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. 8 - December 12, 2016
December 2016 through February 2018
 
  | Volume: Issue | Material Submitted By Noon* | Will Be Published On | 
 
  | 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 | 
 
  | 34:8 | November 21, 2017 (Tuesday) | December 11, 2017 | 
 
  | 34:9 | December 6, 2017 | December 25, 2017 | 
 
  | 34:10 | December 19, 2017 (Tuesday) | January 8, 2018 | 
 
  | 34:11 | January 3, 2018 | January 22, 2018 | 
 
  | 34:12 | January 17, 2018 | February 5, 2018 | 
*Filing deadlines are Wednesdays
unless otherwise specified.
 
   
                                                        PETITIONS FOR RULEMAKING
Vol. 33 Iss. 8 - December 12, 2016
TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND
OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
BOARD OF DENTISTRY
Initial Agency Notice
Title of Regulation:
18VAC60-21. Regulations Governing the Practice of Dentistry.
Statutory Authority: § 54.1-2400 of the Code of
Virginia.
Name of Petitioner: Rodney S. Mayberry, DDS.
Nature of Petitioner's Request: To amend 18VAC60-21-80.
Publishing an advertisement that contains a false claim of professional
superiority, contains a claim to be a specialist, or uses any terms to
designate a dental specialty unless he is entitled to such specialty
designation under the guidelines or requirements for specialties approved by
the American Dental Association (Requirements for Recognition of Dental
Specialties and National Certifying Boards for Dental Specialists, November
2013), or such guidelines or requirements as subsequently amended.
Agency Plan for Disposition of Request: The petition
will be published on December 12, 2016, in the Virginia Register of Regulations
and also posted on the Virginia Regulatory Town Hall at
www.townhall.virginia.gov to receive public comment ending January 11, 2017.
The request to amend regulations and any comments for or against the petition
will be considered by the board at the first scheduled meeting after close of
comment, which will be March 10, 2017. The petitioner will receive information
on the board's decision after that date.
Public Comment Deadline: January 11, 2017.
Agency Contact: Sandra Reen, Executive Director,
Department of Health Professions, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Richmond, VA
23233, telephone (804) 367-4437, or email sandra.reen@dhp.virginia.gov.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-07; Filed November 9, 2016, 4:58 p.m.
 
 
                                                        
                                                        
                                                        REGULATIONS
Vol. 33 Iss. 8 - December 12, 2016
TITLE 3. ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES
ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL BOARD
Fast-Track Regulation
 
 Title of Regulation: 3VAC5-30. Tied-House (amending 3VAC5-30-60). 
 
 Statutory Authority: § 4.1-111 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 Public Hearing Information: No public hearings are
 scheduled. 
 
 Public Comment Deadline: January 11, 2017.
 
 Effective Date: February 3, 2017. 
 
 Agency Contact: Shawn Walker, Director of Law
 Enforcement, Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, 2901 Hermitage Road,
 Richmond, VA 23220, telephone (804) 213-4569, FAX (804) 213-4411, or email
 shawn.walker@abc.virginia.gov.
 
 Basis: Section 4.1-103 of the Code of Virginia
 authorizes the board to promulgate regulations in accordance with the
 Administrative Process Act (§ 2.2-4000 et seq. of the Code of Virginia), and
 § 4.1-111 authorizes the board to amend or repeal regulations adopted by
 it in accordance with the Administrative Process Act.
 
 Purpose: The amendment adds language that conforms with
 the current agency guidance document Circular Letter 06-01 allowing
 manufacturers, importers, brokers, bottlers, and wholesalers of alcoholic
 beverage to provide and install carbon dioxide filters in wine and beer draft
 lines of licensed retail establishments. The amendment has no adverse impact on
 the health, safety, or welfare of the citizens of the Commonwealth. 
 
 Rationale for Using Fast-Track Rulemaking Process: The
 amendment is expected to be noncontroversial as it merely conforms the
 regulation with current practice. 
 
 Substance: The amendment provides that representatives
 of manufactures, importers, bottlers, brokers, or wholesalers of wine and beer
 products may provide and install without charge carbon dioxide filters in draft
 beer lines of retail licensees.
 
 Issues: The primary advantage for the agency, regulated
 community, and the public in amending 3VAC5-30-60 is to conform the regulation
 with a guidance document and current practice within the regulated community.
 Another advantage for the agency is the fulfillment of the commitment made to
 update the regulation when the guidance document was issued. Furthermore, the
 allowance of this practice enables businesses to ensure that product quality
 and integrity are preserved without additional expense to many small
 businesses. There are no disadvantages to the Commonwealth or the public.
 
 Department of Planning and Budget's Economic Impact
 Analysis:
 
 Summary of the Proposed Amendments to Regulation. The Alcoholic
 Beverage Control Board (Board) proposes to specify that any manufacturer,
 importer, bottler, broker or wholesaler of alcoholic beverages may provide to
 retail licensees carbon dioxide filters without charge and install such filters
 in the retailers draft beer lines. 
 
 Result of Analysis. The benefits exceed the costs for the
 proposed change.
 
 Estimated Economic Impact. A carbon dioxide filter is a device
 placed in the gas line of a beer dispensing system. Its purpose is to filter
 impurities from carbon dioxide gas so that the impurities do not end up in
 draft beer. These filters were not prevalent when this regulation was first
 drafted, and therefore were not included in the items that could be given to
 retailers. Since the carbon dioxide filters could only be sold to retailers and
 not given, beer manufacturers/wholesalers became concerned with the integrity
 of their product as some retailers did not have the same concerns and thus were
 not willing to purchase the filters.1 
 
 On February 14, 2006, the Department of Alcoholic Beverage
 Control (Department) issued a guidance document2 stating that the
 Board approved the provision of carbon dioxide filters free of charge. The
 Board's proposed amendment to this regulation conforms the regulation to this
 policy that has been in effect since 2006. Thus the proposal will not affect
 the carbon dioxide filter rule in practice, but will be beneficial in that it
 will improve clarity for readers of the regulation who have not also seen the
 guidance document.
 
 Businesses and Entities Affected. The proposed amendment to the
 regulation merely clarifies, and does not change, an existing rule. The carbon
 dioxide filter rule potentially affects manufacturers, importers, bottlers,
 brokers and wholesalers of alcoholic beverages, as well as retail licensees.
 According to the Department there are over 9,000 such licensed entities in the
 Commonwealth, the majority of which qualify as small businesses.
 
 Localities Particularly Affected. The proposed amendment does
 not disproportionately affect particular localities. 
 
 Projected Impact on Employment. The proposed amendment does not
 significantly affect employment.
 
 Effects on the Use and Value of Private Property. The proposed
 amendment does not affect the use and value of private property.
 
 Real Estate Development Costs. The proposed amendment 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 proposed amendment to the
 regulation merely clarifies, and does not change, an existing rule. Therefore,
 it does not significantly affect costs for small businesses.
 
 Alternative Method that Minimizes Adverse Impact. The proposed
 amendment does not adversely affect small businesses.
 
 Adverse Impacts:
 
 Businesses. The proposed amendment does not adversely affect
 businesses.
 
 Localities. The proposed amendment does not adversely affect
 localities.
 
 Other Entities. The proposed amendment does not adversely
 affect other entities.
 
 ________________________________
 
 1 Source: Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control
 
 2 See Circular Letter 06-01: http://townhall.virginia.gov/L/ViewGDoc.cfm?gdid=3394
 
 Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The
 Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control concurs with the economic impact
 analysis prepared by the Department of Planning and Budget.
 
 Summary:
 
 The amendment allows any manufacturer, importer, bottler,
 broker, or wholesaler of alcoholic beverages to provide carbon dioxide filters
 to retail licensees without charge and to install such filters in the
 retailer's draft beer lines.
 
 3VAC5-30-60. Inducements to retailers; beer and wine tapping
 equipment; bottle or can openers; spirits back-bar pedestals; banquet
 licensees; paper, cardboard or plastic advertising materials; clip-ons and
 table tents; sanctions and penalties.
 
 A. Any manufacturer, importer, bottler, broker, or
 wholesaler, or its representative, may sell, rent, lend, buy for, or give to
 any retailer, without regard to the value thereof, the following: 
 
 1. Draft beer or wine knobs, containing advertising matter
 which shall include the brand name and may further include only trademarks,
 housemarks and slogans and shall not include any illuminating devices or be
 otherwise adorned with mechanical devices which are not essential in the
 dispensing of draft beer or wine; and 
 
 2. Tapping equipment, defined as all the parts of the
 mechanical system required for dispensing draft beer in a normal manner from
 the carbon dioxide tank through the beer faucet, excluding the following: 
 
 a. The carbonic acid gas in containers, except that such gas
 may be sold only at the reasonable open market price in the locality where
 sold; 
 
 b. Gas pressure gauges (may be sold at cost); 
 
 c. Draft arms or standards; 
 
 d. Draft boxes; and 
 
 e. Refrigeration equipment or components thereof; and 
 
 f. Carbon dioxide filters, which may be provided and
 installed without cost.
 
 Further, a manufacturer, bottler or wholesaler may sell, rent
 or lend to any retailer, for use only by a purchaser of draft beer in kegs or
 barrels from such retailer, whatever tapping equipment may be necessary for the
 purchaser to extract such draft beer from its container. 
 
 B. Any manufacturer, importer, bottler, broker, or
 wholesaler, or their representatives, may sell to any retailer and install in
 the retailer's establishment dispensing accessories (such as standards,
 faucets, rods, vents, taps, tap standards, hoses, cold plates, washers,
 couplings, gas gauges, vent tongues, shanks, and check valves) and carbon
 dioxide (and other gases used in dispensing equipment) at a price not less than
 the cost of the industry member who initially purchased them, and if the price
 is collected within 30 days of the date of sale. 
 
 C. Any beer tapping equipment may be converted for wine
 tapping by the beer wholesaler who originally placed the equipment on the
 premises of the retail licensee, provided that such beer wholesaler is also a
 wine wholesaler licensee. Moreover, at the time such equipment is converted for
 wine tapping, it shall be sold, or have previously been sold, to the retail
 licensee at a price not less than the initial purchase price paid by such
 wholesaler. 
 
 D. Any manufacturer, bottler or wholesaler of wine or beer
 may sell or give to any retailer, bottle or can openers upon which advertising
 matter regarding alcoholic beverages may appear, provided the wholesale value
 of any such openers given to a retailer by any individual manufacturer, bottler
 or wholesaler does not exceed $20. Openers in excess of $20 in wholesale value
 may be sold, provided the reasonable open market price is charged therefor. 
 
 E. Any manufacturer of spirits may sell, lend, buy for or
 give to any retail licensee, without regard to the value thereof, back-bar
 pedestals to be used on the retail premises and upon which advertising matter
 regarding spirits may appear. 
 
 F. Manufacturers of alcoholic beverages and their authorized
 vendors or wholesalers of wine or beer may sell at the reasonable wholesale
 price to banquet licensees glasses or paper or plastic cups upon which
 advertising matter regarding alcoholic beverages may appear. 
 
 G. Manufacturers, importers, bottlers, brokers, or wholesalers
 of alcoholic beverages, or their representatives, may not provide point-of-sale
 advertising for any alcoholic beverage or any nonalcoholic beer or nonalcoholic
 wine to retail licensees except in accordance with 3VAC5-30-80. Manufacturers,
 importers, bottlers, brokers, and wholesalers, or their representatives, may
 provide advertising materials to any retail licensee that have been customized
 for that retail licensee (including the name, logo, address, and website of the
 retail licensee) provided that such advertising materials must: 
 
 1. Comply with all other applicable regulations of the board; 
 
 2. Be for interior use only; 
 
 3. Contain references to the alcoholic beverage products or
 brands offered for sale by the manufacturer, bottler, or wholesaler providing
 such materials and to no other products; and 
 
 4. Be made available to all retail licensees. 
 
 H. Any manufacturer, importer, bottler, broker, or wholesaler
 of wine, beer, or spirits, or its representatives, may sell, lend, buy for, or
 give to any retail licensee clip-ons and table tents. 
 
 I. Any manufacturer, importer, bottler, broker, or wholesaler
 of alcoholic beverages, or their representatives, may clean and service, either
 free or for compensation, coils and other like equipment used in dispensing
 alcoholic beverages, and may sell solutions or compounds for cleaning alcoholic
 beverage glasses, provided the reasonable open market price is charged. 
 
 J. Any manufacturer, importer, bottler, or wholesaler of
 alcoholic beverages licensed in this Commonwealth may sell ice to retail
 licensees provided the reasonable open market price is charged. 
 
 K. Any licensee of the board, including any manufacturer,
 bottler, importer, broker as defined in § 4.1-216 A of the Code of
 Virginia, wholesaler, or retailer who violates, attempts to violate, solicits
 any person to violate or consents to any violation of this section shall be
 subject to the sanctions and penalties as provided in § 4.1-328 of the
 Code of Virginia. 
 
 VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4768; Filed November 14, 2016, 6:08 p.m. 
TITLE 3. ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES
ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL BOARD
Fast-Track Regulation
 
 Title of Regulation: 3VAC5-30. Tied-House (amending 3VAC5-30-90). 
 
 Statutory Authority: § 4.1-111 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 Public Hearing Information: No public hearings are
 scheduled. 
 
 Public Comment Deadline: January 11, 2017.
 
 Effective Date: February 3, 2017. 
 
 Agency Contact: Shawn Walker, Director of Law
 Enforcement, Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, 2901 Hermitage Road,
 Richmond, VA 23220, telephone (804) 213-4569, FAX (804) 213-4411, or email
 shawn.walker@abc.virginia.gov.
 
 Basis: Section 4.1-101 of the Code of Virginia
 establishes the Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control and the Alcoholic
 Beverage Control Board. Section 4.1-103 of the Code of Virginia enumerates the
 powers of the board, which includes the authority to adopt regulations and to
 do all acts necessary or advisable to carry out the purposes of the Alcoholic
 Beverage Control Act (§ 4.1-100 et seq. of the Code of Virginia). Section
 4.1-111 of the Code of Virginia provides the board with the authority to adopt
 reasonable regulations that it deems reasonable to carry out the provisions of
 the Alcoholic Beverage Control Act, and to amend or repeal such regulations and
 provides that the board promulgate regulations that may displace competition in
 the marketplace.
 
 Purpose: The amendment is intended to be responsive to
 the regulated business community; promulgated in response to the petition for
 rulemaking submitted by the Virginia Wine Wholesalers Association. The
 amendment to 3VAC5-30-90 will have no impact on the health, safety, or welfare
 of citizens. 
 
 Rationale for Using Fast-Track Rulemaking Process: This
 amendment is not expected to be controversial because the board sought public
 comment in response to the petition for rulemaking submitted by the Virginia
 Wine Wholesalers Association, and all responses received were favorable; no
 registered opposition to the regulatory amendment was received.
 
 Substance: The amendment provides that wholesalers of
 wine products are permitted to establish differentiated pricing between
 on-premises retail licensees and off-premises retail licensees for the same
 product and package.
 
 Issues: The primary advantage of this regulatory action
 is it allows businesses more flexibility in pricing structures of products
 sold, based upon the business model of the purchasing customer. According to
 the petitioners, this change will allow for a distribution structure that is
 modernized and consistent in the wine market segment in other jurisdictions.
 There are no disadvantages to the agency or the Commonwealth because tax
 revenue collections are not affected. A pertinent consideration for the
 regulated community is that long-standing nondiscriminatory pricing is altered,
 but the public comment period revealed no opposition to the amendment.
 
 Department of Planning and
 Budget's Economic Impact Analysis:
 
 Summary of the Proposed Amendments to Regulation. The Alcoholic
 Beverage Control Board (Board) proposes to permit wholesale wine licensees to
 differentiate in product pricing between retail establishment purchasers with
 on-premises and off-premises privileges. 
 
 Result of Analysis. The benefits likely exceed the costs for
 the proposed change.
 
 Estimated Economic Impact. The current regulation limits the
 ability of wine and beer wholesalers from differentiating pricing between
 retail off-premises and retail on-premises privilege licensees. The Board was
 petitioned by the Virginia Wine Wholesalers Association to consider amending
 the regulation section 3VAC5-30-90; Price Discrimination, Inducements, to allow
 for differentiated pricing between off-premises and on-premises accounts. The
 Board proposes an amendment that would permit licensed wine wholesalers to
 establish differentiated pricing between on-premises and off-premises retail
 licensees. The amendment does not pertain to beer wholesalers. 
 
 The proposed amendment will enable wholesale wine licensees to
 have greater flexibility in how they choose to price their products. This may
 enable these firms to adjust prices in a manner that increases profits.
 Wholesalers will likely seek to determine if one of the two types of retail
 establishment purchasers (on-premises and off-premises) is more sensitive to
 price changes than the other; in other words, more likely to increase purchases
 with a lower price and reduce purchases with a higher price.1 If
 wholesalers determine that one of the types of retail establishment purchasers
 is more price sensitive, they will charge a lower price to that type than to
 the less price sensitive type. The more price sensitive type may benefit from
 lower prices, while the less price sensitive type may face higher prices.
 
 Businesses and Entities Affected. The proposed amendment
 affects the 14,000+ retail on-premises and retail off-premises Alcoholic
 Beverage Control licensees and the 350 wholesale wine licensees in the
 Commonwealth, most of which are small businesses.2 
 
 Localities Particularly Affected. The proposed amendment does
 not disproportionately affect particular localities. 
 
 Projected Impact on Employment. The proposed amendment would
 not likely significantly affect employment.
 
 Effects on the Use and Value of Private Property. The proposed
 amendment may enable wholesale wine licensees to increase profits by enabling
 additional flexibility in product pricing.
 
 Real Estate Development Costs. The proposed amendment 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 proposed amendment allows
 wholesale wine licensees to charge one price to small retail off-premises
 privilege licensees and a different price to small on-premises privilege
 licensees. Wholesalers will likely increase prices for the type they determine
 to be less price sensitive, and lower prices for the type they determine to be
 more price sensitive. Thus the cost of wine purchases from wine wholesalers
 will likely increase for the less price sensitive type and decrease for the
 more price sensitive type.
 
 Alternative Method that Minimizes Adverse Impact. Though the
 cost of wine purchases will likely increase for the less price sensitive type
 of Alcoholic Beverage Control retail licensee, there is no apparent alternative
 method that will reduce that adverse impact and still meet the intended policy
 goal with its associated benefits.
 
 Adverse Impacts:
 
 Businesses. The proposed amendment allows wholesale wine
 licensees to charge one price to retail off-premises privilege licensees and a
 different price to on-premises privilege licensees. Wholesalers will likely
 increase prices for the type they determine to be less price sensitive.
 
 Localities. The proposed amendment does not adversely affect
 localities.
 
 Other Entities. The proposed amendment does not adversely
 affect other entities.
 
 _______________________________________
 
 1 In the terminology of economists, those who are more
 price sensitive are said to have relatively elastic demand, and those who are
 less price sensitive are said to have relatively inelastic demand.
 
 2 Data source: Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control
 
 Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The
 Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control concurs with the Department of
 Planning and Budget's economic impact analysis.
 
 Summary:
 
 The amendment allows wine wholesalers to differentiate
 pricing between retail off-premises privilege licensees and retail on-premises
 privilege licensees. 
 
 3VAC5-30-90. Price discrimination; inducements.
 
 A. No wholesale wine or beer licensee shall discriminate in
 price of alcoholic beverages between different retail purchasers except where
 the difference in price charged by such wholesale licensee is due to:
 
 1. Acceptance or rejection by a retail purchaser of terms or
 conditions affecting a price offer, including a quantity discount, as long as
 such terms or conditions are offered on an equal basis to all retailers;
 
 2. A bona fide difference in the cost of sale or delivery; or 
 
 3. The wholesale licensee charging a lower price in good faith
 to meet an equally low price charged by a competing wholesale licensee on a
 brand and package of like grade and quality.
 
 Where such difference in price charged to any such retail
 purchaser does occur, the board may ask for and the wholesale licensee shall
 furnish written substantiation for the price difference. 
 
 B. Notwithstanding subsection A of this section, wholesale
 wine licensees may differentiate in the pricing between retail purchasers with
 on-premises and off-premises privileges. However, there shall be no
 discrimination in pricing among retail licensee purchasers with on-premises
 privileges and no discrimination in pricing among retail licensee purchasers
 with off-premises privileges, unless the conditions in subsection A of this
 section are present.
 
 C. No person holding a license authorizing the sale of
 alcoholic beverages at retail shall knowingly induce or receive a
 discrimination in price prohibited by this section. 
 
 VA.R. Doc. No. R16-24; Filed November 21, 2016, 4:35 p.m. 
TITLE 3. ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES
ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL BOARD
Fast-Track Regulation
 
 Title of Regulation: 3VAC5-60. Manufacturers and
 Wholesalers Operations (amending 3VAC5-60-80). 
 
 Statutory Authority: §§ 4.1-103 and 4.1-111 of the Code
 of Virginia.
 
 Public Hearing Information: No public hearings are
 scheduled. 
 
 Public Comment Deadline: January 11, 2017.
 
 Effective Date: February 3, 2017. 
 
 Agency Contact: Shawn Walker, Director of Law
 Enforcement, Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, 2901 Hermitage Road,
 Richmond, VA 23220, telephone (804) 213-4569, FAX (804) 213-4411, or email
 shawn.walker@abc.virginia.gov.
 
 Basis: Section 4.1-103 of the Code of Virginia
 authorizes the board to promulgate regulations in accordance with the
 Administrative Process Act (§ 2.2-4000 et seq. of the Code of Virginia);
 § 4.1-111 of the Code of Virginia authorizes the board to amend or repeal
 regulations adopted by it in accordance with the Administrative Process Act;
 and § 4.1-212 of the Code of Virginia grants the board the authority to adopt
 a regulation governing the solicitation of mixed beverage licensee by
 representatives of the spirits industry.
 
 Purpose: The purpose of the amendment is to remove the
 incorrect fee amount because the regulation was not updated when § 4.1-230 of
 the Code of Virginia was amended and the fee was increased. The amendment has
 no adverse impact on the health, safety, or welfare of the citizens of the
 Commonwealth. 
 
 Rationale for Using Fast-Track Rulemaking Process: This
 action is expected to be noncontroversial because it is already in practice and
 does nothing but align the regulation with the existing language in the Code of
 Virginia. Individuals who are permitted under this amendment are already paying
 the statutory fee. Additionally, by eliminating the dollar amount, the
 regulation and Code of Virginia will not be in conflict if the statute
 increases the fee in the future.
 
 Substance: The amendment is merely a housekeeping issue
 to remove an outdated fee from 3VAC5-60-80 B 1 b.
 
 Issues: The primary advantage for the agency and
 regulated community is to amend the current language and conformity with
 § 4.1-230 E of the Code of Virginia. There are no disadvantages to the
 public or the Commonwealth.
 
 Department of Planning and Budget's Economic Impact
 Analysis:
 
 Summary of the Proposed Amendments to Regulation. The Alcoholic
 Beverage Control Board (Board) proposes to remove language from this regulation
 that conflicts with statute. 
 
 Result of Analysis. The benefits likely exceed the costs for all
 proposed changes.
 
 Estimated Economic Impact. The current regulation states that
 the annual permit fee for representatives of manufacturers of spirits to
 solicit mixed beverage licensees to sell their product is $300. This conflicts
 with § 4.1-230 of the Code of Virginia1 which lists the fee as $390.
 When statutes and regulations are in conflict, the statutes apply. Thus the
 effective fee is $390. The Board's proposal to remove the specification of the
 fee from the regulation would not affect the applicable fee. Nonetheless the
 proposal would be beneficial in that readers of the regulation would not be
 misled concerning the effective fee under law. 
 
 Businesses and Entities Affected. Since the proposed removal of
 the incorrect fee from the regulation does not affect the applicable fee, only
 readers of the regulation who are not aware of the fee in statute are directly
 affected by the proposal. The fee applies to representatives of manufacturers
 of spirits. There are 459 permits currently held by representatives of
 manufacturers of spirits.2
 
 Localities Particularly Affected. The proposed amendment does
 not disproportionately affect particular localities. 
 
 Projected Impact on Employment. The proposed amendment does not
 significantly affect employment.
 
 Effects on the Use and Value of Private Property. The proposed
 amendment does not affect the use and value of private property.
 
 Real Estate Development Costs. The proposed amendment 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 proposed amendment does not affect
 costs for small businesses.
 
 Alternative Method that Minimizes Adverse Impact. The proposed
 amendment does not adversely affect small businesses.
 
 Adverse Impacts:
 
 Businesses. The proposed amendment does not adversely affect
 businesses.
 
 Localities. The proposed amendment does not adversely affect
 localities.
 
 Other Entities. The proposed amendment does not adversely
 affect other entities.
 
 ____________________________
 
 
 
 
 
 Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The Department
 of Alcoholic Beverage Control concurs with the economic impact analysis
 prepared by the Department of Planning and Budget.
 
 Summary:
 
 The amendment removes an incorrect specific fee so that the
 regulation reflects that the correct fee for the permit issued to solicit the
 sale of mixed beverages by representatives of manufacturers of spirits is
 established pursuant to § 4.1-230 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 3VAC5-60-80. Solicitation of mixed beverage licensees by
 representatives of manufacturers, etc., of spirits. 
 
 A. Generally. This section applies to the solicitation,
 directly or indirectly, of a mixed beverage licensee to sell or offer for sale
 spirits. Solicitation of a mixed beverage licensee for such purpose other than
 by a permittee of the board and in the manner authorized by this section shall
 be prohibited. 
 
 B. Permits. 
 
 1. No person shall solicit a mixed beverage licensee unless he
 has been issued a permit. To obtain a permit, a person shall: 
 
 a. Register with the board by filing an application on such
 forms as prescribed by the board; 
 
 b. Pay in advance a the fee of $300,
 which is subject to proration on a quarterly basis, pursuant to § 4.1-230 E of
 the Code of Virginia; 
 
 c. Submit with the application a letter of authorization from
 the manufacturer, brand owner or its duly designated United States agent, of
 each specific brand or brands of spirits which the permittee is authorized to
 represent on behalf of the manufacturer or brand owner in the Commonwealth; and
 
 
 d. Be an individual at least 21 years of age. 
 
 2. Each permit shall expire yearly on June 30, unless sooner
 suspended or revoked by the board. 
 
 3. A permit hereunder shall authorize the permittee to solicit
 or promote only the brand or brands of spirits for which the permittee has been
 issued written authorization to represent on behalf of the manufacturer, brand
 owner, or its duly designated United States agent and provided that a letter of
 authorization from the manufacturer or brand owner to the permittee specifying
 the brand or brands he is authorized to represent shall be on file with the
 board. Until written authorization or a letter of authorization, in a form
 authorized by the board, is received and filed with the board for a particular
 brand or brands of spirits, there shall be no solicitation or promotion of such
 product by the permittee. Further, no amendment, withdrawal or revocation, in
 whole or in part, of a letter of authorization on file with the board shall be
 effective as against the board until written notice thereof is received
 and filed with the board;, and, until the board receives such
 notice, the permittee shall be deemed to be the authorized representative of
 the manufacturer or brand owner for the brand or brands specified on the most
 current authorization on file with the board. 
 
 C. Records. A permittee shall keep complete and accurate
 records of his solicitation of any mixed beverage licensee for a period of two
 years, reflecting all expenses incurred by him in connection with the
 solicitation of the sale of his employer's products and shall, upon request,
 furnish the board with a copy of such records. 
 
 D. Permitted activities. Solicitation by a permittee shall be
 limited to his authorized brand or brands, may include contact, meetings with,
 or programs for the benefit of mixed beverage licensees and employees thereof
 on the licensed premises, and in conjunction with solicitation, a permittee
 may: 
 
 1. Distribute directly or indirectly written educational
 material (one item per retailer and one item per employee, per visit) which may
 not be displayed on the licensed premises; distribute novelty and specialty
 items bearing spirits advertising not in excess of $10 in wholesale value (in
 quantities equal to the number of employees of the retail establishment present
 at the time the items are delivered); and provide film or video presentations
 of spirits which are essentially educational to licensees and their employees
 only, and are not for display or viewing by customers; 
 
 2. Provide to a mixed beverage licensee sample servings from containers
 of spirits and furnish one, unopened, sample container no larger than 375
 milliliters of each brand being promoted by the permittee and not sold by the
 licensee; such containers and sample containers shall be purchased at a
 government store and bear the permittee's permit number and the word
 "sample" in reasonable sized lettering on the container or sample
 container label; further, the spirits container shall remain the property of
 the permittee and may not be left with the licensee, and any sample
 containers left with the licensee shall not be sold by the licensee; 
 
 3. Promote their his authorized brands of
 spirits at conventions, trade association meetings, or similar gatherings of
 organizations, a majority of whose membership consists of mixed beverage
 licensees or spirits representatives for the benefit of their members and
 guests, and shall be limited as follows: 
 
 a. To sample servings from containers of spirits purchased
 from government stores when the spirits donated are intended for consumption
 during the gathering; 
 
 b. To displays of spirits in closed containers bearing the
 word "sample" in lettering of reasonable size and informational signs
 provided such merchandise is not sold or given away except as permitted in this
 section; 
 
 c. To distribution of informational brochures, pamphlets and
 the like, relating to spirits; 
 
 d. To distribution of novelty and specialty items bearing
 spirits advertising not in excess of $10 in wholesale value; 
 
 e. To film or video presentations of spirits which are
 essentially educational; 
 
 f. To display at the event the brands being promoted by the
 permittee;
 
 g. To rent display booth space if the rental fee is the same
 as paid by all exhibitors at the event;
 
 h. To provide its own hospitality, which is independent from
 activities sponsored by the association or organization holding the event;
 
 i. To purchase tickets to functions and pay registration fees
 if the payments or fees are the same as paid by all attendees, participants, or
 exhibitors at the event; and
 
 j. To make payments for advertisements in programs or
 brochures issued by the association or organization holding the event if the
 total payments made for all such advertisements do not exceed $300 per year for
 any association or organization holding the event; or
 
 4. Provide or offer to provide point-of-sale advertising
 material to licensees as provided in 3VAC5-20-20 or 3VAC5-30-80. 
 
 E. Prohibited activities. A permittee shall not: 
 
 1. Sell spirits to any licensee, solicit or receive orders for
 spirits from any licensee, provide or offer to provide cash discounts or cash
 rebates to any licensee, or to negotiate any contract or contract terms for the
 sale of spirits with a licensee; 
 
 2. Discount or offer to discount any merchandise or other
 alcoholic beverages as an inducement to sell or offer to sell spirits to
 licensees; 
 
 3. Provide or offer to provide gifts, entertainment or other
 forms of gratuity to licensees except that a permittee may provide a licensee
 "routine business entertainment," as defined in 3VAC5-30-70, subject
 to the same conditions and limitations that apply to wholesalers and
 manufacturers under that section; 
 
 4. Provide or offer to provide any equipment, furniture,
 fixtures, property or other thing of value to licensees except as permitted by
 this regulation; 
 
 5. Purchase or deliver spirits or other alcoholic beverages
 for or to licensees or provide any services as inducements to licensees, except
 that this provision shall not preclude the sale or delivery of wine or beer by
 a licensed wholesaler; 
 
 6. Be employed directly or indirectly in the manufacturing,
 bottling, importing or wholesaling of spirits and simultaneously be employed by
 a retail licensee; 
 
 7. Solicit licensees on any premises other than on their
 licensed premises or at conventions, trade association meetings or similar
 gatherings as permitted in subdivision D 3 of this section; 
 
 8. Solicit or promote any brand or brands of spirits without
 having on file with the board a letter from the manufacturer or brand owner
 authorizing the permittee to represent such brand or brands in the
 Commonwealth; or 
 
 9. Engage in solicitation of spirits other than as authorized
 by law. 
 
 F. Refusal, suspension or revocation of permits. 
 
 1. The board may refuse, suspend, or revoke a permit if
 it shall have reasonable cause to believe that any cause exists which that
 would justify the board in refusing to issue such person a license, or that
 such person has violated any provision of this section or committed any other
 act that would justify the board in suspending or revoking a license. 
 
 2. Before refusing, suspending, or revoking such
 permit, the board shall follow the same administrative procedures accorded an
 applicant or licensee under Title 4.1 of the Code of Virginia and regulations
 of the board. 
 
 VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4769; Filed November 14, 2016, 6:26 p.m. 
TITLE 3. ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES
ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL BOARD
Fast-Track Regulation
 
 Title of Regulation: 3VAC5-70. Other Provisions (amending 3VAC5-70-20). 
 
 Statutory Authority: § 4.1-103, 4.1-111, and 4.1-213 of
 the Code of Virginia.
 
 Public Hearing Information: No public hearings are
 scheduled. 
 
 Public Comment Deadline: January 11, 2017.
 
 Effective Date: February 3, 2017. 
 
 Agency Contact: Shawn Walker, Director of Law
 Enforcement, Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, 2901 Hermitage Road,
 Richmond, VA 23220, telephone (804) 213-4569, FAX (804) 213-4411, or email
 shawn.walker@abc.virginia.gov.
 
 Basis: Section 4.1-103 of the Code of Virginia
 authorizes the board to promulgate regulations in accordance with the
 Administrative Process Act (§ 2.2-4000 et seq. of the Code of Virginia) and §
 4.1-111 of the Code of Virginia authorizes the board to amend or repeal
 regulations adopted by it in accordance with the Administrative Process Act.
 
 Purpose: The purpose of the amendments are to conform to
 the language found in § 4.1-213 of the Code of Virginia, which was amended by
 Chapter 787 of the 2014 Acts of Assembly to eliminate the minimum size and one
 gallon maximum limitations on the size of cider containers. The amendments will
 have no adverse impact on the health, safety, or welfare of the citizens of the
 Commonwealth.
 
 Rationale for Using Fast-Track Rulemaking Process: This
 proposal is expected to be noncontroversial as the proposed amendment is merely
 bringing the regulation into conformity with the language of § 4.1-213 of the
 Code of Virginia related to the permitted sizes of containers of cider. The
 change in this statute was promulgated at the request of members of the
 regulated community.
 
 Substance: The amendments remove the minimum container
 size of 375 milliliters and the maximum size limitation of one-gallon and add
 language consistent with § 4.1-213 D of the Code of Virginia
 related to the container sizes of cider.
 
 Issues: The primary advantage for the agency and
 regulated community is to update the regulation to conform with § 4.1-213
 D of the Code of Virginia. There are no disadvantages to the public or the
 Commonwealth.
 
 Department of Planning and Budget's Economic Impact
 Analysis:
 
 Summary of the Proposed Amendments to Regulation. The Alcoholic
 Beverage Control Board (Board) proposes to conform this regulation to statutory
 language in 2014 legislation concerning the sale of cider. 
 
 Result of Analysis. The benefits likely exceed the costs for
 all proposed changes.
 
 Estimated Economic Impact. Chapter 787 of the 2014 Acts of
 Assembly1 added the following to § 4.1-213 of the Code of
 Virginia: 
 
 "Cider containing less than seven percent of alcohol by
 volume may be sold in any containers that comply with federal regulations for
 wine or beer, provided such containers are labeled in accordance with Board
 regulations. Cider containing seven percent or more of alcohol by volume may be
 sold in any containers that comply with federal regulations for wine, provided
 such containers are labeled in accordance with Board regulations."
 
 The Board proposes to add this same language to the regulation.
 Adding the language to the regulation will have no impact on the law in effect,
 but may be beneficial in that readers of the regulation may be better informed
 of the law in effect concerning the permitted sale of cider in the
 Commonwealth.
 
 Businesses and Entities Affected. As the proposed language is
 already in statute, adding it to the regulation does not affect anyone beyond
 potentially enlightening readers of the regulation who are not aware of the
 statute.
 
 Localities Particularly Affected. The proposed amendment does
 not disproportionately affect particular localities. 
 
 Projected Impact on Employment. The proposed amendment does not
 significantly affect employment.
 
 Effects on the Use and Value of Private Property. The proposed
 amendment does not affect the use and value of private property.
 
 Real Estate Development Costs. The proposed amendment 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 proposed amendment does not affect
 costs for small businesses.
 
 Alternative Method that Minimizes Adverse Impact. The proposed
 amendment does not adversely affect small businesses.
 
 Adverse Impacts:
 
 Businesses. The proposed amendment does not adversely affect
 businesses.
 
 Localities. The proposed amendment does not adversely affect
 localities.
 
 Other Entities. The proposed amendment does not adversely
 affect other entities.
 
 ___________________________________________
 
 1 See http://leg1.state.va.us/cgi-bin/legp504.exe?141+ful+CHAP0787
 
 Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The
 Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control concurs with the economic impact analysis
 prepared by the Department of Planning and Budget.
 
 Summary:
 
 Pursuant to Chapter 787 of the 2014 Acts of Assembly, the
 amendments expand the sizes of containers in which cider is permitted to be
 sold in the Commonwealth.
 
 3VAC5-70-20. Procedures for handling cider; authorized
 licensees; containers; labels; markup; age limits. 
 
 A. The procedures established by regulations of the board for
 the handling of wine having an alcoholic content of not more than 14% by volume
 shall, with the necessary change of detail, be applicable to the handling of
 cider, subject to the following exceptions and modifications. 
 
 B. Licensees authorized to sell beer and wine, or either, at
 retail are hereby approved by the board for the sale of cider and such sales
 shall be made only in accordance with the age limits set forth below in
 this section. 
 
 C. Containers of cider shall have a capacity of not less
 than 12 ounces (375 milliliters if in a metric-sized container) nor more than
 one gallon (three liters if in a metric-sized container). containing
 less than 7.0% alcohol by volume may be sold in any containers that comply with
 federal regulations for wine and beer provided such containers are labeled in
 accordance with board regulations. Cider containing 7.0% of more alcohol by volume
 may be sold in any containers that comply with federal regulations for wine,
 provided the containers are labeled in accordance with board regulations. 
 
 D. If the label of the product is subject to approval by the
 federal government, a copy of the federal label approval shall be provided to
 the board. 
 
 E. The markup or profit charged by the board shall be $.08
 per liter or fractional part thereof. 
 
 F. Persons must be 21 years of age or older to purchase or
 possess cider. 
 
 G. The provisions of subsection A and subdivision B 4 of
 3VAC5-60-20 shall not be applicable to the sale of cider by wholesale wine
 licensees to retail licensees of the board. 
 
 VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4756; Filed November 14, 2016, 6:06 p.m. 
TITLE 13. HOUSING
VIRGINIA HOUSING DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY
Final Regulation
 
 
 
 REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
 Virginia Housing Development Authority is claiming an exemption from the
 Administrative Process Act (§ 2.2-4000 et seq. of the Code of Virginia)
 pursuant to § 2.2-4002 A 4 of the Code of Virginia.
 
  
 
 Title of Regulation: 13VAC10-180. Rules and
 Regulations for Allocation of Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (amending 13VAC10-180-50, 13VAC10-180-60). 
 
 Statutory Authority: § 36-55.30:3 of the Code of
 Virginia.
 
 Effective Date: January 1, 2017. 
 
 Agency Contact: Paul M. Brennan, General Counsel,
 Virginia Housing Development Authority, 601 South Belvidere Street, Richmond,
 VA 23220, telephone (804) 343-5798, or email paul.brennan@vhda.com.
 
 Summary:
 
 The amendments (i) update the per unit cost limits; (ii)
 set a maximum permissible minimum income requirement for tenants receiving
 rental assistance that is applicable to all developments; (iii) increase the
 maximum per-development credit limit in the nonprofit pool; (iv) reduce the
 number of points awarded to applicants for providing a leasing preference to
 persons on public housing waiting lists; (v) for both elderly and family
 developments, implement a new sliding point scale for developments located in
 areas of economic opportunity, defined based upon census data, and delete
 language limiting points to census tracts with no other such development; (vi)
 define permissible uses of community rooms receiving points; (vii) revise
 amenity point requirements for certain windows and glass doors, internet
 service, and bath vent fans; (viii) increase points for developments with
 project-based vouchers and meeting listed criteria; (ix) extend points for
 providing preference to persons with developmental disabilities to an
 additional existing category of developments; (x) increase points for
 EarthCraft and LEED Gold developments; (xi) eliminate points for EarthCraft
 Platinum; (xii) provide points for certain developments with tenant utility
 monitoring and benchmarking; (xiii) increase points for developments applying
 for both 4.0% and 9.0% credits; (xiv) reduce developer experience points based
 on penalties for certain nonperformance; (xv) provide additional points for
 rental assistance demonstration deals competing in the local housing authority
 pool; (xvi) delete the 20% limit on credits in any pool for developments for
 the elderly; and (xvii) make other miscellaneous administrative or clarifying
 changes.
 
 13VAC10-180-50. Application. 
 
 Prior to submitting an application for reservation,
 applicants shall submit on such form as required by the executive director, the
 letter for authority signature by which the authority shall notify the chief
 executive officers (or the equivalent) of the local jurisdictions in which the
 developments are to be located to provide such officers a reasonable
 opportunity to comment on the developments. 
 
 Application for a reservation of credits shall be commenced
 by filing with the authority an application, on such form or forms as the
 executive director may from time to time prescribe or approve, together with
 such documents and additional information (including, without limitation, a market
 study that shows adequate demand for the housing units to be produced by the
 applicant's proposed development) as may be requested by the authority in order
 to comply with the IRC and this chapter and to make the reservation and
 allocation of the credits in accordance with this chapter. The executive
 director may reject any application from consideration for a reservation or
 allocation of credits if in such application the applicant does not provide the
 proper documentation or information on the forms prescribed by the executive
 director.
 
 All sites in an application for a scattered site development
 may only serve one primary market area. If the executive director determines
 that the sites subject to a scattered site development are served by different primary
 market areas, separate applications for credits must be filed for each primary
 market area in which scattered sites are located within the deadlines
 established by the executive director.
 
 The application should include a breakdown of sources and uses
 of funds sufficiently detailed to enable the authority to ascertain what costs
 will be incurred and what will comprise the total financing package, including
 the various subsidies and the anticipated syndication or placement proceeds
 that will be raised. The following cost information, if applicable, needs to be
 included in the application to determine the feasible credit amount: site
 acquisition costs, site preparation costs, construction costs, construction
 contingency, general contractor's overhead and profit, architect and engineer's
 fees, permit and survey fees, insurance premiums, real estate taxes during
 construction, title and recording fees, construction period interest, financing
 fees, organizational costs, rent-up and marketing costs, accounting and
 auditing costs, working capital and operating deficit reserves, syndication and
 legal fees, development fees, and other costs and fees. All applications
 seeking credits for rehabilitation of existing units must provide for
 contractor construction costs of at least $10,000 per unit for developments
 financed with tax-exempt bonds and $15,000 per unit for all other developments.
 
 Any application that exceeds the cost limits set forth below
 in subdivisions 1, 2, and 3 shall be rejected from further consideration
 hereunder and shall not be eligible for any reservation or allocation of
 credits.
 
 1. Inner Northern Virginia. The Inner Northern Virginia region
 shall consist of Arlington County, Fairfax County, City of Alexandria, City of
 Fairfax, and City of Falls Church. The total development cost of proposed
 developments in the Inner Northern Virginia region may not exceed (i) for new
 construction or adaptive reuse: $335,475 $387,809 per unit plus
 up to an additional $37,275 $43,090 per unit if the proposed development
 contains underground or structured parking for each unit or (ii) for
 acquisition/rehabilitation: $292,875 $338,564 per unit. 
 
 2. Prince William County, Loudoun County, and Fauquier
 County, Manassas City, and Manassas Park City. The total development
 cost of proposed developments in Prince William County, Loudoun County, and
 Fauquier County, Manassas City, and Manassas Park City may not exceed
 (i) for new construction or adaptive reuse: $249,210 $288,087 per
 unit plus up to an additional $43,090 per unit if the proposed development
 contains underground or structured parking for each unit or (ii) for
 acquisition/rehabilitation: $175,725 $203,138 per unit. 
 
 3. Balance of state. The total development cost of proposed
 developments in the balance of the state may not exceed (i) for new
 construction or adaptive reuse: $186,375 $215,450 per unit plus
 up to an additional $43,090 per unit if the proposed development contains
 underground or structured parking for each unit or (ii) for
 acquisition/rehabilitation: $143,775 $166,204 per unit.
 
 Costs, subject to a per unit limit set by the executive
 director, attributable to equipping units with electrical and plumbing hook-ups
 for dehumidification systems [ and attributable to installing approved
 dehumidification systems ] will not be included in the calculation of
 the above per unit cost limits.
 
 The cost limits in subdivisions 1, 2, and 3 above are 2012
 2015 fourth quarter base amounts. The cost limits shall be adjusted
 annually beginning in the fourth quarter of 2013 2016 by the
 authority in accordance with Marshall & Swift cost factors for such
 quarter, and the adjusted limits will be indicated on the application form,
 instructions, or other communication available to the public. 
 
 Each application shall include plans and specifications or,
 in the case of rehabilitation for which plans will not be used, a unit-by-unit
 work write-up for such rehabilitation with certification in such form and from
 such person satisfactory to the executive director as to the completion of such
 plans or specifications or work write-up.
 
