VirginiaSB7012026 Regular SessionSenateWALLET

Virginia Lottery; disclosure of identity of winners.

Sponsored By: Adam P. Ebbin (Democratic)

Became Law

Summary

Virginia Lottery; disclosure of identity of winners. Prohibits the Virginia Lottery (the Department) from disclosing information about any individual winner and exempts such information from disclosure under the Virginia Freedom of Information Act unless the winner consents to such disclosure. Under current law, the Department is prohibited from disclosing information about any individual winner whose prize exceeds $1 million unless the winner consents to such disclosure.

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Bill Overview

Analyzed Economic Effects

21 provisions identified: 21 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.

Privacy for housing and disability loans

Personal information for people who apply for or receive affordable housing help or loans is kept private. This includes rental‑assistance waiting lists and affordable unit applications. Financial, medical, and rehab details for Assistive Technology Loan Fund applicants and recipients are also private. You can still access your own records.

Privacy for minors and abuse victims

Library records that tie a patron to specific materials are private, and records that identify any patron under 18 are protected. Parents or guardians can still see their child’s records. State and local parks and workforce agencies keep identifying information about minors private; parents get access unless a court limited their rights, and emancipated minors can allow or limit access in writing. Case‑team discussions about sexual assault, child abuse or neglect, adult abuse, or human trafficking are private; findings may be shared only as statistics that do not identify people.

Emergency alerts and volunteer info privacy

The Statewide Alert Network keeps contact details and schedules private when sharing them would harm network or participant security. Names, addresses, emails, phone or pager numbers, and operating schedules of citizen emergency team volunteers are also kept private. These rules protect emergency communications and the people who help run them.

Environmental enforcement and site privacy

Environmental agencies can keep active federal enforcement strategies and proposed sanctions private until a proposed sanction is presented to the director. Inspection reports, notices of violation, and contamination documents can still be shared. Localities may keep hazardous‑waste siting talks private if release would hurt their negotiating position. Agencies can also withhold exact locations of rare species, caves, and historic sites; landowners can request information about their own land.

State tax returns stay confidential

Filed state income, business, estate, and property tax returns and related confidential tax records are not open to the public. The law protects these records from routine FOIA disclosure. Your tax filings stay private.

Utility customer names and addresses private

For public utilities tied to a local government, your name and service address can be kept private. The law does not hide your usage amounts or what you were charged or paid. It protects household location privacy while keeping billing totals visible.

Retirement talks private, holdings disclosed

Virginia’s public retirement systems can keep confidential analyses and pre‑decision talks about non‑exchange‑traded investments and manager choices private when disclosure would harm value. Private firms may request trade‑secret protection for submitted materials with a written request. The identity and amount of each investment, its present value, and performance by asset class still must be disclosed.

Treasury audits, accounts, and investor privacy

Records used to plan and carry out unclaimed‑property examinations are kept private. Information needed to open Local Government Investment Pool accounts is not public. Lists of registered owners of local‑government bonds can be withheld. These measures protect audit methods, account details, and investor identities.

Economic development and innovation plans private

The economic development authority can keep parts of its strategic and marketing plans private if release would reveal target companies or harm the Commonwealth’s financial interest. The executive summaries must remain public. The innovation authority can also keep internal investment strategies and private‑company trade secrets private when disclosure would harm financial interests.

Privacy for lottery players and winners

The Virginia Lottery keeps personal data from the voluntary exclusion program and from people who report prohibited conduct private. If you win $1,000,000 or more, the Lottery does not release your name, hometown, or prize amount unless you give written consent, unless a legal exception applies. Winners of less than $1,000,000 still have their name, hometown, and amount shared.

Toll road driver data stays private

Toll facility records that identify a person, vehicle, trip, or payment details are not public. This includes vehicle IDs, photos, Social Security or license ID numbers, credit or bank data, home addresses, phone numbers, and the date or time you used a toll. It protects motorists’ privacy and reduces identity‑theft risk.

VCU Health business and customer privacy

VCU Health can keep nonpublic staff records, confidential contract costs, third‑party financials, customer account details, and strategic or marketing plans private. It also protects proprietary work and unreleased employee research. This applies only when the material is not already public, published, copyrighted, or patented.

Veterans donor and trust info privacy

Donors to the Veterans Services Foundation have their contact and bank data kept private. The foundation may still share the donation amount, date, and purpose, and your name unless you asked to be anonymous. Personal information in Veterans Care Center Resident Trust Funds is private, and the person it concerns can access it.

