All Roll Calls
Yes: 237 • No: 0
Sponsored By: Danica A. Roem (Democratic)
Became Law
Voluntary contributions during electronic Department of Motor Vehicles transactions. Requires the Department of Motor Vehicles to provide a method by which an individual conducting certain electronic Department transactions may make a voluntary contribution to the Virginia Highway Safety Improvement Program. Under current law, the Department is only required to provide a method by which voluntary contributions may be made to the Virginia Donor Registry and Public Awareness Fund.
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8 provisions identified: 3 benefits, 1 costs, 4 mixed.
Virginia runs the Highway Safety Improvement Program to cut deaths and severe injuries on all roads. It uses set‑aside funds and donations for eligible safety projects. Beginning in fiscal year 2024, after administration costs, at least 54% goes to fixing dangerous locations and at least 29% to behavior‑based safety work. The Board keeps a five‑year plan and picks projects that save the most lives per dollar.
You can mark organ, tissue, and eye donor consent when you apply for a license or ID. The DMV notes your decision on your card and in your record, and it stays until you revoke it. That note is legally enough to allow donation after death. Minors may register as donors as allowed by state law. The DMV mails a donor-info brochure with each driver’s license renewal notice. DMV and staff are immune from liability for donor notations unless they act with gross negligence or willful misconduct.
You can choose to add your blood type to your driver’s license. The DMV also keeps it in your record for emergency medical use only. You can remove it by writing to the DMV and paying any required fee.
When you renew a license, ID, or vehicle registration online, the DMV offers a voluntary donation. You can give to the Virginia Donor Registry or to the Virginia Highway Safety Improvement Program. The DMV must say the gift is voluntary and send the money to the right state partner. You pay only if you choose to donate.
Residents may get an identification privilege card if they can prove identity and residency and the DMV confirms Virginia-source income or dependent status on a Virginia tax return in the past 12 months. You cannot hold another DMV credential at the same time. The card costs $25; homeless youth do not pay. The original expires on your fourth birthday after issue; renewals last four years, and cards for under-15s end at age 16. No tax proof is needed for duplicates or renewals. The DMV treats your records as private, sharing only with you, your parent/guardian or representative, by court order, or with certain government entities for official use.
You can choose to add a note on your vehicle registration that you or a regular rider has a communication‑impairing disability. The DMV may require you to confirm you have the rider’s consent. You can remove the indicator by writing to the DMV. Criminal justice agencies may see only whether the indicator exists, not any health details.
If you are at least 15 and have a sincere religious objection to photos, you can get a special ID without a photo. You must use the DMV form, show identity, legal presence, residency, and SSN or non-work status, and may need IRS Form 4029. You cannot already hold a license or special ID. The card costs $2 per year, with a $10 minimum; homeless youth pay no fee. It can last up to eight years and expires on your birthday; the DMV may extend it up to 90 days if processing is delayed. The DMV keeps application information confidential, with limited exceptions for people you authorize and law enforcement.
Your license shows a DMV number, not your Social Security number. It shows your photo, full name, birth date, and a Virginia address. You may choose which Virginia address prints on the card. The DMV keeps your Virginia residence address on file, and you must tell them when it changes.
Danica A. Roem
Democratic • Senate
There are no cosponsors for this bill.
All Roll Calls
Yes: 237 • No: 0
House vote • 3/3/2026
Passed House Block Vote
Yes: 97 • No: 0
House vote • 2/26/2026
Reported from Transportation
Yes: 21 • No: 0
House vote • 2/24/2026
Subcommittee recommends reporting
Yes: 10 • No: 0
Senate vote • 2/6/2026
Read third time and passed Senate Block Vote
Yes: 40 • No: 0
Senate vote • 2/5/2026
Transportation Amendment agreed to
Yes: 0 • No: 0
Senate vote • 2/4/2026
Passed by for the day Block Vote (Voice Vote)
Yes: 0 • No: 0
Senate vote • 2/4/2026
Constitutional reading dispensed Block Vote (on 1st reading)
Yes: 40 • No: 0
Senate vote • 2/3/2026
Reported from Finance and Appropriations
Yes: 15 • No: 0
Senate vote • 1/15/2026
Reported from Transportation with amendment and rereferred to Finance and Appropriations
Yes: 14 • No: 0
Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP0328)
Approved by Governor-Chapter 328 (effective 7/1/2026)
Governor's Action Deadline 11:59 p.m., April 13, 2026
Enrolled Bill communicated to Governor on March 10, 2026
Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (SB41)
Bill text as passed Senate and House (SB41ER)
Enrolled
Signed by President
Signed by Speaker
Passed House Block Vote (97-Y 0-N 0-A)
Read third time
Read second time
Reported from Transportation (21-Y 0-N)
Subcommittee recommends reporting (10-Y 0-N)
Assigned HTRAN sub: Department of Motor Vehicles
Referred to Committee on Transportation
Read first time
Placed on Calendar
Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (SB41)
Read third time and passed Senate Block Vote (40-Y 0-N 0-A)
Transportation Amendment agreed to
Engrossed by Senate as amended Block Vote (Voice Vote)
Read second time
Passed by for the day Block Vote (Voice Vote)
Constitutional reading dispensed Block Vote (on 1st reading) (40-Y 0-N 0-A)
Chaptered
4/6/2026
Enrolled
3/9/2026
Engrossed
2/5/2026
Amendment
1/20/2026
Amendment
1/14/2026
Introduced
11/22/2025
SB767 — Motor vehicles; glass repair and replacement, emissions inspections, penalties, repeals.
