall be deemed a final determination of a change in
liability for the federal tax:
1. Payment or refund of any federal income or estate tax,
not the subject of any other final determination described in subdivision 2, 3,
4, or 5 of this subsection B. The payment of a federal income or
estate tax is a final determination for Virginia purposes even though a refund
suit may be pending or contemplated which that could result in
another "final determination";
2. The receipt of an assessment or other notice that the
amount of deficiency or overassessment stated on federal Form 870 or similar
form has been agreed to by the IRS;
3. The expiration of the 90-day time period (150-day period in
the case of notice addressed to a person outside the states of the union and
the District of Columbia) within which a petition for redetermination may be
filed with the U.S. United States Tax Court with respect to a
statutory notice of deficiency issued by the Internal Revenue Service, if a
petition is not filed with that court within such time;
4. A closing agreement entered into with the Internal Revenue
Service under Section § 7121 of the Internal Revenue Code (26
USC § 1 et seq.). The "final determination" shall
occur when the taxpayer receives notice of the signing by the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue;
5. A decision by the U.S. United States Tax
Court, U.S. District Court a United States district court, the
U.S. Claims Court, U.S. Court of Appeals a United States court of
appeals, or the United States Supreme Court that has become final, or the
date the court approves a voluntary agreement stipulating disposition of the
case.
C. Assessment. The denial in whole or in part of taxpayers
a taxpayer's claim for refund, or the department's failure to act within
three months, is treated as an assessment for the purpose of permitting a
taxpayer to pursue other administrative and judicial remedies, but only as to
matters first raised by the amended return. Therefore an amended return should
not be filed if the claim for refund involves issues that were previously
considered in the course of an audit, application for correction, or
protective claim.
23VAC10-110-70. Report of change of federal taxable income.
(Repealed.)
A. Report. If the amount of any individual's federal
taxable income is changed or corrected by the Internal Revenue Service or other
competent authority or as the result of a renegotiation of a contract or
subcontract with the United States, such individual must report the change or
correction to the department within 90 days from the date of the final
determination of such change, correction, or renegotiation. In reporting a
change, correction or renegotiation, the individual shall either concede its
accuracy or state why such is erroneous.
B. Amended return. When any individual files an amended
federal income tax return for any taxable year, he must also file an amended
Virginia return for such taxable year. The amended return must be filed within
90 days of the filing of the complementary federal amended return, except that
any amended return claiming a refund for overpayment of tax must be filed
within 60 days of the final determination of any changes in his federal tax
liability. (See 23VAC10-20-180.)
C. Final determination. For purposes of this section a
"final determination" of a change in federal tax liability shall have
the same meaning as set forth in 23VAC10-20-180.
23VAC10-115-110. Returns of estates and trusts.
A. Filing requirements. 1. Every resident estate or trust
which that either is required to file a federal income tax return
for the taxable year or which that has any Virginia taxable
income for the taxable year must file an income tax return. If the return is
for a fractional part of a year, the due date shall be determined as if the
return were for a full 12-month period, that is, it shall be due by the 15th
day of the fourth month after the close of the taxable year.
2. B. Every nonresident estate or trust having
Virginia taxable income for the taxable year determined under 23VAC10-115-50
must file an income tax return.
3. C. The return must be accompanied by a copy
of any federal fiduciary tax return filed for such taxable year.
B. Due date.
1. The return is due on or before May 1 of each year for
fiduciaries filing on a calendar-year basis.
2. If the return is for a fiscal or fractional year, it is
due on or before the 15th day of the fourth month after the close of the
taxable year.
C. Who to file.
1. Deceased individual. The return for any deceased
individual shall be made and filed by his executor, administrator, or other
person charged with his property.
2. Fiduciary. The return for an estate or trust shall be
made and filed by the fiduciary.
3. Two or more fiduciaries. If two or more fiduciaries are
acting jointly, the return may be made by any one of them.
D. Report of change. If the amount of any fiduciary's
federal taxable income is changed or corrected by the Internal Revenue Service
or other competent authority or as the result of a renegotiation of a contract
or subcontract with the United States, such fiduciary must report the change or
correction to the department within 90 days from the date of the final
determination of such change, correction, or renegotiation. In reporting a
change, correction or renegotiation, the fiduciary shall either concede its
accuracy or state why such is erroneous.