 Each application shall include evidence of (i) sole fee
 simple ownership of the site of the proposed development by the applicant, (ii)
 lease of such site by the applicant for a term exceeding the compliance period
 (as defined in the IRC) or for such longer period as the applicant represents
 in the application that the development will be held for occupancy by
 low-income persons or families or (iii) right to acquire or lease such site
 pursuant to a valid and binding written option or contract between the
 applicant and the fee simple owner of such site for a period extending at least
 four months beyond any application deadline established by the executive
 director, provided that such option or contract shall have no conditions within
 the discretion or control of such owner of such site. Any contract for the
 acquisition of a site with existing residential property may not require an
 empty building as a condition of such contract, unless relocation assistance is
 provided to displaced households, if any, at such level required by the
 authority. A contract that permits the owner to continue to market the
 property, even if the applicant has a right of first refusal, does not
 constitute the requisite site control required in clause (iii) above. No
 application shall be considered for a reservation or allocation of credits
 unless such evidence is submitted with the application and the authority
 determines that the applicant owns, leases or has the right to acquire or lease
 the site of the proposed development as described in the preceding sentence. In
 the case of acquisition and rehabilitation of developments funded by Rural
 Development of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (Rural Development), any site
 control document subject to approval of the partners of the seller does not
 need to be approved by all partners of the seller if the general partner of the
 seller executing the site control document provides (i) an attorney's opinion
 that such general partner has the authority to enter into the site control
 document and such document is binding on the seller or (ii) a letter from the
 existing syndicator indicating a willingness to secure the necessary partner
 approvals upon the reservation of credits.
 
 Effective January 1, 2016, each Each
 application shall include written evidence satisfactory to the authority (i) of
 proper zoning or special use permit for such site or (ii) that no zoning
 requirements or special use permits are applicable.
 
 Each application shall include, in a form or forms required
 by the executive director, a certification of previous participation listing
 all developments receiving an allocation of tax credits under § 42 of the IRC
 in which the principal or principals have or had an ownership or participation
 interest, the location of such developments, the number of residential units
 and low-income housing units in such developments and such other information as
 more fully specified by the executive director. Furthermore, for any such
 development, the applicant must indicate whether the appropriate state housing
 credit agency has ever filed a Form 8823 with the IRS reporting noncompliance
 with the requirements of the IRC and that such noncompliance had not been
 corrected at the time of the filing of such Form 8823. The executive director
 may reject any application from consideration for a reservation or allocation
 of credits unless the above information is submitted with the application. If,
 after reviewing the above information or any other information available to the
 authority, the executive director determines that the principal or principals
 do not have the experience, financial capacity and predisposition to regulatory
 compliance necessary to carry out the responsibilities for the acquisition,
 construction, ownership, operation, marketing, maintenance and management of
 the proposed development or the ability to fully perform all the duties and
 obligations relating to the proposed development under law, regulation and the
 reservation and allocation documents of the authority or if an applicant is in
 substantial noncompliance with the requirements of the IRC, the executive
 director may reject applications by the applicant. No application will be
 accepted from any applicant with a principal that has or had an ownership or
 participation interest in a development at the time the authority reported such
 development to the IRS as no longer in compliance and no longer participating
 in the federal low-income housing tax credit program.
 
 Each application shall include, in a form or forms required
 by the executive director, a certification that the design of the proposed
 development meets all applicable amenity and design requirements required by
 the executive director for the type of housing to be provided by the proposed
 development.
 
 The application should include pro forma financial statements
 setting forth the anticipated cash flows during the credit period as defined in
 the IRC. The application shall include a certification by the applicant as to
 the full extent of all federal, state and local subsidies that apply (or that
 the applicant expects to apply) with respect to each building or development.
 The executive director may also require the submission of a legal opinion or
 other assurances satisfactory to the executive director as to, among other
 things, compliance of the proposed development with the IRC and a
 certification, together with an opinion of an independent certified public
 accountant or other assurances satisfactory to the executive director, setting
 forth the calculation of the amount of credits requested by the application and
 certifying, among other things, that under the existing facts and circumstances
 the applicant will be eligible for the amount of credits requested.
 
 Each applicant shall commit in the application to provide
 relocation assistance to displaced households, if any, at such level required
 by the executive director. Each applicant shall commit in the application to
 use a property management company certified by the executive director to manage
 the proposed development.
 
 Each applicant shall commit in the application not to
 require an annual minimum income requirement that exceeds the greater of $3,600
 or 2.5 times the portion of rent to be paid by tenants receiving rental
 assistance.
 
 If an applicant submits an application for reservation or
 allocation of credits that contains a material misrepresentation or fails to
 include information regarding developments involving the applicant that have
 been determined to be out of compliance with the requirements of the IRC, the
 executive director may reject the application or stop processing such
 application upon discovery of such misrepresentation or noncompliance and may
 prohibit such applicant from submitting applications for credits to the authority
 in the future.
 
 In any situation in which the executive director deems it
 appropriate, he may treat two or more applications as a single application.
 Only one application may be submitted for each location.
 
 The executive director may establish criteria and assumptions
 to be used by the applicant in the calculation of amounts in the application,
 and any such criteria and assumptions may be indicated on the application form,
 instructions or other communication available to the public.
 
 The executive director may prescribe such deadlines for
 submission of applications for reservation and allocation of credits for any
 calendar year as he shall deem necessary or desirable to allow sufficient
 processing time for the authority to make such reservations and allocations. If
 the executive director determines that an applicant for a reservation of
 credits has failed to submit one or more mandatory attachments to the
 application by the reservation application deadline, he may allow such
 applicant an opportunity to submit such attachments within a certain time
 established by the executive director with a 10-point scoring penalty per item.
 
 After receipt of the applications, if necessary, the
 authority shall notify the chief executive officers (or the equivalent) of the
 local jurisdictions in which the developments are to be located and shall
 provide such officers a reasonable opportunity to comment on the developments.
 
 The development for which an application is submitted may be,
 but shall not be required to be, financed by the authority. If any such
 development is to be financed by the authority, the application for such
 financing shall be submitted to and received by the authority in accordance
 with its applicable rules and regulations.
 
 The authority may consider and approve, in accordance
 herewith, both the reservation and the allocation of credits to buildings or
 developments that the authority may own or may intend to acquire, construct
 and/or rehabilitate.
 
 13VAC10-180-60. Review and selection of applications;
 reservation of credits.
 
 The executive director may divide the amount of credits into
 separate pools and each separate pool may be further divided into separate
 tiers. The division of such pools and tiers may be based upon one or more of
 the following factors: geographical areas of the state; types or
 characteristics of housing, construction, financing, owners, occupants, or
 source of credits; or any other factors deemed appropriate by him to best meet
 the housing needs of the Commonwealth.
 
 An amount, as determined by the executive director, not less
 than 10% of the Commonwealth's annual state housing credit ceiling for credits,
 shall be available for reservation and allocation to buildings or developments
 with respect to which the following requirements are met:
 
 1. A "qualified nonprofit organization" (as
 described in § 42(h)(5)(C) of the IRC) that is authorized to do business in
 Virginia and is determined by the executive director, on the basis of such
 relevant factors as he shall consider appropriate, to be substantially based or
 active in the community of the development and is to materially participate
 (regular, continuous and substantial involvement as determined by the executive
 director) in the development and operation of the development throughout the
 "compliance period" (as defined in § 42(i)(1) of the IRC); and
 
 2. (i) The "qualified nonprofit organization"
 described in the preceding subdivision 1 is to own (directly or through a
 partnership), prior to the reservation of credits to the buildings or
 development, all of the general partnership interests of the ownership entity
 thereof; (ii) the executive director of the authority shall have determined
 that such qualified nonprofit organization is not affiliated with or controlled
 by a for-profit organization; (iii) the executive director of the authority
 shall have determined that the qualified nonprofit organization was not formed
 by one or more individuals or for-profit entities for the principal purpose of
 being included in any nonprofit pools (as defined below) established by the
 executive director, and (iv) the executive director of the authority shall have
 determined that no staff member, officer or member of the board of directors of
 such qualified nonprofit organization will materially participate, directly or
 indirectly, in the proposed development as a for-profit entity.
 
 In making the determinations required by the preceding
 subdivision 1 and clauses (ii), (iii) and (iv) of subdivision 2 of this
 section, the executive director may apply such factors as he deems relevant,
 including, without limitation, the past experience and anticipated future
 activities of the qualified nonprofit organization, the sources and manner of
 funding of the qualified nonprofit organization, the date of formation and
 expected life of the qualified nonprofit organization, the number of paid staff
 members and volunteers of the qualified nonprofit organization, the nature and
 extent of the qualified nonprofit organization's proposed involvement in the
 construction or rehabilitation and the operation of the proposed development,
 the relationship of the staff, directors or other principals involved in the
 formation or operation of the qualified nonprofit organization with any persons
 or entities to be involved in the proposed development on a for-profit basis,
 and the proposed involvement in the construction or rehabilitation and
 operation of the proposed development by any persons or entities involved in
 the proposed development on a for-profit basis. The executive director may
 include in the application of the foregoing factors any other nonprofit
 organizations that, in his determination, are related (by shared directors,
 staff or otherwise) to the qualified nonprofit organization for which such
 determination is to be made.
 
 For purposes of the foregoing requirements, a qualified
 nonprofit organization shall be treated as satisfying such requirements if any
 qualified corporation (as defined in § 42(h)(5)(D)(ii) of the IRC) in
 which such organization (by itself or in combination with one or more qualified
 nonprofit organizations) holds 100% of the stock satisfies such requirements.
 
 The applications shall include such representations and
 warranties and such information as the executive director may require in order
 to determine that the foregoing requirements have been satisfied. In no event
 shall more than 90% of the Commonwealth's annual state housing credit ceiling
 for credits be available for developments other than those satisfying the
 preceding requirements. The executive director may establish such pools
 (nonprofit pools) of credits as he may deem appropriate to satisfy the
 foregoing requirement. If any such nonprofit pools are so established, the
 executive director may rank the applications therein and reserve credits to
 such applications before ranking applications and reserving credits in other
 pools, and any such applications in such nonprofit pools not receiving any
 reservations of credits or receiving such reservations in amounts less than the
 full amount permissible hereunder (because there are not enough credits then
 available in such nonprofit pools to make such reservations) shall be assigned
 to such other pool as shall be appropriate hereunder; provided, however, that
 if credits are later made available (pursuant to the IRC or as a result of
 either a termination or reduction of a reservation of credits made from any
 nonprofit pools or a rescission in whole or in part of an allocation of credits
 made from such nonprofit pools or otherwise) for reservation and allocation by
 the authority during the same calendar year as that in which applications in
 the nonprofit pools have been so assigned to other pools as described above,
 the executive director may, in such situations, designate all or any portion of
 such additional credits for the nonprofit pools (or for any other pools as he
 shall determine) and may, if additional credits have been so designated for the
 nonprofit pools, reassign such applications to such nonprofit pools, rank the
 applications therein and reserve credits to such applications in accordance
 with the IRC and this chapter. In the event that during any round (as
 authorized hereinbelow) of application review and ranking the amount of credits
 reserved within such nonprofit pools is less than the total amount of credits made
 available therein, the executive director may either (i) leave such unreserved
 credits in such nonprofit pools for reservation and allocation in any
 subsequent round or rounds or (ii) redistribute, to the extent permissible
 under the IRC, such unreserved credits to such other pool or pools as the
 executive director shall designate reservations therefore in the full amount
 permissible hereunder (which applications shall hereinafter be referred to as
 "excess qualified applications") or (iii) carry over such unreserved
 credits to the next succeeding calendar year for the inclusion in the state
 housing credit ceiling (as defined in § 42(h)(3)(C) of the IRC) for such
 year. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein, no reservation of
 credits shall be made from any nonprofit pools to any application with respect
 to which the qualified nonprofit organization has not yet been legally formed
 in accordance with the requirements of the IRC. In addition, no application for
 credits from any nonprofit pools or any combination of pools may receive a
 reservation or allocation of annual credits in an amount greater than $750,000
 $950,000 unless credits remain available in such nonprofit pools after
 all eligible applications for credits from such nonprofit pools receive a
 reservation of credits.
 
 Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein, applicants
 relying on the experience of a local housing authority for developer experience
 points described hereinbelow and/or using Hope VI funds from HUD in connection
 with the proposed development shall not be eligible to receive a reservation of
 credits from any nonprofit pools.
 
 The authority shall review each application, and, based on
 the application and other information available to the authority, shall assign
 points to each application as follows:
 
 1. Readiness.
 
 a. Written evidence satisfactory to the authority of
 unconditional approval by local authorities of the plan of development or site
 plan for the proposed development or that such approval is not required. (40
 points; applicants receiving points under this subdivision 1 a are not eligible
 for points under subdivision 5 a below)
 
 b. For applications submitted prior to January 1, 2016,
 written evidence satisfactory to the authority (i) of proper zoning or special
 use permit for such site or (ii) that no zoning requirements or special use
 permits are applicable. (40 points)
 
 2. Housing needs characteristics.
 
 a. Submission of the form prescribed by the authority with any
 required attachments, providing such information necessary for the authority to
 send a letter addressed to the current chief executive officer (or the
 equivalent) of the locality in which the proposed development is located,
 soliciting input on the proposed development from the locality within the
 deadlines established by the executive director. (minus 50 points for failure
 to make timely submission)
 
 b. A letter in response to its notification to the chief
 executive officer of the locality in which the proposed development is to be
 located opposing the allocation of credits to the applicant for the
 development. In any such letter, the chief executive officer must certify that
 the proposed development is not consistent with current zoning or other
 applicable land use regulations. Any such letter must also be accompanied by a
 legal opinion of the locality's attorney opining that the locality's opposition
 to the proposed development does not have a discriminatory intent or a
 discriminatory effect (as defined in 24 CFR 100.500(a)) that is not
 supported by a legally sufficient justification (as defined in 24 CFR
 100.500(b)) in violation of the Fair Housing Act (Title VIII of the Civil
 Rights Act of 1968, as amended) and the HUD implementing regulations. (minus 25
 points)
 
 c. Any proposed development that is to be located in a
 revitalization area meeting the requirements of § 36-55.30:2 A of the Code
 of Virginia. (10 points)
 
 d. Commitment by the applicant for any development without
 section 8 project-based assistance to give leasing preference to individuals
 and families (i) on public housing waiting lists maintained by the local
 housing authority operating in the locality in which the proposed development
 is to be located and notification of the availability of such units to the
 local housing authority by the applicant or (ii) on section 8 (as defined in
 13VAC10-180-90) waiting lists maintained by the local or nearest section 8
 administrator for the locality in which the proposed development is to be
 located and notification of the availability of such units to the local section
 8 administrator by the applicant. (10 points; Applicants receiving points
 under this subdivision may not require an annual minimum income requirement for
 prospective tenants that exceeds the greater of $3,600 or 2.5 times the portion
 of rent to be paid by such tenants.) (5 points)
 
 e. Any of the following: (i) firm financing commitment(s) from
 the local government, local housing authority, Federal Home Loan Bank
 affordable housing funds, Virginia Housing Trust Fund, funding from VOICE for
 projects located in Prince William County and donations from unrelated private
 foundations that have filed an IRS Form 990 (or a variation of such form) or
 Rural Development for a below-market rate loan or grant; (ii) a resolution
 passed by the locality in which the proposed development is to be located
 committing such financial support to the development in a form approved by the
 authority; (iii) a commitment to donate land, buildings or tap fee waivers from
 the local government; or (iv) a commitment to donate land (including a below
 market rate land lease) from an entity that is not a principal in the applicant
 (the donor being the grantee of a right of first refusal or purchase option,
 with no ownership interest in the applicant, shall not make the donor a
 principal in the applicant). (The amount of such financing, dollar value of
 local support, or value of donated land (including a below market rate land
 lease) will be determined by the executive director and divided by the total
 development sources of funds and the proposed development receives two points
 for each percentage point up to a maximum of 40 points.)
 
 f. Any development subject to (i) HUD's Section 8 or Section
 236 programs program or (ii) Rural Development's 515 program, at
 the time of application. (20 points, unless the applicant is, or has any
 common interests with, the current owner, directly or indirectly, the
 application will only qualify for these points if the applicant waives all
 rights to any developer's fee and any other fees associated with the acquisition
 and rehabilitation (or rehabilitation only) of the development unless permitted
 by the executive director for good cause.)
 
 g. Any development receiving (i) a real estate tax abatement
 on the increase in the value of the development or (ii) new project-based
 subsidy from HUD or Rural Development for the greater of five units or 10% of
 the units of the proposed development. (10 points)
 
 h. Any proposed elderly development located in a census tract
 that has less than a 10% poverty rate (based upon Census Bureau data) with
 no other elderly tax credit units in such census tract. (25 points).
 Effective January 1, 2018, any proposed elderly development located in a census
 tract that has less than a 12% poverty rate (based upon Census Bureau data) (20
 points); any proposed elderly development located in a census tract that has
 less than a 3.0% poverty rate (based upon Census Bureau data) (30 points).
 
 i. Any proposed family development located in a census tract
 that has less than a 10% poverty rate (based upon Census Bureau data) with
 no other family tax credit units in such census tract. (25 points).
 Effective January 1, 2018, any proposed family development located in a census
 tract that has less than a 12% poverty rate (based upon Census Bureau data) (20
 points); any proposed family development located in a census tract that has
 less than a 3.0% poverty rate (based upon Census Bureau data) (30 points).
 
 j. Any proposed development listed in the top 25 developments
 identified by Rural Development as high priority for rehabilitation at the time
 the application is submitted to the authority [ , (15
 points) [ ; effective January 1, 2018 (30 points) ].
 
 
 k. Any proposed new construction development (including
 adaptive re-use reuse and rehabilitation that creates additional
 rental space) located in a pool identified by the authority as a pool with
 little or no increase in rent-burdened population. (up to minus 20 points,
 depending upon the portion of the development that is additional rental space,
 in all pools [ except the at-large pool, 0 points in the at-large
 pool ]. The; the executive director may make exceptions in
 the following circumstances: 
 
 (1) Specialized types of housing designed to meet special
 needs that cannot readily be addressed utilizing existing residential
 structures; 
 
 (2) Housing designed to serve as a replacement for housing
 being demolished through redevelopment; or 
 
 (3) Housing that is an integral part of a neighborhood
 revitalization project sponsored by a local housing authority.)
 
 l. Any proposed new construction development (including
 adaptive re-use reuse and rehabilitation that creates additional
 rental space) that is located in a pool identified by the authority as a pool
 with an increasing rent-burdened population. (up to 20 points, depending upon
 the portion of the development that is additional rental space, in all pools
 [ except the at-large pool, 0 points in the at-large pool) ].
 
 3. Development characteristics.
 
 a. Evidence satisfactory to the authority documenting the
 quality of the proposed development's amenities as determined by the following:
 
 (1) The following points are available for any application:
 
 (a) If a community/meeting room with a minimum of 749 square
 feet is provided. (5 points) Community rooms receiving points under this subdivision
 3 a (1) (a) may not be used for commercial purposes. [ Provided
 Effective January 1, 2018, provided ] that the cost of the
 community room is not included in eligible basis, the owner may conduct, or
 contract with a nonprofit provider to conduct, programs or classes for tenants
 and members of the community in the community room, so long as (i) tenants
 compose at least one-third of participants, with first preference given to
 tenants above the one-third minimum; (ii) no program or class may be offered
 more than five days per week; (iii) no individual program or class may last
 more than eight hours per day, and all programs and class sessions may not last
 more than 10 hours per day in the aggregate; (iv) cost of attendance of the
 program or class must be below market rate with no profit from the operation of
 the class or program being generated for the owner (owner may also collect an
 amount of reimbursement of supplies and clean-up costs); (v) the community room
 must be available for use by tenants when programs and classes are not offered,
 subject to reasonable "quiet hours" established by owner; and (vi)
 any owner offering programs or classes must provide an annual certification to
 the authority that it is in compliance with such requirements, with failure to
 comply with these requirements resulting in a 10-point penalty for three years
 from the date of such noncompliance for principals in the owner.
 
 (b) If the exterior walls are constructed using the following
 materials:
 
 (i) Brick or other similar low-maintenance material approved
 by the authority (as indicated on the application form, instructions, or other
 communication available to the public) covering 30% or more of the exterior
 walls. (10 points) and
 
 (ii) If subdivision 3 a (1) (b) (i) above is met, an
 additional one-fifth point for each percent of exterior wall brick or other
 similar low-maintenance material approved by the authority (as indicated on the
 application form, instructions, or other communication available to the public)
 in excess of 30%. (maximum 10 points) and
 
 (iii) If subdivision 3 a (1) (b) (i) above is met, an
 additional one-tenth point for each percent of exterior wall covered by
 fiber-cement board. (maximum 7 points)
 
 (c) If all kitchen and laundry appliances (except range hoods)
 meet the EPA's Energy Star qualified program requirements. (5 points)
 
 (d) If all the windows and glass doors meet the EPA's
 Energy Star qualified program requirements are Energy Star labeled for
 the North-Central Zone or are National Fenestration Rating Council (NFRC)
 labeled with a maximum U-Factor of 0.27 and maximum solar heat gain coefficient
 (SHGC) of 0.40. (5 points)
 
 (e) If every unit in the development is heated and cooled with
 either (i) heat pump equipment with both a SEER seasonal energy
 efficiency ratio (SEER) rating of 15.0 or more and a HSPF heating
 seasonal performance factor (HSPF) rating of 8.5 or more or (ii) air
 conditioning equipment with a SEER rating of 15.0 or more, combined with a gas
 furnace with an AFUE annual fuel utilization efficiency (AFUE)
 rating of 90% or more. (10 points)
 
 (f) If the water expense is submetered (the tenant will pay
 monthly or bimonthly bill). (5 points)
 
 (g) If each bathroom contains only WaterSense labeled faucets
 and showerheads. (2 points)
 
 (h) If each unit is provided with the necessary infrastructure
 for high-speed cable, DSL or wireless Internet service. (1 point)
 
 (i) If all the water heaters have an energy factor greater
 than or equal to 67% for gas water heaters or greater than or equal to 93% for
 electric water heaters; or any centralized commercial system that has an
 efficiency performance rating equal to or greater than 95%, or any solar
 thermal system that meets at least 60% of the development's domestic hot water
 load. (5 points)
 
 (j) If each bathroom is equipped with a WaterSense labeled
 toilet. (2 points)
 
 (k) For Effective until January 1, 2018, for new
 construction only, if each full bathroom is equipped with EPA Energy Star
 qualified bath vent fans. (2 points) Effective January 1, 2018, if each full
 bathroom is provided either an EPA Energy Star qualified bath vent fan with
 duct size per manufacturer requirements or a continuous exhaust as part of a
 dedicated outdoor air system with humidity control. (2 points)
 
 (l) If the development has or the application provides for
 installation of continuous R-3 or higher wall sheathing insulation. (5 points)
 
 (m) If all cooking surfaces are equipped with fire prevention
 or suppression features that meet the authority's requirements (as indicated on
 the application form, instructions, or other communication available to the
 public). (2 points)
 
 (2) The following points are available to applications
 electing to serve elderly tenants:
 
 (a) If all cooking ranges have front controls. (1 point)
 
 (b) If all units have an emergency call system. (3 points)
 
 (c) If all bathrooms have an independent or supplemental heat
 source. (1 point)
 
 (d) If all entrance doors to each unit have two eye viewers,
 one at 42 inches and the other at standard height. (1 point)
 
 (3) If the structure is historic, by virtue of being listed
 individually in the National Register of Historic Places, or due to its
 location in a registered historic district and certified by the Secretary of
 the Interior as being of historical significance to the district, and the
 rehabilitation will be completed in such a manner as to be eligible for
 historic rehabilitation tax credits. (5 points)
 
 b. Any development in which (i) the greater of five units or
 10% of the units will be assisted by HUD project-based vouchers (as evidenced
 by the submission of a letter satisfactory to the authority from an authorized
 public housing authority (PHA) that the development meets all prerequisites for
 such assistance) or other form of documented and binding federal or state
 project-based rent subsidies in order to ensure occupancy by extremely
 low-income persons; and (ii) the greater of five units or 10% of the units will
 conform to HUD regulations interpreting the accessibility requirements of
 § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act and be actively marketed to persons with
 disabilities as defined in the Fair Housing Act in accordance with a plan
 submitted as part of the application for credits (all common space must also
 conform to HUD regulations interpreting the accessibility requirements of § 504
 of the Rehabilitation Act, and all the units described in clause (ii)
 above must include roll-in showers and roll-under sinks and front control
 ranges, unless agreed to by the authority prior to the applicant's submission
 of its application). (50 points) (60 points)
 
 In addition, for any development eligible for the preceding 50
 60 points, subject to appropriate federal approval, any applicant that
 commits to providing a first preference on its waiting list for persons with an
 intellectual or a developmental disability (ID/DD) as
 confirmed by the Virginia Department of Medical Assistance Services (DMAS)
 or the Virginia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental
 Services (DBHDS) for the greater of five units or 10% of the units. (25
 points)
 
 c. Any development in which the greater of five units or 10%
 of the units (i) have rents within HUD's Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) payment
 standard, (ii) conform to HUD regulations interpreting the accessibility
 requirements of § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, and (iii) are actively
 marketed to persons with disabilities as defined in the Fair Housing Act in
 accordance with a plan submitted as part of the application for credits (all
 common space must also conform to HUD regulations interpreting the
 accessibility requirements of § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act). (30 points) 
 
 In addition, for any development eligible for the preceding
 30 points, subject to appropriate federal approval, any applicant that commits
 to providing a first preference on its waiting list for persons with a
 developmental disability as confirmed by the Virginia Department of Behavioral
 Health and Developmental Services for the greater of [ 5
 five ] units or 10% of the units. (25 points)
 
 d. Any development in which 5.0% of the units (i) conform to
 HUD regulations interpreting the accessibility requirements of § 504 of the
 Rehabilitation Act and (ii) are actively marketed to persons with disabilities
 as defined in the Fair Housing Act in accordance with a plan submitted as part
 of the application for credits. (15 points)
 
 e. Any development located within one-half mile of an existing
 commuter rail, light rail or subway station or one-quarter mile of one or more
 existing public bus stops. (10 points, unless the development is located within
 the geographical area established by the executive director for a pool of
 credits for Northern Virginia or Tidewater Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA),
 in which case, the development will receive 20 points if the development is
 ranked against other developments in such Northern Virginia or Tidewater MSA
 pool, 10 points if the development is ranked against other developments in any
 other pool of credits established by the executive director)
 
 f. Any development for which the applicant agrees to obtain
 either (i) EarthCraft certification or (ii) U.S. Green Building Council LEED
 green-building certification prior to the issuance of an IRS Form 8609 with the
 proposed development's architect certifying in the application that the
 development's design will meet the criteria for such certification, provided
 that the proposed development's architect is on the authority's list of
 LEED/EarthCraft certified architects. (15 points for a LEED Silver development
 or EarthCraft certified development; [ 30 35 ] points
 for a LEED Gold development or EarthCraft Gold development; 45 points for a
 LEED Platinum development [ and an additional 10 points for an
 EarthCraft certified development ] or EarthCraft [ Platinum
 development.); 45 points for EarthCraft ] Gold development
 [ and that performs ] tenant utility
 monitoring and benchmarking.) The executive director may, if needed,
 designate a proposed development as requiring an increase in credit in order to
 be financially feasible and such development shall be treated as if in a
 difficult development area as provided in the IRC for any applicant receiving
 [ 30 25 ] or 45 points under this subdivision, provided
 however, any resulting increase in such development's eligible basis shall be
 limited to 5.0% of the development's eligible basis for [ 30 25 ]
 points awarded under this subdivision and 10% for 45 points awarded under this
 subdivision of the development's eligible basis. 
 
 g. If units are constructed to include the authority's
 universal design features, provided that the proposed development's architect
 is on the authority's list of universal design certified architects. (15
 points, if all the units in an elderly development meet this requirement; 15
 points multiplied by the percentage of units meeting this requirement for
 nonelderly developments)
 
 h. [ Any Effective until January 1, 2018, any ]
 development in which the applicant proposes to produce less than 100 low-income
 housing units. (20 points for producing 50 low-income housing units or less,
 minus 0.4 points for each additional low-income housing unit produced down to 0
 points for any development that produces 100 or more low-income housing units.)
 
 
 i. Any applicant for a development that, pursuant to a common
 plan of development, is part of a larger development located on the same or
 contiguous sites, financed in part by tax-exempt bonds. (20 (25
 points for tax-exempt bond financing of at least 30% of aggregate units, 30
 35 points for tax-exempt bond financing of at least 40% of aggregate
 units, and 40 45 points for tax-exempt bond financing of at least
 50% of aggregate units; such points being noncumulative) 
 
 4. Tenant population characteristics. Commitment by the
 applicant to give a leasing preference to individuals and families with
 children in developments that will have no more than 20% of its units with one
 bedroom or less. (15 points; plus 0.75 points for each percent of the
 low-income units in the development with three or more bedrooms up to an
 additional 15 points for a total of no more than 30 points)
 
 5. Sponsor characteristics.
 
 a. Evidence that the controlling general partner or managing
 member of the controlling general partner or managing member for the proposed
 development have developed:
 
 (1) As controlling general partner or managing member, (i) at
 least three tax credit developments that contain at least three times the number
 of housing units in the proposed development or (ii) at least six tax credit
 developments. (50 points) or
 
 (2) At least three deals as a principal and have at least
 $500,000 in liquid assets. "Liquid assets" means cash, cash
 equivalents, and investments held in the name of the entity(s) and or
 person(s), including cash in bank accounts, money market funds, U.S. Treasury
 bills, and equities traded on the New York Stock Exchange or NASDAQ. Certain
 cash and investments will not be considered liquid assets, including but not
 limited to: (i) stock held in the applicant's own company or any closely held
 entity, (ii) investments in retirement accounts, (iii) cash or investments
 pledged as collateral for any liability, and (iv) cash in property accounts,
 including reserves. The authority will assess the financial capacity of the
 applicant based on its financial statements. The authority will accept
 financial statements audited, reviewed, or compiled by an independent certified
 public accountant. Only a balance sheet dated on or after December 31 of the
 year prior to the application deadline is required. The authority will accept a
 compilation report with or without full note disclosures. Supplementary
 schedules for all significant assets and liabilities may be required. Financial
 statements prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted
 in the United States (U.S. GAAP) are preferred. Statements prepared in the
 income tax basis or cash basis must disclose that basis in the report. The
 authority reserves the right to verify information in the financial statements.
 (50 points) or 
 
 (3) As controlling general partner or managing member, at
 least one tax credit development that contains at least the number of housing
 units in the proposed development. (10 points)
 
 Applicants receiving points under subdivisions a (1) and a
 (2) of this subdivision 5 shall have the 50 points reduced [ for
 each principal if the controlling general partner or managing member
 of the controlling general partner or managing member ] in the
 applicant [ that ] acted as a principal in a
 development receiving an allocation of credits from the authority where
 [ : 
 
 (a) such principal met the requirements to be eligible for
 points under 5(a)(1) or (2) and 
 
 (b) any of ] the following occurred: (i)
 submission of a Form 8609 application that failed to match the required
 accountant's cost certification (minus 10 points for two years); (ii) failure
 to place a rehabilitation development in service by substantial completion
 (e.g., placed in service by expenditures after two years) (minus 5 points for
 two years); (iii) more than two requests for final inspection (minus 5 points
 for two years); [ and or ] (iv) requests
 for any deadline extension (minus 1 point for two years).
 
 Applicants receiving points under subdivision 5 subdivisions
 a (1) and a (2) above of this subdivision 5 are not
 eligible for points under subdivision a of subdivision 1 Readiness, above.
 
 b. Any applicant that includes a principal that was a
 principal in a development at the time the authority inspected such development
 and discovered a life-threatening hazard under HUD's Uniform Physical Condition
 Standards and such hazard was not corrected in the time frame timeframe
 established by the authority. (minus 50 points for a period of three years
 after the violation has been corrected)
 
 c. Any applicant that includes a principal that was a
 principal in a development that either (i) at the time the authority reported
 such development to the IRS for noncompliance had not corrected such
 noncompliance by the time a Form 8823 was filed by the authority or (ii)
 remained out-of-compliance with the terms of its extended use commitment after
 notice and expiration of any cure period set by the authority. (minus 15 points
 for a period of three calendar years after the year the authority filed Form
 8823 or expiration of such cure period, unless the executive director
 determines that such principal's attempts to correct such noncompliance was
 prohibited by a court, local government or governmental agency, in which case,
 no negative points will be assessed to the applicant, or 0 points, if the
 appropriate individual or individuals connected to the principal attend
 compliance training as recommended by the authority)
 
 d. Any applicant that includes a principal that is or was a
 principal in a development that (i) did not build a development as represented
 in the application for credit (minus two times the number of points assigned to
 the item or items not built or minus 20 points for failing to provide a minimum
 building requirement, for a period of three years after the last Form 8609 is
 issued for the development, in addition to any other penalties the authority
 may seek under its agreements with the applicant), or (ii) has a reservation of
 credits terminated by the authority (minus 10 points a period of three years
 after the credits are returned to the authority).
 
 e. Any applicant that includes a management company in its
 application that is rated unsatisfactory by the executive director or if the
 ownership of any applicant includes a principal that is or was a principal in a
 development that hired a management company to manage a tax credit development
 after such management company received a rating of unsatisfactory from the executive
 director during the compliance period and extended use period of such
 development. (minus 25 points)
 
 f. Any applicant that includes a principal that was a
 principal in a development for which the actual cost of construction (as
 certified in the Independent Auditor's Report with attached Certification of
 Sources and Uses that is submitted in connection with the Owner's Application
 for IRS Form 8609) exceeded the applicable cost limit by 5.0% or more (minus 50
 points for a period of three calendar years after December 31 of the year the
 cost certification is complete; provided, however, if the Board of
 Commissioners determines that such overage was outside of the applicant's
 control based upon documented extenuating circumstances, no negative points
 will be assessed).
 
 [ g. Any applicant that includes a principal that
 has submitted a subsequent application for a development prior to the issuance
 of Form 8609 for that development. (minus 10 points for a period of two
 calendar years after the year in which the subsequent application was
 submitted) ] 
 
 6. Efficient use of resources.
 
 a. The percentage by which the total of the amount of credits
 per low-income housing unit (the "per unit credit amount") of the
 proposed development is less than the standard per unit credit amounts
 established by the executive director for a given unit type, based upon the
 number of such unit types in the proposed development. (200 points multiplied
 by the percentage by which the total amount of the per unit credit amount of
 the proposed development is less than the applicable standard per unit credit
 amount established by the executive director, negative points will be assessed
 using the percentage by which the total amount of the per unit credit amount of
 the proposed development exceeds the applicable standard per unit credit amount
 established by the executive director.)
 
 b. The percentage by which the cost per low-income housing
 unit (the "per unit cost"), adjusted by the authority for location,
 of the proposed development is less than the standard per unit cost amounts
 established by the executive director for a given unit type, based upon the
 number of such unit types in the proposed development. (100 points multiplied
 by the percentage by which the total amount of the per unit cost of the
 proposed development is less than the applicable standard per unit cost amount
 established by the executive director; negative points will be assessed using
 the percentage by which the total amount of the per unit cost amount of the
 proposed development exceeds the applicable standard per unit cost amount
 established by the executive director.)
 
 The executive director may use a standard per square foot
 credit amount and a standard per square foot cost amount in establishing the
 per unit credit amount and the per unit cost amount in subdivision 6 above. For
 the purpose of calculating the points to be assigned pursuant to such
 subdivision 6 above, all credit amounts shall include any credits previously
 allocated to the development.
 
 7. Bonus points.
 
 a. Commitment by the applicant to impose income limits on the
 low-income housing units throughout the extended use period (as defined in the
 IRC) below those required by the IRC in order for the development to be a
 qualified low-income development. Applicants receiving points under this
 subdivision 7 a may not receive points under subdivision 7 b
 below. (Up to 50 points, the product of (i) 100 multiplied by (ii) the
 percentage of housing units in the proposed development both rent restricted to
 and occupied by households at or below 50% of the area median gross income;
 plus one point for each percentage point of such housing units in the proposed
 development that are further restricted to rents at or below 30% of 40% of the
 area median gross income up to an additional 10 points.)
 
 b. Commitment by the applicant to impose rent limits on the
 low-income housing units throughout the extended use period (as defined in the
 IRC) below those required by the IRC in order for the development to be a
 qualified low-income development. Applicants receiving points under this
 subdivision 7 b may not receive points under subdivision 7 a above.
 (Up to 25 points, the product of (i) 50 multiplied by (ii) the percentage of
 housing units in the proposed development rent restricted to households at or
 below 50% of the area median gross income; plus one point for each percentage
 point of such housing units in the proposed development that are further
 restricted to rents at or below 30% of 40% of the area median gross income up
 to an additional 10 points. Points for proposed developments in low-income
 jurisdictions shall be two times the points calculated in the preceding
 sentence, up to 50 points.)
 
 c. Commitment by the applicant to maintain the low-income
 housing units in the development as a qualified low-income housing development
 beyond the 30-year extended use period (as defined in the IRC). Applicants
 receiving points under this subdivision 7 c may not receive bonus points
 under subdivision 7 d below. (40 points for a 10-year commitment
 beyond the 30-year extended use period or 50 points for a 20-year commitment
 beyond the 30-year extended use period.)
 
 d. Participation by a local housing authority or qualified
 nonprofit organization (substantially based or active in the community with at
 least a 10% ownership interest in the general partnership interest of the
 partnership) and a commitment by the applicant to sell the proposed development
 pursuant to an executed, recordable option or right of first refusal to such
 local housing authority or qualified nonprofit organization or to a wholly
 owned subsidiary of such organization or authority, at the end of the 15-year
 compliance period, as defined by IRC, for a price not to exceed the outstanding
 debt and exit taxes of the for-profit entity. The applicant must record such
 option or right of first refusal immediately after the low-income housing
 commitment described in 13VAC10-180-70. Applicants receiving points under this
 subdivision 7 d may not receive bonus points under subdivision 7
 c above. (60 points; plus five points if the local housing authority or
 qualified nonprofit organization submits a homeownership plan satisfactory to
 the authority in which the local housing authority or qualified nonprofit
 organization commits to sell the units in the development to tenants.)
 
 e. Any development participating in the Rental Assistance
 Demonstration (RAD) program competing in the local housing authority pool will
 receive an additional 10 points. Applicants must show proof of a commitment to
 enter into housing assistance payment (CHAP) or a RAD conversion commitment
 (RCC).
 
 In calculating the points for subdivisions 7 a and b above,
 any units in the proposed development required by the locality to exceed 60% of
 the area median gross income will not be considered when calculating the
 percentage of low-income units of the proposed development with incomes below
 those required by the IRC in order for the development to be a qualified
 low-income development, provided that the locality submits evidence satisfactory
 to the authority of such requirement.
 
 After points have been assigned to each application in the
 manner described above, the executive director shall compute the total number
 of points assigned to each such application. Any application that is assigned a
 total number of points less than a threshold amount of 425 points (325 points
 for developments financed with tax-exempt bonds in such amount so as not to
 require under the IRC an allocation of credits hereunder) shall be rejected
 from further consideration hereunder and shall not be eligible for any
 reservation or allocation of credits.
 
 During its review of the submitted applications, the
 authority may conduct its own analysis of the demand for the housing units to
 be produced by each applicant's proposed development. Notwithstanding any
 conclusion in the market study submitted with an application, if the authority
 determines that, based upon information from its own loan portfolio or its own
 market study, inadequate demand exists for the housing units to be produced by
 an applicant's proposed development, the authority may exclude and disregard
 the application for such proposed development.
 
 The executive director may exclude and disregard any
 application that he determines is not submitted in good faith or that he
 determines would not be financially feasible.
 
 Upon assignment of points to all of the applications, the
 executive director shall rank the applications based on the number of points so
 assigned. If any pools shall have been established, each application shall be
 assigned to a pool and, if any, to the appropriate tier within such pool and
 shall be ranked within such pool or tier, if any. The amount of credits made
 available to each pool will be determined by the executive director. Available credits
 will include unreserved per capita dollar amount credits from the current
 calendar year under § 42(h)(3)(C)(i) of the IRC, any unreserved per capita
 credits from previous calendar years, and credits returned to the authority
 prior to the final ranking of the applications and may include up to 40% of
 next calendar year's per capita credits as shall be determined by the executive
 director. Those applications assigned more points shall be ranked higher than
 those applications assigned fewer points. However, if any set-asides
 established by the executive director cannot be satisfied after ranking the
 applications based on the number of points, the executive director may rank as
 many applications as necessary to meet the requirements of such set-aside (selecting
 the highest ranked application, or applications, meeting the requirements of
 the set-aside) over applications with more points.
 
 In the event of a tie in the number of points assigned to two
 or more applications within the same pool, or, if none, within the
 Commonwealth, and in the event that the amount of credits available for
 reservation to such applications is determined by the executive director to be
 insufficient for the financial feasibility of all of the developments described
 therein, the authority shall, to the extent necessary to fully utilize the
 amount of credits available for reservation within such pool or, if none,
 within the Commonwealth, select one or more of the applications with the
 highest combination of points from subdivision 7 above, and each application so
 selected shall receive (in order based upon the number of such points,
 beginning with the application with the highest number of such points) a
 reservation of credits. If two or more of the tied applications receive the
 same number of points from subdivision 7 above and if the amount of credits
 available for reservation to such tied applications is determined by the
 executive director to be insufficient for the financial feasibility of all the
 developments described therein, the executive director shall select one or more
 of such applications by lot, and each application so selected by lot shall
 receive (in order of such selection by lot) a reservation of credits.
 
 For each application which may receive a reservation of
 credits, the executive director shall determine the amount, as of the date of
 the deadline for submission of applications for reservation of credits, to be
 necessary for the financial feasibility of the development and its viability as
 a qualified low-income development throughout the credit period under the IRC.
 In making this determination, the executive director shall consider the sources
 and uses of the funds, the available federal, state and local subsidies
 committed to the development, the total financing planned for the development
 as well as the investment proceeds or receipts expected by the authority to be
 generated with respect to the development, and the percentage of the credit
 dollar amount used for development costs other than the costs of intermediaries.
 He shall also examine the development's costs, including developer's fees and
 other amounts in the application, for reasonableness, and if he determines that
 such costs or other amounts are unreasonably high, he shall reduce them to
 amounts that he determines to be reasonable. The executive director shall
 review the applicant's projected rental income, operating expenses and debt
 service for the credit period. The executive director may establish such
 criteria and assumptions as he shall deem reasonable for the purpose of making
 such determination, including, without limitation, criteria as to the
 reasonableness of fees and profits and assumptions as to the amount of net
 syndication proceeds to be received (based upon such percentage of the credit
 dollar amount used for development costs, other than the costs of
 intermediaries, as the executive director shall determine to be reasonable for
 the proposed development), increases in the market value of the development,
 and increases in operating expenses, rental income and, in the case of
 applications without firm financing commitments (as defined hereinabove) at
 fixed interest rates, debt service on the proposed mortgage loan. The executive
 director may, if he deems it appropriate, consider the development to be a part
 of a larger development. In such a case, the executive director may consider,
 examine, review and establish any or all of the foregoing items as to the
 larger development in making such determination for the development.
 
 At such time or times during each calendar year as the
 executive director shall designate, the executive director shall reserve
 credits to applications in descending order of ranking within each pool and
 tier, if applicable, until either substantially all credits therein are reserved
 or all qualified applications therein have received reservations. (For the
 purpose of the preceding sentence, if there is not more than a de minimis
 amount, as determined by the executive director, of credits remaining in a pool
 after reservations have been made, "substantially all" of the credits
 in such pool shall be deemed to have been reserved.) The executive director may
 rank the applications within pools at different times for different pools and
 may reserve credits, based on such rankings, one or more times with respect to
 each pool. The executive director may also establish more than one round of
 review and ranking of applications and reservation of credits based on such
 rankings, and he shall designate the amount of credits to be made available for
 reservation within each pool during each such round. The amount reserved to
 each such application shall be equal to the lesser of (i) the amount requested
 in the application or (ii) an amount determined by the executive director, as
 of the date of application, to be necessary for the financial feasibility of
 the development and its viability as a qualified low-income development
 throughout the credit period under the IRC; provided, however, that in no event
 shall the amount of credits so reserved exceed the maximum amount permissible
 under the IRC.
 
 Not [ Effective until January 1, 2018, not
 more than 20% of the credits in any pool may be reserved to developments
 intended to provide elderly housing, unless the feasible credit amount, as
 determined by the executive director, of the highest ranked elderly housing
 development in any pool exceeds 20% of the credits in such pool, then such
 elderly housing development shall be the only elderly housing development
 eligible for a reservation of credits from such pool. However, if credits
 remain available for reservation after all eligible nonelderly housing
 developments receive a reservation of credits, such remaining credits may be
 made available to additional elderly housing developments. The above limitation
 of credits available for elderly housing shall not include elderly housing
 developments with project-based subsidy providing rental assistance for at
 least 20% of the units that are submitted as rehabilitation developments or
 assisted living facilities licensed under Chapter 17 (§ 63.2-1700 et seq.)
 of Title 63.2 of the Code of Virginia. ] 
 
 If the amount of credits available in any pool is determined
 by the executive director to be insufficient for the financial feasibility of
 the proposed development to which such available credits are to be reserved,
 the executive director may move the proposed development and the credits
 available to another pool. If any credits remain in any pool after moving
 proposed developments and credits to another pool, the executive director may
 for developments that meet the requirements of § 42(h)(1)(E) of the IRC
 only, reserve the remaining credits to any proposed development(s) scoring at
 or above the minimum point threshold established by this chapter without regard
 to the ranking of such application with additional credits from the
 Commonwealth's annual state housing credit ceiling for the following year in
 such an amount necessary for the financial feasibility of the proposed
 development, or developments. However, the reservation of credits from the
 Commonwealth's annual state housing credit ceiling for the following year shall
 be in the reasonable discretion of the executive director if he determines it
 to be in the best interest of the plan. In the event a reservation or an allocation
 of credits from the current year or a prior year is reduced, terminated, or
 canceled, the executive director may substitute such credits for any credits
 reserved from the following year's annual state housing credit ceiling.
 