Motor vehicle glass repair and replacement; emissions inspection; penalties. Establishes various notice requirements for motor vehicle glass repair shops, defined in the bill, and provides that a violation of such requirements is a prohibited practice under the Virginia Consumer Protection Act. The bill permits a motor vehicle to qualify for an emissions inspection waiver if such vehicle has failed an inspection and the vehicle's onboard diagnostic system is in a not-ready condition to be tested when presented for reinspection. This bill is identical to HB 312.
SB803 — Virginia Fair Housing Law; regulations defining terms related to unlawful conduct.
Virginia Fair Housing Law; unlawful conduct. Directs the Fair Housing Board to promulgate regulations defining "quid pro quo harassment," "hostile environment harassment," and other terms related to unlawful conduct under the Virginia Fair Housing Law. The bill directs the Fair Housing Board to adopt emergency regulations to implement the provisions of the bill.
SB731 — Private companies providing public transportation services; employee protections.
Private companies providing public transportation services; employee protections; report. Requires the governing body of any county or city that contracts with a private company to provide transportation services to (i) require such company to provide any employee of such company providing such services compensation and benefits that are, at a minimum, equivalent to the compensation and benefits provided to a public employee, as defined in the bill, with a position requiring equivalent qualifications and years of service; (ii) provide transportation services through such company's own employees; and (iii) if such county or city subsequently elects to provide its own system of public transportation, adopt an ordinance or resolution providing for collective bargaining and ensure all employees of such private company are offered employment with such subsequent public transportation system without loss of compensation or benefits. The bill clarifies that the bill only applies to actions occurring on or after the effective date and excludes any action taken, contract signed, liability incurred, or right accrued prior to July 1, 2026, from the requirements. Finally, the bill directs the Director of the Department of Rail and Public Transportation to convene a work group to develop recommendations on how to implement the provisions of the bill and requires the work group to report its findings and recommendations to the Chairs of the House Committee on Labor and Commerce and Senate Committee on Local Government by November 1, 2026. This bill is identical to HB 547.
SB620 — Va. ABC Authority; permitting of retail tobacco product retailers, etc.
Virginia Alcoholic Beverage Control Authority; permitting of retail tobacco product retailers; purchase, possession, and sale of retail tobacco products; penalties; report. Transitions and provides a more comprehensive structure for the current licensing and enforcement responsibilities related to liquid nicotine and retail tobacco products from the Department of Taxation to a permitting system administered by the Virginia Alcoholic Beverage Control Authority. The bill requires the Board of Directors of the Virginia Alcoholic Beverage and Control Authority to conduct an unannounced buyer operation at least once every 24 months to verify that a permittee, defined in the bill, is not selling retail tobacco products to persons under 21 years of age. Portions of the bill have a delayed effective date of October 1, 2026. This bill is identical to HB 308.
SB666 — Residential land development and construction; fee transparency, local housing development.
Department of Housing and Community Development; housing development database. Requires the Department of Housing and Community Development to collect from each locality and make available to the public, localities, state agencies, and other state and regional public entities in a centralized, machine-readable, screen reader compatible database various data for each new and existing housing development in each locality in the Commonwealth, including data related to the number of housing development plans submitted and approved by the locality and the average approval timeline for housing development plans.
SB599 — Va. Opioid Use Red. & Jail-Based Substance Use Disorder Trtmt. and Transition Fund; grant procedure.
Virginia Opioid Use Reduction and Jail-Based Substance Use Disorder Treatment and Transition Fund; grant procedures. Requires the grant procedure to govern funds awarded to local and regional jails for the planning or operation of substance use disorder treatment services and transition services for persons with substance use disorder who are incarcerated in local and regional jails to include requirements that (i) any grant awarded shall be made for up to three years and (ii) an applicant for a grant submit a plan demonstrating how such applicant will become independently financially viable within the time period for which the grant is awarded. This bill is a recommendation of the Joint Commission on Health Care and is identical to HB 455.