E. Amended return. When any fiduciary files an amended
federal income tax return for any taxable year, it must also file an amended
Virginia return for such taxable year. The amended return must be filed within
90 days of the filing of the complementary federal amended return, except that
any amended return claiming a refund for overpayment of tax must be filed
within 60 days of the final determination of any changes in its federal tax
liability. (See 23VAC10- 20-180.)
F. Final determination. For purposes of this section a
"final determination" of a change in federal tax liability shall have
the same meaning as set forth in 23VAC10-20-180 B.
23VAC10-120-30. Report of change of federal taxable income.
(Repealed.)
A. Report. If the amount of any corporation's federal
taxable income is changed or corrected by the Internal Revenue Service or other
competent authority or as the result of a renegotiation of a contract or
subcontract with the United States, such corporation must report the change or
correction to the department within 90 days from the date of the final
determination of such change, correction, or renegotiation. In reporting a
change, correction or renegotiation, the corporation shall either concede its
accuracy or state why such is erroneous.
B. Amended return. When any corporation files an amended
federal income tax return for any taxable year, it must also file an amended
Virginia return for such taxable year. The amended return must be filed within
90 days of the filing of the complementary federal amended return, except that
any amended return claiming a refund for over-payment of tax must be filed
within 60 days of the final determination of any changes in its federal tax
liability. (See 23VAC10-20-180.)
C. Final determination. For purposes of this section a
"final determination" of a change in federal tax liability shall have
the same meaning as set forth in 23VAC10-20-180 B.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4737; Filed October 12, 2016, 2:24 p.m.
TITLE 23. TAXATION
DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION
Fast-Track Regulation
Title of Regulation: 23VAC10-350. Forest Products Tax
Regulations (repealing 23VAC10-350-10 through
23VAC10-350-40).
Statutory Authority: § 58.1-203 of the Code of Virginia.
Public Hearing Information: No public hearings are
scheduled.
Public Comment Deadline: January 17, 2017.
Effective Date: February 1, 2017.
Agency Contact: Joe Mayer, Lead Policy Analyst,
Department of Taxation, P.O. Box 27185, Richmond, VA 23261-7185, telephone
(804) 371-2299, FAX (804) 371-2355, or email joseph.mayer@tax.virginia.gov.
Basis: Section 58.1-203 of the Code of Virginia
authorizes the Tax Commissioner to issue regulations relating to the
interpretation and enforcement of the laws governing taxes administered by the
Department of Taxation. Section 3.2-1612 of the Code of Virginia authorizes the
Tax Commissioner to administer the forest products tax.
Purpose: As a result of a periodic review of the Forest
Products Tax Regulation initiated by the Department of Taxation on April 28,
2016, and completed June 20, 2016, the Department of Taxation has determined
that the regulation should be repealed because the statutes imposing the forest
products tax were substantially amended effective July 1, 2015, and the
regulation provides no guidance on the new statutes. Additionally, the new law
was drafted with the participation of the forest products industry and no
guidance beyond the plain meaning of the forest products tax statutes is necessary
at this time. Therefore, the regulation is not necessary to protect the public
health, safety, or welfare. A regulation that is not necessary to interpret the
law or to protect the public health, safety, or welfare violates the general
principles set forth in Governor Terence R. McAuliffe's Executive Order 17
signed June 30, 2014.
Repeal of the regulation does not reflect any change in current
tax policy. Repeal of the regulation will have no impact on the administration
of the forest products tax.
Rationale for Using Fast-Track Rulemaking Process: The
department is using the fast-track rulemaking process because the repeal of the
Forest Products Tax Regulation is expected to be noncontroversial because the
statutes imposing the forest products tax were substantially amended effective
July 1, 2015, and the regulation provides no guidance on the new statutes. No
comments were received during the periodic review of the regulation.