 In the event that during any round of application review and
 ranking the amount of credits reserved within any pools is less than the total
 amount of credits made available therein during such round, the executive
 director may either (i) leave such unreserved credits in such pools for
 reservation and allocation in any subsequent round or rounds or,
 (ii) redistribute such unreserved credits to such other pool or pools as the
 executive director may designate or, (iii) supplement such
 unreserved credits in such pools with additional credits from the
 Commonwealth's annual state housing credit ceiling for the following year for
 reservation and allocation if in the reasonable discretion of the executive
 director, it serves the best interest of the plan, or (iv) carry over such
 unreserved credits to the next succeeding calendar year for inclusion in the
 state housing credit ceiling (as defined in § 42(h)(3)(C) of the IRC) for such
 year.
 
 Notwithstanding anything contained herein, the total amount
 of credits that may be awarded in any credit year after credit year 2001 to any
 applicant or to any related applicants for one or more developments shall not
 exceed 15% of Virginia's per capita dollar amount of credits for such credit
 year (the "credit cap"). However, if the amount of credits to be reserved
 in any such credit year to all applications assigned a total number of points
 at or above the threshold amount set forth above shall be less than Virginia's
 dollar amount of credits available for such credit year, then the authority's
 board of commissioners may waive the credit cap to the extent it deems
 necessary to reserve credits in an amount at least equal to such dollar amount
 of credits. Applicants shall be deemed to be related if any principal in a
 proposed development or any person or entity related to the applicant or
 principal will be a principal in any other proposed development or
 developments. For purposes of this paragraph, a principal shall also include
 any person or entity who, in the determination of the executive director, has
 exercised or will exercise, directly or indirectly, substantial control over
 the applicant or has performed or will perform (or has assisted or will assist
 the applicant in the performance of), directly or indirectly, substantial
 responsibilities or functions customarily performed by applicants with respect
 to applications or developments. For the purpose of determining whether any
 person or entity is related to the applicant or principal, persons or entities
 shall be deemed to be related if the executive director determines that any
 substantial relationship existed, either directly between them or indirectly
 through a series of one or more substantial relationships (e.g., if party A has
 a substantial relationship with party B and if party B has a substantial relationship
 with party C, then A has a substantial relationship with both party B and party
 C), at any time within three years of the filing of the application for the
 credits. In determining in any credit year whether an applicant has a
 substantial relationship with another applicant with respect to any application
 for which credits were awarded in any prior credit year, the executive director
 shall determine whether the applicants were related as of the date of the
 filing of such prior credit year's application or within three years prior
 thereto and shall not consider any relationships or any changes in
 relationships subsequent to such date. Substantial relationships shall include,
 but not be limited to, the following relationships (in each of the following
 relationships, the persons or entities involved in the relationship are deemed
 to be related to each other): (i) the persons are in the same immediate family
 (including, without limitation, a spouse, children, parents, grandparents,
 grandchildren, brothers, sisters, uncles, aunts, nieces, and nephews) and are
 living in the same household; (ii) the entities have one or more common general
 partners or members (including related persons and entities), or the entities
 have one or more common owners that (by themselves or together with any other
 related persons and entities) have, in the aggregate, 5.0% or more ownership
 interest in each entity; (iii) the entities are under the common control (e.g.,
 the same person or persons and any related persons serve as a majority of the
 voting members of the boards of such entities or as chief executive officers of
 such entities) of one or more persons or entities (including related persons
 and entities); (iv) the person is a general partner, member or employee in the
 entity or is an owner (by himself or together with any other related persons
 and entities) of 5.0% or more ownership interest in the entity; (v) the entity
 is a general partner or member in the other entity or is an owner (by itself or
 together with any other related persons and entities) of 5.0% or more ownership
 interest in the other entity; or (vi) the person or entity is otherwise
 controlled, in whole or in part, by the other person or entity. In determining
 compliance with the credit cap with respect to any application, the executive
 director may exclude any person or entity related to the applicant or to any
 principal in such applicant if the executive director determines that (i) such
 person or entity will not participate, directly or indirectly, in matters
 relating to the applicant or the ownership of the development to be assisted by
 the credits for which the application is submitted, (ii) such person or entity
 has no agreement or understanding relating to such application or the tax
 credits requested therein, and (iii) such person or entity will not receive a
 financial benefit from the tax credits requested in the application. A limited
 partner or other similar investor shall not be determined to be a principal and
 shall be excluded from the determination of related persons or entities unless
 the executive director shall determine that such limited partner or investor
 will, directly or indirectly, exercise control over the applicant or
 participate in matters relating to the ownership of the development substantially
 beyond the degree of control or participation that is usual and customary for
 limited partners or other similar investors with respect to developments
 assisted by the credits. If the award of multiple applications of any applicant
 or related applicants in any credit year shall cause the credit cap to be
 exceeded, such applicant or applicants shall, upon notice from the authority,
 jointly designate those applications for which credits are not to be reserved
 so that such limitation shall not be exceeded. Such notice shall specify the
 date by which such designation shall be made. In the absence of any such
 designation by the date specified in such notice, the executive director shall
 make such designation as he shall determine to best serve the interests of the
 program. Each applicant and each principal therein shall make such
 certifications, shall disclose such facts and shall submit such documents to
 the authority as the executive director may require to determine compliance
 with credit cap. If an applicant or any principal therein makes any
 misrepresentation to the authority concerning such applicant's or principal's
 relationship with any other person or entity, the executive director may reject
 any or all of such applicant's pending applications for reservation or
 allocation of credits, may terminate any or all reservations of credits to the
 applicant, and may prohibit such applicant, the principals therein and any
 persons and entities then or thereafter having a substantial relationship (in
 the determination of the executive director as described above) with the
 applicant or any principal therein from submitting applications for credits for
 such period of time as the executive director shall determine.
 
 Within a reasonable time after credits are reserved to any
 applicants' applications, the executive director shall notify each applicant
 for such reservations of credits either of the amount of credits reserved to
 such applicant's application (by issuing to such applicant a written binding
 commitment to allocate such reserved credits subject to such terms and
 conditions as may be imposed by the executive director therein, by the IRC and
 by this chapter) or, as applicable, that the applicant's application has been
 rejected or excluded or has otherwise not been reserved credits in accordance
 herewith. The written binding commitment shall prohibit any transfer, direct or
 indirect, of partnership interests (except those involving the admission of
 limited partners) prior to the placed-in-service date of the proposed
 development unless the transfer is consented to by the executive director. The
 written binding commitment shall further limit the developers' fees to the
 amounts established during the review of the applications for reservation of
 credits and such amounts shall not be increased unless consented to by the
 executive director. 
 
 If credits are reserved to any applicants for developments
 that have also received an allocation of credits from prior years, the
 executive director may reserve additional credits from the current year equal
 to the amount of credits allocated to such developments from prior years,
 provided such previously allocated credits are returned to the authority. Any
 previously allocated credits returned to the authority under such circumstances
 shall be placed into the credit pools from which the current year's credits are
 reserved to such applicants.
 
 The executive director shall make a written explanation
 available to the general public for any allocation of housing credit dollar
 amount that is not made in accordance with established priorities and selection
 criteria of the authority.
 
 The authority's board shall review and consider the analysis
 and recommendation of the executive director for the reservation of credits to
 an applicant, and, if it concurs with such recommendation, it shall by
 resolution ratify the reservation by the executive director of the credits to
 the applicant, subject to such terms and conditions as it shall deem necessary
 or appropriate to assure compliance with the aforementioned binding commitment
 issued or to be issued to the applicant, the IRC and this chapter. If the board
 determines not to ratify a reservation of credits or to establish any such
 terms and conditions, the executive director shall so notify the applicant.
 
 The executive director may require the applicant to make a
 good faith deposit or to execute such contractual agreements providing for
 monetary or other remedies as it may require, or both, to assure that the
 applicant will comply with all requirements under the IRC, this chapter and the
 binding commitment (including, without limitation, any requirement to conform
 to all of the representations, commitments and information contained in the
 application for which points were assigned pursuant to this section). Upon
 satisfaction of all such aforementioned requirements (including any
 post-allocation requirements), such deposit shall be refunded to the applicant
 or such contractual agreements shall terminate, or both, as applicable.
 
 If, as of the date the application is approved by the
 executive director, the applicant is entitled to an allocation of the credits
 under the IRC, this chapter and the terms of any binding commitment that the
 authority would have otherwise issued to such applicant, the executive director
 may at that time allocate the credits to such qualified low-income buildings or
 development without first providing a reservation of such credits. This
 provision in no way limits the authority of the executive director to require a
 good faith deposit or contractual agreement, or both, as described in the
 preceding paragraph, nor to relieve the applicant from any other requirements
 hereunder for eligibility for an allocation of credits. Any such allocation
 shall be subject to ratification by the board in the same manner as provided
 above with respect to reservations.
 
 The executive director may require that applicants to whom
 credits have been reserved shall submit from time to time or at such specified
 times as he shall require, written confirmation and documentation as to the
 status of the proposed development and its compliance with the application, the
 binding commitment and any contractual agreements between the applicant and the
 authority. If on the basis of such written confirmation and documentation as
 the executive director shall have received in response to such a request, or on
 the basis of such other available information, or both, the executive director
 determines any or all of the buildings in the development that were to become
 qualified low-income buildings will not do so within the time period required
 by the IRC or will not otherwise qualify for such credits under the IRC, this
 chapter or the binding commitment, then the executive director may (i)
 terminate the reservation of such credits and draw on any good faith deposit,
 or (ii) substitute the reservation of credits from the current credit year with
 a reservation of credits from a future credit year if the delay is caused by a
 lawsuit beyond the applicant's control that prevents the applicant from
 proceeding with the development. If, in lieu of or in addition to the foregoing
 determination, the executive director determines that any contractual
 agreements between the applicant and the authority have been breached by the
 applicant, whether before or after allocation of the credits, he may seek to
 enforce any and all remedies to which the authority may then be entitled under
 such contractual agreements.
 
 The executive director may establish such deadlines for
 determining the ability of the applicant to qualify for an allocation of
 credits as he shall deem necessary or desirable to allow the authority
 sufficient time, in the event of a reduction or termination of the applicant's
 reservation, to reserve such credits to other eligible applications and to
 allocate such credits pursuant thereto.
 
 Any material changes to the development, as proposed in the
 application, occurring subsequent to the submission of the application for the
 credits therefor shall be subject to the prior written approval of the
 executive director. As a condition to any such approval, the executive director
 may, as necessary to comply with this chapter, the IRC, the binding commitment
 and any other contractual agreement between the authority and the applicant,
 reduce the amount of credits applied for or reserved or impose additional terms
 and conditions with respect thereto. If such changes are made without the prior
 written approval of the executive director, he may terminate or reduce the
 reservation of such credits, impose additional terms and conditions with
 respect thereto, seek to enforce any contractual remedies to which the
 authority may then be entitled, draw on any good faith deposit, or any
 combination of the foregoing.
 
 In the event that any reservation of credits is terminated or
 reduced by the executive director under this section, he may reserve, allocate
 or carry over, as applicable, such credits in such manner as he shall determine
 consistent with the requirements of the IRC and this chapter.
 
 Notwithstanding the provisions of this section, the executive
 director may make a reservation of credits to any applicant that proposes a
 nonelderly development that (i) will be assisted by HUD project-based vouchers
 or another form of documented and binding federal or state project-based rent
 subsidies in order to ensure occupancy by extremely low-income persons; (ii)
 conforms to HUD regulations interpreting the accessibility requirements of §
 504 of the Rehabilitation Act; and (iii) will be actively marketed to people with
 disabilities in accordance with a plan submitted as part of the application for
 credits and approved by the executive director for either (a) at least 25% of
 the units in the development or (b) if HUD Section 811 funds are providing the
 rent subsidies, at least 15% but not more than 25% of the units in the
 development. Any such reservations made in any calendar year may be up to 6.0%
 of the Commonwealth's annual state housing credit ceiling for the applicable
 credit year. However, such reservation will be for credits from the
 Commonwealth's annual state housing credit ceiling from the following calendar
 year.
 
 VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4837; Filed November 10, 2016, 9:16 a.m. 
TITLE 14. INSURANCE
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.
 
  
 
 Title of Regulation: 14VAC5-45. Rules Governing
 Suitability in Annuity Transactions (amending 14VAC5-45-10 through 14VAC5-45-40;
 adding 14VAC5-45-45, 14VAC5-45-47). 
 
 Statutory Authority: §§ 12.1-13 and 38.2-223 of the Code
 of Virginia.
 
 Public Hearing Information: A public hearing will be
 held upon request.
 
 Public Comment Deadline: January 23, 2017.
 
 Agency Contact: Raquel C. Pino, Policy Advisor, Bureau
 of Insurance, State Corporation Commission, P.O. Box 1157, Richmond, VA 23218,
 telephone (804) 371-9499, FAX (804) 371-9873, or email
 raquel.pino@scc.virginia.gov.
 
 Summary:
 
 The proposed amendments incorporate provisions contained in
 the National Association of Insurance Commissioners' Suitability in Annuity
 Transactions Model Regulation, including (i) a new definition for suitability
 information, (ii) additional requirements for providing information to
 consumers regarding the annuity, (iii) a requirement that agents complete a
 one-time four-credit continuing education course on annuity products, and (iv)
 a five-year recordkeeping retention requirement. 
 
 AT RICHMOND, NOVEMBER 18, 2016
 
 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA, ex rel.
 
 STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION
 
 CASE NO. INS-2016-00267
 
 Ex Parte: In the matter of
 Amending the Rules Governing
 Suitability in Annuity Transactions
 
 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, and § 38.2-223 of the Code
 provides that the Commission may issue any rules and regulations necessary or
 appropriate for the administration and enforcement of Title 38.2 of the Code.
 
 The rules and regulations issued by the Commission pursuant
 to § 38.2-223 of the Code are set forth in Title 14 of the Virginia Administrative
 Code. A copy may also be found at the Commission's website:
 http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case. 
 
 The Bureau of Insurance ("Bureau") has submitted to
 the Commission proposed amendments to rules set forth in Chapter 45 of Title 14
 of the Virginia Administrative Code, entitled Rules Governing Suitability in
 Annuity Transactions ("Rules"), which amend the Rules set out at
 14VAC5-45-10 through 14VAC5-45-40, and add new Rules at 
 
 14VAC5-45-45 and 14VAC5-45-47. 
 
 The proposed amendments to Chapter 45 are necessary to
 incorporate provisions contained in the National Association of Insurance
 Commissioners' Suitability in Annuity Transactions Model Regulation. These
 provisions include a new definition for suitability information, additional
 requirements for providing information to consumers regarding the annuity, a
 requirement that agents complete a one-time four-credit continuing education
 course on annuity products, and a five-year recordkeeping retention requirement.
 
 
 NOW THE COMMISSION is of the opinion that the proposed
 amendments submitted by the Bureau to amend the Rules set out at 14VAC5-45-10
 through 14VAC5-45-40, and add new Rules at 14VAC5-45-45 and 14VAC5-45-47,
 should be considered for adoption with a proposed effective date of April 1,
 2017.
 
 Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED THAT:
 
 (1) The proposed amendments to the Rules Governing
 Suitability in Annuity Transactions, which amend the Rules set out at
 14VAC5-45-10 through 14VAC5-45-40, and add new Rules at 14VAC5-45-45 and
 14VAC5-45-47, are attached hereto and made a part hereof.
 
 (2) All interested persons who desire to comment in support
 of or in opposition to, or request a hearing to consider the proposed
 amendments to the Rules, shall file such comments or hearing request on or
 before January 23, 2017, with Joel H. Peck, Clerk, State Corporation
 Commission, c/o Document Control Center, P.O. Box 2118, Richmond, Virginia
 23218. Interested persons desiring to submit comments electronically may do so
 by following the instructions at the Commission's website:
 http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case. All comments shall refer to Case No.
 INS-2016-00267. 
 
 (3) If no written request for a hearing on the proposal to
 amend the Rules as outlined in this Order is received on or before January 23,
 2017, the Commission, upon consideration of any comments submitted in support
 of or in opposition to the proposal, may adopt the Rules as submitted by the
 Bureau. 
 
 (4) The Bureau forthwith shall provide notice to all
 companies, agencies, and agents licensed by the Commission to sell annuities or
 variable annuities in Virginia and to all interested persons. 
 
 (5) The Commission's Division of Information Resources
 forthwith shall cause a copy of this Order, together with the proposal to amend
 the Rules, to be forwarded to the Virginia Registrar of Regulations for
 appropriate publication in the Virginia Register of Regulations.
 
 (6) The Commission's Division of Information Resources
 shall make available this Order and the attached proposed amendments to the
 Rules on the Commission's website: http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case. 
 
 (7) The Bureau shall file with the Clerk of the Commission an
 affidavit of compliance with the notice requirements of Ordering Paragraph (4)
 above.
 
 (8) This matter is continued. 
 
 AN ATTESTED COPY hereof shall be sent by the Clerk of the
 Commission to: Kiva B. Pierce, Assistant Attorney General, Division of Consumer
 Counsel, Office of the Attorney General, 900 East Main Street, Second Floor,
 Richmond, Virginia 23219; and a copy hereof shall be delivered to the
 Commission's Office of General Counsel and the Bureau of Insurance in care of
 Deputy Commissioner Althelia P. Battle. 
 
 14VAC5-45-10. Purpose and scope. 
 
 The purpose of this chapter is to set forth rules and
 procedures for recommendations to consumers that result in a transaction
 involving annuity products so that the insurance needs and financial objectives
 of consumers at the time of the transaction are appropriately addressed. This
 chapter shall apply to any recommendation to purchase or,
 exchange, or replace an annuity made to a consumer by an agent, or
 insurer where no agent is involved, that results in the purchase or,
 exchange, or replacement recommended. 
 
 14VAC5-45-20. Definitions. 
 
 The following words and terms when used in this chapter shall
 have the following meaning, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise: 
 
 "Agent" or "insurance agent" means an
 individual or business entity that sells, solicits, or negotiates contracts of
 insurance or annuity in this Commonwealth. 
 
 "Annuity" means a fixed, variable, or
 modified guaranteed annuity that is individually solicited, whether the product
 is classified as an individual annuity or group annuity. 
 
 "Commission" means the State Corporation
 Commission. 
 
 "Continuing education credit" or "CE
 credit" means one continuing education credit as defined in
 § 38.2-1867 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 "Continuing education provider" or "CE
 provider" means an individual or entity that is approved to offer
 continuing education courses pursuant to § 38.2-1867 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 "FINRA" means the Financial Industry Regulatory
 Authority or a succeeding agency.
 
 "Insurer" means an insurance company required to be
 licensed under the laws of this Commonwealth to provide insurance products,
 including annuities. 
 
 "Recommendation" means advice provided by an agent,
 or an insurer where no agent is involved, to an individual consumer that
 results in a purchase or, exchange, or replacement of an
 annuity in accordance with that advice. 
 
 "Replacement" means a transaction in which a new
 policy or contract is to be purchased, and it is known or should be known to
 the proposing agent, or to the proposing insurer if there is no agent, that by
 reason of the transaction, an existing policy or contract, has been or is to
 be:
 
 1. Lapsed, forfeited, surrendered or partially surrendered,
 assigned to the replacing insurer, or otherwise terminated;
 
 2. Converted to reduced paid-up insurance, continued as
 extended term insurance, or otherwise reduced in value by the use of
 nonforfeiture benefits or other policy values;
 
 3. Amended so as to effect either a reduction in benefits
 or in the term for which coverage would otherwise remain in force or for which
 benefits would be paid;
 
 4. Reissued with any reduction in cash value; or
 
 5. Used in a financed purchase.
 
 "Suitability information" means information that
 is reasonably appropriate to determine the suitability of a recommendation,
 including the following:
 
 1. Age;
 
 2. Annual income;
 
 3. Financial situation and needs, including the financial
 resources used for the funding of the annuity;
 
 4. Financial experience;
 
 5. Financial objectives;
 
 6. Intended use of the annuity;
 
 7. Financial time horizon;
 
 8. Existing assets, including investment and life insurance
 holdings;
 
 9. Liquidity needs;
 
 10. Liquid net worth;
 
 11. Risk tolerance; and
 
 12. Tax status.
 
 14VAC5-45-30. Exemptions. 
 
 Unless otherwise specifically included, this chapter shall
 not apply to recommendations transactions involving: 
 
 1. Direct response solicitations where there is no recommendation
 based on information collected from the consumer pursuant to this chapter;.
 
 
 2. Contracts used to fund: 
 
 a. An employee pension or welfare benefit plan that is covered
 by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (29 USC § 1001 et seq.);
 
 
 b. A plan described by 26 USC §§ 401(a), 401(k),
 403(b), 408(k) or 408(p) of the Internal Revenue Code, if established or
 maintained by an employer; 
 
 c. A government or church plan defined in 26 USC § 414 of the
 Internal Revenue Code, a government or church welfare benefit plan, or a
 deferred compensation plan of a state or local government or tax exempt
 organization under 26 USC § 457 of the Internal Revenue Code; 
 
 d. A nonqualified deferred compensation arrangement
 established or maintained by an employer or plan sponsor; 
 
 e. Settlements of or assumptions of liabilities associated
 with personal injury litigation or any dispute or claim resolution process; or 
 
 f. Preneed funeral contracts as defined in § 54.1-2800 of the
 Code of Virginia. 
 
 14VAC5-45-40. Duties of insurers and agents. 
 
 A. In recommending to a consumer the purchase of an annuity
 or the exchange of an annuity that results in another insurance transaction or
 series of insurance transactions, the agent, or the insurer where no agent is
 involved, shall have reasonable grounds for believing that the recommendation
 is suitable for the consumer on the basis of the facts disclosed by the
 consumer as to his investments and other insurance products and as to his
 financial situation and needs, including the consumer's suitability
 information, and that there is a reasonable basis to believe all of the
 following:
 
 1. The consumer has been reasonably informed of various
 features of the annuity, such as the potential surrender period and surrender charge;
 potential tax penalty if the consumer sells, exchanges, surrenders or
 annuitizes the annuity; mortality and expense fees; investment advisory fees;
 potential charges for and features of riders; limitations on interest returns;
 insurance and investment components; and market risk;
 
 2. The consumer would benefit from certain features of the
 annuity, such as tax deferred growth, annuitization, or death or living
 benefit;
 
 3. The particular annuity as a whole, the underlying
 subaccounts to which funds are allocated at the time of purchase or exchange of
 the annuity, and riders and similar product enhancements, if any, are suitable
 (and in the case of an exchange or replacement, the transaction as a whole is
 suitable) for the particular consumer based on the consumer's suitability
 information; and
 
 4. In the case of an exchange or replacement of an annuity,
 the exchange or replacement is suitable, including taking into consideration
 whether: 
 
 a. The consumer will incur a surrender charge, be subject
 to the commencement of a new surrender period, lose existing benefits (such as
 death, living, or other contractual benefits), or be subject to increased fees,
 investment advisory fees, or charges for riders and similar product
 enhancements;
 
 b. The consumer would benefit from product enhancements and
 improvements; and
 
 c. The consumer has had another annuity exchange or
 replacement, and, in particular, an exchange or replacement within the
 preceding 36 months. 
 
 B. Prior to the execution of a purchase or,
 exchange, or replacement of an annuity resulting from a recommendation,
 an agent, or insurer where no agent is involved, shall make reasonable efforts
 to obtain the consumer's suitability information concerning: 
 
 1. The consumer's financial status; 
 
 2. The consumer's tax status; 
 
 3. The consumer's investment objectives; and 
 
 4. Other information used or considered to be reasonable by
 the agent, or the insurer where no agent is involved, in making recommendations
 to the consumer. 
 
 C. Except as permitted under subsection D of this section,
 an insurer shall not issue an annuity recommended to a consumer unless there is
 a reasonable basis to believe the annuity is suitable based on the consumer's
 suitability information.
 
 D. 1. Except as provided in subdivision 2 of this subsection,
 neither an agent, nor an insurer where no agent is involved, shall have any
 obligation to a consumer under subsection A or C of this section related
 to any recommendation annuity transaction if a consumer: 
 
 a. Refuses No recommendation is made;
 
 b. A recommendation was made and was later found to have
 been prepared based on materially inaccurate information provided by the
 consumer;
 
 c. A consumer refuses to provide relevant suitability
 information requested by the insurer or agent and the annuity transaction is
 not recommended; 
 
 b. Decides d. A consumer decides to enter into
 an insurance annuity transaction that is not based on a
 recommendation of the insurer or agent; or 
 
 c. Fails e. A consumer fails to provide complete
 or accurate information. 
 
 2. An insurer or agent's recommendation subject to subdivision
 1 of this subsection shall be reasonable under all the circumstances actually
 known to the insurer or agent at the time of the recommendation. 
 
 E. An agent, or where no agent is involved the responsible
 insurer representative, shall at the time of sale:
 
 1. Make a record of any recommendation subject to
 subsection A of this section;
 
 2. Obtain a customer signed statement, documenting a
 customer's refusal to provide suitability information, if any; and
 
 3. Obtain a customer signed statement acknowledging that an
 annuity transaction is not recommended if a customer decides to enter into an
 annuity transaction that is not based on the agent's or insurer's
 recommendation.
 
 D. F. 1. An insurer either shall assure that a
 system to supervise recommendations that is reasonably designed to achieve
 compliance with this chapter is established and maintained by complying with
 subdivisions 3 and 4 of this subsection, or shall establish and maintain
 such a system, including, but not limited to the following: 
 
 a. Maintaining written procedures; and The insurer
 shall maintain reasonable procedures to inform its agents of the requirements
 of this chapter and shall incorporate the requirements of this chapter into
 relevant agent training manuals;
 
 b. Conducting periodic reviews of its records that are
 reasonably designed to assist in detecting and preventing violations of this
 chapter. The insurer shall establish standards for agent product training
 and shall maintain reasonable procedures to require its agents to comply with
 the requirements of 14VAC5-45-45;
 
 c. The insurer shall provide product-specific training and
 training materials that explain all material features of its annuity products
 to its agents;
 
 d. The insurer shall maintain procedures for review of each
 recommendation prior to issuance of an annuity that are designed to ensure that
 there is a reasonable basis to determine that a recommendation is suitable.
 Such review procedures may apply a screening system for the purpose of
 identifying selected transactions for additional review and may be accomplished
 electronically or through other means including physical review. Such an
 electronic or other system may be designed to require additional review only of
 those transactions identified for additional review by the selection criteria;
 
 e. The insurer shall maintain reasonable procedures to
 detect recommendations that are not suitable. This may include confirmation of
 consumer suitability information, systematic customer surveys, interviews,
 confirmation letters, and programs of internal monitoring. Nothing in this
 subdivision prevents an insurer from complying with this subdivision by
 applying sampling procedures, or by confirming suitability information after
 issuance or delivery of the annuity; and
 
 f. The insurer shall annually provide a report to senior
 management, including to the senior manager responsible for audit functions,
 which details a review, with appropriate testing, reasonably designed to
 determine the effectiveness of the supervision system, the exceptions found,
 and corrective action taken or recommended, if any.
 
 2. An agent and independent agency either shall adopt a system
 established by an insurer to supervise recommendations of its agents that is
 reasonably designed to achieve compliance with this chapter, or shall
 establish and maintain such a system, including, but not limited to: 
 
 a. Maintaining written procedures; and 
 
 b. Conducting periodic reviews of records that are reasonably
 designed to assist in detecting and preventing violations of this chapter. 
 
 3. An insurer may contract with a third party, including an
 agent or independent agency, to establish and maintain a system of supervision
 as required by subdivision 1 of this subsection with respect to agents under
 contract with or employed by the third party. 
 
 4. An insurer shall make reasonable inquiry to assure that the
 third party contracting under subdivision 3 of this subsection is performing
 the functions required under subdivision 1 of this subsection and shall take
 action that is reasonable under the circumstances to enforce the contractual
 obligation to perform the functions. An insurer may comply with its obligation
 to make reasonable inquiry by doing all of the following: 
 
 a. The insurer annually obtains a certification from a third
 party senior manager who has responsibility for the delegated functions that
 the manager has a reasonable basis to represent, and does represent, that the
 third party is performing the required functions; and 
 
 b. The insurer, based on reasonable selection criteria,
 periodically selects third parties contracting under subdivision 3 of this
 subsection for a review to determine whether the third parties are performing
 the required functions. The insurer shall perform those procedures to conduct
 the review that are reasonable under the circumstances. 
 
 5. An insurer that contracts with a third party pursuant to
 subdivision 3 of this subsection and that complies with the requirements to supervise
 in subdivision 4 of this subsection shall have fulfilled its responsibilities
 under subdivision 1 of this subsection. 
 
 6. An insurer, agent, or independent agency is not
 required by subdivisions subdivision 1 or 2 of this subsection
 to: 
 
 a. Review, or provide for review of, all agent-solicited
 transactions; or 
 
 b. Include in its system of supervision an agent's
 recommendations to consumers of products other than the annuities offered by
 the insurer, agent, or independent agency. 
 
 7. An agent or independent agency contracting with an insurer
 pursuant to subdivision 3 of this subsection, when requested by the insurer
 pursuant to subdivision 4 of this subsection, shall promptly give a
 certification as described in subdivision 4 or give a clear statement that it
 is unable to meet the certification criteria. 
 
 8. No person may provide a certification under subdivision 4 a
 of this subsection unless: 
 
 a. The person is a senior manager with responsibility for the
 delegated functions; and 
 
 b. The person has a reasonable basis for making the
 certification. 
 
 G. An agent shall not dissuade or attempt to dissuade a
 consumer from:
 
 1. Truthfully responding to an insurer's request for
 confirmation of suitability information;
 
 2. Filing a complaint; or
 
 3. Cooperating with the investigation of a complaint.
 
 H. An agent shall comply with the following FINRA
 requirements:
 
 1. Sales made in compliance with FINRA requirements
 pertaining to suitability and supervision of annuity transactions shall satisfy
 the requirements under this chapter. This subsection applies to FINRA
 broker-dealer sales of annuities if the suitability and supervision is similar
 to those applied to variable annuity sales. However, nothing in this subsection
 shall limit the commission's ability to enforce (including investigate) the
 provisions of this chapter.
 
 2. For subdivision 1 of this subsection to apply, an
 insurer shall:
 
 a. Monitor the FINRA member broker-dealer using information
 collected in the normal course of an insurer's business; and
 
 b. Provide to the FINRA member broker-dealer information
 and reports that are reasonably appropriate to assist the FINRA member
 broker-dealer to maintain its supervision system.
 
 E. I. Compliance with the National
 Association of Securities Dealers Conduct Rules (http://nasd.complinet.com/nasd/display/display.html?rbid=1189&element_id=
 1159000466) FINRA Rule 2111
 (http://finra.complinet.com/en/display/display_main.html?rbid=2403&element_id=9859)
 pertaining to suitability shall satisfy the requirements under this section for
 the recommendation of variable annuities. However, nothing in this subsection
 shall limit the commission's ability to enforce the provisions of this chapter.
 
 
 14VAC5-45-45. Agent training.
 
 A. An agent shall not solicit the sale of an annuity
 product unless the agent has adequate knowledge of the product to recommend the
 annuity and the agent is in compliance with the insurer's standards for product
 training. An agent may rely on insurer-provided product specific training
 standards and materials to comply with this subsection.
 
 B. Training requirements are as follows:
 
 1. An agent who engages in the sale of annuity products
 shall complete a one-time four-credit training course approved as continuing
 education by the Insurance Continuing Education Board in accordance with §
 38.2-1867 of the Code of Virginia and provided by the Insurance Continuing
 Education Board approved education provider.
 
 2. Agents who hold a life insurance line of authority and
 who desire to sell annuities shall complete the requirements of this subsection
 by January 1, 2018. Individuals who obtain a life insurance line of authority
 on or after January 1, 2018, may not engage in the sale of annuities until the
 annuity training course required under this subsection has been completed.
 
 3. The minimum length of the training required under this
 subsection shall be sufficient to qualify for at least four CE credits, but may
 be longer.
 
 4. The training required under this subsection shall
 include information on the following topics:
 
 a. The types of annuities and various classifications of
 annuities;
 
 b. Identification of the parties to an annuity;
 
 c. How product specific annuity contract features affect
 consumers;
 
 d. The application of income taxation of qualified and
 nonqualified annuities;
 
 e. The primary uses of annuities; and
 
 f. Appropriate sales practices and replacement and
 disclosure requirements.
 
 5. Providers of courses intended to comply with this
 subsection shall cover all topics listed in subdivision 4 of this subsection
 and shall not present any marketing information or provide training on sales
 techniques or provide specific information about a particular insurer's
 products. Additional topics may be offered in conjunction with and in addition
 to those in subdivision 4 of this subsection.
 
 6. A provider of an annuity training course intended to
 comply with this subsection shall register as a CE provider in this
 Commonwealth and comply with the rules and guidelines applicable to agent
 continuing education courses as set forth in § 38.2-1867 of the Code of
 Virginia.
 
 7. Annuity training courses may be conducted and completed
 by classroom or self-study methods in accordance with § 38.2-1867 of the Code
 of Virginia.
 
 8. Providers of annuity training shall comply with the
 reporting requirements and shall issue certificates of completion in accordance
 with § 38.2-1867 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 9. The satisfaction of the training requirements of another
 state that are substantially similar to the provisions of this subsection shall
 be deemed to satisfy the training requirements of this subsection in this
 Commonwealth.
 
 10. An insurer shall verify that an agent has completed the
 annuity training course required under this subsection before allowing the
 agent to sell an annuity product for that insurer. An insurer may satisfy its
 responsibility under this subsection by obtaining certificates of completion of
 the training course or obtaining reports provided by commission-sponsored
 database systems or vendors or from a reasonably reliable commercial database
 vendor that has a reporting arrangement with approved insurance education
 providers. 
 
 14VAC5-45-47. Recordkeeping.
 
 A. Insurers, agencies, and agents shall maintain or be
 able to make available to the commission records of the information collected
 from the consumer and other information used in making the recommendations that
 were the basis for insurance transactions for five years after the insurance
 transaction is completed by the insurer. An insurer is permitted, but shall not
 be required, to maintain documentation on behalf of an agent.
 
 B. Records required to be maintained by this chapter may
 be maintained in paper, photographic, micro-process, magnetic, mechanical, or
 electronic media or by any process that accurately reproduces the actual
 document. 
 
 VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4899; Filed November 19, 2016, 4:32 p.m. 
TITLE 14. INSURANCE
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.
 
  
 
 Title of Regulation: 14VAC5-400. Rules Governing
 Unfair Claim Settlement Practices (amending 14VAC5-400-10 through 14VAC5-400-80;
 adding 14VAC5-400-25, 14VAC5-400-90, 14VAC5-400-100, 14VAC5-400-110). 
 
 Statutory Authority: §§ 12.1-13, 38.2-223, and 38.2-510
 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 Public Hearing Information:
 
 For casualty insurers and interested persons - January 10,
 2017 - 9 a.m. - State Corporation Commission, Tyler Building, 1300 East Main
 Street, 2nd Floor Courtroom, Richmond, VA 23219
 
 For life and health insurers and interested persons - January
 12, 2017 - 9 a.m. - State Corporation Commission, Tyler Building, 1300 East
 Main Street, 2nd Floor Courtroom, Richmond, VA 23219
 
 Public Comment Deadline: January 31, 2017.
 
 Agency Contact: Katie Johnson, Policy Advisor, Bureau of
 Insurance, State Corporation Commission, 1300 East Main Street, 6th Floor,
 Richmond, VA 23219, P.O. Box 1157, Richmond, VA 23218, telephone (804)
 371-9688, FAX (804) 371-9873, or email katie.johnson@scc.virginia.gov.
 
 Summary:
 
 The proposed amendments follow closely the National
 Association of Insurance Commissioners' Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act,
 Unfair Property/Casualty Claims Settlement Practices Model Regulation, and
 Unfair Life, Accident and Health Claims Settlement Practices Model Regulation.
 The proposed amendments (i) set forth claims settlement standards that are
 specific to automobile insurance, property policies, accident and sickness
 insurance, life insurance, and annuities; (ii) include clear compliance
 standards for all insurers and claim settlement standards that are applicable
 specifically to property policies, accident and sickness insurance, life
 insurance, and annuities; and (iii) clarify that 14VAC5-400 applies to all
 insurance policies issued in Virginia, except workers' compensation, title
 insurance, and fidelity and surety insurance.
 
 AT RICHMOND, NOVEMBER 14, 2016
 
 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA, ex
 rel.
 
 STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION
 
 CASE NO. INS-2016-00265
 
 Ex Parte: In the matter of
 Amending the Rules Governing
 Unfair Claim Settlement Practices
 
 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, and § 38.2-223 of the Code
 provides that the Commission may issue any rules and regulations necessary or
 appropriate for the administration and enforcement of Title 38.2 of the Code.
 
 The rules and regulations issued by the Commission pursuant
 to § 38.2-223 of the Code are set forth in Title 14 of the Virginia
 Administrative Code. A copy may also be found at the Commission's website:
 http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case. 
 
 The Bureau of Insurance ("Bureau") has submitted to
 the Commission proposed amendments to rules set forth in Chapter 400 of Title
 14 of the Virginia Administrative Code, entitled "Rules Governing Unfair
 Claim Settlement Practices" ("Rules"), which amend the Rules at
 14VAC5-400-10 through 14VAC5-400-80, and add new Rules at 14VAC5-400-25 and
 14VAC5-400-90 through 14VAC5-400-110. 
 
 The amendments to Chapter 400 are necessary to conform the
 Rules to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners' Unfair Claims
 Settlement Practices Act (MDL-900), Unfair Property/Casualty Claims Settlement
 Practices Model Regulation (MDL-902), and Unfair Life, Accident and Health
 Claims Settlement Practices Model Regulation (MDL-903). These amendments
 clarify that Chapter 400 applies to all insurance policies issued in the
 Commonwealth of Virginia – except policies of workers' compensation insurance,
 title insurance, and fidelity and surety insurance – including those policies
 that are issued by health maintenance organizations, dental maintenance
 organizations, dental provider organizations, health service plans, accident
 and sickness insurers, and dental and optometric service plans. In addition,
 the amendments set forth claims settlement standards that are specific to
 automobile insurance, property policies, and accident and sickness insurance,
 life insurance and annuities. 
 
 NOW THE COMMISSION is of the opinion that the Bureau's
 proposal to amend the Rules at 14VAC5-400-10 through 14VAC5-400-80, and add new
 Rules at 14VAC5-400-25 and 14VAC5-400-90 through 14VAC5-400-110, should be
 considered for adoption.
 
 Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED
 THAT:
 
 (1) The proposed amendments to the "Rules Governing
 Unfair Claims Settlement Practices," which amend the Rules at
 14VAC5-400-10 through 14VAC5-400-80, and add new Rules at 14VAC5-400-25 and
 14VAC5-400-90 through 14VAC5-400-110, are attached hereto and made a part
 hereof.
 
 (2) All interested persons who desire to comment in support
 of or in opposition to, or request a hearing to consider the proposed
 amendments, shall file such comments or hearing request on or before January
 31, 2017, with Joel H. Peck, Clerk, State Corporation Commission, c/o Document
 Control Center, P.O. Box 2118, Richmond, Virginia 23218. Interested persons
 desiring to submit comments electronically may do so by following the
 instructions at the Commission's website: http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case. All
 comments shall refer to Case No. INS-2016-00265.
 
 (3) The Bureau shall hold two meetings during the comment
 period in order for insurers and interested persons to address questions about
 the proposed Rules to the Bureau.  The meeting for property and casualty
 insurers and interested persons will be held on Tuesday,
 January 10, 2017, and the meeting for life and health insurers and
 interested persons will be held on Thursday, January 12, 2017. Each meeting
 shall be held from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. in the Commission's second floor
 courtroom, located in the Tyler Building, 1300 East Main Street, Richmond,
 Virginia 23219.
 
 (4) If no written request for a hearing on the proposal to
 amend the Rules as outlined in this Order is received on or before January 31,
 2017, the Commission, upon consideration of any comments submitted in support
 of or in opposition to the proposal, may adopt the Rules as submitted by the
 Bureau. 
 
 (5) The Bureau forthwith shall provide notice of the proposal
 to amend the Rules by sending, by e-mail or U.S. mail, a copy of this Order,
 together with the proposal, to all insurers licensed by the Commission to
 operate in the Commonwealth of Virginia, except for insurers licensed
 exclusively to write workers' compensation insurance, title insurance or
 fidelity and surety insurance, as well as all interested persons.
 
 (6) The Commission's Division of Information Resources
 forthwith shall cause a copy of this Order, together with the proposed amended
 Rules, to be forwarded to the Virginia Registrar of Regulations for appropriate
 publication in the Virginia Register of Regulations.
 
 (7) The Commission's Division of Information Resources shall
 make available this Order and the attached proposed amended Rules on the
 Commission's website: http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case. 
 
 (8) The Bureau shall file with the Clerk of the Commission an
 affidavit of compliance with the notice requirements of Ordering Paragraph (5)
 above.
 
 (9) This matter is continued. 
 
 AN ATTESTED COPY hereof shall be sent by the Clerk of the
 Commission to: Kiva B. Pierce, Assistant Attorney General, Division of Consumer
 Counsel, Office of the Attorney General, 202 North Ninth Street, Richmond,
 Virginia 23219; and a copy hereof shall be delivered to the Commission's Office
 of General Counsel and the Bureau of Insurance in care of Deputy Commissioner
 Althelia P. Battle and Deputy Commissioner Rebecca Nichols.
 
 14VAC5-400-10. Scope Purpose and scope. 
 
 This The purpose of this chapter defines
 certain is to set forth minimum standards which, if violated with
 such frequency as to indicate a general business practice, will be deemed to
 constitute unfair claim settlement practices for the acknowledgment,
 investigation, and disposition of claims arising under insurance policies
 issued pursuant to the laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia. This chapter
 applies to all persons as hereinafter defined in 14VAC5-400-20
 and to all insurance policies and insurance contracts except policies of
 workers' compensation insurance, title insurance, and fidelity and
 surety insurance and contracts or plans for future hospitalization, medical,
 surgical, dental, optometric or legal services. This chapter is not
 exclusive, and other acts, not herein specified, may also be deemed to be a
 violation of the Unfair Trade Practices Act (§ 38.2-500 et seq. of the Code of
 Virginia). 
 
 14VAC5-400-20. Definitions. 
 
 The definition of "person" contained in §
 38.2-501 of the Code of Virginia shall apply to this chapter and, in addition,
 where used in this chapter following words and terms when used in this
 chapter shall have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates
 otherwise: 
 
 "Agent" means any individual, corporation,
 association, partnership or other legal entity person authorized to
 represent an insurer with respect to a claim;.
 
 "Claim" means a demand for payment by a claimant
 and does not mean an inquiry concerning coverage;. 
 
 "Claimant" means either a first party
 claimant, a third party claimant, or both, and includes such claimant's a
 designated legal representative and includes a member of the claimant's immediate
 family, or any other representative designated by the claimant;.
 
 "Commission" means the State Corporation Commission
 of the Commonwealth of Virginia;.
 
 "Documentation" includes all pertinent
 communications, including electronic communications and transactions, data,
 notes, work papers, claim forms, bills, and explanation of benefits forms
 relative to the claim.
 
 "Estimate" means a written statement of the cost
 of repairs to an automobile or to property, including any supplements.
 
 "Explanation of benefits" means any form
 provided by any insurer that explains the amounts covered under a policy or
 plan and shows the amounts payable by a covered person to a health care
 provider.
 
 "First party claimant" means an individual,
 corporation, association, partnership or other legal entity asserting insured,
 a beneficiary, a policy owner, or an annuitant who asserts a right to
 payment under an insurance policy or insurance contract issued to such
 individual, corporation, association, partnership or other legal entity
 arising out of the occurrence of the contingency or loss covered by such policy
 or contract;. 
 
 "Insured" means a person covered by an insurance
 policy.
 
 "Insurer" means a person licensed to issue or who
 that issues any insurance policy or insurance contract in this
 Commonwealth and or any third party acting on its behalf. Insurer
 shall also include surplus lines brokers;.
 
 "Investigation" means all activities of an insurer directly
 or indirectly related to the determination of liability and extent of loss
 under coverages afforded by an insurance policy or insurance contract; used
 to make a determination that the claim should be paid, denied, or closed.
 
 "Notification of claim" means any notification,
 whether in writing or other means acceptable under the terms of the insurance
 policy or insurance contract, to an insurer or its agent, by a claimant, which
 reasonably apprises the insurer of the facts pertinent to a claim; 
 
 "Person" has the same meaning as defined in §
 38.2-501 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 "Policy" means insurance policy, contract,
 certificate of insurance, evidence of coverage, or annuity.
 
 "Proof of loss" means all necessary
 documentation reasonably required by the insurer to make a determination of
 benefit or coverage.
 
 "Provider" means any person providing health
 care services.
 
 "Third party claimant" means any individual,
 corporation, association, partnership or other legal entity person
 asserting a claim against any individual, corporation, association,
 partnership or other legal entity an insured or a provider filing
 a claim on behalf of an insured under an insurance policy or insurance
 contract of an insurer;.
 
 "Workers' Compensation insurance" includes, but
 is not limited to, Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Compensation. 
 
 14VAC5-400-25. Compliance standards.
 
 It shall be a violation of this chapter if any person:
 
 1. Willfully violates any provision of this chapter; or
 
 2. Commits a violation of any provision of this chapter
 with such frequency as to indicate a general business practice.
 
 14VAC5-400-30. File and record documentation. 
 
 The A. An insurer's claim files shall be
 subject to examination by the Commission or by its duly appointed designees
 commission. Such files shall contain all notes and work papers
 pertaining to the claim in such detail that pertinent events and the dates of
 such events can be reconstructed. 
 
 B. An insurer shall maintain all claim data so that it is
 accessible and retrievable for examination. Claim data includes the claim
 number, line of coverage, date of loss and date received, as well as date of
 payment of the claim, date of denial, or date closed without payment.
 
