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2020 Official Opinions
Official opinions will be posted as they are issued, generally within 24 to 48 hours. Please check this page at regular intervals to determine whether additional opinions have been issued.
December
Opinion # |
Requestor |
Summary |
---|---|---|
20-022 | Honorable Louise Lucas, Member, Senate of Virginia | Funds contributed by members of the Portsmouth Public Schools' Section 125 Flexible Benefits Plan are not "local funds” that are subject to return to the City under § 22.1-100 if not expended during the year. |
20-037 | Honorable Dana Lawhorne, Sheriff, City of Alexandria | In a city with both a police department and a sheriff's office, the police department is the primary law-enforcement agency responsible for the service of protective orders issued pursuant to §§ 16.1-253.1, 16.1-253.4, 16.1-279.1, and §§ 19.2-152.8, 19.2-152.9, and 19.2-152.10 of the Code of Virginia. |
20-025 | C.H. "Chuck” Slemp III, Commonwealth's Attorney, County of Wise & City of Norton; and Timothy W. McAfee, Town Attorney, Town of Pound | The Town of Pound Police Department has authority to take certain actions outside of the Town's territorial jurisdiction to investigate crimes occurring within the Town. Effective law enforcement in any area of the Commonwealth, however, depends largely on a cooperative effort among all appropriate departments. |
20-056 | Honorable Jennifer B. Boysko, Member, Senate of Virginia | The Procurement Act provides public bodies the discretion to determine whether it is appropriate to include in a solicitation the requirement that a successful bidder or offeror pay its employees or contract workers a living wage. Ample evidence exists to show that a living wage requirement can improve the quality of goods or services obtained by a public body, and the amendments to the Procurement Act made by the General Assembly in 2015 make clear that adoption of a living wage requirement by a public body to meet its procurement needs is permitted. |
November
Opinion # |
Requestor |
Summary |
---|---|---|
20-040 | Honorable C.E. Cliff Hayes Jr., Member, Virginia House of Delegates | The use of the word "shall” in Virginia Code Sections 2.2-5205 and 2.2-5207 requires that each community policy and management team and family assessment and planning team include a parent representative. |
October
Opinion # |
Requestor |
Summary |
---|---|---|
19-058 | Honorable R. Creigh Deeds, Member, Senate of Virginia | The Virginia Department of Taxation has discretion under current state law to adopt a pro-rata methodology to calculate the amount of a retirement plan distribution that may be subtracted from Virginia taxable income pursuant to § 58.1-322.02(11). |
20-043 | Honorable Sally Hudson, Member, Virginia House of Delegates | Virginia Code § 15.2-1413 does not empower a locality to modify or indefinitely extend the deadlines for responding to requests for records set forth in § 2.2-3704(B) of the Virginia Freedom of Information Act (VFOIA). The time limits for responding to requests for records in VFOIA remain in place and must be complied with even during the current emergency. |
20-047 | Honorable Scott A. Surovell, Member, Senate of Virginia | Current Virginia law does not permit a political party or a candidate's campaign committee to conduct a raffle. The background check requirements of Virginia Code § 18.2-308.2:5 apply to any raffle where the prize to be awarded includes a firearm. |
20-002 | Honorable Colette Wallace McEachin, Commonwealth's Attorney, City of Richmond | Where a law enforcement officer serves a protective order, the lawfulness of any detention is governed by the standard of whether the officer has reasonable, articulable suspicion of criminal activity. |
September
Opinion # |
Requestor |
Summary |
---|---|---|
19-063 | Honorable David A. Reid, Member, Virginia House of Delegates | A transaction of a school board that impacts the salary and benefits of a large group of school employees, in which specific employees are not directly identifiable, is not a transaction that "affects the public generally” under § 2.2-3112(B)(3). Accordingly, a school board member who is married to a member of the group may not participate in the transaction under the provisions of § 2.2-3112(B)(3). The school board member may, however, participate in the transaction under § 2.2-3112(B)(1), and declaration of the member's personal interest is required. Even if the school board member has filed a written declaration of the personal interest, he or she must also orally disclose the existence of the interest during every meeting where the transaction is discussed. |
20-036 | Honorable Clinton Jenkins, Member, Virginia House of Delegates | In some instances, a local school board policy restricting the release of information may conflict with the Virginia Freedom of Information Act (VFOIA). VFOIA requires public bodies to operate in an open and accessible manner, and policies adopted by a school board should not impede access to public records by citizens of the Commonwealth. |