Substance: This action will repeal the Forest Products
Tax Regulations. Effective July 1, 2015, the forest products tax is imposed on
the first manufacturer using, consuming, or processing forest products unless
the tax has been previously paid by the severer of the forest products. The
forest products tax also is imposed on the first manufacturer storing forest
products for sale or shipment out of state unless the tax has been previously
paid by the severer of the forest products. If there is no manufacturer, or the
manufacturer is not registered for the tax, then the tax is levied on the
severer of the forest products. The forest products tax revenues are dedicated
to the protection and development of forest resources and the reforestation of
timberlands.
Because the statutes imposing the forest products tax were
recently rewritten, and the regulation provides no guidance on the new
statutes, repeal of the regulation does not reflect any change in current tax
policy. Repeal of the regulation will have no impact on the administration of
the forest products tax.
Issues: As the new statutes imposing the forest products
tax are clear and unambiguous, and the regulation provides no guidance on the
new statutes, the regulation is unnecessary. Accordingly, its repeal poses no
disadvantages to the public or the Commonwealth.
Small Business Impact Review Report of Findings: This
fast-track regulatory action serves as the report of the findings of the
regulatory review pursuant to § 2.2-4007.1 of the Code of Virginia.
Department of Planning and Budget's Economic Impact
Analysis:
Summary of the Proposed Amendments to Regulation. The
Department of Taxation (Department) proposes to repeal the Forest Products Tax
Regulations.
Result of Analysis. The benefits likely exceed the costs for
all proposed changes.
Estimated Economic Impact. Chapter 170 of the 2015 Acts of
Assembly substantially amended the statutes that impose and delineate the
forest products tax. The regulation does not provide guidance beyond the
statutes and no longer accurately reflects the current statutes. When statutes
and regulations are in conflict, the statutes apply. Thus the repeal of this
regulation would not affect legal requirements. Nonetheless the proposed repeal
would be beneficial in that readers of the regulation would not be misled
concerning legal rules and requirements.
Businesses and Entities Affected. The forest products tax is
imposed on the first manufacturer using, consuming, or processing forest
products unless the tax has been previously paid by the severer1 of
the forest products. The forest products tax also is imposed on the first
manufacturer storing forest products for sale or shipment out of state unless
the tax has been previously paid by the severer of the forest products. If
there is no manufacturer or the manufacturer is not registered for the tax,
then the tax is levied on the severer of the forest products. In fiscal year
2015, 205 taxpayers filed forest products tax returns.
Localities Particularly Affected. The proposed repeal of the
regulation does not disproportionately affect localities.
Projected Impact on Employment. The proposed repeal of the
regulation does not affect employment.
Effects on the Use and Value of Private Property. The proposed
repeal of the regulation does not affect the use and value of private property.
Real Estate Development Costs. The proposed repeal of the
regulation does not affect real estate development costs.
Small Businesses:
Definition. Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.04 of the Code of Virginia,
small business is defined as "a business entity, including its affiliates,
that (i) is independently owned and operated and (ii) employs fewer than 500
full-time employees or has gross annual sales of less than $6 million."
Costs and Other Effects. The repeal of the regulation does not
significantly affect costs for small businesses.
Alternative Method that Minimizes Adverse Impact. The proposed
repeal of the regulation does not adversely affect small businesses.
Adverse Impacts:
Businesses. The proposed repeal of the regulation does not
adversely businesses.
Localities. The proposed repeal of the regulation does not
adversely localities.
Other Entities. The proposed repeal of the regulation does not
adversely other entities.
_________________
Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The
Department of Taxation agrees with the Department of Planning and Budget's
economic impact analysis.
Summary:
The regulatory action repeals the regulation because the
regulation provides no guidance beyond the plain meaning of the statutes
imposing the forest products tax, which were substantially amended effective
July 1, 2015. Repeal of the regulation does not reflect any change in current
tax policy and has no impact on the administration of the forest products tax.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4840; Filed October 17, 2016, 3:13 p.m.
Declaration of a State of Emergency
for the Commonwealth of Virginia Due to Hurricane Matthew and in Support of
States Affected by Hurricane Matthew
On October 6, 2016, I declared a state of emergency to exist
for the Commonwealth of Virginia to support relief efforts to all states
affected by Hurricane Matthew. Today, October 17th, I have revised the state of
emergency in the Commonwealth based on the impacts from Hurricane Matthew,
which produced damaging winds, periods of heavy rainfall, power outages, and
flooding across the Commonwealth of Virginia. I therefore direct that
appropriate assistance be rendered by agencies of state government to respond
to the needs of citizens, affected states, and the potential public safety
issues in the Commonwealth presented by oversize and overweight vehicles on the
Commonwealth's highways.