 C. Detailed documentation shall be maintained for each
 claim file in order to permit reconstruction of all transactions relating to
 each claim.
 
 D. Each document within the claim file shall be noted as
 to date received, date processed, or date mailed.
 
 E. All data and documentation shall be maintained for all
 open and closed files for the current year and, at a minimum, the three
 preceding calendar years.
 
 14VAC5-400-40. Misrepresentation of policy provisions. 
 
 A. No person shall knowingly obscure or conceal from first
 party claimants, either directly or by omission, benefits, coverages or other
 provisions of any insurance policy or insurance contract when such insurer
 shall fail to fully disclose to a first party claimant all pertinent
 benefits, coverages, or other provisions are pertinent to a claim
 of an insurance policy under which a claim is presented and document the
 claim file accordingly. 
 
 B. No person shall misrepresent benefits, coverages, or
 other provisions of any insurance policy when such benefits, coverages, or
 other provisions are pertinent to a claim.
 
 C. No insurer shall deny a claim for failure of a first
 party claimant to submit to physical examination or for failure of a
 the first party claimant to exhibit the property which is the
 subject of the claim without proof of demand by such insurer and unfounded
 refusal by a claimant to do so unless there is documentation of breach
 of the policy provisions in the claim file. 
 
 C. D. No insurer shall, except where there
 is a time limit specified in the policy, make statements, written or otherwise,
 requiring a deny a claim based on the failure of a claimant to give
 written notice of loss or proof of loss within a specified time limit and
 which seek to relieve the company of its obligations if such a time limit is
 not complied with required by the policy provisions unless the
 failure to comply with such time limit in fact the notice
 requirements prejudices the insurer's rights. 
 
 D. E. No insurer shall request a first party
 claimant to sign a release that extends beyond the subject matter that gave
 rise to the claim payment include with any payment or in any
 accompanying correspondence that payment is "final" or "a
 release" of any claim unless the policy limit has been paid or a
 compromise settlement has been agreed to by the claimant. 
 
 E. F. No insurer shall issue checks or
 drafts a payment in partial settlement of a loss or claim under
 for a specific coverage which contain that contains
 language that purports purporting to release the insurer or its
 insured the first party claimant from its total liability. 
 
 14VAC5-400-50. Failure to acknowledge Acknowledgment
 of pertinent communications. 
 
 A. Every An insurer, upon receiving
 notification of a claim shall, within 10 working calendar days,
 acknowledge the receipt of such notice to the first party claimant unless
 payment is made within such period of time. Acknowledgment may be sent to a
 provider claimant. If an acknowledgement acknowledgment is
 made by means other than writing, an appropriate notation of such acknowledgement
 acknowledgment shall be made in the claim file of the insurer and dated.
 Notification given by a claimant to an agent of an insurer shall be
 notification to the insurer. 
 
 B. Every insurer, upon Upon receipt of any
 inquiry from the Commission commission respecting a claim, an
 insurer shall, within 15 working days of receipt of such inquiry,
 furnish an adequate a complete response to the inquiry within
 14 calendar days of receipt. 
 
 C. An appropriate reply shall be made within 10 working
 calendar days on all other pertinent communications from a claimant which
 that reasonably suggest that a response is expected. 
 
 D. Every insurer, upon Upon receiving
 notification of a first party claim, an insurer shall promptly
 provide necessary claim forms, instructions, and reasonable assistance so
 that first party claimants can, including language translations, in
 order for the claimant to comply with the policy conditions and the
 insurer's reasonable requirements; provided, however, every insurer, upon
 receiving notification of a third party claim, shall promptly provide the third
 party claimant with all necessary claim forms. Compliance with this subdivision
 subsection within 10 working calendar days of notification
 of a claim shall constitute compliance with subsection A of this section. 
 
 14VAC5-400-60. Standards for prompt investigation of claims. 
 
 A. Unless otherwise specified in the policy, within 15
 working Within 10 calendar days after receipt by the insurer of properly
 executed proofs proof of loss, a first party claimant shall be
 advised of the acceptance or denial of the claim by the insurer. If the insurer
 needs more time to determine whether a first party claim should be
 accepted or denied, it shall notify the first party claimant within 15
 working 10 calendar days after receipt of the proofs proof
 of loss giving the reasons more time is needed. 
 
 B. Unless otherwise specified in the policy, if If
 an investigation of a first party claim has not been completed, every an
 insurer shall, within 45 calendar days from the date of the notification
 of a first party claim and every 45 calendar days thereafter, send to
 the first party claimant a letter written notice setting forth
 the reasons additional time is needed for investigation. 
 
 14VAC5-400-70. Standards for prompt, fair and equitable
 settlement of claims Claims settlement standards applicable to all
 insurers. 
 
 A. Any denial of a claim must, including a partial
 denial, shall be given to a claimant in writing and the claim file of the
 insurer shall contain a copy of the denial. 
 
 B. No An insurer shall deny a claim unless
 provide a reasonable written explanation of the basis for such
 any claim denial is included in the written denial. Specific
 The written explanation shall provide a specific reference to a policy
 provision, condition, or exclusion shall be made when a denial is
 based on such provision, condition or exclusion. 
 
 C. Insurers An insurer shall not fail to
 settle first party claims deny a claim on the basis that
 responsibility for payment should be assumed by others except as may otherwise
 be provided by policy provisions. 
 
 D. In any case where there is no dispute as to coverage or
 liability, every an insurer must shall offer to a
 first party claimant, or to a first party claimant's authorized
 representative, an amount which that is fair and reasonable
 as shown by the investigation of the claim, provided the amount so offered is
 within policy limits and in accordance with policy provisions. 
 
 E. An insurer shall not unreasonably refuse to pay any
 claim in accordance with the provisions of the policy.
 
 F. An insurer shall not compel a first party claimant to
 institute a suit to recover amounts due under the policy by offering
 substantially less than the amounts ultimately recovered in a suit brought by
 the first party claimant.
 
 14VAC5-400-80. Standards for prompt, fair and equitable
 settlements Claims settlement standards applicable to automobile
 insurance. 
 
 A. Where liability is reasonably clear, insurers an
 insurer shall not recommend that a third party claimants claimant
 make claims a claim under their its own policies
 policy solely to avoid paying claims a claim under such
 insurer's insurance the insured's policy or insurance contract.
 
 
 B. Insurers An insurer shall not require a
 claimant to travel unreasonably either to inspect a replacement automobile, to
 obtain a repair estimate, or to have the automobile repaired at a
 specific repair shop. 
 
 C. Insurers An insurer shall, upon the
 claimant's request, include the first party claimant's insured's
 deductible, if any, in subrogation demands. Subrogation recoveries shall be
 shared on a proportionate basis with the first party claimant insured,
 unless the deductible amount has been otherwise recovered. No deduction for
 expenses can be made from the deductible recovery unless an outside attorney is
 retained to collect such recovery. The deduction may then be for only a pro
 rata share of the allocated loss adjustment expense. 
 
 D. If When an insurer prepares an estimate of
 the cost of automobile repairs, such the estimate shall be in
 an amount for which it may be reasonably expected the damage can be
 satisfactorily repaired. The insurer shall give a copy of the estimate to the
 claimant and may furnish to the claimant the names of one or more conveniently
 located qualified repair shops. 
 
 E. When the amount claimed is reduced because of betterment
 or depreciation, all information for such reduction shall be contained in the
 claim file. Such deductions shall be itemized and specified as to dollar amount
 and shall be appropriate for the amount of deductions. 
 
 F. When an insurer elects to repair and the automobile is in
 fact repaired in a repair shop selected by the insurer or designated
 by the insurer as a repair shop that will repair the automobile for the amount
 offered by the insurer, the insurer shall cause the damaged automobile to be
 restored to its condition prior to the loss at no additional cost to the
 claimant other than as stated in the policy and within a reasonable period of
 time. 
 
 G. An insurer shall provide reasonable notice to a
 claimant prior to termination of payment for automobile storage charges. The
 insurer shall provide reasonable time for the claimant to remove the automobile
 from storage prior to the termination of payment. Unless the insurer has
 provided a claimant with the name of a specific towing company prior to the
 claimant's use of another towing company, the insurer shall pay all reasonable
 towing charges irrespective of the towing company used by the claimant.
 
 H. Prior to termination of payment for transportation or
 rental reimbursement expenses, the insurer shall provide reasonable time for
 the claimant to receive payment for automobile repairs or replacement. In the
 event of a total loss, the insurer shall provide reasonable time for a claimant
 to acquire a replacement automobile.
 
 14VAC5-400-90. Claims settlement standards applicable to
 property policies.
 
 When an insurer prepares an estimate of the cost of repairs
 to property, the estimate shall be an amount for which the damage can be
 satisfactorily repaired. The insurer shall give a copy of the estimate to the
 claimant. 
 
 14VAC5-400-100. Claims settlement standards applicable to
 accident and sickness insurance, life insurance, and annuities.
 
 A.  An insurer shall review any notice of claim or
 proof of loss submitted against one policy to determine if such notice of claim
 or proof of loss may fulfill the insured's obligation under any other policy
 issued by that insurer. 
 
 B. For accident and sickness claims, an insurer shall
 provide to a first party claimant an explanation of benefits describing the
 coverage for which the claim is paid or denied within 10 calendar days of
 receipt of proof of loss, unless otherwise specified in the policy. An insurer
 shall provide an explanation of benefits for prescription drug claims that may
 be provided in the aggregate no less frequently than quarterly. 
 
 C. An insurer shall not arbitrarily or unreasonably deny
 or delay payment of a claim in which liability has become reasonably clear.
 
 14VAC5-400-110. Severability.
 
 If any provision of this chapter or its application to any
 person or circumstance is for any reason held to be invalid by a court, the
 remainder of this chapter and the application of the provisions to other
 persons or circumstances shall not be affected. 
 
 VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4967; Filed November 16, 2016, 4:13 p.m. 
TITLE 16. LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT
SAFETY AND HEALTH CODES BOARD
Proposed Regulation
 
 Title of Regulation: 16VAC25-200. Virginia Voluntary
 Protection Program (adding 16VAC25-200-10 through
 16VAC25-200-110). 
 
 Statutory Authority: §§ 40.1-22 and 40.1-49.13 of the
 Code of Virginia.
 
 Public Hearing Information:
 
 February 16, 2017 - 10 a.m. - Department of Labor and
 Industry, Main Street Centre, 600 East Main Street, 12th Floor Conference Room
 South, Richmond, VA 23219
 
 Public Comment Deadline: February 10, 2017.
 
 Agency Contact: Jay Withrow, Department of Labor and
 Industry, Main Street Centre, 600 East Main Street, Richmond, VA 23219,
 telephone (804) 786-9873, or email jay.withrow @doli.virginia.gov.
 
 Basis: The Safety and Health Codes Board is authorized
 by subdivision 5 of § 40.1-22 of the Code of Virginia to "adopt, alter,
 amend, or repeal rules and regulations to further, protect and promote the
 safety and health of employees in places of employment over which it has
 jurisdiction and to effect compliance with the Federal Occupational Safety and
 Health Act of 1970 (P.L. 91-596), and as may be necessary to carry out its
 functions established under this title." In making such rules and
 regulations to protect the occupational safety and health of employees, the
 board is required to adopt the standard that most adequately assures, to the
 extent feasible and on the basis of the best available evidence, that no
 employee will suffer material impairment of health or functional capacity.
 Section 40.1-22 further provides that the standards shall be at least as
 stringent as the standards promulgated by P.L. 91-596. In addition to the
 attainment of the highest degree of health and safety protection for the
 employee, the board must also consider "the latest available scientific
 data in the field, the feasibility of the standards, and experiences gained
 under this and other health and safety laws."
 
 Chapters 20 and 339 of the 2015 Acts of Assembly added
 § 40.1-49.13 of the Code of Virginia, which codifies the Virginia
 Voluntary Protection Program (VPP).
 
 Purpose: The purpose of the proposed action is to adopt
 those definitions, rules, regulations, and standards required by
 § 40.1-49.13 of the Code of Virginia and necessary for the operation of
 the Virginia VPP in a manner that will promote and recognize employer
 implementation of exceptional safety and health management systems throughout
 the Commonwealth. Historically, employer adoption of VPP concepts has
 consistently resulted in injury and illness rates of 50% to 60%, or more, below
 that of the employer's industry as a whole.
 
 Substance: The proposed regulation provides requirements
 for a traditional site-based VPP, which has two levels of participation, Star
 worksite and Merit worksite. Star worksite participants are a select group of
 worksites that have designed and implemented outstanding safety and health
 programs, including full and meaningful employee involvement. Merit worksite
 participants have demonstrated the potential and willingness to achieve Star
 status and are implementing planned actions to fully meet the VPP Star
 requirements. 
 
 VPP also encompasses the following programs, which provide
 interested employers and employees the opportunity to develop and implement
 exemplary safety and health management systems:
 
 1. Challenge – where employers are guided by challenge
 administrators through a three-stage process intended to prepare a company to
 achieve VPP Star status;
 
 2. Site-based construction – for long-term construction sites;
 
 3. Mobile workforce – for employers that move from site to
 site; and
 
 4. Corporate – designed for corporate applicants.
 
 The standards for the VPP include the following requirements
 for VPP participation:
 
 1. Upper management leadership and active and meaningful
 employee involvement;
 
 2. Systematic assessment of occupational hazards;
 
 3. Comprehensive hazard prevention, mitigation, and control
 programs;
 
 4. Employee safety and health training; and
 
 5. Safety and health program evaluation.
 
 The proposed regulation addresses the following issues:
 
 1. Scope, purpose, and applicability
 
 2. Definitions
 
 3. Categories of participation (Star, Merit, Challenge, etc.);
 
 4. Ways to participate (site-based in both general industry and
 construction, mobile workforce, VPP corporate);
 
 5. Application requirements;
 
 6. Comprehensive safety and health management system
 requirements;
 
 7. Certification and recertification processes;
 
 8. Onsite evaluations;
 
 9. Annual submissions;
 
 10. Other participation requirements; 
 
 11. Enforcement activity at VPP sites; and
 
 12. Withdrawal or termination.
 
 Issues: In Virginia, the Voluntary Protection Program
 was instituted in 1996 and is patterned after federal OSHA's VPP, which was
 originally created in 1982. The VOSH Program adopted VPP as a component of
 DOLI's larger mission to "…make Virginia a better place in which to work,
 live and conduct business by promoting safe, healthful workplaces, best
 employment practices…." An employer's membership in VPP is recognized as
 the nation's and Virginia's highest award that can be bestowed by a government
 agency to an employer for excellence in occupational safety and health
 management systems.
 
 Virginia VPP currently recognizes 45 VPP sites employing over
 11,000 employees who enjoy the protections and benefits of working in some of
 the safest and healthiest working conditions in the country. VPP sites also
 directly impact numerous qualified subcontractors and their employees that work
 at VPP sites as those companies are required to provide safety and health
 protections to their employees that are the equivalent to the protections
 provided to VPP site employees.
 
 The traditional site-based VPP has two levels of participation,
 Star worksite and Merit worksite. Star participants are a select group of
 worksites that have designed and implemented outstanding safety and health
 programs, including full and meaningful employee involvement. Merit
 participants are those that have demonstrated the potential and willingness to
 achieve Star status and are implementing planned actions to fully meet the VPP
 Star requirements. 
 
 VPP also encompasses the following programs, which provide
 interested employers and employees the opportunity to develop and implement
 exemplary safety and health management systems:
 
 1. Challenge – where employers are guided by challenge
 administrators through a three-stage process, which prepares a company to
 achieve VPP Star status;
 
 2. Site-based construction – for long term construction sites;
 
 3. Mobile workforce – for employers that move from site to
 site; and
 
 4. Corporate - designed for corporate applicants.
 
 This regulation applies to Virginia employers and employees who
 volunteer to participate in Virginia VPP. As such, there is no negative impact
 on Virginia's employers that are not program participants. 
 
 Program participants do incur costs associated with developing
 and implementing safety and health management systems that often exceed current
 requirements in VOSH laws, standards, and regulations; however, the costs are
 incurred on a voluntary basis. 
 
 Employers that take proactive steps to improve safety and
 health protections for employees can realize significant savings and avoided
 costs associated with workplace injuries and illnesses. In 2015, the National
 Safety Council reported that the average cost of a medically consulted
 occupational injury in 2013 was $42,000. In 2013, the Washington Post reported
 that the average net profit margin for all U.S. companies was 8.2%. With a net
 profit margin of 8.2%, a business would need to generate $512,195 in new
 revenues to simply pay for the costs of that single injury.
 
 The Department of Labor and Industry tracks injury and illness
 rates for each VPP site on an annual basis. Virginia VPP participating
 worksites average more than 60% lower injury and illness rates than their nonparticipating
 counterparts in their respective industries. Virginia VPP helps employers
 identify and correct occupational hazards in a proactive and cooperative
 approach that reduces or eliminates debilitating injuries, illnesses, and fatal
 accidents suffered by Virginia's employees. Nationally, recordable injury and
 illness rates for VPP sites have averaged 50% below that of other worksites in
 their industry.
 
 VPP Star sites regularly report decreased bottom line
 expenditures, which are associated with both drastically reduced injury and
 illness rates and improved productivity and employee morale. Reducing private
 sector employer costs associated with injuries, illnesses, and fatal accidents
 enhances a company's economic viability and competitiveness and increases
 available capital for reinvestment, expansion, and new hiring.
 
 Virginia VPP worksites have demonstrated over many years that
 VPP participation will: 
 
 1. Substantially reduce workplace injuries and illnesses;
 
 2. Reduce workers' compensation costs;
 
 3. Result in a more highly trained and experienced workforce;
 
 4. Improve company productivity; and
 
 5. Promote competiveness in the marketplace. 
 
 VPP is available to private and public sector employers of all
 sizes. For example, it includes the Dominion Power North Anna nuclear facility,
 which has almost 1,000 employees, as well as Veritiv-Lynchburg with
 approximately 10 employees. A small sample of other participants in the
 Virginia VPP include: Delta Airlines, Miller Coors, Raytheon, Eastman Chemical
 Company, and International Paper. 
 
 Virginia was the first VPP in the country to recognize state
 correctional institutions as VPP members – Augusta and Lunenburg Correctional
 Facilities of the Virginia Department of Corrections (VADOC). Both facilities
 have consistently incurred lower workers' compensation costs than other
 comparable VADOC sites and have significantly lower injury and illness rates
 than the national rates for correctional facilities.
 
 VADOC, a participant in the VPP program since 2001, estimates
 that the Commonwealth saved approximately $1.5 million at Lunenburg
 Correctional Center (LCC) between 2002 and 2006. VADOC further estimates that
 since 2001, based on a 2009 comparative analysis, the five other medium
 security dormitory-design Virginia correctional centers achieved similar
 results in VPP to that of LCC. The potential savings may have been
 approximately $3 million in direct (insured) costs and $10.4 million in
 indirect costs, for a total savings of $13.4 million. With the program's
 continued expansion into other state facilities, the Commonwealth could expect
 increased savings. Other state agencies, as well as local governments, could
 also experience these benefits from participating in VPP.
 
 Expanding Virginia's VPP will promote safer and healthier work
 places in Virginia by using a proactive, cooperative approach between
 employers, employees, and Virginia government, rather than a punitive one. The
 department benefits from this cooperative relationship by having exemplary
 sites to lead and guide other employers to improve their occupational safety
 and health performance. 
 
 Once a site has qualified and successfully submitted an
 application for consideration in the VPP Star program, final approval requires
 an intensive weeklong onsite evaluation by a VOSH VPP team. Final approval is
 determined by DOLI's Commissioner. VPP participants are exempt from regular
 VOSH programmed compliance inspections while they maintain their VPP status.
 Each VPP member site is required to be recertified by an onsite evaluation team
 of safety and health professionals every three to four years to remain in VPP.
 
 Adopting a regulation for the operation of VPP and establishing
 a formal and permanent structure for VPP will also assist DOLI in its pursuit
 of several bold initiatives it hopes will greatly enhance safety and health
 protections for Virginia's workers.
 
 First, DOLI is using VPP staffing resources to work
 cooperatively with the Virginia Associated General Contractors (AGC) to
 establish a pilot strategic partnership, known as Virginia BEST (Building
 Excellence in Safety and Health Training) to encourage and recognize
 construction contractors that voluntarily implement extensive safety and health
 management systems to benefit construction workers. Virginia BEST is a modified
 version of the Challenge concept where employers are guided by Challenge
 administrators through a three-stage process to achieving exemplary safety and
 health management systems.
 
 Second, DOLI is developing a pilot strategic partnership with
 the Virginia Department of Corrections (VADOC) to substantially increase VADOC
 participation in VPP. The VADOC partnership will use Challenge concepts as
 well.
 
 Finally, DOLI is working to expand the scope of VPP by
 implementing a Virginia unique version of the OSHA Challenge Program, which
 would establish three levels of participation for employers wishing to enhance
 their safety and health management systems.
 
 Department of Planning and Budget's Economic Impact
 Analysis:
 
 Summary of the Proposed Amendments to Regulation. Pursuant to
 Chapter 339 of the 2015 Acts of Assembly, the Safety and Health Codes Board
 (Board) proposes to promulgate regulations for the Voluntary Protection Program
 (VPP). 
 
 Result of Analysis. The benefits likely exceed the costs for
 all proposed changes.
 
 Estimated Economic Impact. Chapter 339 of the 2015 Acts of
 Assembly codified VPP and required the Board to adopt regulations necessary for
 the program.1 Pursuant to the statutory mandate, the Board proposes
 to promulgate regulations addressing the operation and administration of the
 program. VPP promotes effective worksite-based safety and health. In VPP,
 management, labor, and the Department of Labor and Industry (DOLI) establish
 cooperative relationships at workplaces that have implemented a comprehensive
 safety and health management system. Participants may terminate VPP status at
 any time for any reason.
 
 VPP is not new in Virginia. According to DOLI, it was
 instituted in 1996 and is patterned after the federal VPP model, which was
 originally created in 1982. An employer's membership in VPP is recognized as
 the nation's and Virginia's highest award that can be bestowed by a government
 agency to an employer for excellence in occupational safety and health
 management systems. Virginia VPP currently recognizes 46 VPP sites employing
 over 11,000 employees. VPP sites also directly impact numerous qualified
 subcontractors and their employees who work at VPP sites as those companies are
 required to provide safety and health protections to their employees that are
 the equivalent to the protections provided to VPP site employees.
 
 The traditional site-based VPP has two levels of participation,
 Star worksite and Merit worksite. Star participants are a select group of
 worksites that have designed and implemented outstanding safety and health
 programs, including full and meaningful employee involvement. Merit
 participants are those that have demonstrated the potential and willingness to
 achieve Star status and are implementing planned actions to fully meet the VPP
 Star requirements. VPP also encompasses the following programs which provide
 interested employers and employees the opportunity to develop and implement
 exemplary safety and health management systems: Challenge – where employers are
 guided by challenge administrators through a three stage process, which can
 prepare a company to achieve VPP Star status; Site-based Construction – for
 long term construction sites; Mobile Workforce – for employers that move from
 site to site; and Corporate - designed for corporate applicants.
 
 While VPP participants do incur costs associated with
 developing and implementing safety and health management systems that often
 exceed mandatory requirements in laws, standards and regulations, these costs
 are incurred on a voluntary basis in anticipation of the expected benefits. In
 general, employers that take proactive steps to improve safety and health
 protections for employees can realize significant savings and avoided costs
 associated with workplace injuries and illnesses. According to DOLI, recordable
 injury and illness rates for VPP sites have averaged 50% below that of other
 worksites in their industry nationally. Virginia VPP participating worksites
 average more than 60% lower injury and illness rates than their
 non-participating counterparts in their respective industries. DOLI further
 notes that VPP Star sites regularly report decreased bottom line expenditures,
 which are associated with both drastically reduced injury and illness rates,
 and improved productivity and employee morale which enhances a company's
 economic viability and competitiveness, and increases available capital for
 reinvestment, expansion and new hiring. These claims are supported by results
 from specific VPP sites including state correctional facilities. Additionally,
 there is consensus among the stakeholders as to the success of the program at
 the national level.2 In short, the success of VPP appears
 uncontroverted. Attributing the entire benefits of VPP to the proposed
 regulation would be inaccurate, however.
 
 The proposed regulation adopts rules for the operation and
 administration of the program which has been in existence since 1996. The
 proposed action promulgates the rules and procedures which have been followed
 in practice for quite some time. Thus, the main economic effect of this
 regulation is to supplement the recent codification of the program in the
 statute signaling Virginia's long term commitment to VPP. Without the code and
 regulation it would have remained largely as a discretionary program, subject
 to be terminated at any time. With the statutory and regulatory language,
 employers are assured that if they choose to participate in the program and
 incur significant costs, the program will not be terminated absent a
 legislative action. In that sense, the main economic effect of the proposed
 regulation is to enhance already existing incentives for employers to
 participate in VPP.
 
 Businesses and Entities Affected. According to DOLI, based on
 data from 2014, approximately 234,644 establishments employing 3.6 million
 employees are subject to the Board's jurisdiction. Of these, all qualified
 public and private sector places of employment may participate in the program.
 Virginia VPP currently recognizes 46 VPP sites employing over 11,000 employees.
 
 Localities Particularly Affected. The proposed changes apply
 statewide.
 
 Projected Impact on Employment. To the extent the proposed
 regulation increases participation in VPP, compliance with voluntarily agreed
 upon more stringent health and safety standards and the likely improvements in
 productivity should have a positive impact on employment.
 
 Effects on the Use and Value of Private Property. To the extent
 the proposed regulation increases participation in VPP, compliance with
 voluntarily agreed upon more stringent health and safety standards and the
 likely reductions in work place injuries or illnesses should have positive
 impact on asset values of participating companies.
 
 Real Estate Development Costs. No significant 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. Less than twenty percent of the
 employers who may choose to participate in VPP are considered small businesses.
 The costs and other effects on them are the same as those discussed above.
 
 Alternative Method that Minimizes Adverse Impact. Participation
 in VPP program is voluntary and is not likely to impose net adverse effects on
 participating employers.
 
 Adverse Impacts:
 
 Businesses. More than eighty percent of the employers who may
 choose to participate in VPP are considered non-small businesses. Participation
 in VPP program is voluntary and is not likely to impose net adverse effects on
 participating employers.
 
 Localities. Some of the employers who may choose to participate
 in VPP may be localities. Participation in VPP program is voluntary and is not
 likely to impose net adverse effects on participating employers.
 
 Other Entities. The proposed amendments will not adversely
 affect other entities.
 
 _____________________________
 
 1 http://lis.virginia.gov/cgi-bin/legp604.exe?151+ful+CHAP0339
 
 2 Promoting Safe Workplaces through Voluntary Protection
 Programs, Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Workforce Protections Committee on
 Education and the Workforce, U.S. House of Representatives, June 28, 2012.
 
 Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The
 Department of Labor and Industry has no additional comment in response to the
 economic impact analysis.
 
 Summary:
 
 The proposed regulation establishes the Virginia Voluntary
 Protection Program (VPP) in accordance with Chapters 20 and 339 of the 2015
 Acts of Assembly. The proposed new chapter applies to Virginia employers and
 employees who volunteer to participate in the program and includes the
 following requirements for participation: upper management leadership and
 active and meaningful employee involvement; systematic assessment of
 occupational hazards; comprehensive hazard prevention, mitigation, and control programs;
 employee safety and health training; and safety and health program evaluation.
 
 The proposed new chapter addresses (i) categories of
 participation, such as Star, Merit, and Challenge; (ii) ways to participate,
 such as site-based in both general industry and construction, mobile workforce,
 VPP corporate; (iii) application requirements; (iv) comprehensive safety and
 health management system requirements; (v) certification and recertification
 processes; (vi) onsite evaluations; (vii) annual submissions; (viii) other
 participation requirements; (ix) enforcement activity at VPP sites; and (x)
 withdrawal or termination from VPP. 
 
 CHAPTER 200
 VIRGINIA VOLUNTARY PROTECTION PROGRAM
 
 16VAC25-200-10. Voluntary participation program.
 
 A. Participation in VPP is strictly voluntary. The
 applicant that wishes to participate freely submits information to VOSH on its
 safety and health management system and opens itself to department review.
 
 B. VPP emphasizes trust and cooperation between VOSH, the
 employer, employees, and employee representatives and is complementary to the
 department's enforcement activity, but does not take its place. This
 partnership enables the department to remove participating sites from
 programmed inspection lists, allowing it to focus inspection resources on
 establishments in greater need of department oversight and intervention.
 However, VOSH will continue to investigate valid employee safety and health
 complaints, referrals, fatalities, accidents, and other significant events at
 VPP participant sites in accordance with VOSH enforcement procedures.
 
 C. VPP participants develop and implement a systems
 approach to effectively identify, evaluate, prevent, and control occupational
 hazards so that injuries and illnesses to employees are prevented.
 
 D. VPP participants are selected based on their written
 safety and health management system, the effective implementation of this
 system over time, and their performance in meeting VPP requirements. Not all
 worksites are appropriate candidates for VPP. At qualifying sites, all
 personnel are involved in the effort to maintain rigorous, detailed attention
 to safety and health. VPP participants often mentor other worksites interested
 in improving safety and health, participate in safety and health outreach and
 training initiatives, share best practices, and promote excellence in safety
 and health in their industries and communities.
 
 E. VPP participants must demonstrate continuous
 improvement in the operation and impact of their safety and health management
 systems. Annual VPP self-evaluations help participant's measure success,
 identify areas needing improvement, and determine needed changes. VOSH onsite
 evaluation teams verify this improvement.
 
 F. Participation in VPP does not diminish employee and
 employer rights and responsibilities under VOSH laws, standards, and
 regulations.
 
 G. The provisions of this chapter are intended to provide
 solely for the safety, health, and welfare of employees and the benefits
 thereof shall not run to any applicant, participant, or any other person nor
 shall a third party have any right of action for breach of any provision of
 this chapter except as otherwise specifically provided herein.
 
 H. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to in any
 way limit the commissioner's discretion to use department personnel and
 resources in accordance with the powers and duties as set forth in Title 40.1
 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 16VAC25-200-20. Definitions.
 
 The following words and terms when used in this chapter
 shall have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates
 otherwise:
 
 "90-day item" means compliance related issues
 that must be corrected within a maximum of 90 days, with effective protection
 provided to employees in the interim.
 
 "Annual evaluation" means a participant's yearly
 self-assessment to gauge the effectiveness of all required VPP elements and any
 other elements of the safety and health management system.
 
 "Annual submission" means a document written by
 a participant and submitted to the department on or before February 15 each
 year, consisting of the following information: updated names and addresses, the
 participant's and applicable contractors' injury and illness case numbers and
 rates, average annual employment and hours worked for the previous calendar
 year, a copy of the most recent annual evaluation of the safety and health
 management system, descriptions of significant changes or events, progress made
 on the previous year's recommendations, Merit or one-year conditional goals (if
 applicable), and any success stories.
 
 "Applicable contractor" means a contractor whose
 employees worked at least 1,000 hours for the participant in any calendar
 quarter within the last 12 months and are not directly supervised by the
 applicant or participant.
 
 "Challenge" means a voluntary protection program
 that provides participating employers and workers a three-stage process to work
 with their designated Challenge administrators to develop and improve their
 safety and health management program. VOSH-approved volunteer third party
 Challenge administrators collaborate with participating employers to improve
 safety and health management programs through mentoring, training, and progress
 tracking.
 
 "Challenge administrator" means selected
 individuals in organizations such as corporations, state agencies, or nonprofit
 associations that have met VOSH VPP criteria, including dedicated resources to
 administer the Challenge program for their worksites or members or other
 organizations' worksites or members. Administrators are involved in the
 application and review processes. In certain situations as specified by the
 commissioner, VOSH can serve as a Challenge administrator.
 
 "Commissioner" means the Commissioner of Labor
 and Industry or his designees.
 
 "Contract employees" means workers who are
 employed by a company that provides services under contract to the VPP
 applicant or participant, usually at the VPP applicant's or participant's
 worksite.
 
 "Days away, restricted, or transfer case incidence
 rate" or "DART rate" means the rate of all injuries and illnesses
 resulting in days away from work, restricted work activity, or job transfer.
 This rate is calculated for a worksite for a specified period of time, usually
 one to three years.
 
 "Department" means the Department of Labor and
 Industry.
 
 "Mentoring" means the assistance that a VPP
 participant provides to another company to improve that site's safety and
 health management system or prepare it for VPP application or participation. 
 
 "Merit goal" means a target for improving one or
 more deficient safety and health management system elements for a participant
 approved to the Merit program. A Merit goal must be met in order for a site to
 achieve Star status.
 
 "Merit program" means a program designed for
 worksites that have demonstrated the potential and commitment to achieve Star
 quality but need to further improve their safety and health management system.
 A worksite may be designated as "Merit" when, during an initial Star
 certification review, the VOSH review team determines that not all Star
 requirements are being fully met. In the case of a Merit designation, the
 participant must complete specified Merit goals in order to achieve Star status
 and continue in VPP. "Merit" is not a participation level that can be
 applied for.
 
 "Misclassification" means when an employer
 improperly classifies a worker as an independent contractor who should in fact
 be an employee.
 
 "Model system" means an exemplary, voluntarily
 implemented worker safety and health management system that (i) implements
 comprehensive safety and health programs that exceed basic compliance with
 occupational safety and health laws and regulations and (ii) meets the VPP
 requirements of this chapter.
 
 "One-year conditional goal" means a target for
 correcting deficiencies in safety and health management system elements or
 sub-elements identified by VOSH during the onsite evaluation of a Star
 participant.
 
 "Onsite assistance visit" means a visit to an
 applicant or participant site by agency personnel or other nonenforcement
 personnel to offer assistance, including help with its application, conduct of
 a records review, or make general observations about the site's safety and
 health management system.
 
 "Onsite evaluation" means a visit to an
 applicant or participant site by a VOSH onsite evaluation team to determine whether
 the site qualifies to participate, continue participation, or advance within
 VPP.
 
 "Onsite evaluation report" means a document
 written by the VOSH onsite evaluation team and consisting of the site report.
 This document contains the team's assessment of the safety and health
 management system and the team's recommendation regarding approval of the
 applicant or reapproval of the participant in VPP.
 
 "Onsite evaluation team" means an
 interdisciplinary group of VOSH professionals and private industry volunteers
 who conduct onsite evaluations. The team normally consists of a team leader, a
 backup team leader, safety and health specialists, and other specialists as
 appropriate.
 
 "Private industry volunteer" or "PIV"
 means a volunteer from a VPP site or corporation knowledgeable in safety and
 health management system assessment, formally trained in the policies and
 procedures of VPP, and determined by VOSH to be qualified to perform as a team
 member on a VPP onsite evaluation.
 
 "Recommendations" means suggested improvements
 noted by the onsite evaluation team that are not requirements for VPP
 participation but would enhance the effectiveness of the site's safety and
 health management system. Compliance with VOSH standards is a requirement, not
 a recommendation.
 
 "Safety and health management system" means a
 method of preventing worker fatalities, injuries, and illnesses through the
 ongoing planning, implementation, integration, and control of four
 interdependent elements: management leadership and employee involvement,
 worksite analysis, hazard prevention and control, and safety and health
 training.
 
 "Star program" means the program within VPP
 designed for participants whose safety and health management systems operate in
 a highly effective, self-sufficient manner and meet all VPP requirements. Star
 is the highest level of VPP participation.
 
 "Temporary employee" means an employee hired on
 a nonpermanent basis by the applicant or participant site.
 
 "Total case incidence rate" or "TCIR"
 means a number that represents the total recordable injuries and illnesses per
 100 full-time employees, calculated for a worksite for a specified period of
 time (usually one to three years).
 
 "Voluntary Protection Program" or
 "VPP" means a voluntary program under which the commissioner recognizes
 and partners with workplaces in which a model system has been implemented.
 
 "Voluntary Protection Program Participants'
 Association" or "VPPPA" means a nonprofit § 50l(c)(3)
 organization whose members are involved in VPP. The mission of the VPPPA is to promote
 safety, health, and environmental excellence through cooperative efforts among
 employees, management, and government.
 
 "VOSH" means the Virginia Occupational Safety
 and Health program of the Department of Labor and Industry.
 
 16VAC25-200-30. Categories of participation.
 
 A. Categories of participation may include:
 
 1. Site-based fixed worksites and long-term construction
 sites, including traditional Star and Merit designations.
 
 2. Challenge participants where employers are guided by
 challenge administrators through a three-stage process, which can prepare a
 company to achieve VPP Star status.
 
 3. Mobile workforce participants where employers often work
 as subcontractors and move from site to site.
 
 4. Corporate participants that have adopted VPP on a large
 scale.
 
 B. Levels of recognition:
 
 1. Star worksite status recognizes the safety and health
 excellence of worksites where workers are successfully protected from fatality,
 injury, and illness by the implementation of comprehensive and effective workplace
 safety and health management systems. These worksites are self-sufficient in
 identifying and controlling workplace hazards.
 
 2. Merit worksite status recognizes worksites that have
 good safety and health management systems and that show the willingness,
 commitment, and ability to achieve site-specific goals that will qualify them
 for Star participation.
 
 a. If the onsite evaluation team recommends participation
 in the Merit program, the site must then complete a set of goals in order to
 maintain Merit status and qualify for the Star program.
 
 b. Merit goals must address Star requirements not presently
 in place or aspects of the safety and health management system that are not up
 to Star quality.
 
 c. Methods for improving the safety and health management
 system that will address identified problem areas must be included in Merit
 goals.
 
 d. Correction of a specific hazardous condition must be a
 90-day item, not a Merit goal. However, when a safety and health management
 system deficiency underlies a specific hazardous condition, then corrections to
 the system must be included as Merit goals.
 
 e. Reducing a three-year TCIR or DART rate to below the
 national average is not by itself an appropriate Merit goal. Corrections to
 safety and health management system deficiencies underlying the high rate must
 be included in the Merit goals.
 
 f. Merit worksites are given a three-year conditional goal
 of achieving Star status. A participant must meet Star rate requirements within
 the first two years of its Merit participation. This is to afford an additional
 year's experience, for a total of no more than three years to gain Star
 approval.
 
 g. A Merit participant qualifies for Star when it has met
 its Merit goals, Star rate requirements, and when all other safety and health
 elements and sub-elements are operating at Star quality.
 
 h. A Merit participant may qualify for the Star program
 before the end of its Merit term if the participant meets all conditions in
 subdivision 2 g of this subsection.
 
 3. Challenge recognizes three-stages of accomplishment as
 specified in 16VAC25-200-40 B.
 
 C. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to prohibit
 the commissioner from establishing programs that are site-specific,
 company-wide, statewide, or any combination thereof.
 
 16VAC25-200-40. Ways to participate.
 
 A. Site-based fixed participation is directed at the
 owners and site officials who control site operations and have ultimate
 responsibility for assuring safe and healthful working conditions of: 
 
 1. Private-sector fixed worksites in general industry;
 
 2. Construction worksites or projects that will have been
 in operation for at least 12 months at the projected time of approval and that
 expect to continue in operation for at least an additional 12 months;
 
 3. State and local government sector fixed worksites;
 
 4. Resident contractors at participating VPP sites for the
 contractors' operations at those VPP sites;
 
 5. Resident contractors at nonparticipating sites for the
 contractors' operations at those sites, so long as the resident contractors are
 part of a larger organization approved to participate under the corporate
 option.
 
 B. Challenge provides participating employers and workers
 an avenue to work with designated Challenge administrators to develop or
 improve their safety and health management system. Challenge participants do
 not generally receive exemptions from VOSH programmed inspections, although it
 is within the commissioner's discretion to design programs that permit
 exemption from programmed inspections for successful Stage 3 applicants.
 
 Challenge administrators collaborate with participating
 employers to improve their safety and health management programs in three
 stages through mentoring, training, and progress tracking:
 
 1. Stage 1 - assess, learn, and develop. Challenge
 participants learn the elements necessary to develop and implement an effective
 safety and health management program; assess performance of existing safety and
 health programs and policies; provide training to management and workers; and
 develop strategies, programs, and policies.
 
 2. Stage 2 - implement, track, and control. Challenge
 participants complete and implement policies and programs developed in Stage 1;
 continue to enhance and develop their safety and health management program;
 implement and improve their safety and health management program; and begin to
 incorporate policies for contractor or special trade contractor safety and
 health management program requirements.
 
 3. Stage 3 - reassess, monitor, and improve. Challenge
 participants monitor, reassess, and continuously improve their safety and
 health management program. Challenge participants who complete Stage 3 have a
 safety and health management system sufficiently advanced for the participant
 to begin the application process for VPP Star certification.
 
 C. Mobile workforce companies typically function as
 contractors or subcontractors that may or may not have the authority for safety
 and health for an entire worksite and for those companies that have employees
 that move site to site, such as a specialty trade contractor or repair and
 maintenance company, regardless of size or length and duration of the project
 or service.
 
 D. VPP corporate is designed for corporate applicants who
 demonstrate a strong commitment to employee safety and health and VPP. These
 applicants, typically large corporations or state or local government agencies,
 have adopted VPP on a large scale for protecting the safety and health of their
 employees. VPP corporate applicants must have established standardized
 corporate-level safety and health management systems that are effectively
 implemented organization-wide, as well as internal audit or screening processes
 that evaluate their facilities for safety and health performance. 
 
 16VAC25-200-50. Application requirements.
 
 A. Term of participation.
 
 1. There is no time limit to the term of participation in
 Star, as long as a site continues to meet all Star requirements and to maintain
 Star quality. 
 
 2. Fixed-site construction participation ceases with the
 completion of the construction project.
 
 3. There is no time limit to the term of participation for
 mobile worksite, corporate, or Challenge site as long as the participant
 continues to meet all applicable requirements and maintain quality systems.
 
 B. Injury and illness history requirements.
 
 1. Injury and illness history is evaluated using a
 three-year total case incident rate (TCIR) and a three-year day away,
 restricted, or transfer case incident rate (DART rate). The three-year TCIR and
 DART rates must be compared to the published Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
 national average for the five-digit or six-digit North American Industrial
 Classification System (NAICS) code for the industry in which the applicant is
 classified. The BLS publishes NAICS industry averages two years after data is
 collected. For example, in calendar year 2016, calendar year 2014 national
 averages will be available and used for comparison.
 
 2. Both the three-year TCIR and the three-year DART rate
 must be below one of the three most recently published BLS national averages
 for the specific NAICS code.
 
 3. Some smaller worksites may be eligible to use the
 alternate rate calculation as provided for in VOSH written procedures.
 
 C. VOSH inspection history. 
 
 1. The applicant must not have been issued final VOSH
 citations related to a fatality in the preceding three-year period prior to
 application submission. In the event that the company elects to contest a
 citation related to a VOSH fatality, the company may not submit a VPP
 application until such time as all fatality-related citations have become a
 final order of the commissioner.
 
 2. If VOSH has inspected an applicant site in the 36 months
 preceding the application, the inspection, abatement, and any other history of
 interaction with VOSH must indicate good faith attempts by the employer to
 improve safety and health at the site. This includes verification of correction
 of all serious violations. In addition, the existence of any of the following
 at the site precludes the site's participation in VPP:
 
 a. Open enforcement investigations;
 
 b. Pending or open contested citations or notices under
 appeal at the time of application;
 
 c. Affirmed willful or antidiscrimination whistleblower
 violations under § 40.1-51.2:1 of the Code of Virginia during the 36 months
 prior to application;
 
 d. Documented instances of misclassification of employees
 during the 36 months prior to application;
 
 e. Unresolved, outstanding enforcement actions, such as
 long-term abatement agreements or contests.
 
 D. Contract worker coverage.
 
 1. Workers for applicable contractors must be provided with
 safety and health protection equal in quality to that provided to participant
 employees.
 
 2. All contractors, whether regularly involved in routine
 site operations or engaged in temporary projects such as construction or
 repair, must follow the safety and health rules of the host site.
 
 3. VPP participants must have in place a documented
 oversight and management system covering applicable contractors to:
 
 a. Ensure that safety and health considerations are
 addressed during the process of selecting contractors and when contractors are
 on site;
 
 b. Ensure that contractors follow site safety rules;
 
 c. Include provisions for timely identification,
 correction, and tracking of uncontrolled hazards in contractor work areas;
 
 d. Include a provision for removing a contractor or
 contractor's employees from the site for safety or health violations. 
 
 4. Nested contractors, such as contracted maintenance
 workers, and temporary employees who are supervised by host site management and
 governed by the site's safety and health management system are entitled to the
 same workplace protections as host employees and are therefore included in the
 host site's injury and illness rates.
 
 5. Site management must maintain copies of the TCIR and
 DART rate data for all applicable contractors based on hours worked at the
 site. Sites must report all applicable contractor TCIR and DART rate data to
 VOSH annually. 
 
 6. Managers, supervisors, and nonsupervisory employees of
 contract employers must be made aware of:
 
 a. The hazards they may encounter while on the site.
 
 b. How to recognize hazardous conditions and the signs and
 symptoms of workplace-related illnesses and injuries.
 
 c. The implemented hazard controls, including safe work
 procedures.
 
 d. Emergency procedures.
 