Lottery retailer and game data privacy

Lottery records that show a retailer's SSN, tax IDs, home contact info, bank numbers, or non‑lottery financials stay private. The Lottery may keep game designs, odds, prize plans, and related materials secret until the first day that game goes on sale. On launch day for that game, those materials become public.

Corrections department confidential records protected

Certain Department of Corrections records that were confidential under prior law remain private under current public‑records rules. The protections continue without change to public access for those records.

Executive and legislative working papers private

Draft papers and correspondence for the Governor, Attorney General, legislators, certain local executives, and university presidents can be kept private. This does not hide information already open to inspection and does not allow hiding resumes or applications for certain Governor appointments. Communications a legislator gives to special committees that review disclosure statements are also private.

Judicial oversight and evaluations stay private

Records the Judicial Inquiry and Review Commission treats as confidential remain private. Individual judicial performance evaluation records made confidential by law also remain private.

Prosecutor training materials kept private

Training materials used for prosecutors or law‑enforcement are private when they are not public elsewhere and would reveal confidential investigative or prosecutorial strategies, methods, or procedures. This helps protect public safety methods from exposure.

Sensitive aviation operations info stays private

When another state entity gives aircraft‑operation information to the Department of Aviation, it can remain protected if it was not disclosable at the source. The providing entity must mark the protected parts and cite the legal basis.

Pilot test results and therapy board privacy

For the Board for Branch Pilots, drug or chemical test records stay private if the pilot tested negative or was not disciplined. The Physical Therapy Compact Commission can keep closed‑session discussions private for the legal purposes listed in law. These rules protect regulated professionals’ privacy and board deliberations.

VDOT bid estimates and tools private

VDOT can withhold internal contract cost estimates and its bid‑analysis program records from public release. This protects confidential procurement strategies and competitive information during contracting.

Sponsors & Cosponsors

Sponsor

  • Adam P. Ebbin

    Democratic • Senate

Cosponsors

There are no cosponsors for this bill.

Roll Call Votes

All Roll Calls

Yes: 187 • No: 18

House vote 2/27/2026

Passed House

Yes: 87 • No: 6 • Other: 1

House vote 2/24/2026

Reported from General Laws

Yes: 19 • No: 1

Senate vote 2/3/2026

Read third time and passed Senate

Yes: 30 • No: 9

Senate vote 2/2/2026

Engrossed by Senate (Voice Vote)

Yes: 0 • No: 0

Senate vote 1/30/2026

Passed by for the day Block Vote (Voice Vote)

Yes: 0 • No: 0

Senate vote 1/30/2026

Constitutional reading dispensed Block Vote (on 1st reading)

Yes: 38 • No: 0

Senate vote 1/28/2026

Reported from General Laws and Technology

Yes: 13 • No: 2

Actions Timeline

  1. Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP0520)

    4/8/2026Governor
  2. Approved by Governor-Chapter 520 (effective 7/1/2026)

    4/8/2026Governor
  3. Governor's Action Deadline 11:59 p.m., April 13, 2026

    3/10/2026Governor
  4. Enrolled Bill communicated to Governor on March 10, 2026

    3/10/2026Senate
  5. Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (SB701)

    3/4/2026Senate
  6. Bill text as passed Senate and House (SB701ER)

    3/4/2026Senate
  7. Enrolled

    3/4/2026Senate
  8. Signed by President

    3/4/2026Senate
  9. Signed by Speaker

    3/4/2026House
  10. Passed House (87-Y 6-N 1-A)

    2/27/2026House
  11. Read third time

    2/27/2026House
  12. Read second time

    2/26/2026House
  13. Reported from General Laws (19-Y 1-N)

    2/24/2026House
  14. Referred to Committee on General Laws

    2/9/2026House
  15. Read first time

    2/9/2026House
  16. Placed on Calendar

    2/9/2026House
  17. Read third time and passed Senate (30-Y 9-N 0-A)

    2/3/2026Senate
  18. Engrossed by Senate (Voice Vote)

    2/2/2026Senate
  19. Read second time

    2/2/2026Senate
  20. Passed by for the day Block Vote (Voice Vote)

    1/30/2026Senate
  21. Constitutional reading dispensed Block Vote (on 1st reading) (38-Y 0-N 0-A)

    1/30/2026Senate
  22. Rules suspended

    1/30/2026Senate
  23. Reported from General Laws and Technology (13-Y 2-N)

    1/28/2026Senate
  24. Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (SB701)

    1/26/2026Senate
  25. Assigned GL&T sub: Gaming

    1/23/2026Senate

Bill Text

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