The health and general welfare of the citizens require that
state action be taken to help alleviate the conditions caused by this
situation. The effects of this incident constitute a disaster wherein human
life, and public and private property are imperiled, as described in § 44-146.16
of the Code of Virginia.
Therefore, by virtue of the authority vested in me by § 44-146.17
of the Code of Virginia, as Governor and as Director of Emergency Management,
and by virtue of the authority vested in me by Article V, Section 7 of the Constitution
of Virginia and by § 44-75.1 of the Code of Virginia, as Governor and
Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces of the Commonwealth, and subject always
to my continuing and ultimate authority and responsibility to act in such
matters, I hereby confirm, ratify, and memorialize in writing my verbal orders
issued on October 6, 2016, whereby I proclaimed that a state of emergency
exists, and directed that appropriate assistance be rendered by agencies of
both state and local governments to prepare for and respond to potential
impacts of Hurricane Matthew, alleviate any conditions resulting from the
incident, implement recovery and mitigation operations and activities so as to
return impacted areas to pre-event conditions in so far as possible, and alleviate
any impediments to the transport of relief supplies or utility restoration
support. Pursuant to § 44-75.1(A)(3) and (A)(4) of the Code of Virginia, I
also directed the Virginia National Guard and the Virginia Defense Force be
called forth to state active duty to assist in providing such aid. This
included Virginia National Guard assistance to the Virginia Department of State
Police to direct traffic, prevent looting, and perform such other law
enforcement functions as the Superintendent of State Police, in consultation
with the State Coordinator of Emergency Management, the Adjutant General, and
the Secretary of Public Safety and Homeland Security, may find necessary.
In order to marshal all public resources and appropriate
preparedness, response, and recovery measures to meet this threat and recover
from its effects, and in accordance with my authority contained in § 44-146.17
of the Code of Virginia, I ordered the following protective and restoration
measures:
A. Implementation by state agencies of the Commonwealth of
Virginia Emergency Operations Plan (COVEOP), as amended, along with other
appropriate state agency plans.
B. Activation of the Virginia Emergency Operations Center
(VEOC) and the Virginia Emergency Support Team (VEST) to coordinate the provision
of assistance to local governments. I am directing that the VEOC and VEST
coordinate state actions in support of affected localities, other mission
assignments to agencies designated in the COVEOP, and others that may be
identified by the State Coordinator of Emergency Management, in consultation
with the Secretary of Public Safety and Homeland Security, which are needed to
provide for the preservation of life, protection of property, and
implementation of recovery activities.
C. The authorization to assume control over the Commonwealth's
state-operated telecommunications systems, as required by the State Coordinator
of Emergency Management, in coordination with the Virginia Information
Technologies Agency, and with the consultation of the Secretary of Public
Safety and Homeland Security, making all systems assets available for use in
providing adequate communications, intelligence, and warning capabilities for
the incident, pursuant to § 44-146.18 of the Code of Virginia.
D. The evacuation of areas threatened or stricken by effects of
Hurricane Matthew, as appropriate. Following a declaration of a local emergency
pursuant to § 44-146.21 of the Code of Virginia, if a local governing body
determines that evacuation is deemed necessary for the preservation of life or
other emergency mitigation, response, or recovery effort, pursuant to § 44-146.17(1)
of the Code of Virginia, I direct the evacuation of all or part of the populace
therein from such areas and upon such timetable as the local governing body, in
coordination with the VEOC, acting on behalf of the State Coordinator of
Emergency Management, shall determine. Notwithstanding the foregoing, I reserve
the right to direct and compel evacuation from the same and different areas and
determine a different timetable both where local governing bodies have made
such a determination and where local governing bodies have not made such a
determination. Also, in those localities that have declared a local emergency
pursuant to § 44-146.21 of the Code of Virginia, if the local governing
body determines that controlling movement of persons is deemed necessary for
the preservation of life, public safety, or other emergency mitigation,
response, or recovery effort, pursuant to § 44-146.17(1) of the Code of
Virginia, I authorize the control of ingress and egress at an emergency area,
including the movement of persons within the area and the occupancy of premises
therein upon such timetable as the local governing body, in coordination with
the State Coordinator of Emergency Management and the VEOC, shall determine.