20-046 | Honorable Marcus B. Simon, Member, Virginia House of Delegates | Virginia and federal law prohibit conduct at polling places that intimidates or harasses voters, or that hinders or impedes their ability to cast a ballot freely. These laws are designed to protect the right to vote, which is fundamental to our democratic system of governance. |
August
Opinion # |
Requestor |
Summary |
---|---|---|
19-062 | Honorable Philip J. Kellam, Virginia Beach Commissioner of the Revenue | Virginia law does not require a commissioner of the revenue or similar local official to deny a business license to a non-citizen applicant who fails to produce a permanent resident card. |
July
Opinion # |
Requestor |
Summary |
---|---|---|
20-033 | Del. Marcia S. "Cia” Price, Del. Lashrecse Aird, Del. Jeion A. Ward, Del. Patrick A. Hope, Del. Marcus B. Simon, Del. Paul E. Krizek, Del. Kelly K. Convirs-Fowler, Del. Jeffrey M. Bourne, Del. Kathy K.L. Tran, Del. Alex Q. Askew, Del. Chris L. Hurst, Del. Lee J. Carter |
The CARES Act and recent enactments of the General Assembly contain various protections for those facing potential eviction in Virginia. Additionally, the branches of Virginia government each possess tools that, depending on the facts and circumstances, may be used to aid those facing eviction. |
June
Opinion # |
Requestor |
Summary |
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19-033 | Ms. Patricia S. Bishop, Director, Virginia Retirement System | A member of the Board of Trustees of the Fairfax County Employees' Retirement System who is appointed to that position by the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors is prohibited under § 51.1-124.26(C) from serving on an advisory committee of the Board of Trustees of the Virginia Retirement System. |
May
Opinion # |
Requestor |
Summary |
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20-024 | Honorable Eileen Filler-Corn, Speaker, Virginia House of Delegates | Items 4-0.01 in House Bill 29 and House Bill 30 permit the House of Delegates and the Senate of Virginia to meet electronically during an emergency, provided certain conditions are met. |
20-020 | Honorable Ken Stolle, Sheriff, City of Virginia Beach | If a first responder becomes ill from a work-related exposure to COVID-19, such illness is likely compensable under the Virginia Workers' Compensation Act. Similar to benefits under the Line of Duty Act, any particular claim will depend on the facts of the case. The General Assembly could create a statutory presumption to benefit police officers, sheriffs' deputies, firefighters, emergency medical technicians, and other first responders who contract COVID-19 because the nature of their duties place them at greater risk for contracting the disease. |
March
Opinion # |
Requestor |
Summary |
---|---|---|
20-011 | Honorable Richard C. (Rip) Sullivan Jr. | Virginia State Code § 2.2-3708.2(A)(3) permits public bodies that are unable to assemble in person because of the unique characteristics of the COVID-19 virus to meet electronically to make decisions that must be made immediately and where failure to do so could result in irrevocable public harm. Whether any particular action by a public body fits within that description requires a fact-specific determination that should be made in consultation with that public body's counsel. It is also my opinion that Code § 44-146.21 does not authorize local governing bodies to hold meetings solely by electronic communication during the pendency of the emergency, but that Code § 15.2-1413 provides additional authority for localities to ensure continuity of government during the declared emergency. Even when a public body is authorized to meet via electronic communication means, Virginia State Code § 2.2-3708.2(A)(3) details further procedural steps such bodies must take to comply with the Virginia Freedom of Information Act, including arrangements for public access to such meeting. |
February
Opinion # |
Requestor |
Summary |
---|---|---|
19-055 | Honorable Gordon F. Erby, Clerk of the Circuit Court for the County of Lunenburg | Virginia Code § 18.2-308.03 requires the clerk of the circuit court to charge a fee of $10 for processing a complete application for a concealed handgun permit; authorizes the State Police to assess a fee not to exceed $5 to cover the cost of processing the application; and authorizes a sheriff's office serving as a county's sole law-enforcement agency to charge a fee not to exceed $35 for the background investigation. In such circumstances, neither the county's board of supervisors, nor the circuit court is authorized to set such fees. |
19-053 | Charles W. Haney and Mary G. Turner, Appomattox Electoral Board | A general registrar is subject to the policies and practices established by the governing body of the locality in which he or she serves, but only to the extent that such policies and practices do not interfere with the orderly function of the duties of the registrar. The term "benefits” as used in Virginia Code § 24.2-111 does not include an annual raise in the general registrar's salary but does include leave, such that a county or city is required to provide the same leave retention benefits to a general registrar that are provided to other employees of the locality. |