 E. Assurances.
 
 1. Applicants must understand and agree, through
 assurances, to fulfill program requirements for participation in VPP.
 
 2. Applicants must assure that:
 
 a. The applicant will comply with VOSH laws, standards, and
 regulations and will correct in a timely manner all hazards discovered through
 self-inspections, employee notification, accident investigations, VOSH onsite
 review, process hazard reviews, annual evaluations, or any other means. The
 applicant will provide effective interim protection as necessary.
 
 b. Site deficiencies related to compliance with VOSH
 requirements and identified during the VOSH onsite review will be corrected
 within 90 days, with interim protection provided to employees.
 
 c. Site employees support the VPP application.
 
 d. VPP elements are in place, and the requirements of the
 elements will be met and maintained.
 
 e. Employees, including newly hired employees and contract
 employees when they reach the site, will have the VPP explained to them,
 including employee rights under the program and VOSH laws, standards, and
 regulations.
 
 f. Employees performing safety and health duties as part of
 the applicant's safety and health management system will be protected from
 discriminatory actions resulting from their carrying out such duties. See § 40.1-51.2:1
 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 g. Employees will have access to the results of
 self-inspections, accident investigations, and other safety and health
 management system data upon request. At unionized sites, this requirement may
 be met through the employee representative's access to these results.
 
 h. The information listed in this subdivision 2 h will be
 maintained and available for VOSH review to determine initial and continued
 approval to the VPP:
 
 (1) Written safety and health management system;
 
 (2) Agreements between management and the collective
 bargaining agents concerning safety and health;
 
 (3) Data necessary to evaluate the achievement of
 individual Merit goals or one-year conditional goals.
 
 i. On or before February 15 each year, each participating
 site must submit its annual evaluation to the department.
 
 j. Whenever significant organizational, ownership, union,
 or operational changes occur, such as a change in management, corporate
 takeover, merger, or consolidation, a new statement of commitment signed by
 both management and any authorized collective bargaining agents, as
 appropriate, will be provided to VOSH within 60 days of the effective date of
 the significant changes.
 
 3. The applicant must demonstrate a willingness to follow
 through on all assurances.
 
 4. Employees must be aware of the recourse available to
 them if management fails to fulfill any of these assurances. This may include
 rescinding their support of VPP participation or exercising the right to file a
 VOSH complaint.
 
 F. Preapplication assistance.
 
 1. Department personnel may conduct onsite assistance
 visits of a prospective applicant's site to offer assistance in the application
 process or before scheduling the onsite evaluation to obtain additional
 information or clarification of information provided in the application.
 
 2. Preapplication assistance may also include referrals to
 the VPP mentoring program, Virginia VPP best practices training sessions, VPPPA
 conferences, and VPPPA application workshops.
 
 G. Application receipt and review.
 
 1. The commissioner shall establish written procedures to
 address requirements concerning receipt and review of application contents,
 including the comprehensive safety and health management system requirements
 outlined in 16VAC25-200-60.
 
 2. If, upon review, the application is considered
 incomplete, the department shall notify the applicant by letter, noting the
 missing elements and requesting that the missing information be submitted
 within 90 days. If the additional information is not provided within that
 timeframe, the application must be returned to the applicant. Applications can
 be resubmitted at any time.
 
 3. If it is clear that the applicant cannot qualify for
 VPP, the department must ask the applicant to withdraw the application within
 30 days. If the application is not withdrawn, the application will be returned
 with a letter indicating the reasons the application was denied.
 
 4. An applicant may withdraw the application by notifying
 the department. The withdrawal is effective on the date the notification is
 received. The original application must be returned to the applicant. If the
 application had already been accepted, the department must retain a working
 copy for one year, for use in responding to questions that may arise. 
 
 16VAC25-200-60. Comprehensive safety and health management
 system requirements.
 
 A. The elements for VPP shall include the following
 requirements for VPP participation:
 
 1. Upper management leadership and active and meaningful
 employee involvement;
 
 2. Systematic assessment of occupational hazards;
 
 3. Comprehensive hazard prevention, mitigation, and control
 programs;
 
 4. Employee safety and health training; and
 
 5. Safety and health program evaluation.
 
 B. The commissioner shall establish written procedures to
 address applicant and participant requirements concerning the elements and
 sub-elements appropriate to the program:
 
 1. Management commitment;
 
 2. VPP commitment;
 
 3. Employee involvement;
 
 4. Contract worker coverage;
 
 5. Safety and health management system evaluation;
 
 6. Worksite analysis;
 
 7. Baseline and comprehensive safety and industrial hygiene
 hazard analysis;
 
 8. Hazard analysis of routine jobs, tasks, and processes;
 
 9. Hazard analysis of significant changes;
 
 10. Pre-use analysis;
 
 11. Documentation and use of hazard analysis;
 
 12. Routine self-inspections;
 
 13. Hazard reporting system for employees;
 
 14. Industrial hygiene (IH) program;
 
 a. IH surveys;
 
 b. Sampling strategy;
 
 c. Sampling results;
 
 d. Documentation;
 
 e. Communication;
 
 f. Use of results;
 
 g. IH expertise;
 
 h. Procedures; and
 
 i. Use of contractors for IH surveys;
 
 15. Analysis of injury, illness, and near-hit incidents;
 
 16. Trend analysis;
 
 17. Hazard prevention and control;
 
 18. Certified professional resources;
 
 19. Hazard elimination and control methods;
 
 a. Engineering;
 
 b. Adminstrative;
 
 c. Work practices; and
 
 d. PPE;
 
 20. Hazard control programs;
 
 21. Compliance with applicable Virginia unique occupational
 safety and health regulations;
 
 22. Occupational health care program;
 
 23. Preventative maintenance of equipment;
 
 24. Tracking of hazard correction;
 
 25. Disciplinary system;
 
 26. Emergency preparedness and response; and
 
 27. Safety and health training.
 
 16VAC25-200-70. Certification process.
 
 A. Evaluation periods. The commissioner shall establish
 written procedures to set time periods and scheduling requirements for onsite
 evaluations in response to initial applications accepted by the department and
 for recertification of participants.
 
 B. Scheduling exceptions. Onsite evaluations shall be
 conducted earlier than normal scheduled requirements when:
 
 1. Significant changes have occurred in management,
 processes, or products that may require evaluation to ensure the site is
 maintaining a VPP quality safety and health management system. 
 
 2. VOSH has learned of significant problems at the site,
 such as increasing injury and illness rates, serious deficiencies described in
 the site's annual evaluation of its safety and health management system, or
 deficiencies discovered through VOSH enforcement activity resulting from an
 employee complaint, fatality, accident, or other event.
 
 C. Decision to conduct the onsite evaluation. Once an
 application is accepted, the department must:
 
 1. Notify the site by letter or email in a timely manner
 that an onsite evaluation will be conducted. However, no onsite evaluation may
 be conducted until all prior enforcement actions have been closed.
 
 2. Notify the appropriate VOSH enforcement personnel so
 that the site can be removed from any programmed inspection lists, effective no
 more than 75 days prior to the scheduled onsite review.
 
 D. Methods of evaluation. The three primary methods of
 evaluation during the certification or recertification process are document
 review, walkthrough, and employee interviews. Additional activities that must
 occur are the opening conference, daily briefings, report preparation, and
 closing conference. The onsite evaluation team must evaluate each element and
 sub-element of the safety and health management system and VPP requirements. 
 
 E. Recommendations. At the conclusion of the onsite
 evaluation, the onsite evaluation team must reach a consensus to recommend to
 the commissioner as to whether the site is suitable for participation or
 continued participation in VPP, and at what level of participation.
 
 16VAC25-200-80. Onsite evaluations.
 
 A. Onsite evaluation team. An onsite evaluation consists
 of a thorough evaluation of a VPP applicant's or participant's safety and
 health management system in order to recommend approval or re-approval. Onsite
 evaluations are carried out by a team consisting of VOSH staff acting in a
 nonenforcement capacity, private industry volunteers, and other qualified team
 members.
 
 B. Onsite evaluation procedures. The commissioner shall
 establish written procedures for onsite evaluations of applicants and
 participants undergoing recertification. The procedures shall address issues
 including:
 
 1. Prioritizing and scheduling onsite evaluations;
 
 2. Inclusion of union representatives, if any, in the
 opening and closing conferences and the opportunity to accompany the onsite
 evaluation team on the site walkthrough;
 
 3. Onsite evaluation team composition, qualifications,
 preparation, and assessment of personal protective equipment needed;
 
 4. Opening conference subjects, review of injury and
 illness records, incentive programs, document review, walkthrough, review of
 safety and health management system elements and sub-elements, formal and
 informal interviews of employees, including applicable contractor employees,
 and closing conference subjects and recommendations;
 
 5. Employee rights under the program and under VOSH laws,
 standards, and regulations; and
 
 6. Assuring that employees performing safety and health
 duties as part of the applicant's safety and health management system will be
 protected from discriminatory actions resulting from their carrying out such
 duties, pursuant to § 40.1-51.2:1 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 C. Correction of hazards.
 
 1. As hazards are found and discussed during the
 walkthrough, the onsite evaluation team must add them to a written list of the
 uncontrolled hazards identified. This list will be used when the team briefs
 site management at the end of each day on site.
 
 2. VOSH expects that every effort will be made by the site
 to correct identified hazards before the closing conference. If hazard
 correction cannot be accomplished before the conclusion of the onsite
 evaluation, the onsite evaluation team and site management must discuss and
 agree upon correction methods and timeframes.
 
 3. The site may be given up to a maximum of 90 days to
 correct uncontrolled hazards, as long as interim protection is provided. These
 90-day items must be corrected before the final onsite evaluation report can be
 processed. Management must provide the team leader with a signed letter
 indicating how and when the correction will be made. The team leader may decide
 to return to the site to verify correction.
 
 4. If, after repeated attempts to reach agreement, site
 management refuses to correct a situation that exposes employees to serious
 safety or health hazards, that situation shall be referred for enforcement
 action.
 
 5. Should any identified hazard be determined to present a
 risk of imminent danger to life or health of an employee, department personnel
 shall assure that its procedures for immediately removing employees from exposure
 to the hazard until corrected are complied with by the applicant or
 participant.
 
 D. Deficiencies in the safety and health management
 system. Where the team detects deficiencies in the safety and health management
 system, even when physical hazards are not present, the onsite evaluation team
 must document these deficiencies as goals for correction, recommendations for
 improvement, or both.
 
 1. If the system deficiency is a requirement for VPP at the
 Star level, it must become the subject of a goal, either a Merit goal or a
 one-year conditional goal. Implementation of goals is mandatory for VPP
 participation. Timeframes, interim protection, and methods of achieving goals
 must be discussed and agreed to with site management.
 
 2. If improvement of the system deficiency is not
 necessarily a requirement for VPP, but will improve worker safety and health at
 the site, the improvement must be a recommendation. Implementation of
 recommendations is encouraged but is not mandatory for VPP participation.
 
 E. Final analysis of findings.
 
 1. When the documentation review, the walkthrough, and
 employee interviews have been completed, the onsite evaluation team must meet
 privately to review and summarize its findings before conducting the closing
 conference.
 
 2. A draft of the certification or recertification report
 shall be completed by the team before leaving the site. The draft report must
 reflect the consensus of the onsite evaluation team.
 
 F. Closing conference. The findings of the onsite
 evaluation team, including its recommendation to the commissioner, must be
 presented to site management and appropriate employee representatives before
 the team leaves the site.
 
 16VAC25-200-90. Annual submissions.
 
 A. Annual self-assessment.
 
 1. Participation in VPP requires each site or participant
 to annually evaluate the effectiveness of its safety and health management
 system, including the effectiveness of all VPP elements and sub-elements.
 
 2. The commissioner shall establish written procedures
 establishing the content and reporting requirements of participant annual
 submissions. 
 
 3. Annual submissions are due on or before February 15 each
 year.
 
 B. Applicable contractors. Participants shall report on
 the injury and illness data for all applicable contractors.
 
 16VAC25-200-100. Enforcement activity at Voluntary
 Protection Program sites.
 
 A. Types of enforcement activity. Two types of enforcement
 activity trigger additional VPP assessment:
 
 1. Unprogrammed VOSH inspections, which occur in response
 to all referrals, formal complaints, fatalities, and certain accidents.
 
 2. Other incidents or events, whether or not injuries or
 illnesses have occurred and whether or not normal enforcement procedures apply
 to the situation. 
 
 B. Site reassessment. VOSH may reassess the site's safety
 and health management system if there is reason to believe that a serious
 deficiency exists that would have an impact on the site's continued
 qualification for VPP.
 
 C. Enforcement personnel. The commissioner shall establish
 written procedures describing the use of enforcement personnel during onsite
 evaluations and any limitations placed on their conducting an enforcement
 inspection at a VPP site.
 
 D. Impact of enforcement activity.
 
 1. If the event that triggers enforcement activity occurs
 during the time between application and onsite evaluation, the onsite
 evaluation must be postponed until the enforcement case is closed. 
 
 2. If the event that triggers enforcement activity occurs
 during the onsite evaluation, the onsite evaluation must cease until the
 enforcement case is closed.
 
 16VAC25-200-110. Withdrawal, suspension, or termination.
 
 A. Withdrawal.
 
 1. Participants may withdraw of their own accord or be
 asked by VOSH to withdraw from the programs.
 
 2. Any participant may choose to withdraw voluntarily at
 any time.
 
 3. VOSH shall request that a participant withdraw from VPP
 if it is determined that it is no longer meeting the requirements for VPP
 participation.
 
 4. The commissioner shall establish written withdrawal
 procedures that (i) provide for the participant's formal notification to the
 department, (ii) the commissioner's acknowledgment of receipt and notification
 to the participant of the status change, (iii) notification to department
 personnel of the status change, (iv) return of the participant to the VOSH
 programmed inspection list, and (v) disposition of the VPP participant file.
 
 5. The commissioner shall establish written procedures to
 address a VPP participant's change of location that establishes criteria for
 determining whether the participant can retain its VPP status or must withdraw.
 
 6. The commissioner will consider the company's
 reapplication to VPP if and when eligibility requirements are met.
 
 B. Suspension.
 
 1. Participants that experience a work-related fatality,
 whether an employee or contract employee, may be immediately suspended from
 program participation until such time as a VOSH fatality investigation can be
 completed.
 
 2. The commissioner shall establish written procedures to
 address a VPP participant's temporary suspension from VPP, that provides for
 the department's formal notification to the participant and removal of the VPP
 flag or other recognition device from display until the suspension is lifted.
 
 3. A participant's suspension will not result in the participant
 being returned to the VOSH programmed inspection list.
 
 C. Termination.
 
 1. The commissioner may terminate a participant from the
 VPP for failure to maintain the requirements of the program. 
 
 2. In the event a fatality investigation shows substantial
 deficiencies in the participant's safety and health programs, such that during
 a normal certification audit the types of deficiencies would have precluded the
 participant from participation in the VPP, the commissioner, in his discretion,
 may terminate the participation in VPP.
 
 3. If a whistleblower investigation pursuant to §§
 40.1-51.2:1 and 40.1-51.2:2 of the Code of Virginia shows substantial
 deficiencies in the participant's safety and health programs, such that during
 a normal certification audit the types of deficiencies would have precluded the
 site from participation in the VPP, the commissioner, in his discretion, may
 terminate the participation in VPP.
 
 4. Under most other situations, termination should occur
 only when all reasonable efforts for assistance have been exhausted. 
 
 5. The commissioner shall establish written termination
 procedures that provide for the commissioner's formal notification to the
 participant and union representatives, an appeal process, and notification of
 the commissioner's final decision. 
 
 6. If the commissioner finds the participant's appeal
 valid, the participant may continue in VPP. 
 
 7. In the event of a final decision to terminate, the
 written procedures shall provide for notification to department personnel of
 the status change, return of the participant to the VOSH programmed inspection
 list, and disposition of the VPP participant file. If a terminated participant wishes
 to pursue reinstatement, it must wait three years to reapply. 
 
 VA.R. Doc. No. R16-4468; Filed November 18, 2016, 1:41 p.m. 
TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
BOARD FOR BARBERS AND COSMETOLOGY
Final Regulation
 
 Title of Regulation: 18VAC41-70. Esthetics
 Regulations (amending 18VAC41-70-10 through 18VAC41-70-40,
 18VAC41-70-60 through 18VAC41-70-110, 18VAC41-70-160, 18VAC41-70-180,
 18VAC41-70-230, 18VAC41-70-240, 18VAC41-70-260, 18VAC41-70-270, 18VAC41-70-280;
 adding 18VAC41-70-35; repealing 18VAC41-70-170, 18VAC41-70-220). 
 
 Statutory Authority: § 54.1-201 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 Effective Date: February 1, 2017. 
 
 Agency Contact: Demetrios J. Melis, Executive Director,
 Board for Barbers and Cosmetology, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 400, Richmond, VA
 23233, telephone (804) 367-8590, FAX (804) 527-4295, or email
 barbercosmo@dpor.virginia.gov.
 
  
 
 Summary:
 
 The amendments are the result
 of a periodic review and include clarifying text to ensure consistency with
 other board regulations and state and federal laws and compliance with current
 industry standards. Changes include (i) adding new definitions; (ii) requiring
 disclosure of felonies, certain misdemeanors, and disciplinary actions; (iii)
 allowing individuals to obtain required training in esthetics apprenticeship
 programs and to take licensure exams after successful completion of such a
 program; (iv) requiring individuals to apply for licensure within five years of
 taking their exams; (v) clarifying that no fee is charged for a temporary
 license; (vi) requiring voided licenses to be returned to the board within 30
 days and clarifying what circumstances may lead to a voided license; (vii)
 allowing for board inspection of shops, salons, and schools during reasonable
 hours; (viii) requiring schools to provide specific information to the board,
 including curriculum changes, and within required time periods; (ix) providing
 grounds for discipline for several prohibited actions; and (x) updating
 sanitation requirements for salons, shops, and schools, including requiring
 salons and shops to provide a client bathroom.
 
 Summary of Public Comments and Agency's Response: A
 summary of comments made by the public and the agency's response may be
 obtained from the promulgating agency or viewed at the office of the Registrar
 of Regulations. 
 
 Part I 
 General 
 
 18VAC41-70-10. Definitions.
 
 The following words and terms when used in this chapter shall
 have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. All
 terms defined in Chapter 7 (§ 54.1-700 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of
 Virginia are incorporated in this chapter.
 
 "Business entity" means a sole proprietorship,
 partnership, corporation, limited liability company, limited liability
 partnership, or any other form of organization permitted by law. 
 
 "Credit hour" means a combination of the number of
 hours in class each week and the number of hours per week in a laboratory by which
 a school may measure its course work. One unit of credit equals one hour of
 classroom study, two hours of laboratory experience or three hours of
 internship or practicum or a combination of the three times the number of weeks
 in the term. Emerging delivery methodologies may necessitate a unit of
 undergraduate credit to be measured in nontime base methods. These courses
 shall use the demonstration of competency, proficiency, or fulfillment
 of learning outcomes to ensure these courses are equivalent to traditionally
 delivered courses. 
 
 "Direct supervision" means that a Virginia licensed
 esthetician or master esthetician shall be present in the esthetics spa
 or esthetics school at all times when services are being performed by a
 temporary license holder or student.
 
 "Endorsement" means a method of obtaining a license
 by a person who is currently licensed in another state or jurisdiction.
 
 "Firm" means any business entity recognized
 under the laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia.
 
 "Licensee" means any individual, sole
 proprietorship, partnership, association, corporation,
 limited liability company, or corporation limited liability
 partnership, or any other form of organization permitted by law holding a
 license issued by the Board for Barbers and Cosmetology, as defined in §
 54.1-700 of the Code of Virginia. 
 
 "Post-secondary educational level" means an
 accredited college or university that is approved or accredited by the
 [ Southern Association of Colleges and Schools ] Commission
 on Colleges or by an accrediting agency that is recognized by the U.S.
 Secretary of Education. 
 
 "Reinstatement" means having a license restored to
 effectiveness after the expiration date has passed.
 
 "Renewal" means continuing the effectiveness of a
 license for another period of time.
 
 "Responsible management" means the following
 individuals:
 
 1. The sole proprietor of a sole proprietorship;
 
 2. The partners of a general partnership;
 
 3. The managing partners of a limited partnership;
 
 4. The officers of a corporation;
 
 5. The managers of a limited liability company;
 
 6. The officers or directors of an association or both; and
 
 7. Individuals in other business entities recognized under
 the laws of the Commonwealth as having a fiduciary responsibility to the firm.
 
 "Sole proprietor" means any individual, not a
 corporation, who is trading under his own name or under an assumed or
 fictitious name pursuant to the provisions of §§ 59.1-69 through 59.1-76 of the
 Code of Virginia. 
 
 "Virginia state institution" for the purposes of
 this chapter means any institution approved by the Virginia Department of
 Education.
 
 Part II 
 Entry 
 
 18VAC41-70-20. General requirements for an esthetician license
 or master esthetician license.
 
 A. In order to receive a license as an esthetician or
 master esthetician, an applicant must Any individual wishing to engage
 in esthetics or master esthetics shall obtain a license in compliance with §
 54.1-703 of the Code of Virginia and meet the following qualifications:
 
 1. The applicant shall be in good standing as a licensed
 esthetician in every jurisdiction Virginia and all other
 jurisdictions where licensed. The applicant shall disclose to the board at
 the time of application for licensure any disciplinary action taken in another
 jurisdiction Virginia and all other jurisdictions in connection with
 the applicant's practice as an esthetician. This includes [ but
 is not limited to ] monetary penalties, fines, suspensions,
 revocations, surrender of a license in connection with a disciplinary action,
 or voluntary termination of a license. The applicant shall disclose to the
 board at the time of application for licensure whether he has been previously
 licensed in Virginia as an esthetician or master esthetician.
 
 Upon review of an applicant's prior disciplinary action,
 the board, in its discretion, may deny licensure to any applicant wherein it
 deems the applicant is unfit or unsuited to engage in esthetics or master
 esthetics. The board will decide each case by taking into account the totality
 of the circumstances. Any plea of nolo contendere or comparable plea shall be
 considered a disciplinary action for the purposes of this section. The
 applicant shall provide a certified copy of a final order, decree, or case
 decision by a court, regulatory agency, or board with the lawful authority to
 issue such order, decree, or case decision, and such copy shall be admissible
 as prima facie evidence of such disciplinary action. 
 
 2. The applicant shall disclose his physical address. A post
 office box is not acceptable.
 
 3. The applicant shall sign, as part of the application, a
 statement certifying that the applicant has read and understands the Virginia
 esthetics license laws and the board's esthetics regulations this
 chapter.
 
 4. In accordance with § 54.1-204 of the Code of Virginia, each
 applicant shall disclose a conviction, in any jurisdiction, of any
 misdemeanor or felony. Any plea of nolo contendere shall be considered a
 conviction for this purpose of this section. The record of a conviction
 certified or authenticated in such form as to be admissible in evidence under
 the laws of the jurisdiction where convicted shall be admissible as prima facie
 evidence of such guilt. The board, at its discretion, may deny licensure or
 certification to any applicant in accordance with § 54.1-204 of the Code of
 Virginia the following information regarding criminal convictions in
 Virginia and all other jurisdictions:
 
 a. All misdemeanor convictions involving moral turpitude,
 sexual offense, drug distribution, or physical injury within [ three
 two ] years of the date of the application; and
 
 b. All felony convictions [ during the
 applicant's lifetime within 20 years of the date of application ].
 
 Any plea of nolo contendere shall be considered a
 conviction for purposes of this subsection. The record of a conviction received
 from a court shall be accepted as prima facie evidence of a conviction or
 finding of guilt. The board, in its discretion, may deny licensure to any
 applicant in accordance with § 54.1-204 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 5. The applicant shall provide evidence satisfactory to the
 board that the applicant has passed the board-approved examination requirement
 administered either by the board or by independent examiners.
 
 B. Eligibility to sit for board-approved examination.
 
 1. Training in the Commonwealth of Virginia. Any person
 completing an approved esthetics training program or a master esthetics
 training program in a Virginia licensed esthetics school shall be eligible for
 the applicable examination.
 
 2. Training outside of the Commonwealth of Virginia. Any
 person completing esthetics training that is substantially equivalent to the
 Virginia program but is outside of the Commonwealth of Virginia must submit to
 the board documentation of the successful completion of training to be eligible
 for examination. If less than the required hours of esthetics training was
 completed, an applicant must submit a certificate, diploma, or other
 documentation acceptable to the board verifying the completion of a substantially
 equivalent esthetics course and documentation of six months of work experience
 as an esthetician in order to be eligible for the esthetician examination.
 
 18VAC41-70-30. License by endorsement.
 
 Upon proper application to the board, any person currently
 licensed to practice as an esthetician or master esthetician in any
 other state or jurisdiction of the United States and who has completed both a
 training program and a written examination and a practical examination requirement
 that is are substantially equivalent to that those
 required by this chapter may be issued an esthetician or master esthetician
 license without an examination. The applicant must also meet the requirements
 set forth in 18VAC41-70-20 A.
 
 18VAC41-70-35. Apprenticeship training. 
 
 A. Licensed estheticians and master estheticians who train
 apprentices shall comply with the standards for apprenticeship training
 established by the Division of Registered Apprenticeship of the Virginia
 Department of Labor and Industry and the Virginia Board for Barbers and
 Cosmetology. Owners of esthetics spas who train apprentices shall comply with
 the standards for apprenticeship training established by the Division of
 Registered Apprenticeship of the Virginia Department of Labor and Industry. 
 
 B. Any person completing the Virginia apprenticeship
 program in esthetics or master esthetics shall be eligible for examination.
 
 18VAC41-70-40. Examination requirements and fees.
 
 A. Applicants for initial licensure shall meet the pass
 both a written examination and a practical examination requirement
 approved by the board. The examinations may be administered by the board or by
 a designated testing service. The board maintains discretion in determining
 the license requirements. 
 
 B. Any applicant who passes one part of the examination
 shall not be required to take that part again provided both parts are passed
 within one year of the initial examination date. 
 
 B. C. Any candidate failing to appear as
 scheduled for examination shall forfeit the examination fee.
 
 C. D. The fee for examination or reexamination
 is subject to contracted charges to the board by an outside vendor. These
 contracts are competitively negotiated and bargained for in compliance with the
 Virginia Public Procurement Act (§ 2.2-4300 et seq. of the Code of Virginia).
 Fees may be adjusted and charged to the candidate in accordance with these
 contracts. The fee shall not exceed $225 per candidate.
 
 E. Any candidate failing to apply for initial licensure
 within five years of passing both a written examination and a practical
 examination shall be required to retake both portions. Records of examinations
 shall be maintained for a maximum of five years.
 
 18VAC41-70-60. Examination administration.
 
 A. The examination shall be administered by the board or the
 designated testing service. The practical examination shall be supervised by
 a chief examiner.
 
 B. Every esthetics or master esthetics examiner shall hold
 a current Virginia license in his respective profession, have three or more
 years of active experience as a licensed professional, and be currently
 practicing in that profession. Examiners shall attend training workshops
 sponsored by the board or by a testing service acting on behalf of the board. 
 
 C. No certified esthetics or master esthetics instructor
 who (i) is currently teaching, (ii) is a school owner, or (iii) is an
 apprentice sponsor shall be an examiner. 
 
 D. Each esthetics or master esthetics chief examiner shall
 (i) hold a current Virginia license in his respective profession, (ii) have
 five or more years of active experience in that profession, (iii) have three
 years of active experience as an examiner, and (iv) be currently practicing in
 his respective profession. Chief examiners shall attend training workshops
 sponsored by the board or by a testing service acting on behalf of the board. 
 
 B. E. The applicant shall follow all procedures
 established by the board with regard to conduct at the examination. Such
 procedures shall include any written instructions communicated prior to
 the examination date and any instructions communicated at the site,
 either written or oral, on the date of the examination. Failure to comply with
 all procedures established by the board and the testing service with regard to
 conduct at the examination may be grounds for denial of application.
 
 18VAC41-70-70. Esthetician temporary license.
 
 A. A temporary license to work under the direct supervision
 of a currently licensed esthetician or master esthetician may be issued only to
 applicants for initial licensure that the board finds eligible for the
 applicable examination. There shall be no fee for a temporary license.
 
 B. The temporary license shall remain in force for 45 days
 following the examination date. The examination date shall be the first test
 date after the applicant has successfully submitted an application to the
 board.
 
 C. Any person continuing to practice esthetics services after
 a temporary license has expired may be prosecuted and fined by the Commonwealth
 under § §§ 54.1-111 A 1 and 54.1-202 of the Code of
 Virginia.
 
 D. No applicant for examination shall be issued more than one
 temporary license.
 
 E. Temporary permits shall not be issued where grounds may
 exist to deny a license pursuant to § 54.1-204 of the Code of Virginia or
 18VAC41-70-20.
 
 18VAC41-70-80. Spa General requirements for a spa
 license.
 
 A. Any individual firm wishing to operate an
 esthetics spa shall obtain a spa license in compliance with § 54.1-704.1 of the
 Code of Virginia., and shall meet the following qualifications in
 order to receive a license: 
 
 1. The applicant, and all members of the responsible
 management, shall be in good standing as a licensed spa in Virginia and all
 other jurisdictions where licensed. The applicant [ and all members
 of the responsible management ] shall disclose to the board at the
 time of application for licensure, any disciplinary action taken in Virginia
 and all other jurisdictions in connection with the applicant's operation of any
 esthetics spa or practice of the profession. This includes [ but
 is not limited to ] monetary penalties, fines, suspensions,
 revocations, surrender of a license in connection with a disciplinary action,
 or voluntary termination of a license. The applicant shall disclose to the
 board at the time of application for licensure if the applicant [ or
 any member of responsible management ] has been previously licensed
 in Virginia as an esthetics spa. 
 
 Upon review of the applicant's [ and all
 members of the responsible management's ] prior disciplinary
 action, the board, in its discretion, may deny licensure to any applicant
 wherein it deems the applicant is unfit or unsuited to engage in the operation
 of an esthetics spa. The board will decide each case by taking into account the
 totality of the circumstances. Any plea of nolo contendere or comparable plea
 shall be considered a disciplinary action for the purposes of this section. The
 applicant shall provide a certified copy of a final order, decree, or case
 decision by a court, regulatory agency, or board with the lawful authority to
 issue such order, decree, or case decision, and such copy shall be admissible
 as prima facie evidence of such disciplinary action. 
 
 2. The applicant shall disclose his physical address. A
 post office box is not acceptable.
 
 3. The applicant shall sign, as part of the application, a
 statement certifying that the applicant has read and understands the Virginia
 esthetics license laws and this chapter. 
 
 4. In accordance with § 54.1-204 of the Code of Virginia,
 each applicant shall disclose the following information about the firm and all
 members of the responsible management regarding criminal convictions in
 Virginia and all other jurisdictions:
 
 a. All misdemeanor convictions [ involving
 moral turpitude, sexual offense, drug distribution, or physical injury ]
 within [ three two ] years of the date
 of the application; and
 
 b. All felony convictions [ during the
 applicant's lifetime within 20 years of the date of application ].
 
 Any plea of nolo contendere shall be considered a conviction
 for purposes of this subsection. The record of a conviction received from a
 court shall be accepted as prima facie evidence of a conviction or finding of
 guilt. The board, in its discretion, may deny licensure to any applicant in
 accordance with § 54.1-204 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 5. The applicant shall disclose the firm's responsible
 management. 
 
 B. An esthetics spa license Shop or salon licenses
 are issued to firms as defined in this chapter and shall not be
 transferable and shall bear the same name and address of the business. Any
 changes in the name, or address, or ownership of the spa
 shall be reported to the board in writing within 30 days of such changes. New
 owners shall be responsible for reporting such changes in writing to the board
 within 30 days of the changes. The board shall not be responsible for
 the licensee's, certificate holder's, or permit holder's failure to receive
 notices, communications, and correspondence caused by the licensee's,
 certificate holder's, or permit holder's failure to promptly notify the board
 in writing of any change of name or address or for any other reason beyond the
 control of the board.
 
 C. In the event of a closing of an esthetics spa, the
 owner must notify the board in writing within 30 days of the closing, and
 return the license to the board. Whenever the legal business entity
 holding the license is dissolved or altered to form a new business entity, the
 original license becomes void and shall be returned to the board within 30 days
 of the change. Additionally, the firm shall apply for a new license, within 30
 days of the change in the business entity. Such changes include [ but
 are not limited to ]: 
 
 1. Death of a sole proprietor;
 
 2. Death or withdrawal of a general partner in a general
 partnership or the managing partner in a limited partnership; and
 
 3. Conversion, formation, or dissolution of a corporation,
 a limited liability company, or association, or any other business entity
 recognized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia.
 
 D. Any change in the officers of a corporation, managers
 of a limited liability company, or officers or directors of an association
 shall be reported to the board in writing within 30 days of the change.
 
 E. The board or any of its agents shall be allowed to
 inspect during reasonable hours any licensed shop or salon for compliance with
 provisions of Chapter 7 (§ 54.1-700 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of
 Virginia or this chapter. For purposes of a board inspection, "reasonable
 hours" means the hours between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.; however, if the licensee
 generally is not open to the public substantially during the same hours,
 "reasonable hours" shall mean the business hours when the licensee is
 open to the public.
 
 18VAC41-70-90. School General requirements for a
 school license.
 
 A. Any individual firm wishing to operate an
 esthetics school shall submit an application to the board at least 60 days
 prior to the date for which approval is sought, obtain a school license in
 compliance with § 54.1-704.2 of the Code of Virginia. All instruction and
 training of estheticians shall be conducted under the direct supervision of a
 certified esthetics instructor. All instruction and training of master
 estheticians shall be conducted under the direct supervision of a certified
 master esthetics instructor., and meet the following qualifications in
 order to receive a license: 
 
 1. The applicant and all members of the responsible
 management shall be in good standing as a licensed school in Virginia and all
 other jurisdictions where licensed. The applicant [ and all members
 of the responsible management ] shall disclose to the board at the
 time of application for licensure, any disciplinary action taken in Virginia
 and all other jurisdictions in connection with the applicant's operation of any
 esthetics school or practice of the profession. This includes [ but
 is not limited to ] monetary penalties, fines, suspensions,
 revocations, surrender of a license in connection with a disciplinary action,
 or voluntary termination of a license. The applicant shall disclose to the
 board at the time of application for licensure if the applicant [ or
 any member of the responsible management ] has been previously
 licensed in Virginia as an esthetics school. 
 
 Upon review of the applicant's [ and all
 members of the responsible management's ] prior disciplinary
 action, the board, in its discretion, may deny licensure to any applicant
 wherein it deems the applicant is unfit or unsuited to engage in the operation
 of an esthetics school. The board will decide each case by taking into account
 the totality of the circumstances. Any plea of nolo contendere or comparable
 plea shall be considered a disciplinary action for the purposes of this
 section. The applicant shall provide a certified copy of a final order, decree,
 or case decision by a court, regulatory agency, or board with the lawful
 authority to issue such order, decree, or case decision, and such copy shall be
 admissible as prima facie evidence of such disciplinary action. 
 
 2. The applicant shall disclose his physical address. A
 post office box is not acceptable.
 
 3. The applicant shall sign, as part of the application, a
 statement certifying that the applicant has read and understands the Virginia
 esthetics license laws and this chapter. 
 
 4. In accordance with § 54.1-204 of the Code of Virginia,
 each applicant shall disclose the following information about the firm and all
 members of the responsible management regarding criminal convictions in
 Virginia and all other jurisdictions:
 
 a. All misdemeanor convictions [ involving
 moral turpitude, sexual offense, drug distribution, or physical injury ]
 within [ three two ] years of the date
 of the application; and
 
 b. All felony convictions [ during the
 applicant's lifetime within 20 years of the date of application ].
 
 Any plea of nolo contendere shall be considered a
 conviction for purposes of this subsection. The record of a conviction received
 from a court shall be accepted as prima facie evidence of a conviction or
 finding of guilt. The board, in its discretion, may deny licensure to any
 applicant in accordance with § 54.1-204 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 5. The applicant shall disclose the firm's responsible
 management. 
 
 B. An esthetics Esthetics school license
 licenses are issued to firms as defined in this chapter and shall not be
 transferable and shall bear the same name and address as the school. Any
 changes in the name or the address of record or principal place of
 business of the school shall be reported to the board in writing within 30
 days of such change. The board shall not be responsible for the licensee's,
 certificate holder's, or permit holder's failure to receive notices,
 communications, and correspondence caused by the licensee's, certificate
 holder's, or permit holder's failure to promptly notify the board in writing of
 any change of name or address or for any other reason beyond the control of the
 board. The name of the school must indicate that it is an educational
 institution. All signs or other advertisements must reflect the name as
 indicated on the license issued by the board and contain language indicating it
 is an educational institution.
 
 C. In the event of a change of ownership of a school, the
 new owners shall be responsible for reporting such changes in writing to the
 board within 30 days of the changes and obtain a new license.
 
 D. In the event of a school closing, the owner must notify
 the board in writing within 30 days of the closing, and return the license to
 the board.
 
 C. Whenever the legal business entity holding the license
 is dissolved or altered to form a new business entity, the original license
 becomes void and shall be returned to the board within 30 days of the change.
 Additionally, the firm shall apply for a new license within 30 days of the
 change in business entity. Such changes include [ but are not
 limited to ]: 
 
 1. Death of a sole proprietor;
 
 2. Death or withdrawal of a general partner in a general
 partnership or the managing partner in a limited partnership; and
 
 3. Conversion, formation, or dissolution of a corporation,
 a limited liability company, an association, or any other business entity
 recognized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia.
 
 D. Any change in the officers of a corporation, managers
 of a limited liability company, or officers or directors of an association
 shall be reported to the board in writing within 30 days of the change.
 
 E. Barber schools, cosmetology schools, nail schools, or
 waxing schools under the Virginia Department of Education shall be exempted
 from licensure requirements. 
 
 F. The board or any of its agents shall be allowed to
 inspect during reasonable hours any licensed school for compliance with
 provisions of Chapter 7 (§ 54.1-700 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of
 Virginia or this chapter. For purposes of a board inspection, "reasonable
 hours" means the hours between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.; however, if
 the licensee generally is not open to the public substantially during the same
 hours, "reasonable hours" shall mean the business hours when the
 licensee is open to the public.
 
 18VAC41-70-100. General requirements for an esthetics
 instructor certificate.
 
 A. Upon filing an application with the Board for Barbers
 and Cosmetology, any person meeting the qualifications set forth in this
 section shall be eligible for an esthetics instructor certificate if the person
 Any individual wishing to engage in esthetics instruction shall meet the
 following qualifications:
 
 1. Holds a current Virginian esthetician license; and The
 applicant shall be in good standing as a licensed esthetician in Virginia and
 all other jurisdictions where licensed. The applicant shall disclose to the
 board at the time of application for licensure any disciplinary action taken in
 Virginia and all other jurisdictions in connection with the applicant's
 practice as an esthetician. This includes [ but is not limited
 to ] monetary penalties, fines, suspensions, revocations,
 surrender of a license in connection with a disciplinary action, or voluntary
 termination of a license. The applicant shall disclose to the board at the time
 of application for licensure whether he has been previously licensed in
 Virginia as an esthetician or master esthetician.
 
 Upon review of the applicant's prior disciplinary action,
 the board, in its discretion, may deny licensure to any applicant wherein it
 deems the applicant is unfit or unsuited to engage in esthetics. The board will
 decide each case by taking into account the totality of the circumstances. Any
 plea of nolo contendere or comparable plea shall be considered a disciplinary
 action for the purposes of this section. The applicant shall provide a
 certified copy of a final order, decree, or case decision by a court,
 regulatory agency, or board with the lawful authority to issue such order,
 decree, or case decision, and such copy shall be admissible as prima facie
 evidence of such disciplinary action. 
 
 2. The applicant shall hold a current Virginia esthetics
 license;
 
 Completes 3. The applicant shall complete one of
 the following qualifications:
 
 a. Passes Pass a course in teaching techniques
 at the postsecondary educational level; or
 
 b. Completes Complete an instructor training
 course approved by the Virginia Board for Barbers and Cosmetology under the
 supervision of a certified esthetics instructor or master esthetics instructor
 in an esthetics school and passes pass an examination in
 esthetics instruction administered by the board or by a testing service acting
 on behalf of the board.; and
 
 3. Persons who (i) make application for licensure between
 September 20, 2007, and September 19, 2008, and (ii) have completed one year of
 documented work experience as an esthetics instructor are not required to
 complete subdivision 2 of this subsection.
 
 4. In accordance with § 54.1-204 of the Code of Virginia,
 each applicant shall disclose the following information regarding criminal
 convictions in Virginia and all other jurisdictions:
 
 a. All misdemeanor convictions [ involving
 moral turpitude, sexual offense, drug distribution, or physical injury ]
 within [ three two ] years of the date
 of the application; and
 
 b. All felony convictions [ during the
 applicant's lifetime within 20 years of the date of application ].
 
 
 Any plea of nolo contendere shall be considered a
 conviction for purposes of this subsection. The record of a conviction received
 from a court shall be accepted as prima facie evidence of a conviction or
 finding of guilt. The board, in its discretion, may deny licensure to any
 applicant in accordance with § 54.1-204 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 B. Esthetics instructors Instructors shall be
 required to maintain a Virginia esthetician license.
 
 18VAC41-70-110. General requirements for a master esthetics
 instructor certificate.
 
 A. Upon filing an application with the Board for Barbers
 and Cosmetology, any person meeting the qualifications set forth in this
 section shall be eligible for a master esthetics instructor certificate if the
 person Any individual wishing to engage in master esthetics instruction
 shall meet the following qualifications:
 
 1. The applicant shall be in good standing as a licensed
 master esthetician in Virginia and all other jurisdictions where licensed. The
 applicant shall disclose to the board at the time of application for licensure
 any disciplinary action taken in Virginia and all other jurisdictions in
 connection with the applicant's practice as [ an a ]
 master esthetician. This includes [ but is not limited to ]
 monetary penalties, fines, suspensions, revocations, surrender of a license
 in connection with a disciplinary action, or voluntary termination of a
 license. The applicant shall disclose to the board at the time of application
 for licensure if the applicant has been previously licensed in Virginia as an esthetician
 or master esthetician.
 
 Upon review of the applicant's prior disciplinary action,
 the board, in its discretion, may deny licensure to any applicant wherein it
 deems the applicant is unfit or unsuited to engage in esthetics or master
 esthetics. The board will decide each case by taking into account the totality
 of the circumstances. Any plea of nolo contendere or comparable plea shall be
 considered a disciplinary action for the purposes of this section. The
 applicant shall provide a certified copy of a final order, decree, or case
 decision by a court, regulatory agency, or board with the lawful authority to
 issue such order, decree, or case decision, and such copy shall be admissible
 as prima facie evidence of such disciplinary action. 
 
 1. Holds 2. The applicant shall hold a current
 Virginia master esthetician license; and
 
 2. Completes 3. The applicant shall complete one
 of the following qualifications:
 
 a. Passes Pass a course in teaching techniques
 at the postsecondary educational level; or
 
 b. Completes Complete an instructor training
 course approved by the Virginia Board for Barbers and Cosmetology under the
 supervision of a certified esthetics instructor or master esthetics instructor
 in an esthetics school and passes pass an examination in esthetics
 instruction administered by the board or by a testing service acting on behalf
 of the board. 3. Persons who (i) make application for licensure between
 September 20, 2007, and September 19, 2008, and (ii) have completed one year of
 documented work experience as a master esthetics instructor are not required to
 complete subdivision 2 of this subsection.; and
 
 4. In accordance with § 54.1-204 of the Code of Virginia,
 each applicant shall disclose the following information regarding criminal
 convictions in Virginia and all other jurisdictions:
 
 a. All misdemeanor convictions involving moral turpitude,
 sexual offense, drug distribution, or physical injury within [ three
 two ] years of the date of the application; and
 
 b. All felony convictions [ during the
 applicant's lifetime within 20 years of the date of application ].
 
 Any plea of nolo contendere shall be considered a
 conviction for purposes of this subsection. The record of a conviction received
 from a court shall be accepted as prima facie evidence of a conviction or
 finding of guilt. The board, in its discretion, may deny licensure to any
 applicant in accordance with § 54.1-204 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 B. Master esthetics instructors Instructors
 shall be required to maintain a Virginia master esthetician license.
 
 18VAC41-70-160. Failure to renew.
 
 A. When a licensed individual or entity licensee
 fails to renew its license within 30 days following its expiration date, the
 licensee shall apply for reinstatement of the license by submitting to the
 Department of Professional and Occupational Regulation a reinstatement
 application and renewal fee and reinstatement fee.
 
 B. When an esthetician or master esthetician a
 licensee fails to renew his its license within two years
 following the expiration date, reinstatement is no longer possible. To resume
 practice, the former licensee shall apply for licensure as a new applicant and
 shall meet all current application entry requirements and
 shall pass the board's current examination for each respective license.
 Individuals applying for licensure under this section shall be eligible to
 apply for a temporary license from the board under 18VAC41-70-70.
 
 C. When an esthetics spa fails to renew its license within
 two years following the expiration date, reinstatement is no longer possible.
 To resume practice, the former licensee shall apply for licensure as a new
 applicant and shall meet all current application requirements.
 
 D. C. The application for reinstatement for an
 esthetics a school shall provide (i) the reasons for failing
 to renew prior to the expiration date and (ii) a notarized statement
 that all students currently enrolled or seeking to enroll at the school have
 been notified in writing that the school's license has expired. All of these
 materials shall be called the application package. Reinstatement will be
 considered by the board if the school consents to and satisfactorily passes an
 inspection of the school by the Department of Professional and Occupational
 Regulation and if the school's records are maintained in accordance with
 18VAC41-70-230 and 18VAC41-70-240. Upon receipt of the reinstatement fee,
 application package, and inspection results, the board may reinstate the
 school's license or require requalification or both. If the reinstatement
 application package and reinstatement fee are not received by the board within
 six months following the expiration date of the school's license, the board
 will notify the testing service that prospective graduates of the unlicensed
 school are not acceptable candidates for the examination. Such notification
 will be sent to the school and must be displayed in a conspicuous manner by the
 school in an area that is accessible to the public. No student shall be disqualified
 from taking the examination because the school was not licensed for a portion
 of the time the student attended if the school license is reinstated by the
 board.
 