Violations of any order to citizens to evacuate shall constitute a violation of
this Executive Order and are punishable as a Class 1 misdemeanor.
E. The activation, implementation, and coordination of appropriate
mutual aid agreements and compacts, including the Emergency Management
Assistance Compact (EMAC), and the authorization of the State Coordinator of
Emergency Management to enter into any other supplemental agreements, pursuant
to § 44-146.17(5) and § 44-146.28:1 of the Code of Virginia, to provide
for the evacuation and reception of injured and other persons and the exchange
of medical, fire, police, National Guard personnel and equipment, public
utility, reconnaissance, welfare, transportation, and communications personnel,
equipment, and supplies. The State Coordinator of Emergency Management is
hereby designated as Virginia’s authorized representative within the meaning of
the Emergency Management Assistance Compact, § 44-146.28:1 of the Code of
Virginia.
F. The authorization of the Departments of State Police,
Transportation, and Motor Vehicles to grant temporary overweight, over width,
registration, or license exemptions to all carriers transporting essential
relief supplies, livestock or poultry feed, or other critical supplies for
livestock or poultry, heating oil, motor fuels, or propane, or providing restoration
of utilities (electricity, gas, phone, water, wastewater, and cable) in and
through any area of the Commonwealth in order to support the disaster response
and recovery, regardless of their point of origin or destination. Weight
exemptions are not valid on interstate highways or on posted structures for
restricted weight unless there is an associated Federal emergency declaration.
All over width loads, up to a maximum of 12 feet, and over
height loads up to a maximum of 14 feet must follow Virginia Department of
Motor Vehicles (DMV) hauling permit and safety guidelines.
In addition to described oversize transportation privileges,
carriers are also exempt from vehicle registration with the Department of Motor
Vehicles. This includes vehicles en route and returning to their home base. The
above-cited agencies shall communicate this information to all staff
responsible for permit issuance and truck legalization enforcement.
This Emergency Declaration implements limited relief from the
provisions of Title 49 Code of Federal Regulations §§ 390-399.
Accordingly, the State Coordinator of Emergency Management recognizes the
exemption for hours of service by any carrier when transporting essential
relief supplies, passengers, property, livestock, poultry, equipment, food,
feed for livestock or poultry, fuel, construction materials, and other critical
supplies to or from any portion of the Commonwealth for purpose of providing
direct relief or assistance as a result of this disaster, pursuant to § 52-8.4
of the Code of Virginia and 49 CFR Section 390.23 and Section 395.3.
The foregoing oversize transportation privileges, as well as
the regulatory exemption provided by § 52-8.4(A) of the Code of Virginia,
and implemented in 19 VAC 30-20-40(B) of the "Motor Carrier Safety
Regulations," shall remain in effect for 30 days from the onset of the
disaster, or until relief is no longer necessary, as determined by the
Secretary of Public Safety and Homeland Security in consultation with the
Secretary of Transportation, whichever is earlier. The discontinuance of
provisions authorized in this paragraph (F) may be implemented and disseminated
by the publication of administrative notice to all affected and interested
parties. I hereby delegate to the Secretary of Public Safety and Homeland
Security, after consultation with other affected Cabinet Secretaries, the
authority to implement this order as set forth in § 2.2-104 of the Code of
Virginia.
G. The authorization of the Marine Resources Commissioner to
act on behalf of the Commission in issuing permits pursuant to Chapter 12 of
Title 28.2 of the Code of Virginia when, in the judgment of the Commissioner,
it is necessary to address immediate health and safety needs and the
Commissioner would be unable to convene a meeting of the full Commission in a
timely manner. In an effort to address the impacts attributable to Hurricane
Matthew on the health, safety and general welfare of the citizens of the
Commonwealth, and in an attempt to expedite the return of impacted areas and
structures to pre-event conditions insofar as possible, no permits for
encroachments on State-owned submerged lands, tidal wetlands and coastal primary
sand dunes or beaches shall be required to replace previously permitted
structures and for beach nourishment activities along public beaches.
1. The pre-existing structure must have been previously
authorized and in a serviceable condition prior to the onset of the hurricane.
2. The replacement structure must be reconstructed in the same
location and in identical or smaller dimensions as the previously permitted
structure.
3. Beach nourishment activities on State-owned submerged lands
must be accomplished with sand from a previously identified or permitted source
of sand suitable for beach nourishment.
4. Reconstruction and beach nourishment activities must be
initiated prior to December 31, 2016, and completed prior to June 30, 2017.
5. Any property owner(s) seeking to replace a previously
permitted structure or nourish public beaches pursuant to this Executive Order
must submit to the Virginia Marine Resources Commission a letter attesting to
the foregoing and containing suitable drawings for beach nourishment activities
or of the proposed replacement structure(s) for comparison purposes.
6. No person may proceed with replacement of a previously
permitted structure or beach nourishment activity under the provisions of this
Executive Order without written approval from the Commissioner of the Virginia
Marine Resources Commission or the Local Wetlands Board Chairman for activities
involving wetlands or coastal primary sand dunes in localities where the
Wetlands Zoning and the Coastal Primary Sand Dune Ordinances have been adopted.
H. The authorization of a maximum of $4,425,000 in state sum
sufficient funds for state and local governments mission assignments authorized
and coordinated through the Virginia Department of Emergency Management that
are allowable as defined by The Stafford Act.
This funding is also available for state response and recovery
operations and incident documentation. Out of this state disaster sum
sufficient, $500,000, or more if available, is authorized for the Department of
Military Affairs for the state's portion of the eligible disaster-related costs
incurred for salaries, travel, and meals during mission assignments authorized
and coordinated through the Virginia Department of Emergency Management.
I. The authorization of a maximum of $250,000 for matching
funds for the Individuals and Household Program, authorized by The Stafford Act
(when presidentially authorized), to be paid from state funds.
J. The implementation by public agencies under my supervision
and control of their emergency assignments as directed in the COVEOP without
regard to normal procedures pertaining to performance of public work, entering
into contracts, incurring of obligations or other logistical and support
measures of the Emergency Services and Disaster Laws, as provided in §
44-146.28(b) of the Code of Virginia. § 44-146.24 of the Code of Virginia
also applies to the disaster activities of state agencies.
K. Designation of members and personnel of volunteer,
auxiliary, and reserve groups including search and rescue (SAR), Virginia
Associations of Volunteer Rescue Squads (VAVRS), Civil Air Patrol (CAP), member
organizations of the Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster (VOAD), Radio
Amateur Civil Emergency Services (RACES), volunteer firefighters, Citizen Corps
Programs such as Medical Reserve Corps (MRCs), Community Emergency Response
Teams (CERTs), and others identified and tasked by the State Coordinator of
Emergency Management for specific disaster-related mission assignments as
representatives of the Commonwealth engaged in emergency services activities
within the meaning of the immunity provisions of § 44-146.23(a) and (f) of
the Code of Virginia, in the performance of their specific disaster-related
mission assignments.
L. The authorization of appropriate oversight boards,
commissions, and agencies to ease building code restrictions and to permit
emergency demolition, hazardous waste disposal, debris removal, emergency
landfill sitting, and operations and other activities necessary to address
immediate health and safety needs without regard to time-consuming procedures
or formalities and without regard to application or permit fees or royalties.
M. The activation of the statutory provisions in § 59.1-525 et
seq. of the Code of Virginia related to price gouging. Price gouging at any
time is unacceptable. Price gouging is even more reprehensible during a time of
disaster after issuance of a state of emergency. I have directed all applicable
executive branch agencies to take immediate action to address any verified
reports of price gouging of necessary goods or services. I make the same
request of the Office of the Attorney General and appropriate local officials.
I further request that all appropriate executive branch agencies exercise their
discretion to the extent allowed by law to address any pending deadlines or
expirations affected by or attributable to this disaster event.