 When an esthetics school fails to renew its license within
 two years following the expiration date, reinstatement is no longer possible.
 To resume practice the former licensee shall apply for licensure as a new
 applicant and shall meet all current application requirements.
 
 E. D. The date a renewal fee is received by the
 Department of Professional and Occupational Regulation or its agent will be
 used to determine whether the requirement for reinstatement of a license is
 applicable and an additional fee is required.
 
 F. E. When a license is reinstated, the
 licensee shall have the same license number and shall be assigned an expiration
 date two years from the previous expiration date of the license.
 
 G. F. A licensee who that
 reinstates his its license shall be regarded as having been
 continuously licensed without interruption. Therefore, a licensee shall be
 subject to the authority of the board for activities performed prior to
 reinstatement.
 
 H. G. A licensee who that fails
 to reinstate his its license shall be regarded as unlicensed from
 the expiration date of the license forward. Nothing in this chapter shall
 divest the board of its authority to discipline a licensee for a violation of
 the law or regulations during the period of time for which the individual or
 business entity was licensed.
 
 Part V 
 Esthetics Schools 
 
 18VAC41-70-170. Applicants for school license. (Repealed.)
 
 Any person, firm, or corporation desiring to operate an
 esthetics school shall submit an application to the board at least 60 days
 prior to the date for which approval is sought.
 
  [ 18VAC41-70-180. General requirements.
 
 An esthetics school shall:
 
 1. Hold a school license for each and every location.
 
 2. Hold a spa license if the school receives compensation for
 services provided in its clinic.
 
 3. For esthetics courses, employ a staff of licensed and
 certified esthetics instructors or licensed and certified master esthetics
 instructors.
 
 4. For master esthetics courses, employ a staff of licensed
 and certified master esthetics instructors.
 
 5. Develop individuals for entry-level competency in
 esthetics.
 
 6. Submit its curricula for board approval. Esthetician
 curricula shall be based on a minimum of 600 clock or equivalent credit hours
 and shall include performances in accordance with 18VAC41-70-190. Master
 esthetician curricula shall be based on a minimum of 600 clock or equivalent credit
 hours and shall include performances in accordance with 18VAC41-70-190 C. All
 changes to curricula must be resubmitted and approved by the board. 
 
 7. Inform the public that all services are performed by
 students if the school receives compensation for services provided in its
 clinic by posting a notice in the reception area of the spa in plain view of
 the public.
 
 8. Conduct classroom instruction in an area separate from the
 clinic area where practical instruction is conducted and services are provided.
 
 9. Complete practical instruction in the school's clinic
 area. ] 
 
 18VAC41-70-220. School identification. (Repealed.)
 
 Each esthetics school approved by the board shall identify
 itself to the public as a teaching institution.
 
 18VAC41-70-230. Records.
 
 A. Schools are required to keep all records of hours in
 accordance with 18VAC41-70-190, including transcripts, course descriptions and
 competency examinations used to award such credit for a period of five years
 after the student terminates or completes the curriculum of the school. shall
 maintain on the premises of each school and available for inspection by the
 board or any of its agents the following records for the period of a student's
 enrollment through five years after the student's completion of the curriculum,
 termination, or withdrawal: 
 
 1. Enrollment application containing the student's
 signature and a [ 2x2 two-inch by two-inch ]
 color head and shoulders photograph of the student,
 
 2. Daily record of attendance containing the student's
 signature,
 
 3. Student clock hours containing the student's signature
 and method of calculation,
 
 4. Practical performance completion sheets containing the
 student's signature,
 
 5. Final transcript,
 
 6. Competency examinations used to award credit, 
 
 7. Course descriptions, and
 
 8. All other relevant documents that account for a
 student's accrued clock hours and practical applications [ . ]
  
 
 B. Schools are required to keep upon graduation,
 termination or withdrawal written records of hours and performances showing
 what instruction a student has received for a period of five years after the
 student terminates or completes the curriculum of the school. These records
 shall be available for inspection by the department. All records must be kept
 on the premises of each school.
 
 C. For a period of five years after a student completes
 the curriculum, terminates or withdraws from the school, schools are required
 to provide documentation of hours and performances completed by a student upon
 receipt of a written request from the student.
 
 B. Schools shall produce to the board or any of its
 agents, within 10 days of the request, any document, book, or record concerning
 any student, or for which the licensee is required to maintain records, for
 inspection and copying by the board or its agents. The board may extend such
 [ time frame timeframe ] upon a showing of
 extenuating circumstances prohibiting delivery within such 10-day period.
 
 C. Schools shall, within 21 days upon receipt of a written
 request from a student, provide documentation of hours and performances
 completed by the student as required to be maintained by subsection A of this
 section.
 
 D. Prior to a school changing ownership or a school closing,
 the schools are school is required to provide to current students
 documentation of hours and performances completed.
 
 E. For a period of one year after a school changes ownership,
 schools are required to the school shall provide, within 21
 days upon receipt of a written request from a student, documentation of
 hours and performances completed by a current student upon receipt of a
 written request from the student. 
 
 18VAC41-70-240. Hours reported Reporting.
 
 A. Schools shall provide, in a manner, format, and
 frequency prescribed by the board, a roster of all current students and a
 roster of students who attended in the preceding six months prior to the
 reporting deadline.
 
 B. Within 30 days of the closing of a licensed
 esthetics school for any reason ceasing to operate, whether through
 dissolution or alteration of the business entity, the school shall provide
 a written report to the board on performances and hours of each of its students
 who have has not completed the program.
 
 18VAC41-70-260. Display of license.
 
 A. Each licensed spa or school shall ensure that all current
 licenses and temporary licenses issued by the board shall be displayed in
 plain view of the public either in the reception area or at
 individual work stations of the spa or school in plain view of the
 public. Duplicate licenses or temporary licenses shall be posted in a like
 manner in every spa or school location where the regulant licensee or
 temporary license holder provides services.
 
 B. All licensees and temporary license holders shall operate
 under the name in which the license or temporary license is issued.
 
 C. All apprenticeship cards issued by the Department of
 Labor and Industry (DOLI) shall be displayed in plain view of the public either
 in the reception area or at individual work stations of the shop or salon. The
 apprentice sponsor shall require each apprentice to wear a badge clearly
 indicating his status as a DOLI registered apprentice. 
 
 18VAC41-70-270. Sanitation and safety standards for spas and
 schools.
 
 A. Sanitation and safety standards.
 
 1. Any spa or school where esthetics services are delivered to
 the public must be clean and sanitary at all times.
 
 2. Compliance with these rules does not confer compliance with
 other requirements set forth by federal, state, and local laws, codes,
 ordinances, and regulations as they apply to business operation, physical
 construction and maintenance, safety, and public health. 
 
 3. Licensees shall take sufficient measures to prevent the
 transmission of communicable and infectious diseases and comply with the
 sanitation standards identified in this section and shall ensure that all
 employees likewise comply.
 
 B. Disinfection and storage of implements. 
 
 1. A wet disinfection unit is a container large enough to
 hold a disinfectant solution in which the objects to be disinfected are
 completely immersed. A wet disinfection unit must have a cover to prevent
 contamination of the solution. The solution must be a hospital grade and
 tuberculocidal disinfectant solution registered with the U.S. Environmental
 Protection Agency (EPA). Disinfectant solutions shall be used according to
 manufacturer's directions. 
 
 2. Disinfection of multiuse items constructed of hard,
 nonporous materials such as metal, glass, or plastic, which the manufacturer
 designed for use on more than one client, is to be carried out in the following
 manner prior to servicing a client:
 
 a. Remove all foreign matter from the object, utilizing a
 brush if needed. Drill bits are to be soaked in acetone and scrubbed with a
 wire brush to remove all foreign matter; 
 
 b. Wash thoroughly with hot water and soap; 
 
 c. Rinse thoroughly with clean water and dry thoroughly
 with a clean paper towel; 
 
 d. Fully immerse implements into solution for a minimum of
 10 minutes; and 
 
 e. After immersion, rinse articles, thoroughly dry with a
 clean paper towel, and store in a clean predisinfected and dry cabinet, drawer,
 or nonairtight covered container, or leave instruments in an EPA-registered
 disinfection storage solution used according to manufacturer's directions. 
 
 3. Single-use items designed by the manufacturer for use on
 no more than one client should be discarded immediately after use on each
 individual client, including [ but not limited to ]
 powder puffs, lip color, cheek color, sponges, styptic pencils, or nail care
 implements. The disinfection and reuse of these items is not permitted and the
 use of single-use items on more than one client is prohibited.
 
 4. For the purpose of recharging, rechargeable tools or
 implements may be stored in an area other than in a closed cabinet or
 container. This area shall be clean. 
 
 5. All materials including cosmetic and nail brushes,
 sponges, chamois, spatulas, and galvanic electrodes must be cleaned with warm
 water and soap or detergent to remove all foreign matter. Implements should
 then be rinsed, thoroughly dried with a clean paper towel, and completely
 immersed in an EPA-registered hospital grade and tuberculocidal disinfectant
 solution. Such implements shall be soaked for 10 minutes or more, removed,
 rinsed, dried thoroughly, and stored in a predisinfected and dry drawer,
 cabinet or nonairtight covered container, or left in an EPA-registered
 disinfection storage solution used according to manufacturer's directions. 
 
 6. All wax pots shall be cleaned and disinfected with an
 EPA-registered hospital grade and tuberculocidal disinfectant solution with no
 sticks left standing in the wax at any time. The area immediately surrounding
 the wax pot shall be clean and free of clutter, waste materials, spills, and
 any other items that may pose a hazard.
 
 7. Each esthetician must have a wet disinfection unit at
 his station. 
 
 8. Nail brushes; nippers; finger bowls; disinfectable or
 washable buffers; disinfectable or washable files, which must also be scrubbed
 with a brush to remove all foreign matter [ ,; ]
 and other instruments must be washed in soap and water, rinsed, thoroughly
 dried with a clean paper towel, and then completely immersed in an
 EPA-registered hospital grade and tuberculocidal disinfectant solution for 10
 minutes after each use. After disinfection they must be rinsed, dried thoroughly
 with a clean paper towel, and placed in a dry, predisinfected, nonairtight
 covered receptacle, cabinet, or drawer, or left in an EPA-registered
 disinfectant storage system used according to manufacturer's directions.
 
 9. Sinks, bowls, tubs, whirlpool units, air-jetted basins,
 pipe-less units, and non-whirlpool basins used in the performance of nail care
 shall be maintained in accordance with manufacturer's recommendations. They
 shall be cleaned and disinfected immediately after each client in the following
 manner:
 
 a. Drain all water and remove all debris; 
 
 b. Clean the surfaces and walls with soap or detergent to
 remove all visible debris, oils, and product residues and then rinse with
 water; 
 
 c. Disinfect by spraying or wiping the surface with an
 [ appropriate EPA-registered hospital grade and
 tuberculocidal disinfectant solution ]; and
 
 d. Wipe dry with a clean towel. 
 
 C. General sanitation and safety requirements.
 
 1. All furniture, walls, floors, and windows Service
 chairs, workstations and workstands, and back bars shall be clean and in
 good repair;
 
 2. The floor surface in the immediate all work area
 areas must be of a washable surface other than carpet. The floor must be
 kept clean, and free of debris, nail clippings, dropped
 articles, spills, and clutter, trash, electrical cords, other
 waste materials, and other items that may pose a hazard;
 
 3. Walls All furniture, fixtures, walls, floors,
 windows, and ceilings in the immediate work area must shall
 be in good repair, and free of water seepage and dirt. All
 mats shall be secured or shall [ lay lie ] flat;
 
 4. A fully functional bathroom with a working toilet and sink
 [ must be available for clients shall be maintained exclusively for
 client use ]. There must be hot and cold running water. Fixtures
 must be in good condition. The bathroom must be lighted and sufficiently
 ventilated. There must be antibacterial soap and clean individual single-use
 towels or hand air-drying device for the client's use. [ For
 facilities newly occupied after January 1, 2017, the bathroom shall be
 maintained exclusively for client use ];
 
 5. General areas for client use must be neat and clean with
 a waste receptacle for common trash;
 
 6. Electrical cords shall be placed to prevent entanglement by
 the client or licensee; 7. Electrical and electrical outlets
 shall be covered by plates;
 
 7. All sharp tools, implements, and heat-producing
 appliances shall be in safe working order at all times, safely stored, and
 placed so as to prevent any accidental injury to the client or licensee; 
 
 8. The spa area shall be sufficiently ventilated to exhaust
 hazardous or objectionable airborne chemicals, and to allow the free
 flow of air; and
 
 9. Adequate lighting shall be provided.
 
 C. Equipment sanitation.
 
 1. Service chairs, wash basins, sinks, showers, tubs,
 tables, and workstations shall be clean. Floors shall be kept free of waste
 materials. Instruments shall be cleaned and disinfected after every use and
 stored free from contamination;
 
 2. The top of workstands shall be kept clean;
 
 3. The work area shall be free of clutter, trash, and any
 other items that may cause a hazard;
 
 4. Equipment shall be placed so as to prevent any
 accidental injury to the client or licensee; and 
 
 5. Electrical appliances and equipment shall be in safe
 working order at all times.
 
 D. Articles, tools, and products.
 
 1. Any multiuse article, tool, or product that cannot
 be cleansed or disinfected is prohibited from use;
 
 2. Soiled implements must be removed from the tops of work
 stations immediately after use;
 
 3. Clean spatulas, other clean tools, or clean disposable
 gloves shall be used to remove bulk substances from containers;
 
 4. Lotions, ointments, creams, and powders shall be
 [ labeled and ] kept in closed containers. A clean
 spatula shall be used to remove creams or other products from jars. Sterile
 cotton or sponges shall be used to apply creams, lotions, and powders.
 Cosmetic containers shall be recovered covered after each use;
 
 5. All appliances shall be safely stored;
 
 6. Presanitized tools and implements, linens, and equipment
 shall be stored for use in a sanitary enclosed cabinet or covered receptacle;
 
 7. Soiled Clean towels, robes, or other
 linens and implements shall be deposited in a container made of
 cleanable materials and separate from those that are clean used for each
 patron. Clean towels, robes, or other linens shall be stored in a clean
 predisinfected and dry cabinet, drawer, or nonairtight covered container.
 Soiled towels, robes, or other linens shall be stored in a container enclosed
 on all sides including the top, except if stored in a separate laundry room;
 
 8. No substance other than a sterile styptic powder or sterile
 liquid astringent approved for homeostasis and applied with a sterile
 single-use applicator shall be used to check bleeding; and
 
 9. Any disposable material making contact with blood or other
 body fluid shall be disposed of in a sealed plastic bag and removed from the
 spa or school in accordance with the guidelines of the Virginia Department of
 Health and OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration).
 
 E. Chemical storage and emergency information.
 
 1. Spas and schools shall have in the immediate working area a
 binder with all [ Material ] Safety Data Sheets [ (MSDS)
 (SDS) ] provided by manufacturers for any chemical products used;
 
 2. Spas and schools shall have a blood spill clean-up kit in
 the work area that contains at a minimum latex gloves, two [ 12x12
 12-inch by 12-inch ] towels, one disposable trash bag, bleach, one
 empty spray bottle, and one mask with face shield or any OSHA-approved blood
 spill clean-up kit;
 
 3. Flammable chemicals shall be [ labeled and ]
 stored in a nonflammable storage cabinet or a properly ventilated room; and
 
 4. Chemicals that could interact in a hazardous manner [ (oxidizers
 ( ] e.g., [ oxidizers ], catalysts,
 and solvents) shall be [ labeled and ] separated in storage.
 
 F. Client health guidelines.
 
 1. All employees providing client services shall cleanse their
 hands with an antibacterial product prior to providing services to each client;
 
 2. All employees providing client services shall wear gloves
 while providing services when exposure to bloodborne pathogens is possible;
 
 3. No spa or school providing esthetics services shall have on
 the premises esthetics products containing hazardous substances that have been
 banned by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in esthetics
 products;
 
 4. No product shall be used in a manner that is disapproved by
 the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) FDA; and
 
 5. Esthetics spas must be in compliance with current building
 and zoning codes.
 
 G. In addition to any the requirements set
 forth in this section, all licensees and temporary license holders shall adhere
 to regulations and guidelines established by the Virginia Department of Health
 and the Occupational and Safety Division of the Virginia Department of Labor
 and Industry.
 
 H. All spas and schools shall immediately report the results
 of any inspection of the spa or school by the Virginia Department of Health as
 required by § 54.1-705 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 I. All spas and schools shall conduct a self-inspection on an
 annual basis and maintain a self-inspection form on file for five years so that
 it may be requested and reviewed by the board at its discretion.
 
 18VAC41-70-280. Grounds for license revocation, probation, or
 suspension; denial of application, renewal or reinstatement; or imposition of a
 monetary penalty.
 
 A. The board may, in considering the totality of the
 circumstances, fine any licensee, certificate holder, or temporary license
 holder, and suspend, place on probation, or revoke or refuse to renew or
 reinstate any license, certificate, or temporary license, or deny any
 application issued under the provisions of Chapter 7 (§ 54.1-700 et seq.)
 of Title 54.1 of the Code of Virginia and the regulations of the board this
 chapter if the board finds that the licensee, certificate holder, permit
 holder, or applicant:
 
 1. The licensee, certificate holder, temporary license
 holder or applicant is Is incompetent, or negligent in
 practice, or incapable mentally or physically, as those terms are generally
 understood in the profession, to practice as an esthetician; 
 
 2. The licensee, certificate holder, or temporary license
 holder fails to teach in accordance with the board-approved curriculum or fails
 to comply with 18VAC41-70-190 D when making an assessment of credit hours
 awarded. 
 
 3. The licensee, certificate holder, temporary license
 holder, or applicant is 2. Is convicted of fraud or deceit in the
 practice or teaching of esthetics, fails to teach in accordance with the
 board-approved curriculum, or fails to comply with 18VAC41-70-190 D when making
 an assessment of credit hours awarded; 
 
 4. The licensee, certificate holder, temporary license
 holder, or applicant attempted 3. Attempts to obtain, obtained,
 renewed, or reinstated a license certificate or temporary license by
 false or fraudulent representation;
 
 5. The licensee, certificate holder, temporary license
 holder, or applicant violates 4. Violates or induces others to
 violate, or cooperates with others in violating, any of the provisions of this
 chapter or Chapter 7 (§ 54.1-700 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of Virginia
 or any local ordinance or regulation governing standards of health and
 sanitation of the establishment in which any esthetician may practice or offer
 to practice;
 
 5. Offers, gives, or promises anything of value or benefit
 to any federal, state, or local employee for the purpose of influencing that
 employee to circumvent, in the performance of his duties, any federal, state,
 or local law, regulation, or ordinance governing esthetics or master esthetics;
 
 6. Fails to respond to the board or any of its agents or
 provides false, misleading, or incomplete information to an inquiry by the
 board or any of its agents;
 
 7. Fails or refuses to allow the board or any of its agents
 to inspect during reasonable hours any licensed shop, salon, or school for
 compliance with provisions of Chapter 7 (§ 54.1-700 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of
 the Code of Virginia or this chapter; 
 
 6. The licensee, certificate holder, temporary license
 holder, or applicant fails 8. Fails to produce, upon request or
 demand of the board or any of its agents, any document, book, record, or copy
 thereof in a licensee's, certificate holder's, temporary license holder's,
 applicant's, or owner's possession or maintained in accordance with this
 chapter; 
 
 7. A licensee, certificate holder, or temporary license
 holder fails 9. Fails to notify the board of a change of name or
 address in writing within 30 days of the change for each and every license,
 certificate, or temporary license. The board shall not be responsible for
 the licensee's, certificate holder's, or temporary license holder's failure to
 receive notices, communications and correspondence caused by the licensee's,
 certificate holder's, or temporary license holder's failure to promptly notify
 the board in writing of any change of name or address or for any other reason
 beyond the control of the board;
 
 8. The licensee, certificate holder, temporary license
 holder, or applicant publishes 10. Makes any misrepresentation or
 publishes or causes to be published any advertisement that is false,
 deceptive, or misleading; 
 
 9.The licensee, certificate holder, temporary license
 holder, or applicant fails 11. Fails to notify the board in writing
 within 30 days of the suspension, revocation, or surrender of a license or
 temporary license in connection with a disciplinary action in any [ other ]
 jurisdiction or of any license or temporary license that has been the subject
 of disciplinary action in any [ other ] jurisdiction; or
 
 10. The licensee, certificate holder, temporary license
 holder, or applicant has been convicted or found guilty in any jurisdiction of
 any misdemeanor or felony. Any plea or nolo contendere shall be considered a
 conviction for the purpose of this section. The record of a conviction
 certified or authenticated in such form as to be admissible in evidence under
 the laws of the jurisdiction where convicted shall be admissible as prima facie
 evidence of such guilt;
 
 11. The licensee, certificate holder, temporary license
 holder, or applicant fails to notify the board in writing within 30 days that
 the licensee, certificate holder, temporary license holder, or applicant has
 pleaded guilty or nolo contendere or was convicted and found guilty of any
 misdemeanor or felony.
 
 12. Has been convicted or found guilty, regardless of the
 manner of adjudication, in Virginia or any other jurisdiction of the United
 States of a misdemeanor involving moral turpitude, sexual offense, drug
 distribution, or physical injury or any felony, there being no appeal pending
 therefrom or the time for appeal having elapsed. Review of convictions shall be
 subject to the requirements of § 54.1-204 of the Code of Virginia. Any plea of
 nolo contendere shall be considered a conviction for purposes of this
 subdivision. The record of a conviction certified or authenticated in such form
 as to be admissible in evidence under the laws of the jurisdiction where
 convicted shall be admissible as prima facie evidence of such conviction or
 guilt;
 
 13 [ . ] Fails to inform the board
 in writing within 30 days of pleading guilty or nolo contendere or being
 convicted or found guilty regardless of adjudication of convictions as stated
 in subdivision 12 of this section;
 
 14. Allows, as [ an owner or operator
 responsible management ] of a spa or school, a person who has not
 obtained a license or a temporary permit to practice unless the person is duly
 enrolled as a registered apprentice;
 
 15. Allows, as [ an owner or operator
 responsible management ] of a school, a person who has not obtained
 an instructor certificate to practice as an esthetics or a master esthetics
 instructor;
 
 16. Fails to take sufficient measures to prevent
 transmission of communicable or infectious diseases or fails to comply with
 sanitary requirements provided for in this chapter or any local, state, or
 federal law or regulation governing the standards of health and sanitation for
 the practices of esthetics or master esthetics, or the operation of esthetics
 spas; or
 
 17. Fails to comply with all procedures established by the
 board and the testing service with regard to conduct at [ the
 any board ] examination.
 
 B. In addition to subsection A of this section, the board
 may, in considering the totality of the circumstances, revoke, suspend, place
 on probation, or refuse to renew or reinstate the license of any school or
 impose a fine as permitted by law, or both, if the board finds that:
 
 1. An instructor of the approved school fails to teach the
 curriculum as provided for in this chapter;
 
 2. The owner or director of the approved school permits or
 allows a person to teach in the school without an applicable current esthetics
 instructor certificate or master esthetics instructor certificate; or
 
 3. The instructor, owner or director is guilty of fraud or
 deceit in the teaching of esthetics.
 
 C. In addition to subsection A of this section, the board
 may, in considering the totality of the circumstances, revoke, suspend, place
 on probation, or refuse to renew or reinstate the license of any esthetics spa
 or impose a fine as permitted by law, or both, if the board finds that:
 
 1. The owner or operator of the spa fails to comply with
 the sanitary requirements of an esthetics spa provided for in this chapter or
 in any local ordinances; or
 
 2. The owner or operator allows a person who has not
 obtained a license or a temporary license to practice as an esthetician or
 master esthetician.
 
 D. In addition to subsection A of this section, the board
 may, in considering the totality of the circumstances, revoke, suspend, place
 on probation, or refuse to renew or reinstate the license of any licensee or
 impose a fine as permitted by law, or both, if the board finds that the
 licensee fails to take sufficient measures to prevent transmission of
 communicable or infectious diseases or fails to comply with any local, state or
 federal law or regulation governing the standards of health and sanitation for
 the practice of esthetics.
 
 
 
 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 (18VAC41-70)
 
 Esthetician – Esthetics Instructor Examination &
 License Application, A425-1261_62EXLIC (eff. 9/2011)
 
 Master Esthetician – Master Esthetics Instructor
 Examination & License Application, A425-1264_65EXLIC (eff. 9/2011)
 
 Temporary Permit Application, A425-1213TP (eff. 9/2011)
 
 License by Endorsement Application, A450-1213END-v9 (rev.
 9/2016)
 
 Training & Experience Verification Form,
 A425-1213TREXP (eff. 9/2011)
 
 Individuals - Reinstatement Application, A450-1213REI-v8
 (rev. 9/2016)
 
 Salon, Shop, Spa & Parlor License/Reinstatement Application
 A450-1213BUS-v8 (rev. 9/2016)
 
 Salon, Shop & Spa Self Inspection Form,
 A425-1213_SSS_INSP (eff. 9/2011)
 
 Instructor Certification Application, A450-1213INST-v7
 (rev. 9/2016)
 
 School License Application, A450-1213SCHL-v9 (rev. 9/2016)
 
 School Reinstatement Application, A450-1213SCHL-REIN-v2
 (rev. 9/2016)
 
 School Self Inspection Form, A425-1213SCH_INSP (eff.
 9/2011)
 
 Licensure Fee Notice, A450-1213FEE-v6 (rev. 9/2016)
 
 [ Esthetician
 – Esthetics Instructor Examination & License Application,
 A450-1261_62EXLIC-v13 (eff. 1/2017)
 
 Master
 Esthetician – Master Esthetics Instructor Examination & License
 Application, A450-1264_65EXLIC-v14 (eff. 1/2017)
 
 Temporary
 Permit Application, A450-1213TEMP-v2 (eff. 1/2017)
 
 License
 by Endorsement Application, A450-1213END-v10 (eff. 1/2017)
 
 Training
 & Experience Verification Form, A450-1213TREXP-v5 (eff. 1/2017)
 
 Individual
 - Reinstatement Application, A450-1213REI-v9 (eff. 1/2017)
 
 Salon,
 Shop, Spa & Parlor License/Reinstatement Application A450-1213BUS-v9 (eff.
 1/2017)
 
 Salon,
 Shop & Spa Self Inspection Form, A450-1213_SSS_INSP-v3 (eff. 5/2016)
 
 Instructor
 Certification Application, A450-1213INST-v8 (eff. 1/2017)
 
 School
 License Application, A450-1213SCHL-v10 (eff. 1/2017)
 
 School
 Reinstatement Application, A450-1213SCHL_REI-v3 (eff. 1/2017)
 
 School
 Self Inspection Form, A450-1213SCH_INSP-v3 (eff. 5/2016) ] 
 
 Licensure
 Fee Notice, A450-1213FEE-v6 (rev. 9/2016)
 
 [ Change
 of Responsible Management, A450-1213CRM (eff. 1/2017) ] 
 
 VA.R. Doc. No. R14-3985; Filed November 14, 2016, 4:26 p.m. 
TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
COMMON INTEREST COMMUNITY BOARD
Proposed Regulation
 
 Title of Regulation: 18VAC48-50. Common Interest
 Community Manager Regulations (amending 18VAC48-50-253, 18VAC48-50-255). 
 
 Statutory Authority: § 54.1-2349 of the Code of
 Virginia.
 
 Public Hearing Information:
 
 January 31, 2017 - 10 a.m. - Department of Professional and
 Occupational Regulation, Perimeter Center, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 200,
 Hearing Room 3, Richmond, VA 23233
 
 Public Comment Deadline: February 10, 2017.
 
 Agency Contact: Trisha Henshaw, Executive Director,
 Common Interest Community Board, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 400, Richmond, VA
 23233, telephone (804) 367-8510, FAX (866) 490-2723, or email
 cic@dpor.virginia.gov.
 
 Basis: Section 54.1-201 of the Code of Virginia states
 in part that regulatory boards shall promulgate regulations in accordance with
 the Administrative Process Act (§2.2-4000 et seq. of the Code of Virginia)
 necessary to assure continued competence, to prevent deceptive or misleading
 practices by practitioners, and to effectively administer the regulatory system
 administered by the regulatory board. The imperative form of the verb
 "shall" is used, making the board's authority to regulate mandatory
 rather than discretionary.
 
 Section 54.1-2349 of the Code of Virginia states in part that
 the board shall establish an education-based certification program for persons
 who are involved in the business or activity of providing management services
 to common interest communities and authorizes the board to approve training
 courses and instructors.
 
 Purpose: The General Assembly determined that an
 education-based certification program for persons who are involved in the
 business or activity of providing management services for compensation to
 common interest communities was essential to protect the health, safety, and
 welfare of the citizens of Virginia. The Common Interest Community Board's
 current regulations require both applicants for initial licensure and renewal
 to complete a minimum of two contact hours in common interest community law and
 regulation in addition to fair housing training. The two contact hour programs
 are only applicable for renewal of certificates for principal or supervisory
 employees and are not a prerequisite to initial certification. The proposed
 amendment to the language provides much-needed clarification.
 
 Substance: The proposed amendments to 18VAC48-50-253 and
 18VAC48-50-255 remove "applicants" from the requirement of completing
 a two-hour common interest community law and regulation training program and a
 two-hour fair housing training program as a prerequisite for initial
 certification. In addition, the proposed amendment clarifies the topic areas
 and course of study regarding the two contact hours pertaining to common
 interest community law and regulation.
 
 Issues: The primary advantage to the public and the
 certificate holders of the board is that the revisions will clarify the
 training program course content required to renew a certification and ensure
 that certificate-holders are aware of regulatory and legislative changes
 related to common interest communities and fair housing. There are no identified
 disadvantages to the public with the proposed language change as it does not
 change any of the current requirements or practices. The advantage to the
 Commonwealth is that the change ensures clarity and consistency when reviewing
 training programs for approval. There are no identified disadvantages to the
 Commonwealth. 
 
 Department of Planning and Budget's Economic Impact
 Analysis:
 
 Summary of the Proposed Amendments to Regulation. The Common
 Interest Community Board (Board) proposes amendments to the "Virginia
 common interest community law and regulation training program" and
 "fair housing training program" requirements. The Board proposes to
 remove erroneous language and amend other language to improve clarity. 
 
 Result of Analysis. The benefits likely exceed the costs for
 all proposed changes.
 
 Estimated Economic Impact. The current "18VAC48-50-253
 Virginia Common Interest Community Law and Regulation Training Program
 Requirements" states that: "In order to qualify as a Virginia common
 interest community law and regulation training program for applicants for
 and renewal of certificates1 issued by the board, the common
 interest community law and regulation program must include a minimum of two
 contact hours and the syllabus shall encompass Virginia laws and regulations
 related to common interest community management and creation, governance,
 administration, and operations of associations."
 
 Analogous to 18VAC48-50-253, the current "18VAC48-50-255
 Fair Housing Training Program Requirements" states that "In order to
 qualify as a fair housing training program for applicants for and renewal of
 certificates2 issued by the board, the fair housing training program
 must include a minimum of two contact hours and …" According to the
 Department of Professional and Occupational Regulation, the two contact hour
 programs are only applicable for renewal of certificates for principal or
 supervisory employees, and not a prerequisite to initial certification. Thus
 the Board proposes to remove "applicants for and" from both 18VAC48-50-253
 and 18VAC48-50-255. Removing this language will not have any impact in practice
 beyond clarifying the actual requirements in practice. This will be beneficial
 in that it will reduce the likelihood that readers of the regulation are
 misled. 
 
 The Board also proposes to clarify the language on the training
 content. The current regulation specifies which aspects (i.e., management,
 creation, governance, administration, and operations) of common interest
 communities to which the training must be related. The proposed action would
 remove those specific aspects to clarify that the training on law and
 regulations is not limited only to those aspects of common interest
 communities.
 
 Businesses and Entities Affected. The proposed amendments
 pertain to the 6 Virginia common interest community law and regulation training
 programs and the 7 fair housing training programs. 
 
 Localities Particularly Affected. The proposed amendments do
 not disproportionately affect particular localities. 
 
 Projected Impact on Employment. The proposed amendments do not
 affect employment.
 
 Effects on the Use and Value of Private Property. The proposed
 amendments do not affect the use and value of private property.
 
 Real Estate Development Costs. The proposed amendments do 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 proposed amendments do not
 significantly affect costs for small businesses.
 
 Alternative Method that Minimizes Adverse Impact. The proposed
 amendments do not adversely affect small businesses.
 
 Adverse Impacts:
 
 Businesses. The proposed amendments do not adversely affect
 businesses.
 
 Localities. The proposed amendments do not adversely affect
 localities.
 
 Other Entities. The proposed amendments do not adversely affect
 other entities.
 
 __________________________
 
 1 The text in the regulation is not bolded. 
 
 2 Ibid
 
 Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The
 Common Interest Community Board concurs with the approval of the economic
 impact analysis prepared by the Department of Planning and Budget.
 
 Summary:
 
 The proposed amendments clarify (i) that the requirement to
 complete a minimum of two contact hours in common interest community law and
 regulation in addition to fair housing training applies only to the renewal of
 certificates for principal or supervisory employees and is not a prerequisite
 to initial certification and (ii) the topic areas and course of study regarding
 the two contact hours pertaining to common interest community law and
 regulation.
 
 18VAC48-50-253. Virginia common interest community law and
 regulation training program requirements.
 
 In order to qualify as a Virginia common interest community
 law and regulation training program for applicants for and renewal of
 certificates issued by the board, the common interest community law and
 regulation program must include a minimum of two contact hours and the syllabus
 shall encompass updates to Virginia laws and regulations directly
 related to common interest community management and creation, governance,
 administration, and operations of associations.
 
 18VAC48-50-255. Fair housing training program requirements.
 
 In order to qualify as a fair housing training program for applicants
 for and renewal of certificates issued by the board, the fair housing
 training program must include a minimum of two contact hours and the syllabus
 shall encompass Virginia fair housing laws and any updates, all as
 related to the management of common interest communities.
 
 VA.R. Doc. No. R16-4618; Filed November 10, 2016, 12:09 p.m. 
TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
BOARD OF PHARMACY
Proposed Regulation
 
 Title of Regulation: 18VAC110-20. Regulations
 Governing the Practice of Pharmacy (amending 18VAC110-20-25). 
 
 Statutory Authority: §§ 54.1-2400 and 54.1-3307 of the
 Code of Virginia.
 
 Public Hearing Information:
 
 December 12, 2016 - 9 a.m. - Perimeter Center, 9960 Mayland
 Drive, Suite 201, Board Room 2, Richmond, VA 23233.
 
 Public Comment Deadline: February 10, 2017.
 
 Agency Contact: Caroline Juran, RPh, Executive Director,
 Board of Pharmacy, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Richmond, VA 23233-1463,
 telephone (804) 367-4416, FAX (804) 527-4472, or email
 caroline.juran@dhp.virginia.gov.
 
 Basis: Regulations are promulgated under the general
 authority of § 54.1-2400 of the Code of Virginia, which provides the Board
 of Pharmacy the authority to promulgate regulations to administer the
 regulatory system.
 
 The specific authority of the board to regulate the practice of
 pharmacy is found in § 54.1-3307 of the Code of Virginia
 
 Purpose: In 2012, the U.S. Department of Justice
 resolved allegations against Walgreens Pharmacy with a $7.9 million payment
 because the chain offered beneficiaries of government health care programs
 (Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, etc.) inducements that are prohibited by law to
 transfer prescriptions to Walgreen pharmacies. Quotes from federal law
 enforcement illustrate the need to enact such a prohibition in Virginia. The
 U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan said, "Continuity with
 a pharmacist is important to detect problems with dosages and drugs
 interactions.  Patients should make decisions based on legitimate health
 care needs, not on inducements like gift cards." The Inspector General for
 the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said, “Violating Federal
 health care laws, as Walgreens allegedly did by offering incentives for new business,
 cannot be tolerated.”
 
 As the Virginia Pharmacists Association stated in its letter of
 support for a regulatory change, "Transfer coupons and other transfer
 incentives fragment the medication records of patients which leads to
 inaccuracies in the medication records and is detrimental to patient
 care." The Board of Pharmacy has determined that there is a need to
 propose a regulation to protect the health, safety, and welfare of the citizens
 who count on Virginia pharmacies for accuracy and integrity in filling
 prescriptions.
 
 Substance: The proposed amendment makes it
 unprofessional conduct to offer inducements or incentives, such as coupons or
 gift cards, for a patient to transfer a prescription, absent any professional
 rationale for such transfer. Customer rewards or affinity cards that
 encourage loyalty to a pharmacy would not be considered unprofessional.
 
 Issues: The primary advantage to the public is
 improvement in the continuity of care in delivery of pharmaceutical services.
 There is a disadvantage for customers who use prescription transfer just as a
 means of obtaining gift cards and incentives. There are no advantages or
 disadvantages to the agency.
 
 The Department of Planning and Budget's Economic Impact
 Analysis:
 
 Summary of the Proposed Amendments to Regulation. The Board of
 Pharmacy (Board) proposes to add to the list of unprofessional conduct for
 pharmacists and pharmacies the following acts: "Advertising or soliciting
 in a manner that may jeopardize the health, safety and welfare of a patient,
 including incentivizing or inducing the transfer of a prescription absent
 professional rationale by use of coupons, rebates, or similar offerings." 
 
 Result of Analysis. There is insufficient data to accurately
 compare the magnitude of the benefits versus the costs. Detailed analysis of
 the benefits and costs can be found in the next section.
 
 Estimated Economic Impact
 
 Background. Pursuant to Virginia Code § 54.1-3316, the Board
 may revoke or suspend pharmacy permits or impose a monetary penalty when permit
 holders have engaged in unprofessional conduct. Thus the proposal to add
 inducements to transfer prescriptions by use of coupons, rebates, or similar
 offerings to the list of unprofessional conduct effectively bans the use of
 such incentives. According to the Department of Health Professions, only large
 chain drug stores have issued these inducements.
 
 Benefits. According to the Virginia Pharmacists Association,
 "Transfer coupons and other transfer incentives fragment the medication
 records of patients which leads to inaccuracies in the medication records and
 is detrimental to patient care." Pharmacists are trained to understand and
 detect dangerous drug interactions. When individuals fill their prescriptions
 at multiple pharmacies,1 the pharmacists at these pharmacies may not
 be aware of all the drugs being taken by the individual. This inhibits
 pharmacists' ability to catch and prevent dangerous drug interactions. Some
 drug interactions can potentially cause severe health problems. Other
 interactions reduce the effectiveness of one or both drugs.
 
 Even with the proposed ban on inducements to transfer
 prescriptions, people remain free to fill prescriptions at multiple pharmacies
 and to transfer prescriptions. The proposed ban on inducements to transfer
 prescriptions would though very likely significantly reduce the frequency of
 prescription transfers. This would in turn reduce the number of occurrences
 where pharmacists are unaware of all the prescriptions being taken by a
 patient. Thus, the ban would likely reduce the frequency that patients suffer
 from adverse drug interactions in Virginia. Information is unavailable to
 forecast the magnitude of the reduction in adverse drug interactions.
 
 Costs. Coupons, rebates and other incentives help consumers
 save money. Banning inducements to transfer prescriptions by use of coupons,
 rebates, or similar offerings increases the cost of prescriptions for people
 who would otherwise take advantage of such offerings. 
 
 It is indeterminate as to whether the large chain drug stores
 that offer the inducements are worse off or better off with the ban. Since they
 currently offer the inducements they presumably believe doing so maximizes
 their profits. Thus losing this marketing option may reduce net profits. On the
 other hand, the inducements reduce the ultimate price paid by the consumers
 utilizing the inducements. Banning the inducements can be seen as stopping
 competition between the drug stores and essentially enabling them all to charge
 a higher price. 
 
 Comparison. People who are meticulous about their records and
 wish to save money through use of coupons and rebates are worse off with the
 proposed ban. Such individuals do not put themselves at increased risk of
 adverse drug interactions since they keep their multiple pharmacists fully informed
 of all of their prescriptions. So the ban produces no benefit for them. The ban
 does increase their costs of obtaining prescriptions since they would no longer
 be able save money through use the coupons, rebates, and other incentives.
 
 People who do not keep their multiple pharmacists informed of
 all their prescriptions are likely better off with the ban. Such individuals
 put themselves at increased risk of negative health outcomes due to their
 inhibiting their multiple pharmacists' ability to catch and prevent dangerous
 drug interactions. Given the potential severity of the increased health risks,
 the benefits of the proposed ban for people who do not keep their multiple
 pharmacists informed of all their prescriptions likely exceed the cost of paying
 somewhat more for prescriptions.
 
 Businesses and Entities Affected. The proposed amendment
 potentially affects all pharmacies in the Commonwealth. According to the
 Department of Health Professions, only large chain drug stores have issued
 coupons, rebates, and other inducements to transfer prescriptions. Consumers
 who use inducements to transfer prescriptions are also affected.
 
 Localities Particularly Affected. The proposed amendment does
 not disproportionately affect particular localities. 
 
 Projected Impact on Employment. The proposed amendment does not
 significantly affect employment.
 
 Effects on the Use and Value of Private Property. The proposed
 amendment does affect how the large chain drug stores that have issued
 inducements to transfer prescriptions use their property. They will no longer
 be able to issue such inducements for their pharmacies. As discussed above, it
 is indeterminate as to whether this will be positive or negative toward their
 value.
 
 Real Estate Development Costs. The proposed amendment 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 proposed amendment does not
 directly affect small businesses.
 
 Alternative Method that Minimizes Adverse Impact. The proposed
 amendment does not directly affect small businesses.
 
 Adverse Impacts:
 
 Businesses. As discussed above, it is indeterminate as to
 whether the proposed amendment will be positive or negative for large drug
 stores.
 
 Localities. The proposed amendment will not likely adversely
 affect localities.
 
 Other Entities. As discussed above, the proposed amendment
 adversely affects people who are meticulous about their records and wish to
 save money through use of coupons and rebates.
 
 ______________________________
 
 1 Filling prescriptions at different locations of one
 drug store chain would presumably not leave the pharmacists unaware of all the
 prescriptions filled as they would have the same computerized information
 system.
 
 Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The Board
 of Pharmacy does not concur with the economic impact analysis (EIA) of the
 Department of Planning and Budget on proposed amended regulations for
 18VAC110-20, Regulations Governing the Practice of Pharmacy, relating to the
 prohibition on offering inducements to transfer prescriptions.
 
 The EIA fails to note the high cost of adverse drug
 interactions, one of the problems associated with patients moving prescriptions
 from pharmacy to pharmacy, following inducements such as coupons and rebates. A
 learning module developed by the Food and Drug Administration on the Prevalence
 and Incidence of Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs) uses research and statistics
 from the Institute of Medicine and other sources, such as the Journal of the
 American Medical Association. It reports that ADRs are one of the leading
 causes of morbidity and mortality in health care. The Institute of Medicine
 reported in January of 2000 that from 44,000 to 98,000 deaths occur annually
 from medical errors. Of this total, an estimated 7,000 deaths occur due to
 ADRs. 
 
 The exact number of ADRs is not certain, but whatever the true
 number is, ADRs represent a significant public health problem that is, for the
 most part, preventable.
 
 When a patient requests transfer of a prescription, it is commonplace
 for prescriptions to be transferred verbally from one pharmacist to another, a
 process that can lead to transcriptions errors if the prescription information
 is communicated incorrectly or misunderstood by the receiving pharmacist.
 Inducing patients to transfer prescriptions would appear to unnecessarily
 increase risk associated with the transfer process which could lead to patient
 harm. 
 
 On page 2 of the EIA, the analyst makes the statement that
 "Banning the inducements can be seen as stopping competition between the
 drug stores and essentially enabling them all to charge a higher price."
 Apparently, the intent of the regulatory action has been misread, because it
 does not "ban inducements" that pharmacies can offer to their customers.
 Pharmacies may continue to advertise lower prices and offer affinity rewards
 for filling prescriptions; the ban would be on inducements to switch
 prescriptions from drug store to drug store. There are a variety of ways in
 which a pharmacy can lower the cost of prescription drugs (i.e., $4
 antibiotics), so competition is not impeded by enactment of this regulation.
 
 The EIA also fails to note that the issue of inducements to
 transfer has already been addressed by the U.S. Department of Justice. In 2012,
 the Department of Justice resolved allegations against Walgreens Pharmacy with
 a $7.9 million payment because the chain offered beneficiaries of government
 health care programs (Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, etc.) inducements that are
 prohibited by law to transfer prescriptions to Walgreen pharmacies. Quotes from
 federal law enforcement illustrate the need to enact such a prohibition in
 Virginia. The U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan said,
 "Continuity with a pharmacist is important to detect problems with dosages
 and drugs interactions.  Patients should make decisions based on
 legitimate health care needs, not on inducements like gift cards." The
 Inspector General for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, said,
 "Violating Federal health care laws, as Walgreens allegedly did by
 offering incentives for new business, cannot be tolerated."
 
 The proposal of the Virginia Board of Pharmacy follows the
 action of the Department of Justice for the reasons noted.
 
 Summary:
 
 The proposed amendments prohibit advertising or soliciting
 that may jeopardize the health, safety, and welfare of a patient, including
 incentivizing or inducing a patient to transfer a prescription absent
 professional rationale by use of coupons, rebates, etc.
 
 18VAC110-20-25. Unprofessional conduct.
 