N. The following conditions apply to the deployment of the
Virginia National Guard and the Virginia Defense Force:
1. The Adjutant General of Virginia, after consultation with
the State Coordinator of Emergency Management, shall make available on state
active duty such units and members of the Virginia National Guard and Virginia
Defense Force and such equipment as may be necessary or desirable to assist in
preparations for this incident and in alleviating the human suffering and
damage to property.
2. Pursuant to § 52-6 of the Code of Virginia, I authorize
the Superintendent of the Department of State Police to appoint any and all
such Virginia Army and Air National Guard personnel called to state active duty
as additional police officers as deemed necessary. These police officers shall
have the same powers and perform the same duties as the State Police officers
appointed by the Superintendent. However, they shall nevertheless remain
members of the Virginia National Guard, subject to military command as members
of the State Militia. Any bonds and/or insurance required by § 52-7 of the
Code of Virginia shall be provided for them at the expense of the Commonwealth.
3. In all instances, members of the Virginia National Guard and
Virginia Defense Force shall remain subject to military command as prescribed
by § 44-78.1 of the Code of Virginia and are not subject to the civilian
authorities of county or municipal governments. This shall not be deemed to
prohibit working in close cooperation with members of the Virginia Departments
of State Police or Emergency Management or local law enforcement or emergency
management authorities or receiving guidance from them in the performance of
their duties.
4. Should service under this Executive Order result in the
injury or death of any member of the Virginia National Guard, the following
will be provided to the member and the member's dependents or survivors:
a. Workers' Compensation benefits provided to members of the
National Guard by the Virginia Workers' Compensation Act, subject to the
requirements and limitations thereof; and, in addition,
b. The same benefits, or their equivalent, for injury, disability,
and/or death, as would be provided by the federal government if the member were
serving on federal active duty at the time of the injury or death. Any such
federal-type benefits due to a member and his or her dependents or survivors
during any calendar month shall be reduced by any payments due under the
Virginia Workers' Compensation Act during the same month. If and when the time period
for payment of Workers' Compensation benefits has elapsed, the member and his
or her dependents or survivors shall thereafter receive full federal-type
benefits for as long as they would have received such benefits if the member
had been serving on federal active duty at the time of injury or death. Any
federal-type benefits due shall be computed on the basis of military pay grade
E-5 or the member's military grade at the time of injury or death, whichever
produces the greater benefit amount. Pursuant to § 44-14 of the Code of
Virginia, and subject to the availability of future appropriations which may be
lawfully applied to this purpose, I now approve of future expenditures out of
appropriations to the Department of Military Affairs for such federal-type
benefits as being manifestly for the benefit of the military service.
5. The following conditions apply to service by the Virginia
Defense Force:
a. Virginia Defense Force personnel shall receive pay at a rate
equivalent to a National Guard soldier of like rank, not to exceed 25 years of
service.
b. Lodging and meals shall be provided by the Adjutant General
or reimbursed at standard state per diem rates;
c. All privately owned equipment, including, but not limited
to, vehicles, boats, and aircraft, will be reimbursed for the expense of fuel.
Damage or loss of said equipment will be reimbursed, minus reimbursement from
personal insurance, if said equipment was authorized for use by the Adjutant
General in accordance with § 44-54.12 of the Code of Virginia;
d. In the event of death or injury, benefits shall be provided
in accordance with the Virginia Workers’ Compensation Act, subject to the
requirements and limitations thereof.
Upon my approval, the costs incurred by state agencies and
other agents in performing mission assignments through the VEOC of the
Commonwealth as defined herein and in § 44-146.28 of the Code of Virginia,
other than costs defined in the paragraphs above pertaining to the Virginia
National Guard and pertaining to the Virginia Defense Force, in performing
these missions shall be paid from state funds.
This Executive Order shall be effective October 6, 2016, and
shall remain in full force and effect until November 6, 2016, unless sooner
amended or rescinded by further executive order. Termination of the Executive
Order is not intended to terminate any federal-type benefits granted or to be
granted due to injury or death as a result of service under this Executive
Order.
Given under my hand and under the Seal of the Commonwealth of
Virginia, this 17th day of October, 2016.