 The following practices shall constitute unprofessional
 conduct within the meaning of § 54.1-3316 of the Code of Virginia: 
 
 1. Failing to comply with provisions of § 32.1-127.1:03 of the
 Code of Virginia related to the confidentiality and disclosure of patient
 records or related to provision of patient records to another practitioner or
 to the patient or his personal representative;
 
 2. Willfully or negligently breaching the confidentiality of a
 patient unless otherwise required or permitted by applicable law;
 
 3. Failing to maintain confidentiality of information received
 from the Prescription Monitoring Program, obtaining such information for
 reasons other than to assist in determining the validity of a prescription to
 be filled, or misusing information received from the program;
 
 4. Engaging in disruptive or abusive behavior in a pharmacy or
 other health care setting that interferes with patient care or could reasonably
 be expected to adversely impact the quality of care rendered to a patient;
 
 5. Engaging or attempting to engage in a relationship with a
 patient that constitutes a professional boundary violation in which the
 practitioner uses his professional position to take advantage of the
 vulnerability of a patient or his family, including but not limited to sexual
 misconduct with a patient or a member of his family or other conduct that
 results or could result in personal gain at the expense of the patient; 
 
 6. Failing to maintain adequate safeguards against diversion
 of controlled substances; 
 
 7. Failing to appropriately respond to a known dispensing
 error in a manner that protects the health and safety of the patient; 
 
 8. Delegating a task within the practice of pharmacy to a
 person who is not adequately trained to perform such a task;
 
 9. Failing by the PIC to ensure that pharmacy interns and
 pharmacy technicians working in the pharmacy are registered and that such
 registration is current; or
 
 10. Failing to exercise professional judgment in determining
 whether a prescription meets requirements of law before dispensing; or
 
 11. Advertising or soliciting in a manner that may
 jeopardize the health, safety, and welfare of a patient, including
 incentivizing or inducing the transfer of a prescription absent professional
 rationale by use of coupons, rebates, or similar offerings.
 
 VA.R. Doc. No. R16-4549; Filed November 14, 2016, 8:44 a.m. 
TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
REAL ESTATE BOARD
Fast-Track Regulation
 
 Title of Regulation: 18VAC135-11. Public
 Participation Guidelines (amending 18VAC135-11-50). 
 
 Statutory Authority: §§ 2.2-4007.02 and 54.1-201 of the
 Code of Virginia.
 
 Public Hearing Information: No public hearings are
 scheduled. 
 
 Public Comment Deadline: January 11, 2017.
 
 Effective Date: January 30, 2017. 
 
 Agency Contact: Christine Martine, Executive Director,
 Real Estate Board, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 400, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone
 (804) 367-8552, FAX (866) 826-8863, or email reboard@dpor.virginia.gov.
 
 Basis: The Real Estate Board is authorized under § 54.1-201
 of the Code of Virginia to promulgate regulations necessary to assure continued
 competency, to prevent deceptive or misleading practices by practitioners, and
 to effectively administer the regulatory system administered by the board. The
 authority granted under § 54.1-404 of the Code of Virginia includes the
 promulgation of regulations governing the proper discharge of the board's
 duties. The amendments conform to Chapter 795 of the 2012 Acts of Assembly,
 which provides that in formulating any regulation or in evidentiary hearings on
 regulations, an interested party shall be entitled to be accompanied by and
 represented by counsel or other qualified representative.
 
 Purpose: The purpose of this action is clarity and
 conformity to the Administrative Process Act (§ 2.2-4000 et seq. of the Code of
 Virginia). Participation by the public in the regulatory process is essential
 to assist the board in the promulgation of regulations that will protect the
 public health and safety.
 
 Rationale for Using Fast-Track Rulemaking Process: The
 amendment was recommended by the Department of Planning and Budget and is
 intended to merely conform to the statute. Therefore, there is no controversy
 in its promulgation.
 
 Substance: The amendment provides that interested persons
 may be accompanied by and represented by counsel or other representative when
 presenting their views in the promulgation of any regulatory action.
 
 Issues: Other than conformity and consistency between
 law and regulation, there are no primary advantages or disadvantages to the
 public in implementing the amended provisions, since the provisions are already
 in the Code of Virginia. There are no primary advantages and disadvantages to
 the agency or the Commonwealth. 
 
 Department of Planning and Budget's Economic Impact
 Analysis:
 
 Summary of the Proposed Amendments to Regulation. Pursuant to
 Chapter 795 of the 2012 Acts of Assembly,1 the Real Estate Board
 (Board) proposes to specify in this regulation that interested persons shall be
 afforded an opportunity to be accompanied by and represented by counsel or
 other representative when submitting data, views, and arguments, either orally
 or in writing, to the agency. 
 
 Result of Analysis. The benefits likely exceed the costs for
 all proposed changes.
 
 Estimated Economic Impact. The current Public Participation
 Guidelines state that: "In considering any nonemergency, nonexempt
 regulatory action, the agency shall afford interested persons an opportunity to
 submit data, views, and arguments, either orally or in writing, to the
 agency." The Board proposes to append "and (ii) be accompanied by and
 represented by counsel or other representative."
 
 Chapter 795 of the 2012 Acts of Assembly added to § 2.2-4007.02.
 "Public participation guidelines" of the Code of Virginia that
 interested persons also be afforded an opportunity to be accompanied by and
 represented by counsel or other representative. Since the Code of Virginia
 already specifies that interested persons shall be afforded an opportunity to
 be accompanied by and represented by counsel or other representative, the
 Board's proposal to add this language to the regulation will not change the law
 in effect, but will be beneficial in that it will inform interested parties who
 read this regulation but not the statute of their legal rights concerning
 representation. 
 
 Businesses and Entities Affected. The proposed amendment
 potentially affects all individuals who comment on pending regulatory changes.
 
 Localities Particularly Affected. The proposed amendment does
 not disproportionately affect particular localities. 
 
 Projected Impact on Employment. The proposed amendment does not
 significantly affect employment.
 
 Effects on the Use and Value of Private Property. The proposed
 amendment does not affect the use and value of private property.
 
 Real Estate Development Costs. The proposed amendment 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 proposed amendment does not affect
 costs for small businesses.
 
 Alternative Method that Minimizes Adverse Impact. The proposed
 amendment does not adversely affect small businesses.
 
 Adverse Impacts:
 
 Businesses. The proposed amendment does not adversely affect
 businesses.
 
 Localities. The proposed amendment does not adversely affect
 localities.
 
 Other Entities. The proposed amendment does not adversely
 affect other entities.
 
 _____________________________________________
 
 1 See http://leg1.state.va.us/cgi-bin/legp504.exe?121+ful+CHAP0795+hil
 
 Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The Real
 Estate Board concurs with the economic impact analysis prepared by the
 Department of Planning and Budget.
 
 Summary:
 
 Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.02 of the Code of Virginia, the
 amendment provides that interested persons submitting data, views, and
 arguments on a regulatory action may be accompanied by and represented by
 counsel or another representative.
 
 Part III
 Public Participation Procedures 
 
 18VAC135-11-50. Public comment.
 
 A. In considering any nonemergency, nonexempt regulatory
 action, the agency shall afford interested persons an opportunity to (i)
 submit data, views, and arguments, either orally or in writing, to the agency;
 and (ii) be accompanied by and represented by counsel or other representative.
 Such opportunity to comment shall include an online public comment forum on the
 Town Hall. 
 
 1. To any requesting person, the agency shall provide copies
 of the statement of basis, purpose, substance, and issues; the economic impact
 analysis of the proposed or fast-track regulatory action; and the agency's
 response to public comments received. 
 
 2. The agency may begin crafting a regulatory action prior to
 or during any opportunities it provides to the public to submit comments. 
 
 B. The agency shall accept public comments in writing after
 the publication of a regulatory action in the Virginia Register as follows: 
 
 1. For a minimum of 30 calendar days following the publication
 of the notice of intended regulatory action (NOIRA). 
 
 2. For a minimum of 60 calendar days following the publication
 of a proposed regulation. 
 
 3. For a minimum of 30 calendar days following the publication
 of a reproposed regulation. 
 
 4. For a minimum of 30 calendar days following the publication
 of a final adopted regulation. 
 
 5. For a minimum of 30 calendar days following the publication
 of a fast-track regulation. 
 
 6. For a minimum of 21 calendar days following the publication
 of a notice of periodic review. 
 
 7. Not later than 21 calendar days following the publication
 of a petition for rulemaking. 
 
 C. The agency may determine if any of the comment periods
 listed in subsection B of this section shall be extended. 
 
 D. If the Governor finds that one or more changes with
 substantial impact have been made to a proposed regulation, he may require the
 agency to provide an additional 30 calendar days to solicit additional public
 comment on the changes in accordance with § 2.2-4013 C of the Code of
 Virginia. 
 
 E. The agency shall send a draft of the agency's summary
 description of public comment to all public commenters on the proposed
 regulation at least five days before final adoption of the regulation pursuant
 to § 2.2-4012 E of the Code of Virginia. 
 
 VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4933; Filed November 14, 2016, 10:10 a.m. 
TITLE 22. SOCIAL SERVICES
STATE BOARD OF SOCIAL SERVICES
Forms
 
 
 
 REGISTRAR'S NOTICE:
 Forms used in administering the following regulation have been filed by the
 Department of Social Services. 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 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. 
 
  
 
 Title of Regulation: 22VAC40-191. Background Checks
 for Child Welfare Agencies.
 
 Contact Information: Deborah Eves, Division of
 Licensing, Children's Programs, Department of Social Services, 801 East Main
 Street, 9th Floor, Wytestone Building, Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804)
 726-7506, or email deborah.eves@dss.virginia.gov.
 
 FORMS (22VAC40-191) 
 
 Criminal History/Sex Offender and Crimes Against
 Minors Registry Search Form, SP-230 (rev. 12/2012)
 
 Virginia Department of Social Services/Child Protective
 Services Central Registry Release of Information Form, 032-02-151-09 (rev.
 11/2009) 
 
 Sworn Statement or Affirmation for Child Day Programs,
 032-05-0160-08-eng (eff. 6/2013) 
 
 Sworn Statement or Affirmation for Child-Placing Agencies,
 032-05-0974-03-eng (eff. 6/2013) 
 
 Sworn Statement or Affirmation for Foster and Adoptive
 Parents, Adult Household Members, 032-05-0973-03-eng (eff. 6/2013)
 
 Sworn
 Statement or Affirmation for Child Placing Agencies, 032-05-0974-04-eng (eff.
 7/2014)
 
 Central
 Registry Release of Information Form, 032-02-0151-12-eng (eff. 8/2015)
 
 Sworn
 Statement or Affirmation for Child Day Programs, 032-05-0160-09-eng (eff.
 7/2014)
 
 Sworn
 Statement or Affirmation for Foster and Adoptive Parents, Adult Household
 Members, 032-05-0973-04-eng (eff. 7/2014)
 
 VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4980; Filed November 18, 2016, 2:58 p.m. 
TITLE 22. SOCIAL SERVICES
STATE BOARD OF SOCIAL SERVICES
Final Regulation
 
 Title of Regulation: 22VAC40-201. Permanency Services
 - Prevention, Foster Care, Adoption and Independent Living (amending 22VAC40-201-10 through
 22VAC40-201-150, 22VAC40-201-170, 22VAC40-201-200; adding 22VAC40-201-35,
 22VAC40-201-161; repealing 22VAC40-201-160). 
 
 Statutory Authority: §§ 63.2-217, 63.2-319, and 63.2-900
 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 Effective Date: January 11, 2017. 
 
 Agency Contact: Em Parente, Program Manager, Department
 of Social Services, 801 East Main Street, Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804)
 726-7538, FAX (804) 726-7895, or email em.parente@dss.virginia.gov.
 
 Summary:
 
 The amendments include (i) as required by state and federal
 law, allowing independent living services to be extended to youths older than
 18 years of age who are being released from Department of Juvenile Justice
 custody, so long as those youths were in foster care before they were
 incarcerated and remove the permanency goal of independent living except for
 juvenile refugees, youths leaving foster care who are at least 18 years old,
 and youths at least 18 years of age who are leaving Juvenile Correctional
 Center custody; (ii) limiting when a foster child can be removed from kinship
 foster care without the consent of the relative foster parent; (iii) allowing
 the restoration of parental rights for the parents, whose rights had been
 terminated, of older foster care children; (iv) mandating that the state
 Department of Social Services negotiate adoption assistance subsidies; (v)
 setting the process by which named parties will decide which school district a
 foster child will attend; and (vi) reducing the timeframe for submitting a
 foster care plan to the courts and the timeframe for the courts to approve that
 plan.
 
 Summary of Public Comments and Agency's Response: No
 public comments were received by the promulgating agency. 
 
 22VAC40-201-10. Definitions.
 
 The following words and terms when used in this chapter shall
 have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise: 
 
 "Administrative panel review" means a review of a
 child in foster care that the local board conducts on a planned basis, and
 that is open to the participation of the birth parents or prior custodians and
 other individuals significant to the child and family, pursuant to
 § 63.2-907 of the Code of Virginia to evaluate the current status and
 effectiveness of the objectives in the service plan and the services being
 provided for the immediate care of the child and the plan to achieve a
 permanent home for the child. The administrative review may be attended by
 the birth parents or prior custodians and other interested individuals
 significant to the child and family [ , ] as
 appropriate.
 
 "Adoption" means a legal process that entitles the
 person being adopted to all of the rights and privileges, and subjects the
 person to all of the obligations of a birth child.
 
 "Adoption assistance" means a money payment or
 services provided to adoptive parents or other persons on behalf of
 a child with special needs who meets federal or state requirements to
 receive such payments. 
 
 "Adoption assistance agreement" means a written
 agreement between the child-placing agency local board and the
 adoptive parents of a child with special needs [ , ] to
 provide for the unmet financial and service needs of or in cases in
 which the child is in the custody of a licensed child-placing agency, an
 agreement between the local board, the licensed child-placing agency, and the
 adoptive parents that sets out the [ payments payment ]
 and services that will be provided to benefit the child in accordance
 with Chapter 13 (§ 63.2-1300 et seq.) of Title 63.2 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 
 "Adoption Manual" means Volume VII, Section III,
 Chapter C - Adoption/Agency Placement of the Service Program Manual of the
 Virginia Department of Social Services dated October 2009/March 2010. 
 
 "Adoption Progress Report" means a report filed
 with the juvenile court on the progress being made to place the child in an
 adoptive home. Section 16.1-283 of the Code of Virginia requires that an
 Adoption Progress Report be submitted to the juvenile court every six months
 following termination of parental rights until the adoption is final.
 
 "Adoption search" means interviews and written
 or telephone inquiries made by a local department to locate and advise the
 biological parents or siblings of an adult adoptee's request, by Application
 for Disclosure or petition to the court, for identifying information from a
 closed adoption record.
 
 "Adoptive home" means any family home selected and
 approved by a parent, local board [ , ] or a licensed
 child-placing agency for the placement of a child with the intent of adoption.
 
 "Adoptive home study" means an assessment of a
 family completed by a child-placing agency to determine the family's
 suitability for adoption. The adoptive home study is included in the dual
 approval process.
 
 "Adoptive parent" means any provider selected and
 approved by a parent or a child-placing agency for the placement of a child
 with the intent of adoption.
 
 "Adoptive placement" means arranging for the care
 of a child who is in the custody of a child-placing agency in an approved home
 for the purpose of adoption. 
 
 "Adult adoption" means the adoption of any person
 18 years of age or older, carried out in accordance with § 63.2-1243 of
 the Code of Virginia.
 
 "Agency placement adoption" means an adoption in
 which a child is placed in an adoptive home by a child-placing agency that has
 custody of the child. 
 
 "AREVA" means the Adoption Resource Exchange of
 Virginia that maintains a registry and photo-listing of children waiting for
 adoption and families seeking to adopt. 
 
 "Assessment" means an evaluation of the situation
 of the child and family to identify strengths and services needed.
 
 "Birth family" means the child's biological family.
 
 
 "Birth parent" means the child's biological parent
 and for purposes of adoptive placement means a parent by previous adoption. 
 
 "Birth sibling" means the child's biological
 sibling.
 
 "Board" means the State Board of Social Services. 
 
 "Child" means any natural person under 18 years of
 age. 
 
 "Child-placing agency" means any person who places
 children in foster homes, adoptive homes, or independent living arrangements
 pursuant to § 63.2-1819 of the Code of Virginia or a local board that
 places children in foster homes or adoptive homes pursuant to §§ 63.2-900,
 63.2-903, and 63.2-1221 of the Code of Virginia. Officers, employees, or agents
 of the Commonwealth, or any locality acting within the scope of their authority
 as such, who serve as or maintain a child-placing agency, shall not be required
 to be licensed.
 
 "Child with special needs" as it relates to
 adoption assistance means a child who meets the definition of a child with
 special needs set forth in §§ 63.2-1300 [ and or ]
 63.2-1301 B of the Code of Virginia.
 
 "Children's Services Act" or "CSA" means
 a collaborative system of services and funding that is child centered, family
 focused, and community based when addressing the strengths and needs of
 troubled and at-risk youth and their families in the Commonwealth.
 
 "Claim for benefits," as used in § 63.2-915 of
 the Code of Virginia and 22VAC40-201-115, means (i) foster care maintenance,
 including enhanced maintenance; (ii) the services set forth in a court approved
 foster care service plan, the foster care services identified in an individual
 family service plan developed by a family assessment and planning team or other
 multi-disciplinary team pursuant to the Children's Services Act
 (§ 2.2-5200 et seq. of the Code of Virginia), or a transitional living
 plan for independent living services; (iii) the placement of a child through an
 agreement with the child's parents or guardians, where legal custody remains
 with the parents or guardians; (iv) foster care prevention services as set out
 in a prevention service plan; or (v) placement of a child for adoption when an
 approved family is outside the locality with the legal custody of the child, in
 accordance with 42 USC § 671(a)(23).
 
 "Close relative" means a grandparent,
 great-grandparent, adult nephew or niece, adult brother or sister, adult uncle
 or aunt, or adult great uncle or great aunt. 
 
 "Commissioner" means the commissioner of the
 department, his designee, or his authorized representative.
 
 "Community Policy and Management Team" or
 "CPMT" means a team appointed by the local governing body to
 receive funds pursuant to Chapter 52 (§ 2.2-5200 et seq.) of Title 2.2
 of the Code of Virginia. The powers and duties of the CPMT are set out in
 § 2.2-5206 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 "Concurrent permanency planning" means a
 sequential, structured approach to case management which requires working
 towards a permanency goal (usually reunification) while at the same time
 establishing and working towards an alternative permanency plan utilizing
 a structured case management approach in which reasonable efforts are made to
 achieve a permanency goal, usually [ a ] reunification
 with the family, simultaneously with an established alternative permanent plan
 for the child.
 
 "Custody investigation" means a method to gather
 information related to the parents and a child whose custody, visitation, or
 support is in controversy or requires determination [ . ] 
 
 "Department" means the State state
 Department of Social Services. 
 
 "Denied," as used in § 63.2-915 of the Code of
 Virginia and 22VAC40-201-115, means the refusal to provide a claim for
 benefits. 
 
 "Dual approval process" "Dually
 approved" means a process that includes a home study, mutual
 selection, interviews, training, and background checks to be completed on all
 applicants being considered for approval have met the required
 standards to be approved as a resource, foster or and
 adoptive family home provider. 
 
 "Entrustment agreement" means an agreement that
 the local board enters into with the parent, parents, or guardian to place the
 child in foster care either to terminate parental rights or for the temporary
 care and placement of the child. The agreement specifies the conditions for the
 care of [ the ] child.
 
 "Family assessment and planning team" or
 "FAPT" means the local team created by the CPMT (i) to assess the
 strengths and needs of troubled youths and families who are approved for
 referral to the team and (ii) to identify and determine the complement of
 services required to meet their unique needs. The powers and duties of the FAPT
 are set out in § 2.2-5208 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 "Foster care" means 24-hour substitute care
 for children in the custody of the local board or who remain in the custody
 of their parents, but are placed away from their parents or guardians and
 for whom the local board has placement and care responsibility through a noncustodial
 agreement. Foster care also includes children under the placement and
 care of the local board who have not been removed from their home. 
 
 "Foster care maintenance payments" means payments
 to cover federally allowable those expenses made on behalf of a
 child in foster care including the cost of, and the cost of providing,
 food, clothing, shelter, daily supervision [ , ] school supplies,
 a child's incidentals, reasonable travel for the child to visit
 relatives to the child's home for visitation, and reasonable
 travel to remain in his previous in the school in which
 the child is enrolled at the time of the placement, and other allowable
 expenses in accordance with guidance developed by the department. The
 term also includes costs for children in institutional care and costs related
 to the child of a child in foster care as set out in 42 USC § 675.
 
 "Foster Care Manual" means Chapter E - Foster
 Care of the Child and Family Services Manual of the Virginia Department of
 Social Services dated July 2011. 
 
 "Foster care placement" means placement of a
 child through (i) an agreement between the parents or guardians and the local
 board or the public agency designated by the CPMT where legal custody remains
 with the parents or guardians, or (ii) an entrustment or commitment of the
 child to the local board or licensed child-placing agency.
 
 "Foster care plan" means a written document
 filed with the court in accordance with § 16.1-281 of the Code of Virginia that
 describes the programs, care, services, and other support that will be offered
 to the child and his parents and other prior custodians. The foster care plan
 defined in this definition is the case plan referenced in 42 USC § 675.
 
 "Foster care prevention" means the provision of
 services to a child and family to prevent the need for foster care placement.
 
 "Foster care services" means the provision of a
 full range of prevention, placement casework, treatment, and
 community services, including [ but not limited to ]
 independent living services, for a planned period of time to a child meeting
 the requirements as set forth in § 63.2-905 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 "Foster child" means a child for whom the local
 board has assumed placement and care responsibilities through a noncustodial
 foster care agreement, entrustment, or court commitment before 18 years of age.
 
 
 "Foster home" means the place of residence of any
 natural person in which any child, other than a child by birth or adoption of
 such person, resides as a member of the household. 
 
 "Foster parent" means an approved provider who
 gives 24-hour substitute family care, room and board, and services for children
 or youth committed or entrusted to a child-placing agency.
 
 "Independent living arrangement" means placement of
 a child at least 16 years of age who is in the custody of a local board or
 licensed child-placing agency and has been placed by the local board or
 licensed child-placing agency in a living arrangement in which he does not have
 daily substitute parental supervision. 
 
 "Independent living services" means services and
 activities provided to a child in foster care 14 years of age or older who was
 committed or entrusted to a local board of social services, child welfare
 agency, or private child-placing agency. Independent living services may also
 mean services and activities provided to a person who (i) was in foster
 care on his 18th birthday and has not yet reached the age of 21 years or
 (ii) is at least 18 years of age and who, immediately prior to his commitment
 to the Department of Juvenile Justice, was in the custody of a local department
 of social services. Such services shall include counseling, education,
 housing, employment, and money management skills development, access to
 essential documents, and other appropriate services to help children or persons
 prepare for self-sufficiency. 
 
 "Individual family service plan" or
 "IFSP" means the plan for services developed by the FAPT in
 accordance with § 2.2-5208 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 "Intercountry placement" means the arrangement for
 the care of a child in an adoptive home or foster care placement into or out of
 the Commonwealth by a licensed child-placing agency, court, or other entity
 authorized to make such placements in accordance with the laws of the foreign
 country under which it operates. 
 
 "Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children"
 or "ICPC" means a uniform law that has been enacted by all 50 states,
 the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands which
 establishes orderly procedures for the interstate placement of children and
 sets responsibility for those involved in placing those children. 
 
 "Interstate placement" means the arrangement for
 the care of a child in an adoptive home, foster care placement, or in the home
 of the child's parent or with a relative or nonagency guardian, into or out of
 the Commonwealth, by a child-placing agency or court when the full legal right
 of the child's parent or nonagency guardian to plan for the child has been
 voluntarily terminated or limited or severed by the action of any court. 
 
 "Investigation" means the process by which the local
 department child-placing agency obtains information required by
 § 63.2-1208 of the Code of Virginia about the placement and the
 suitability of the adoption. The findings of the investigation are compiled
 into a written report for the circuit court containing a recommendation on the
 action to be taken by the court.
 
 [ "Local board" means the local board of
 social services in each county and city in the Commonwealth required by § 63.2-300
 of the Code of Virginia. ] 
 
 "Local department" means the local department of
 social services of any county or city in the Commonwealth.
 
 "Nonagency placement adoption" means an adoption in
 which the child is not in the custody of a child-placing agency and is placed
 in the adoptive home directly by the birth parent or legal guardian. 
 
 "Noncustodial foster care agreement" means an
 agreement that the local department enters into with the parent or guardian of
 a child to place the child in foster care when the parent or guardian retains
 custody of the child. The agreement specifies the conditions for placement and
 care of the child.
 
 "Nonrecurring expenses" means expenses of adoptive
 parents directly related to the adoption of a child with special needs including,
 but not limited to, attorney or other fees directly related to the finalization
 of the adoption, transportation, court costs, and reasonable and necessary fees
 of licensed child-placing agencies as set out in § 63.2-1301 D of
 the Code of Virginia. 
 
 "Parental placement" means locating or effecting
 the placement of a child or the placing of a child in a family home by the
 child's parent or legal guardian for the purpose of foster care or adoption. 
 
 "Permanency" means establishing family connections
 and placement options for a child to provide a lifetime of commitment,
 continuity of care, a sense of belonging, and a legal and social status that go
 beyond a child's temporary foster care placements.
 
 "Permanency planning" means a social work practice
 philosophy that promotes establishing a permanent living situation for every
 child with an adult with whom the child has a continuous, reciprocal
 relationship within a minimum amount of time after the child enters the foster
 care system.
 
 "Permanency planning indicator" or
 "PPI" means a tool used in concurrent permanency planning to assess
 the likelihood of reunification. This tool assists the worker in determining if
 a child should be placed with a resource family and if a concurrent goal should
 be established.
 
 "Prior custodian" means the person who had custody
 of the child and with whom the child resided, other than the birth parent,
 before custody was transferred to or placement made with the child-placing
 agency when that person had custody of the child.
 
 "Putative Father Registry" means a confidential
 database designed to protect the rights of a putative father who wants to be
 notified in the event of a proceeding related to termination of parental rights
 or adoption for a child he may have fathered. 
 
 "Residential placement" means a placement in a
 licensed publicly or privately owned facility, other than a private family
 home, where 24-hour care is provided to children separated from their families.
 A residential placement includes placements in children's residential
 facilities as defined in § 63.2-100 of the Code of Virginia. 
 
 "Resource parent" means a provider who has
 completed the dual approval process and has been approved as both a foster and
 adoptive family home provider.
 
 "Reunification" means the return of the child to
 his home after removal for reasons of child abuse and neglect, abandonment,
 child in need of services, parental request for relief of custody, noncustodial
 agreement, entrustment, or any other court-ordered removal.
 
 "Service plan" means a written document that
 describes the programs, care, services, and other support which will be offered
 to the child and his parents and other prior custodians pursuant to
 § 16.1-281 of the Code of Virginia,
 
 "Service worker" means a worker responsible for
 case management or service coordination for prevention, foster care, or
 adoption cases.
 
 "SSI" means Supplemental Security Income. 
 
 "State pool fund funds" means the
 pooled state and local funds administered by CSA and used to pay for services
 authorized by the CPMT.
 
 "Step-parent adoption" means the adoption of a
 child by a spouse [ , of a birth or adoptive parent ]
 or the adoption of a child by a former spouse of the birth or adoptive parent
 in accordance with § 63.2-1201.1 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 "Title IV-E" means the title of the Social Security
 Act that authorizes federal funds for foster care and adoption assistance.
 
 "Visitation and report" means the visitation
 visits conducted pursuant to § 63.2-1212 of the Code of Virginia subsequent
 to the entry of an interlocutory order of adoption and the written report compiling
 of the findings made in the course of the visitation which.
 The report is filed in the circuit court in accordance with § 63.2-1212
 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 "Wrap around services" means an individually
 designed set of services and supports provided to a child and his family that
 includes treatment services, personal support services or any other supports
 necessary to achieve the desired outcome. Wrap around services are developed
 through a team approach.
 
 "Youth" means any child in foster care between 16
 and 18 years of age or any person 18 to 21 years of age transitioning out of
 foster care and receiving independent living services pursuant to
 § 63.2-905.1 of the Code of Virginia. "Youth" may also mean
 an individual older than the age of 16 years who is the subject of an adoption
 assistance agreement. 
 
 22VAC40-201-20. Foster care prevention services.
 
 A. The local department shall first make reasonable efforts
 to keep the child in his home.
 
 B. The local department shall make diligent efforts to locate
 and assess relatives or other alternative caregivers to support the child
 remaining in his home or as placement options if the child cannot safely remain
 in his home. 
 
 C. Foster care services, The local department shall
 provide services pursuant to § 63.2-905 of the Code of Virginia, shall
 be available to the child and birth parents or custodians to prevent
 the need for foster care placement when the child is abused and neglected as
 defined in § 63.2-100 of the Code of Virginia or has been found to be a child
 in need of services as defined in § 16.1-228 of the Code of Virginia
 [ by the court ] or as determined by the family assessment
 and planning team. 
 
 D. Any services available to a child in foster care shall
 also be available to a child and his birth parents or custodians to prevent
 foster care placement and shall be based on an assessment of the child's and
 birth parents' or custodians' needs. 
 
 E. Any service Appropriate services shall be
 provided to prevent foster care placement or to stabilize the family situation
 provided the need for the service is documented in the local department's service
 written plan or in the IFSP used in conjunction with accessing
 CSA funds.
 
 F. Children at imminent risk of entry into foster care shall
 be evaluated by the local department as reasonable candidates for foster care
 based on federal and state guidelines regulations, 45 CFR 1356.60(c).
 
 G. The local department shall consider a develop a
 written plan for the implementation of wrap around plan of care services
 prior to removing a child from his home and. As long as the risk of
 removal from the home continues, services shall be provided to address
 identified needs. In the event that the child can no longer be safely
 maintained in the home, the local department shall document why the
 support and services considered and the reasons such support and services
 provided were not sufficient to maintain the child in his home.
 
 H. Within 30 days after Prior to removing the
 child from the custody of his parents, the local department shall make diligent
 efforts, in accordance with the Foster Care Manual to notify in writing
 all adult relatives that the child is being removed or has been removed or
 is likely to be removed and explain the options to relatives to participate in
 the care and placement of the child including eligibility as a kinship foster
 parent and the services and supports that may be available for children placed
 in such a home. 
 
 22VAC40-201-30. Entering foster care.
 
 A. A child enters foster care through a court commitment,
 entrustment agreement, or noncustodial foster care agreement. Foster care
 children who have been committed to the Department of Juvenile Justice (DJJ)
 shall re-enter foster care at the completion of the DJJ commitment if under the
 age of 18. 
 
 B. The entrustment agreement shall specify the rights and
 obligations of the child, the birth parent or custodian, and the child-placing
 agency local department. Entrustments shall not be used for
 educational purposes, to make the child eligible for Medicaid, or to obtain
 mental health treatment. 
 
 1. Temporary entrustment Entrustment agreements that
 are not for the termination of parental rights may be revoked by the birth
 parent or custodian or child-placing agency local board prior to
 the court's approval of the agreement.
 
 2. Permanent entrustment Entrustment agreements that
 terminate parental rights shall only be entered into when the birth parent
 and the child-placing agency local board, after counseling about
 alternatives to permanent relinquishment, agree that voluntary relinquishment
 of parental rights and placement of the child for adoption are in the child's
 best interests. When a child-placing agency local board enters
 into a permanent entrustment agreement, the child-placing agency shall make
 diligent efforts to ensure the timely finalization of the adoption.
 
 3. Local departments shall submit Submission of
 a petition for approval of the entrustment agreement to the juvenile and
 domestic relations court pursuant to § 63.2-903 shall be in
 accordance with § 16.1-277.01 of the Code of Virginia. 
 
 C. A child may be placed in foster care by a birth parent or
 custodian entering into a noncustodial foster care agreement with the local
 department where the birth parent or custodian retains legal custody and the
 local department assumes placement and care of the child.
 
 1. A noncustodial foster care agreement shall be signed by the
 local department and the birth parent or custodian and shall address (i)
 the conditions for care and control of the child; and (ii) the
 rights and obligations of the child, birth parent or custodian, and the local
 department. Local departments shall enter into a noncustodial foster care
 agreement at the request of the birth parent or custodian when such an
 agreement is in the best interest of the child. When a noncustodial foster care
 agreement is executed, the permanency goal shall be reunification and
 continuation of the agreement is subject to the cooperation of the birth parent
 or custodian and child. 
 
 2. The plan for foster care placement through a noncustodial
 foster care agreement shall be submitted to the court for approval within 60
 45 days of the child's entry into foster care. Submission of a
 petition for approval of a noncustodial agreement to the juvenile and domestic
 relations court shall be made in accordance with § 16.1-281 of the Code of
 Virginia.
 
 3. When a child is placed in foster care through a
 noncustodial foster care agreement, all foster care requirements shall be met.
 
 22VAC40-201-35. Reentry into foster care from commitment.
 
 A. In the event the youth was in the custody of the local
 board immediately prior to his commitment to the Department of Juvenile Justice
 (DJJ) and has not attained the age of 18 years, the local board shall resume custody
 upon the youth's release from commitment, unless an alternative arrangement for
 the custody of the youth has been made and communicated in writing to DJJ. At
 least 90 days prior to the youth's release from commitment on parole
 supervision the local department shall consult with the court service unit on
 the youth's return to the locality and collaborate to develop a foster care
 plan that prepares the youth for successful transition back to the custody of
 the local department or to an alternative custody arrangement, if applicable.
 The plan shall identify services necessary for the transition and how the
 services are to be provided. 
 
 B. The foster care plan shall be submitted to the court
 for approval within 45 days of the youth's reentry into foster care. Submission
 of a petition for approval of the foster care plan to the juvenile and domestic
 relations district court shall be made in accordance with § 16.1-281 of the
 Code of Virginia.
 
 22VAC40-201-40. Foster care placements.
 
 A. Within 30 days of the child being placed in the custody
 of the local board, the local department shall exercise due diligence to
 [ identify and ] notify in writing all adult relatives that
 the child has been removed and explain the options to relatives to participate
 in the care and placement of the child including eligibility as a kinship
 foster parent and the services and supports that may be available for children
 placed in such a home. 
 
 B. The local department shall ensure a child in foster
 care is placed in a licensed or an approved home or licensed
 facility that complies with all applicable federal and state
 requirements for safety. Placements shall be made subject to the requirements
 of § 63.2-901.1 of the Code of Virginia. The following requirements shall be
 met when placing a child in a licensed or an approved home or licensed
 facility:
 
 1. The local department shall make diligent efforts exercise
 due diligence to locate and assess relatives as a foster home placement for
 the child, including in emergency situations. 
 
 2. The local department shall place the child in the least
 restrictive, most family like setting consistent with the best interests and
 needs of the child.
 
 3. The local department shall attempt to place the child in as
 close proximity as possible to the birth parent's or prior custodian's home to
 facilitate visitation, provide continuity of connections, and provide
 educational stability for the child.
 
 4. The local department shall make diligent efforts take
 reasonable steps to place the child with siblings unless such a joint
 placement would be contrary to the safety or well-being of the child or
 siblings.
 
 5. The local department shall, when appropriate, consider
 placement with a resource parent in a dually approved home
 so that if reunification fails, the placement is the best available placement
 to provide permanency through adoption for the child.
 
 6. The local department shall not delay or deny placement of a
 child into a foster family placement on the basis of race, color, or national
 origin of the foster or resource parent or child. 
 
 7. When a child being placed in foster care is of native
 American, Alaskan Eskimo, or Aleut heritage and is a member of a
 nationally recognized tribe, the local department shall follow all federal
 laws, regulations, and policies regarding the referral of a the
 child of native American heritage. The local department may contact the Virginia
 Council on Indians Department of Historic Resources for information
 on contacting Virginia tribes and shall consider tribal culture and connections
 in the placement and care of a child of Virginia Indian heritage.
 
 8. If a child is placed in a kinship foster placement
 pursuant to § 63.2-900.1 of the Code of Virginia, the child shall not be
 removed from the physical custody of the kinship foster parent, provided the
 child has been living with the kinship foster parent for six consecutive months
 and the placement continues to meet approval standards for foster care, unless
 (i) the kinship foster parent consents to the removal; (ii) removal is agreed upon
 at a family partnership meeting; (iii) removal is ordered by a court of
 competent jurisdiction; or (iv) removal is warranted pursuant to § 63.2-1517 of
 the Code of Virginia. 
 
 B. C. A service worker shall make a
 preplacement visit to any out-of-home placement to observe the environment
 where the child will be living and ensure that the placement is safe and
 capable of meeting the needs of the child. The preplacement visit shall precede
 the placement date except in cases of emergency. In cases of emergency, the
 visit shall occur on the same day as the placement. 
 
 C. D. Foster, or adoptive, or
 resource family homes shall meet standards established by the board and
 shall be approved by child-placing agencies. Group homes and residential
 facilities shall be licensed by the appropriate licensing agency. Local
 departments shall verify the licensure status of the facility prior to
 placement of the child Prior to the placement of a child in a licensed
 child-placing agency (LCPA) foster home, the local department shall verify that
 the LCPA approved the foster home. Prior to the placement of a child in a
 children's residential facility, the local department shall verify that the
 facility is licensed to operate by the appropriate state regulatory authority.
 
 
 D. E. Local departments shall receive notice
 of the approval [ by the receiving state ] from the
 department's office of the ICPC prior to placing a child out of state.
 
 E. F. When a child is to be placed in a home
 in the local department is considering placement of a child in a foster
 or adoptive home approved by another local department's jurisdiction
 department within Virginia, the local department intending to place the
 child shall notify the local department that approved the home that the home
 is being considered for the child's placement. The local department consult
 with the approving local department about the placement of the child and shall
 also verify that the home is still approved and shall consult with the
 approving local department about placement of the child.
 
 F. G. When a child is moving with a
 foster, or adoptive, or resource family is moving
 from one jurisdiction to another, the local department holding custody shall
 notify the local department in the jurisdiction to which the foster, or
 adoptive, or resource family is moving.
 
 G. H. When a child moves with a foster, or
 adoptive, or resource family from one jurisdiction to another in
 Virginia, the local department holding custody shall continue supervision of
 the child unless supervision is transferred to the other local department.
 
 H. I. A local department may petition the court
 to transfer custody of a child to another local department when the birth
 parent or prior custodian has moved to that locality. 
 
 I. J. In planned placement changes or relocation
 of foster parents, birth parents with residual parental rights or prior
 custodians and all other relevant parties shall be notified that a placement
 change or move is being considered if such notification is in the best interest
 of the child. The birth parent or prior custodian shall be involved in the
 decision-making process regarding the placement change prior to a final
 decision being made. 1. The service worker shall consider the child's best
 interest and safety needs when involving the birth parent or prior custodian
 and all other relevant parties in the decision-making process regarding
 placement change or notification of the new placement. 
 
 2. K. In the case of an where an
 emergency situation requires an immediate placement change, the birth
 parent with residual parental rights or prior custodian and all other relevant
 parties shall be notified immediately of the placement change. The child-placing
 agency local department shall inform the birth parent or prior
 custodian why the placement change occurred and why the birth parent or prior
 custodian and all other relevant parties could not be involved in the
 decision-making process. 
 
 22VAC40-201-50. Initial foster care placement activities.
 
 A. Information on every child in foster care shall be entered
 into the department's automated child welfare system in accordance with
 guidance in the initial placement activities section of the Foster Care Manual.
 
 B. The local department shall assess the child for Title
 IV-E eligibility. The local department shall also refer the child for
 all financial benefits to which the child may be eligible, including [ but
 not limited to ] Child Support, Title IV-E, SSI, other
 governmental benefits, and private resources.
 
 C. The service worker shall ensure that the child receives a
 medical examination no later than 30 days after initial placement. The child
 shall be provided a medical evaluation within 72 hours of initial placement if
 conditions indicate such an evaluation is necessary. [ Dental
 appointments shall be scheduled every six months as age appropriate, and
 physicals shall be scheduled at regular intervals. If the child has
 not had a dental appointment in the past six months and it is developmentally
 appropriate, a dental appointment shall be scheduled as soon as possible. ]
 
 
 D. The In accordance with § 22.1-3.4 of the
 Code of Virginia, the local department shall collaborate with the
 appropriate local educational agencies school division to
 ensure that the child remains in his previous school placement when it is a
 joint determination that it is in the best interests of the child. If
 remaining in the same school is not in the best interests of the child, the
 service worker shall enroll the child in an appropriate new school as soon as
 possible but no more than 72 hours after placement. 
 
 1. The child's desire to remain in his previous school setting
 shall be considered in making the decision about which school the child shall
 attend. 
 
 2. The service worker, in cooperation with the birth parents
 or prior custodians, foster care providers, and other involved adults, shall
 coordinate the school placement. 
 
 3. If remaining in the same school is jointly determined to
 be in the best interests of the child, the local department shall arrange for
 transportation for the child to remain in that school unless the child requires
 specialized transportation documented in the Individualized Education Program
 (IEP) for the child, which is funded by the responsible school division.
 
 4. The local department shall document in writing the joint
 determination with the local school division of the child's best interest for
 school placement.
 
 5. If the joint determination process cannot be completed
 prior to the placement in the new residence, the child will remain in the same
 school until the best interest determination is completed.
 
 E. Within 72 hours of placing a school age child in a
 foster care placement, the local department making the placement shall give
 written notification to the principal of the school in which the child is to be
 enrolled and the superintendent of the relevant school division of the
 placement and notify the principal of the status of parental rights.
 
 22VAC40-201-60. Assessment.
 
 A. Assessments shall be conducted in a manner that
 respectfully involves children and birth parents or prior custodians to give
 them a say in what happens to them an opportunity for shared decision
 making. Decision making shall include input from children, youth, birth
 parents or prior custodians, and other interested individuals. Assessments
 shall be used both in the establishment of foster care goals and also to inform
 service plans.
 
 B. The initial foster care assessment shall result in the
 selection of a specific permanency goal. In accordance with guidance in the
 assessment section of the Foster Care Manual, the local department shall
 complete the PPI during the initial foster care assessment to assist in
 determining if a concurrent goal should be selected.
 
 C. B. The initial foster care assessment shall
 be completed within [ time frames timeframes ] developed
 by the department but shall not exceed 30 calendar days after acceptance of the
 child in a foster care placement.
 
 1. C. When a child has been removed from his
 home as a result of abuse or neglect, the initial foster care assessment shall
 include a summary of the Child Protective Services' safety and risk
 assessments. 
 
 2. D. The history and circumstances of the
 child, the birth parents or prior custodians, or other interested individuals
 shall be assessed at the time of the initial foster care assessment to
 determine their service needs. The initial foster care assessment shall:
 
 a. 1. Include a comprehensive social history;
 
 b. 2. Utilize assessment tools designated by the
 department; 
 
 c. 3. Be entered into the department's automated
 child welfare system; and
 
 d. 4. Include a description of how the child,
 youth, birth parents or prior custodians, and other interested individuals were
 involved in the decision making process.
 
 D. The service worker shall refer the child; birth parents
 or prior custodians; and foster, adoptive or resource parents for appropriate
 services identified through the assessment. The assessment shall include an
 assessment of financial resources. 
 
 E. Assessments of Assessment shall be ongoing and
 evaluate the effectiveness of services to the child;, birth
 parents or prior custodians;, and foster, or
 adoptive, or resource parents and the need for additional services shall
 occur at least every three months as long as the goal is to return home.
 For all other goals, assessments of the effectiveness and need for additional
 services shall occur at least every six months after placement for as long as
 the child remains in foster care. The assessments shall be completed in
 accordance with guidance in the assessment section of the Foster Care Manual.
 
 F. The service worker shall refer the child, birth parents
 or prior custodians, and foster or adoptive parents for appropriate services
 identified through the assessment. The assessment shall include an assessment
 of financial resources.
 
 22VAC40-201-70. Foster care goals.
 
 A. Foster care goals are established to assure permanency planning
 is achieved for the child. Priority shall be given to the goals
 listed in subdivisions 1, 2, and 3 of this subsection, which are recognized in
 federal legislation as providing children with permanency. The selection of
 goals other than those in subdivisions 1, 2, and 3 of this subsection must
 include documentation as to why each of these first three goals were not
 selected. Foster Permissible foster care goals are:
 
 1. Return Transfer custody [ of the
 child ] to [ a parent or a prior custodian. his
 prior family ];
 
 2. Transfer [of] custody of the child to a relative
 other than his prior family.;
 
 3. Adoption. Finalize adoption [ of the
 child ];
 
 4. Permanent Place the child in permanent foster
 care.;
 
 5. Independent Transition to independent living.
 if the child is admitted to the United States as a refugee or asylee; or
 
 6. Another Place the child in another planned
 permanent living arrangement in accordance with § 16.1-282.1 A2 of the
 Code of Virginia.
 
 B. When the permanency goal is changed to adoption, the local
 department shall file petitions with the court 30 days prior to the hearing to:
 
 
 1. Approve the foster care service plan seeking to change the
 permanency goal to adoption; and 
 
 2. Terminate parental rights.
 
 Upon termination of parental rights, the local department
 shall provide an array of adoption services to support obtaining a finalized
 adoption. 
 
 C. The goal of permanent foster care shall only be considered
 for children age 14 and older in accordance with guidance in the section on
 choosing a goal in the Foster Care Manual. The local department
 shall engage in concurrent permanency planning in order to achieve timely
 permanency for the child. Permanency goals shall be considered and addressed
 from the beginning of placement and continuously evaluated.
 
 D. When the goal for the youth is to transition to
 independent living, the local department shall provide services pursuant to
 guidance in the section on choosing a goal in the Foster Care Manual. 
 
 E. D. The goal of another planned permanent
 living arrangement may be chosen when the court has found that none of the
 alternative permanency goals are appropriate and the court has found the child
 to:
 
 1. Have The child has a severe and chronic
 emotional, physical, or neurological disabling condition; and
 
 2. Require The child requires long-term
 residential care for the condition.; and
 
 3. None of the alternatives listed in clauses (i) through
 (v) of § 16.1-282.1 A of the Code of Virginia is achievable for the child at
 the time placement in another planned permanent living arrangement is approved
 as the permanent goal for the child. 
 
 F. These permanency goals shall be considered and
 addressed from the beginning of placement and continuously evaluated. Although
 one goal may appear to be the primary goal, other goals shall be continuously
 explored and planned for as appropriate. 
 
 E. If either the goal of permanent foster care or another
 planned permanent living arrangement is selected, the local department shall
 continue to search for relatives and significant individuals as permanent
 families throughout the child's involvement with the child welfare system. The
 local department shall continue to evaluate the best interest of the child
 [ and in light of ] the changing
 circumstances of the child and extended family.
 
 F. The goal of independent living services shall only be
 selected for those children admitted to the United States as a refugee or
 asylee or those youth age 18 years leaving foster care and meeting the
 requirements to receive independent living services. For those youth with this
 goal, the service worker shall continue diligent efforts to search for a
 relative or other interested adult who will provide a permanent long-term
 family relationship for the youth.
 
 22VAC40-201-80. Service Foster care plans.
 
 A. Every child in foster care longer than 45 days
 shall have a current service written foster care plan approved
 by the court within 60 days of entry into foster care. The service foster
 care plan shall specify the assessed permanency goal and when
 appropriate the concurrent permanency goal, and shall meet all
 requirements set forth in federal or state law. The In the
 development of the service foster care plan, the local
 department shall occur through shared decision-making between the local
 department; consider input from the child;, the birth
 parents or prior custodians;, the foster, or
 adoptive, or resource parents;, and any other interested
 individuals, who may include service providers. All of these partners
 persons shall be involved in sharing information for the purposes of
 well-informed decisions and planning for the child with a focus on safety and
 permanence.
 
 B. A service The foster care plan shall be
 written after the completion of a thorough the assessment. Service
 Foster care plans shall directly reference how the strengths identified
 in the foster care assessment will support the plan and the needs to be met to
 achieve the permanency goal, including the identified concurrent permanency
 goal, in a timely manner.
 
 C. A plan for visitation with the birth parents or prior
 custodians, and siblings, grandparents, or other interested
 individuals for all children in foster care shall be developed and
 presented to the court as part of the service foster care plan in
 accordance with § 63.2-900.2 of the Code of Virginia. A plan shall not
 be required if such visitation is not in the best interest of the child. 
 
 22VAC40-201-90. Service delivery.
 
 A. Permanency planning services Services shall be
 provided to support the safety and well-being of the child. Services to
 children and birth parents or prior custodians shall be delivered as part of
 a total system with cooperation, coordination, and collaboration occurring
 among children and youth, birth parents or prior custodians, service providers,
 the legal community and other interested individuals continue until
 evidence indicates the services are either not effective to reach the child's
 goal or no longer necessary because the goal has been achieved, or the birth
 parent or prior custodian has refused services. 
 
 B. Permanency planning for children and birth parents or
 prior custodians shall be an inclusive process providing timely
 notifications and full disclosure to the birth parents or prior custodians
 of the establishment of a concurrent permanency goal when indicated and
 the implications of concurrent permanency planning for the child and birth
 parents or prior custodians. Child-placing agencies Local departments
 shall also make timely notifications notify the birth parents or
 prior custodians concerning placement changes, hearings and meetings
 regarding the child, and assessments of needs and case progress,
 and responsiveness shall be responsive to the requests of the
 child and birth parents or prior custodians.
 
 C. Services to children and birth parents or prior
 custodians shall continue until an assessment indicates the services are no
 longer necessary. Services to achieve concurrent permanency goals shall be
 provided to support achievement of both permanency goals.
 
 D. C. In order to meet the child's
 permanency goals ensure that permanency is achieved for the child,
 services may be provided to extended family relatives or other
 interested individuals who are assessed to be potential permanency options
 for the child and may continue until an assessment indicates the services
 are no longer necessary.
 
 D. Developmental and medical examinations shall be
 provided for the child in foster care in accordance with the Virginia Department
 of Medical Assistance Services' Early Periodic Screening Diagnosis and
 Treatment (EPSDT) schedule in the Virginia EPSDT Periodicity Chart. Dental
 examinations shall be provided for the child in accordance with the American
 Academy of Pediatric Dentistry's Periodicity and Anticipatory Guidance
 Recommendations (Dental Health Guidelines-Ages 0-18 Years, Recommendations for
 Preventive Pediatric Dental Care (AAPD Reference Manual 2002-2003)) as
 determined by the Virginia Department of Medical Assistance Services. As
 indicated through assessment, appropriate health care services shall include
 trauma, developmental, mental health, psychosocial, and substance abuse
 services and treatments. Local departments shall follow the protocols for
 appropriate and effective use of psychotropic medications for children in
 foster care disseminated by the department.
 
 E. All children in foster care shall have a face-to-face
 contact with an approved case service worker at least once per
 calendar month regardless of the child's permanency goal or placement and in
 accordance with guidance in the service delivery section of the
 Foster Care Manual and the Adoption Manual. The majority More
 than 50% of each child's visits shall be in his place of residency.
 
 1. The purpose of the visits shall be to assess the child's
 progress, needs, adjustment to placement, and other significant information
 related to the health, safety, and well-being of the child. 
 
 2. The visits shall be made by individuals who meet the
 department's requirements consistent with 42 USC § 622(b). 
 
 F. Supportive services to foster, adoptive, and resource
 parents shall be provided. 1. The local department shall enter into a
 placement agreement developed by the department with the foster, or
 adoptive, or resource parents. The As required by § 63.2-900
 of the Code of Virginia, the placement agreement shall include, at a
 minimum, a code of ethics and mutual responsibilities for all parties to the
 agreement as required by § 63.2-900 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 1. Services to prevent placement disruptions shall be
 provided to the foster and adoptive parents.
 
 2. Foster, and adoptive, and resource
 parents who have children placed with them shall be contacted by a service
 worker as often as needed in accordance with 22VAC211-100 22VAC40-211-100
 to assess service needs and progress. 
 
 3. Foster, and adoptive, and resource
 parents shall be given full factual information about the child, including but
 not limited to, circumstances that led to the child's removal, and
 complete educational, medical, and behavioral information. All
 information shall be kept confidential by the foster and adoptive parents.
 
 
 4. Foster, and adoptive, and resource
 parents shall be given appropriate sections of the foster care [ service ]
 plan. [ Information in the service plan that is prohibited from
 being released shall not be provided to the foster parent, in accordance with §
 16.1-281 B and C of the Code of Virginia. ] 
 
 5. If needed, services to stabilize the placement shall be
 provided. 
 
 6. 5. Respite care for foster, and
 adoptive, and resource parents may be provided on an emergency or
 planned basis in accordance with criteria developed by the department.
 
 
 7. 6. The department shall make a contingency
 fund funds available to provide reimbursement to local departments'
 foster and resource parents for damages pursuant to § 63.2-911 of the
 Code of Virginia and according to department guidance to property caused
 by children placed in the home. Provision of reimbursement is contingent
 upon the availability of funds. 
 
 22VAC40-201-100. Providing independent living services.
 
 A. Independent living services shall be identified by the
 youth; foster, or adoptive or resource family; local
 department; service providers; legal community; and other interested
 individuals and shall be included in the service plan. Input from the youth in
 assembling these individuals and developing the services is required. 
 
 B. Independent living services may shall be
 provided to all youth ages 14 to 18 years and may shall be
 provided until the youth reaches age 21 offered to any person between
 18 and 21 years of age who is in the process of transitioning from foster care
 to self-sufficiency.
 
 C. [ The ] child-placing agency
 [ local department may offer a program of independent
 living services that meets the youth's needs such as Independent living
 services include ] education, vocational training, employment, mental
 and physical health services, transportation, housing, financial support, daily
 living skills, counseling, and development of permanent connections with
 adults. 
 
 D. Child-placing agencies Local departments
 shall assess the youth's independent living skills and needs in accordance
 with guidance in the service delivery section of the Foster Care Manual
 and incorporate the assessment results into the youth's service plan. 
 
 E. A youth placed in foster care before the age of 18 years
 may continue to receive independent living services from the child-placing
 agency local department between the ages of 18 and 21 years
 if:
 
 1. The youth is making progress in an educational or
 vocational program, has employment, or is in a treatment or training program;
 and
 
 2. The youth agrees to participate with the local department
 in (i) developing a service agreement and (ii) signing the service agreement.
 The service agreement shall require, at a minimum, that the youth's living
 arrangement shall be approved by the local department and that the youth shall
 cooperate with all services; or
 
 3. The youth is in permanent foster care and is making
 progress in an educational or vocational program, has employment, or is in a
 treatment or training program. 
 
 F. A youth age 16 years and older is eligible to live
 in an independent living arrangement provided the child-placing agency local
 department utilizes the independent living arrangement placement criteria
 developed by the department to determine that such an arrangement is in the
 youth's best interest. An eligible youth may receive an independent living
 stipend to assist him with the costs of maintenance. The eligibility criteria
 for receiving an independent living stipend will be developed by the
 department.
 
 G. Any person who was committed or entrusted to a child-placing
 agency local department and chooses to discontinue receiving
 independent living services after age 18 but prior to his 21st birthday years
 may request a resumption of independent living services in accordance with §
 63.2-905.1 of the Code of Virginia provided that (i) the person has not
 yet reached 21 years of age and (ii) the person has entered into a written
 agreement, less than 60 days after independent living services have been
 discontinued, with the local board regarding the terms and conditions of his
 receipt of independent living services. Local departments shall provide
 any person who chooses to leave foster care or terminate independent living
 services before his 21st birthday written notice of his right to request
 restoration of independent living services in accordance with § 63.2-905.1 of
 the Code of Virginia by including such written notice in the person's
 transition plan.
 
 H. Child-placing agencies Local departments
 shall assist eligible youth in applying for educational and vocational
 financial assistance. Educational and vocational specific funding sources shall
 be used prior to using other sources.
 
 I. Local departments shall provide independent living
 services to any person between 18 and 21 years of age who:
 
 1. Was in the custody of the local board immediately prior
 to his commitment to the Department of Juvenile Justice;
 
 2. Is in the process of transitioning from a commitment to
 the Department of Juvenile Justice to self-sufficiency; and
 
 3. Provides written notice of his intent to receive
 independent living services and enters into a written agreement which sets forth
 the terms and conditions for the provision of independent living services with
 the local board within 60 days of his release from commitment.
 
 I. J. Every six months a supervisory review of
 service plans for youth receiving independent living services after age 18
 shall be conducted to assure the effectiveness of service provision. 
 
 22VAC40-201-110. Court hearings and case reviews.
 
 A. For all court hearings, local departments shall: 
 
 1. File petitions in accordance with the requirements for the
 type of hearing. 
 
 2. Obtain and consider the child's input as to who should be
 included in the court hearing. If persons identified by the child will not be
 included in the court hearing, the child-placing agency service
 worker shall explain the reasons to the child for such a decision
 consistent with the child's developmental and psychological status.
 
 3. Inform the court of reasonable efforts made to achieve
 concurrent permanency goals in those cases where a concurrent goal has been
 identified.
 
 B. An administrative panel review shall be held six months
 after a permanency planning hearing when the goals goal of adoption,
 permanent foster care, or independent living have has been
 approved by the court unless the court requires more frequent hearings. A
 foster care review hearing will be held annually. The child will continue
 to have Administrative Panel Reviews administrative panel reviews
 or review hearings every six months until a final order of adoption is
 issued or the child reaches age 18 years.
 
 C. The local department shall invite the child; the birth
 parents or prior custodians when appropriate; and the child's foster,
 or adoptive, or resource parents;, placement
 providers;, guardian ad litem;, court appointed
 special advocate (CASA);, relatives; and other interested
 individuals service providers to participate in the administrative
 panel reviews.
 
 D. The local department shall consider all recommendations
 made during the administrative panel review in planning services for the child
 and birth parents or prior custodians and document the recommendations on the
 department approved form. All interested individuals Individuals who
 were invited, including those not in attendance, shall be given a copy of
 the results of the administrative panel review as documented on the department
 approved form.
 
 E. A supervisory review is required every six months for
 youth ages 18 to 21. 
 
 F. When In accordance with § 16.1-242.1 of the Code
 of Virginia, when a case is on appeal for termination of parental rights,
 the juvenile and domestic relations district court retains jurisdiction on all
 matters not on appeal. The circuit court appeal hearing may substitute for a
 review hearing if the circuit court addresses the future status of the child. 
 
 G. An adoption progress report shall be prepared every six
 months after a permanency planning hearing when the goal of adoption has been
 approved by the court. The adoption progress report shall be entered into the
 automated child welfare data system. The child will continue to have annual
 review hearings in addition to adoption progress reports until a final order of
 adoption is issued or the child reaches age 18 years.
 
 H. If a child is in the custody of the local department
 and a preadoptive family has not been identified and approved for the child,
 the child's guardian ad litem or the local board of social services may file a
 petition to restore the previously terminated parental rights of the child's
 parent in accordance with § 16.1-283.2 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 22VAC40-201-120. Funding.
 
 A. The local department is responsible for establishing a
 foster child's eligibility for federal, state, or other funding sources and
 making required payments from such sources. State pool funds shall be used
 Local departments shall seek state pool funds for a child's maintenance
 and service needs when other funding sources are not available.
 
 B. The assessment and provision of services to the child and
 birth parents or prior custodians shall be made without regard to the funding
 source. 
 
 C. Local departments shall reimburse foster or resource
 parents for expenses paid by them on behalf of the foster child when the
 expenses are preauthorized or for expenses paid without preauthorization when
 the local department deems the expenses are appropriate.
 
 D. C. The child's eligibility for Title IV-E
 funding shall be redetermined upon a change in situation and in
 accordance with federal Title IV-E eligibility requirements, the Title IV-E
 Eligibility Manual, October 2005, and the Adoption Manual.
 
 E. The service worker is responsible for providing the
 eligibility worker information required for the annual redetermination of
 Medicaid eligibility and information related to changes in the child's situation.
 
 
 22VAC40-201-130. Closing the foster care case.
 
 A. Foster care cases are closed or transferred to another
 service category under the following circumstances:
 
 1. When the foster care child turns 18 years of age; 
 
 2. When the court releases the child from the local
 department's custody prior to the age of 18 years; 
 
 3. When a voluntary placement agreement temporary
 entrustment or noncustodial agreement has expired, been revoked, or been
 terminated by the court;
 
 4. When the foster care child is committed to DJJ the
 Department of Juvenile Justice; or
 
 5. When the final order of adoption is issued. 
 
 B. When the foster care case is closed for services, the case
 record shall be maintained according to the record retention schedules of
 established by the Library of Virginia. 
 
 C. Any foster care youth who has reached age 18 years
 has the right to request information from his records in accordance with state
 law.
 
 22VAC40-201-140. Other foster care requirements.
 
 A. The director of a local department or his designee
 may grant approval for a child to travel out-of-state and out-of-country. The
 approval must be in writing and maintained in the child's file.
 
 B. Pursuant to § 63.2-908 of the Code of Virginia, a foster or
 resource parent may consent to a marriage or entry into the military if the
 child has been placed with him through a permanent foster care agreement which
 that has been approved by the court.
 
 C. An employee of a local department, including a relative,
 cannot serve as a foster, adoptive, or resource licensed
 child-placing agency parent for a child in the custody of that local
 department. The employee can be a foster, adoptive, or resource parent for
 another local department or licensed child-placing agency or In the
 event it is in the child's best interest that a local employee be the foster
 parent, the child's custody may be transferred to another local department.
 
 D. The child of a foster child remains the responsibility of
 his parent, unless custody has been removed by the court. 
 
 1. The child is not subject to requirements for service
 foster care plans, reviews, or hearings. However, the needs and safety
 of the child shall be considered and documented in the service foster
 care plan for the foster child (parent). 
 
 2. The child is eligible for maintenance payments,
 services, in accordance with 42 USC § 675(4)(B) and Medicaid, and
 child support services based on federal law and in accordance with guidance in
 the Foster Care Manual and the Adoption Manual in accordance with 42 USC
 § 672(h). 
 
 E. When a child in foster care is committed to the Department
 of Juvenile Justice (DJJ), the local department no longer has custody or
 placement and care responsibility for the child. As long as the discharge or
 release plan for the child is to return to the local department prior to
 reaching age 18 years, the local department shall maintain a connection
 with the child in accordance with guidance developed by the
 department. 
 
 F. At least 90 days prior to a youth's release from
 commitment to the Department of Juvenile Justice, the local department shall:
 
 1. Consult with the court services unit concerning the
 youth's return to the locality; and
 
 2. Work collaboratively with the court services unit to
 develop a plan for the youth's successful transition back to the community,
 which will identify the services necessary to facilitate the transition and
 will describe how the services will be provided.
 
 22VAC40-201-150. Adoption Resource Exchange of Virginia.
 
 A. The Adoption Resource Exchange of Virginia (AREVA) is a
 service offered by the department that connects families with children who are
 available for adoption within the Commonwealth of Virginia. AREVA is one tool
 used to help local departments reach the federal goal of permanency within 24
 months specified in § 471 of the Title IV-E of the Social Security Act (42 USC
 § 671) and the requirement of § 16.1-283 F of the Code of Virginia to file
 reports to the court on progress towards adoption. The purpose of AREVA is
 to increase opportunities for children waiting to be adopted by
 providing services to child-placing agencies having custody of these children.
 The services provided by AREVA include [ , but are not limited to ]:
 
 1. Maintaining a registry of children awaiting adoption and a
 registry of approved parents waiting to adopt;
 
 2. Preparing and posting an electronic photo-listing of
 children with special needs awaiting adoption and a photo-listing
 of parents awaiting placement of a child with special needs; 
 
 3. Providing information and referral services for children
 who have special needs to link child-placing agencies with other adoption
 resources; 
 
 4. Providing ongoing targeted and child-specific recruitment
 efforts for waiting children; 
 
 5. Providing consultation and technical assistance on
 child-specific recruitment to child-placing agencies for waiting children; and 
 
 6. Monitoring local departments' compliance with legal
 requirements, guidance, and policy on registering children and parents. 
 
 B. For a child in foster care [ that
 who ] has the foster care plan goal of adoption as specified in
 § 63.2-906 of the Code of Virginia and whose parental rights have been
 terminated, the child-placing agency shall register the child with AREVA within
 60 days of termination of parental rights. 
 
 C. Child-placing agencies shall comply with all of the
 AREVA requirements according to guidance in the Adoption Manual. 
 
 22VAC40-201-160. Adoption assistance. (Repealed.)
 
 A. An adoption assistance agreement shall be executed by
 the child-placing agency for a child who has been determined eligible for
 adoption assistance. Local departments shall use the adoption assistance
 agreement form developed by the department. 
 
 B. For a child to be eligible for adoption assistance he
 must have been determined to be a child with special needs as defined in
 22VAC40-201-10 and meet the following criteria:
 
 1. Be under 18 years of age and meet the requirements set
 forth in § 473 of Title IV-E of the Social Security Act (42 USC § 673); or 
 
 2. Be under 18 years of age and in the placement and care
 of a child-placing agency at the time the petition for adoption is filed and be
 placed by the child-placing agency with the prospective adoptive parents for
 the purpose of adoption, except for those situations in which the child has
 resided for 18 months with the foster or resource parents who file a petition
 for adoption under § 63.2-1229 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 C. The types of adoption assistance for which a child may
 be eligible are: 
 
 1. Title IV-E adoption assistance if the child meets
 federal eligibility requirements. 
 
 2. State adoption assistance when the child's foster care
 expenses were paid from state pool funds or when the child has a conditional
 agreement and payments are not needed at the time of placement into an adoptive
 home but may be needed later and the child's foster care expenses were paid
 from state pool funds. A conditional adoption assistance agreement allows the
 adoptive parents to apply for state adoption assistance after the final
 order of adoption. A conditional  adoption assistance agreement shall not
 require annual certification.
 
 D. Adoption assistance payments shall be negotiated with
 the adoptive parents taking into consideration the needs of the child and the
 circumstances of the family. In considering the family's circumstances, income
 shall not be the sole factor. Family and community resources shall be explored
 to help defray the costs of adoption assistance 
 
 E. Three types of payments may be made on behalf of a
 child who is eligible for adoption assistance: 
 
 1. The adoptive parent shall be reimbursed, upon request,
 for the nonrecurring expenses of adopting a child with special needs.
 
 a. The total amount of reimbursement is based on actual
 costs and shall not exceed $2,000 per child per placement.
 
 b. Payment of nonrecurring expenses may begin as soon as
 the child is placed in the adoptive home and the adoption assistance agreement
 has been signed. 
 
 c. Nonrecurring expenses include: 
 
 (1) Attorney fees directly related to the finalization of
 the adoption;
 
 (2) Transportation and other expenses incurred by adoptive
 parents related to the placement of the child. Expenses may be paid for more
 than one visit; 
 
 (3) Court costs related to filing an adoption petition; 
 
 (4) Reasonable and necessary fees related to adoption
 charged by licensed child-placing agencies; and
 
 (5) Other expenses directly related to the finalization of
 the adoption.  
 
 2. A maintenance payment shall be approved for a child who
 is eligible for adoption assistance unless the adoptive parent indicates or it
 is determined through negotiation that the payment is not needed. In these
 cases a conditional adoption assistance agreement may be entered into. The
 amount of maintenance payments made shall not exceed the foster care
 maintenance payment that would have been paid during the period if the child
 had been in a foster family home. 
 
 a. The amount of the payment shall be negotiated with the
 adoptive parents taking into consideration the needs of the child and
 circumstances of the adoptive parents. 
 
 b. The maintenance payments shall not be reduced below the
 amount specified in the adoption assistance agreement without the concurrence
 of the adoptive parents or a reduction mandated by the appropriation
 act. 
 
 c. Increases in the amount of the maintenance payment shall
 be made when the child is receiving the maximum allowable foster care
 maintenance rate and: 
 
 (1) The child reaches a higher age grouping, as specified
 in guidance for foster care maintenance rates; or
 
 (2) Statewide increases are approved for foster care
 maintenance rates. 
 
 3. A special service payment is used to help meet the
 child's physical, mental, emotional, or nonroutine dental needs. The special
 service payment shall be directly related to the child's special needs. Special
 service payments shall be time limited based on the needs of the child. 
 
 a. Types of expenses that are appropriate to be paid are
 included in the Adoption Manual. 
 
 b. A special service payment may be used for a child
 eligible for Medicaid to supplement expenses not covered by Medicaid. 
 
 c. Payments for special services are negotiated with the
 adoptive parents taking into consideration: 
 
 (1) The special needs of the child; 
 
 (2) Alternative resources available to fully or partially
 defray the cost of meeting the child's special needs; and 
 
 (3) The circumstances of the adoptive family. In
 considering the family's circumstances, income shall not be the sole factor. 
 
 d. The rate of payment shall not exceed the prevailing
 community rate. 
 
 e. The special services adoption assistance agreement shall
 be separate and distinct from the adoption assistance agreement for maintenance
 payments and nonrecurring expenses.
 
 F. When a child is determined eligible for adoption
 assistance prior to the adoption being finalized, the adoption assistance
 agreement: 
 
 1. Shall be executed within 90 days of receipt of the
 application for adoption assistance; 
 
 2. Shall be signed before entry of the final order of
 adoption; 
 
 3. Shall specify the amount of payment and the services to
 be provided, including Medicaid; and
 
 4. Shall remain in effect regardless of the state to which
 the adoptive parents may relocate. 
 
 G. Procedures for the child whose eligibility for adoption
 assistance is established after finalization shall be the same as for the child
 whose eligibility is established before finalization except the application
 shall be submitted within one year of diagnosis of the condition that
 establishes the child as a child with special needs and the child otherwise
 meets the eligibility requirements of subsection B of this section for adoption
 assistance payments. Application for adoption assistance after finalization
 shall be for state adoption assistance. 
 
 H. The adoptive parents shall annually submit an adoption
 assistance affidavit to the local department in accordance with guidance in the
 Adoption Manual. 
 
 I. The local department is responsible for:
 
 1. Payments and services identified in the adoption
 assistance agreement, regardless of where the family resides; and
 
 2. Notifying adoptive parents who are receiving adoption
 assistance that the annual affidavit is due. 
 
 J. Adoption assistance shall be terminated when the child
 reaches the age of 18 unless the child has a physical or mental disability or
 an educational delay resulting from the child's disability which warrants
 continuation of the adoption assistance. If a child has one of these conditions
 the adoption assistance may continue until the child reaches the age of 21. 
 
 K. Adoption assistance shall not be terminated before the
 child's 18th birthday without the consent of the adoptive parents unless: 
 
 1. The child is no longer receiving financial support from
 the adoptive parents; or 
 
 2. The adoptive parents are no longer legally responsible
 for the child. 
 
 L. Child-placing agencies are responsible for informing
 adoptive parents in writing that they have the right to appeal decisions
 relating to the child's eligibility for adoption assistance and decisions
 relating to payments and services to be provided within 30 days of receiving
 written notice of such decisions. Applicants for adoption assistance shall have
 the right to appeal adoption assistance decisions related to:
 
 1. Failure of the child-placing agency to provide full
 factual information known by the child-placing agency regarding the child prior
 to adoption finalization; 
 
 2. Failure of the child-placing agency to inform the
 adoptive parents of the child's eligibility for adoption assistance; and
 
 3. Decisions made by the child-placing agency related to
 the child's eligibility for adoption assistance, adoption assistance payments,
 services, and changing or terminating adoption assistance. 
 
 22VAC40-201-161. Adoption assistance.
 
 A. The purpose of adoption assistance is to facilitate
 adoptive placements and ensure permanency for children with special needs. 
 
 B. For a child to be eligible for adoption assistance he
 must have been determined to be a child with special needs in accordance with
 §§ 63.2-1300 and 63.2-1301 of the Code of Virginia and meet the following
 criteria:
 
 1. Be younger than 18 years of age and meet the
 requirements set forth in § 473 of Title IV-E of the Social Security Act (42
 USC § 673); or 
 
 2. Be younger than 18 years of age and in the placement and
 care of a child-placing agency at the time the petition for adoption is filed
 and be placed by the child-placing agency with the prospective adoptive parents
 for the purpose of adoption, except for those situations in which the foster
 parents have filed a petition for adoption under § 63.2-1229 of the Code
 of Virginia.
 
 C. Adoption assistance may include the following payments
 or services where appropriate: 
 
 1. Title IV-E maintenance payments if the child meets
 federal eligibility requirements. 
 
 2. State-funded maintenance payments when the local
 department determines that (i) the child does not meet the requirements in §
 473 of Title IV-E of the Social Security Act (42 USC § 673) [ ;
 and ] (ii) the child is a child with special needs [ ;
 (iii) the child's foster care expenses were paid from state pool funds or Title
 IV-E; and (iv) an adoption assistance payment is necessary to facilitate an
 adoption pursuant to § 63.2-1301 B of the Code of Virginia ].
 
 3. [ A state-funded State-funded ]
 special service [ payment is payments ] used
 to help meet the child's physical, mental, emotional, or dental needs
 [ . Special service payments (i) ] when the
 child is in the custody of the local board or in the custody of a licensed
 child-placing agency and placed for adoption, [ (ii) ] when
 the child meets the criteria of a child with special needs set out in §
 63.2-1300 of the Code of Virginia, and [ (iii) ] when
 the adoptive parents are capable of providing permanent family relationships
 needed by the child in all respects except financial.
 
 4. Nonrecurring expense payments when an adoption
 assistance agreement is entered into prior to [ or at the time of ]
 the finalization of the adoption. [ Claims for nonrecurring
 expense payments must be filed within two years of the date of the final decree
 of adoption. ] 
 
 D. For the child who meets the requirements in § 473
 of Title IV-E of the Social Security Act (42 USC § 673) or who is receiving
 state-funded maintenance payments and has a special medical need as specified
 in § 32.1-325 of the Code of Virginia and in the Virginia DSS Medicaid
 Eligibility manual, M0310.102 2b, the adoption assistance agreement shall
 include a statement indicating the child's Medicaid eligibility status. 
 
 E. Additional criteria for the payments and services
 specified in subsection C of this section are as follows:
 
 1. A maintenance payment [ , whether under
 Title IV-E or state funded, ] shall be approved for a child who is
 eligible for adoption assistance unless the adoptive parent indicates, or it is
 determined through negotiation, that the payment is not needed. [ The
 amount of maintenance payments made shall not exceed the foster care
 maintenance payment that would have been paid during the period if the child
 had been in a foster family home. ] 
 
 a. The amount of [ the payment
 all payments ] shall be negotiated by a representative of the
 department with the adoptive parents, taking into consideration the needs of
 the child and circumstances of the adoptive parents. 
 
 b. [ The amount of maintenance payments made
 shall not exceed the foster care maintenance payment that would have been paid
 during the period if the child had been in a foster family home. 
 
 c. ] The maintenance payments shall not be
 reduced below the amount specified in the adoption assistance agreement without
 the concurrence of the adoptive parents or a [ statewide ]
 reduction [ mandated by the appropriation act ].
 
 
 [ c. Increases in the amount of the maintenance
 payment shall be made when the child is receiving the maximum allowable foster
 care maintenance rate d. The maintenance payment specified in the
 adoption assistance agreement may only be increased if the child is already
 receiving the maximum amount allowed ] and (i) the child reaches
 [ a higher age grouping, as specified in guidance for foster care
 maintenance rates an age at which the foster care maintenance rate
 would increase ] or (ii) statewide increases are approved for
 foster care maintenance rates. 
 
 [ e. The adoptive parents shall be required under the
 adoption assistance agreement to keep the local department informed of the
 circumstances that would make them ineligible for a maintenance payment or
 eligible for a different amount of maintenance payment than that specified in
 the adoption assistance agreement.
 
 f. Maintenance payments shall cease being made to the
 adoptive parents for the child who has not yet reached the age of 18 years if
 (i) the adoptive parents are no longer legally responsible for the support of
 the child or (ii) the child is no longer receiving any support from the
 adoptive parents. ] 
 
 2. The special service payment shall be directly related to
 the child's special needs listed on the adoption assistance agreement. Special
 service payments shall be time limited based on the needs of the child and can
 be modified beyond the original provision of the agreement when the local
 department and the adoptive parents agree to the modification in a signed and
 dated addendum. Subsection K of this section addresses addendums to an existing
 agreement. 
 
 [ a. Types of payments that are appropriate are
 included in the Chapter F, Section 2 of the VDSS Child and Family Services
 Manual. 
 
 b. a. ] A special service
 payment may be used for a child eligible for Medicaid to supplement payments
 not covered by Medicaid. 
 
 [ c. b. ] Payments for
 special services are negotiated by a representative of the department with the
 adoptive parents, taking into consideration: 
 
 (1) The special needs of the child; 
 
 (2) Alternative resources available to fully or partially
 defray the cost of meeting the child's special needs; and 
 
 (3) The circumstances of the adoptive family [ .
 In considering the family's circumstances, income shall not be the sole factor,
 including the family's income ]. 
 
 [ d. c. ] The rate of
 payment shall not exceed the prevailing [ community ]
 rate [ for the provision of such special services within the
 child's community ]. 
 
 [ e. d. ] The special
 services adoption assistance payments shall be separate and distinct from the
 maintenance payments and nonrecurring expenses on the adoption assistance form.
 
 3. The adoptive parent shall be reimbursed, upon request,
 for the nonrecurring expenses of adopting a child with special needs.
 
 a. The total amount of reimbursement [ is
 shall be ] based on actual costs and shall not exceed $2,000 per
 child per placement [ or an amount established by federal law ].
 
 b. Payment of nonrecurring expenses may begin as soon as
 the child is placed in the adoptive home and the adoption assistance agreement
 has been signed.
 
 c. Nonrecurring expenses include those items set out in §
 63.2-1301 D of the Code of Virginia.
 
 4. When the adoptive parents decline a specific payment or
 agree to a reduced payment amount and their family circumstances or the child's
 needs change, the adoptive parents may request a change to the agreement and an
 addendum to the adoption assistance agreement can be negotiated. The
 requirements for addendums to an existing adoption assistance agreement are in subsection
 K of this section.
 
 F. All adoption assistance payments, services, and
 agreements shall be negotiated with the adoptive parents by a representative of
 the department, taking into consideration the needs of the child, the
 circumstances of the family, and the limitations specified in subsections B, C,
 and E of this section. Documentation supporting the requests for payments and
 services shall be provided by the adoptive parents and for consideration in the
 negotiation of the adoption assistance agreement. Income shall not be the sole
 factor in considering the family's circumstances during the negotiations.
 Available family and community resources shall be explored as an alternative or
 supplement to the adoption assistance payment.
 
 G. An adoption assistance agreement shall be [ executed
 entered into ] by the local board [ and the adoptive
 parents ] or a child who has been determined eligible for adoption
 assistance [ and when an adoption assistance agreement is
 necessary to facilitate the adoption ]. Local departments shall
 use the adoption assistance agreement form developed by the department.
 [ The agreement shall be entered into by the local board and the
 adoptive parents, or in In ] cases in which the child is
 in the custody of a licensed child-placing agency, the agreement shall be
 entered into by the local board, the licensed child-placing agency, and the
 adoptive parents. [ All adoption assistance agreements shall be
 negotiated by a representative of the department. ]
 
 H. When a child is determined [ to be ]
 eligible for adoption assistance prior to the adoption being finalized, the
 adoption assistance agreement shall: 
 
 [ 1. Be executed within 90 days of receipt of the
 application for adoption assistance;
 
 2. 1. ] Be signed [ before
 prior to or at the time of ] entry of the final order of adoption; 
 
 [ 3. 2. ] Specify the
 payment types, monthly amounts, special services to be provided; and
 
 [ 4. 3. ] Remain in effect
 [ and governed by the laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia ] regardless
 of the state to which the adoptive parents may relocate. 
 
 I. Application for adoption assistance after finalization
 of the adoption shall be for [ state adoption assistance
 state-funded maintenance payments ] as set out in § 63.2-1301 B of
 the Code of Virginia. The application for adoption assistance shall be
 submitted within one year of diagnosis of the condition that establishes the
 child as a child with special needs.
 
 J. The adoptive parents shall annually submit a signed
 adoption assistance affidavit to the local department by the end of the month
 in which the adoption assistance agreement was effective [ pursuant
 to § 63.2-1302 C of the Code of Virginia ]. 
 
 K. Adoption assistance agreements may be modified beyond
 the original provisions of the agreement to the extent provided by law when the
 local department and the adoptive parents agree in writing to [ the
 extension, ] new [ or renewed ] special
 services or provisions in an addendum signed and dated by the local department
 and the adoptive parents. The local departments shall use the addendum form
 provided by the department and the changes to the agreement shall be negotiated
 by a representative of the department. [ The provisions of the
 special services and payments specified on the addendum shall still meet the
 requirements specified in subsections C and D of this section. ] 
 
 L. The local department is responsible for:
 
 1. Maintaining payments and services identified in the
 adoption assistance agreement and any addendum in effect, regardless of where
 the family resides; 
 
 2. Notifying adoptive parents who are receiving adoption
 assistance that the annual affidavit is due;
 
 3. Discussing with the adoptive parents the child's unique
 needs and their ability to manage the needs of the child;
 
 4. Assisting the adoptive parents in coordinating services
 to meet the child's special needs related to adoption assistance upon request;
 
 5. Providing services to prevent disruption [ of
 the placement ] and strengthen family well-being, when
 requested by the adoptive parents; and
 
 6. Providing training, when requested, to the adoptive
 parents as part of an already established local department curriculum. If the
 local department does not provide the necessary training when requested, the
 local department shall identify potential training sources and assist the
 adoptive parent in accessing the training.
 
 M. Adoption assistance shall be terminated when the child
 reaches the age of 18 years unless the child has a physical or mental
 disability or an educational delay resulting from the child's disability that
 warrants continuation of the adoption assistance. If a child has a physical or
 mental disability that warrants continuation of the adoption assistance, the
 adoption assistance payments may continue until the child reaches the age of 21
 years if the local department and adoptive parents sign an addendum to the
 agreement to extend the agreement to the specified age. If the sole reason for
 continuing the agreement beyond the age of 18 years is educational delay, then state-funded
 adoption assistance may continue until the youth graduates from high school or
 until the youth's 21st birthday, whichever is earlier, if the local department
 and the adoptive parents sign an addendum to the agreement to extend the
 agreement to the end of the month of high school graduation or until the
 youth's 21st birthday, whichever is earlier. 
 
 N. Adoption assistance shall not be terminated before the
 child's 18th birthday without the consent of the adoptive parents unless: 
 
 1. The child is no longer receiving [ financial ]
 support from the adoptive parents; or 
 
 2. The adoptive parents are no longer legally responsible
 for the support of the child. 
 
 O. Local boards of social services are responsible for
 informing adoptive parents in writing of their right to appeal decisions
 relating to the child's eligibility for adoption assistance and decisions
 relating to payments and services to be provided within 30 days of receiving
 written notice of such decisions. In accordance with § 63.2-1304 of the Code of
 Virginia applicants for, and recipients of, adoption assistance shall have the
 right to appeal adoption assistance decisions by a local board or licensed
 child-placing agency in granting, denying, changing, or discontinuing adoption
 assistance.
 
 22VAC40-201-170. [ Child placing Child-placing ]
 agency's responsibilities for consent in non-agency nonagency
 adoptive placements.
 
 A. At the request of the juvenile court, the child-placing
 agency shall:
 
 1. Conduct a home study of the prospective adoptive home that
 shall include the elements in §§ 63.2-1231 and 63.2-1205.1 of the Code of
 Virginia and department guidance in Volume VII, Section III, Chapter D -
 Adoption/Non-Agency Placement and Other Court Services of the Service Program
 Manual of the Virginia Department of Social Services, October 2009 taking
 into consideration that the manner in which a family receives a child for
 adoption shall have no bearing on how the family is to be assessed for purposes
 of adoptive placement; and
 
 2. Provide the court with a written report of the home study. 
 
 B. The child-placing agency shall make a recommendation to
 the court regarding the suitability of the individual to adopt. 
 
 C. If As provided in §§ 63.2-1218 and 63.2-1219 of
 the Code of Virginia, if the child-placing agency suspects an exchange of
 property, money, services, or any other thing of value has occurred in
 violation of law in the placement or adoption of the child, it shall report
 such findings to the commissioner for investigation. The following
 exceptions apply: 
 
 1. Reasonable and customary services provided by a licensed
 or duly authorized child-placing agency, and fees paid for such services; 
 
 2. Payment or reimbursement for medical expenses directly
 related to the birth mother's pregnancy and hospitalization for the birth of
 the child who is the subject of the adoption proceedings and for expenses
 incurred for medical care for the child; 
 
 3. Payment or reimbursement to birth parents for
 transportation necessary to execute consent to the adoption; 
 
 4. Usual and customary fees for legal services in adoption
 proceedings; and 
 
 5. Payment or reimbursement of reasonable expenses incurred
 by the adoptive parents for transportation in inter-country placements and as
 necessary for compliance with state and federal law in such placements. 
 
 22VAC40-201-200. Training.
 
 A. Local department foster care and adoption service
 workers and supervisory staff shall attend and complete initial in-service
 training in accordance with guidance in the Foster Care Manual and the
 Adoption Manual §§ 63.2-913 and 63.2-1200.1 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 B. Local department foster care and adoption workers and
 supervisory staff shall complete an individual training needs assessment using
 a method developed by the department.
 
 C. B. Local department foster care and
 adoption service workers and supervisory staff shall attend and
 complete annual in-service training in accordance with guidance developed by
 the department.
 
 
 
 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 (22VAC40-201)
 
 Virginia
 Application for Adoption Assistance, 032-04-0093-00-eng (eff. 3/2012)
 
 Virginia
 Adoption Assistance Agreement, 032-04-0090-00-eng (eff. 7/2014)
 
 Addendum
 to Adoption Assistance Agreement, 032-04-0086-00-eng (eff. 3/2012)
 
 Adoptee
 Application for Disclosure (and Guidelines Regarding the Application),
 032-02-0018-03-eng (eff. 8/2013)
 
 DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
 
 Child & Family Services Manual, Chapter E - Foster
 Care, July 2011, Virginia Department of Social Services
 
 Service Program Manual, Volume VII, Section III, Chapter C
 - Adoption/Agency Placement, October 2009/March 2010, Virginia Department of
 Social Services
 
 Service Program Manual, Volume VII, Section III, Chapter D
 - Adoption/Agency Placement, October 2009, Virginia Department of Social
 Services
 
 Title IV-E Eligibility Manual (E. Foster Care), January
 2012, Virginia Department of Social Services 
 
 Medicaid
 Eligibility Manual, M0310, Non-IV-E Adoption Assistance, Virginia Department of
 Social Services
 
 Virginia
 EPSDT Periodicity Chart, Virginia Department of Medical Assistance Services
 
 Periodicity
 and Anticipatory Guidance Recommendations, AAPD/ADA/AAP Guidelines, Dental
 Health Guidelines - Ages 0 - 18 Years, Recommendations for Preventive
 Pediatric Dental Care (AAPD Reference Manual 2002-2003)
 
 [ Child and Family Services Manual, Chapter E
 Foster Care, Section 17.1.3 Rates, July 2014, Virginia Department of Social
 Services
 
 Child and Family Services Manual, Chapter F Adoption,
 July 2014, Virginia Department of Social Services ] 
 
 VA.R. Doc. No. R13-3751; Filed November 14, 2016, 9:18 a.m. 
TITLE 23. TAXATION
DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION
Fast-Track Regulation
 
 Title of Regulation: 23VAC10-300. Estate Tax (repealing 23VAC10-300-20 through 23VAC10-300-90).
 
 
 Statutory Authority: § 58.1-203 of the Code of Virginia.
 
 Public Hearing Information: No public hearings are
 scheduled. 
 
 Public Comment Deadline: February 10, 2017.
 
 Effective Date: February 27, 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.
 
 Purpose: As a result of a periodic review of the
 Virginia Estate Tax regulation (23VAC10-300) initiated by the Department of
 Taxation on May 30, 2016, and completed June 20, 2016, the Department of
 Taxation has determined that the regulation should be repealed because it
 provides no guidance beyond the plain meaning of the statutes to which it
 applies, and it 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 Virginia estate tax.
 
 Rationale for Using Fast-Track Rulemaking Process: The
 department is using the fast-track rulemaking process because the repeal of the
 Virginia Estate Tax regulation (23VAC10-300) is expected to be noncontroversial
 because the regulation provides no guidance beyond the plain meaning of the
 statutes to which it applies. No comments were received during the periodic
 review of the regulation.
 
 Substance: The action repeals the Virginia Estate Tax
 regulation (23VAC10-300). Since 1980 Virginia imposed a "pick-up"
 estate tax that was equal to the maximum amount of the federal credit for state
 death taxes as it existed on January 1, 1978. Congress eliminated the federal
 credit for state death taxes in 2005, but the freeze to 1978 preserved the
 revenue from the Virginia estate tax. In 2006 the General Assembly struck the
 language tying the tax to the 1978 amount of the federal credit, which
 effectively repealed the Virginia estate tax; see Chapters 4 and 5 of the 2006
 Acts of Assembly, Special Session I. Because the Virginia Estate Tax (§ 58.1-900
 et seq., of the Code of Virginia) no longer imposes a tax on the estates of
 decedents there is no longer a need for the Virginia Estate Tax regulation.
 Repeal of the regulation will have no impact on the administration of the
 Virginia estate tax.
 
 Issues: As the law no longer imposes a Virginia estate
 tax, the regulation pursuant to that law is unnecessary. Accordingly, its
 repeal poses no disadvantages to the public or the Commonwealth. 
 
 Small Business Impact Review Report of Findings: 
 This 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 Estate Tax
 regulation.
 
 Result of Analysis. The benefits likely exceed the costs for
 all proposed changes.
 
 Estimated Economic Impact. Chapters 4 and 5 of the 2006 Special
 Session Acts of Assembly1 effectively eliminated the Commonwealth's
 estate tax for estates of persons who died on or after July 1, 2007. Thus the
 Estate Tax regulation is obsolete. The proposed repeal of the regulation would
 have no impact on applicable rules and requirements, but nonetheless would be
 beneficial in that it would eliminate the possibility that readers of the
 regulation would be misled concerning the law in effect.
 
 Businesses and Entities Affected. Since Virginia's estate tax
 was effectively repealed via legislation in 2006,2 repealing this
 regulation does not affect any businesses or entities beyond potential readers
 of the regulation who may have been misled concerning the law in effect.
 
 Localities Particularly Affected. The proposed repeal of the
 regulation does not disproportionately affect particular 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
 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 affect businesses.
 
 Localities. The proposed repeal of the regulation does not
 adversely affect localities.
 
 Other Entities. The proposed repeal of the regulation does not
 adversely affect other entities. 
 
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 1 See http://leg1.state.va.us/cgi-bin/legp504.exe?062+ful+CHAP0004 and http://leg1.state.va.us/cgi-bin/legp504.exe?062+ful+CHAP0005 
 
 2 Ibid
 
 Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The
 Department of Taxation agrees with the Department of Planning and Budget's
 economic impact analysis.
 
 Summary:
 
 Pursuant to Chapters 4 and 5 of the 2006 Acts of Assembly,
 Special Session I, and a periodic review of the regulation, completed June 20,
 2016, the action repeals the Virginia Estate Tax regulation (23VAC10-300).
 Repeal of the regulation does not reflect any change in current tax policy and
 has no impact on the administration of the Virginia estate tax. 
 
 VA.R. Doc. No. R17-4871; Filed November 21, 2016, 1:22 p.m.