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    Virginia Chamber Legislative Position Key:

    The Virginia Chamber SUPPORTS this bill.

    The Virginia Chamber OPPOSES this bill.

    This bill supports a Blueprint Virginia initiative.

    www.vachamber.com/blueprint

    http://www.vachamber.com/blueprinthttp://www.vachamber.com/blueprinthttp://www.vachamber.com/blueprint
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    Legislation of Interest to the Virginia Business Community

    Economic DevelopmentBill Patron Summary Position

    HB873 Jones

    Ports tax credits. Changes Virginia's ports-related tax credits by increasing the annual amount ofinternational trade facility tax credits that may be issued from $250,000 to $1.25 million, decreasing

    the annual amount of barge and rail usage tax credits that may be issued from $1.5 million to$500,000, and allowing a taxpayer to be eligible for the port volume increase tax credit and the bargeand rail usage tax credit if the taxpayer meets the criteria for both. The bill reduces from 10 percentto five percent the minimum annual increase in cargo transported through a maritime port that is acondition of eligibility for the international trade facility tax credit. The bill also makes roll-on/roll-offcargo eligible for the international trade facility, port volume increase, and barge and rail usage taxcredits.The provisions of the bill would become effective for taxable years beginning on or afterJanuary 1, 2014.

    Education and WorkforceBill Patron Summary Position

    HB30/SB30

    Jones/Stosch Item 135 (M) --Funding to recruit and retain teachers in STEM subjects

    HB30/SB30

    Jones/Stosch

    Item 210 (O)funding to implement SySTEMic Solutions initiative to address needs in STEM

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    HB30/SB30

    Jones/Stosch

    Item 136Improve flexibility of the Virginia Preschool Initiative and use of kindergarten readinessassessment programs

    HB30/SB30

    Jones/Stosch

    4-10.00Implement Virginia Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2011

    HJ1 GreasonStudy; Teacher Career Ladder program; report.Requests the Department of Education to studyand make recommendations regarding the feasibility of implementing a Teacher Career Ladderprogram in the Commonwealth.

    HB35HB42HB333HB386

    HB577HB610SB131

    KoryHabeebGreason

    Comstock

    StolleRobinsonNewman

    School calendar. Makes local school boards responsible for setting the school calendar anddetermining the opening day of the school year and eliminates the post-Labor Day opening

    requirement.

    HB930 Greason

    Standards of Learning assessments; reform. Provides that the number and type of Standards ofLearning assessments shall not exceed 17 specified assessments in grades three through eight. Thebill requires each local school board to certify that is has provided instruction and administered analternative assessment, in conformance with Board guidelines, for each subject area in which theStandards of Learning assessment was not administered. The bill also requires the Secretary ofEducation to establish the Standards of Learning Innovation Committee to periodically review theStandards of Learning and assessments.

    HB1008 Byron

    Voluntary apprenticeships. Conforms provisions of Virginia's voluntary apprenticeship program tofederal law in order to ensure the Department of Labor and Industry's continued recognition as a

    State Apprenticeship Agency. Changes include transferring to the Commissioner of Labor andIndustry powers that currently may be exercised by the Apprenticeship Council and removing theexemption for apprentices currently in the Vi rginia Minimum Wage Act.

    HB1009 Byron

    Recasts the Virginia Workforce Council as the Virginia Board of Workforce Development. TheGovernor is authorized to appoint a Chief Workforce Development Advisor, and relatedresponsibilities of the Governor are assigned to the Chief Workforce Development Advisor, who shallserve as lead staff to the Board. The Office of the Chancellor of the Virginia Community CollegeSystem will provide staff support to accomplish the federally mandated requirements of the federalWorkforce Investment Act. Staff support for the other duties and functions of the board are to beprovided by personnel from the Office of the Secretary of Commerce and Trade pursuant to amemorandum of agreement. The bill increases the membership of the Board by adding the Secretaryof Veterans Affairs and Homeland Security and a representative of the business community. The

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    Board is directed to create two new committees, of which one will address performance andaccountability and the other of which will focus on military transition assistance. The bill also directsthe establishment of an executive committee of the Board, which shall establish m eeting agendas,approve reports to the Governor, and respond to certain urgent issues between scheduled Boardmeetings. Finally, the measure repeals the Advantage Virginia Incentive Program, Fund, andFoundation.

    HB1115 Greason

    Virtual Virginia; local school divisions; shared online courses.Permits the Department ofEducation to contract with one or more local school boards that have created online courses to makesuch courses available to other school divisions through Virtual Virginia. The bill permits such school

    divisions to charge a per-student or per-course fee, subject to Board of Education approval. The billrequires the Department to establish the Virtual Learning Advisory Committee to advise theDepartment on (i) online courses, in -service training, and digital instructional resources that schooldivisions need to meet the Commonwealth's graduation requirements and (ii) strategic planning toexpand blended and online learning opportunities in Virginia's public schools. The bill permits theDepartment to charge school divisions requesting to offer a course through Virtual Virginia andmultidivision online providers an application fee.

    SB539 Howell

    Secretary of Education; annual report. Requires the Secretary of Education, on or before October1 of each year, to report to the Governor and the General Assembly on the Commonwealth's effortsto promote science, technology, engineering, and mathematics education; career readiness; andcareer and professional certification at all levels of education.

    Employment LawBill Patron Summary Position

    HB32 Morrissey

    Minimum wage.Increases the minimum wage from its current federally mandated level of $7.25 perhour to $8.50 per hour effective July 1, 2014, unless a higher minimum wage is required by thefederal Fair Labor Standards Act. The act will expire at such time as the federal minimum wageequals or exceeds $8.50 per hour.

    HB93 Krupicka

    Employment applications; inquiries regarding criminal arrests, charges, or convictions;penalty.Prohibits state agencies and private employers from including on any employmentapplication a question inquiring whether the prospective employee has ever been arrested orcharged with, or convicted of, any crime, subject to certain exceptions. A prospective employee maynot be asked if he has ever been convicted of any crime unless the inquiry takes place after theprospective employee has received a conditional offer of employment, which offer may be withdrawnif the prospective employee has a conviction record that bears a rational relationship to the dutiesand responsibilities of the position. A prospective employee may not be asked if he has ever beenarrested or charged with a crime unless the inquiry takes place after the prospective employee has

    received a conditional offer of employment, which offer may be withdrawn if (i) the prospectiveemployee's criminal arrest or charge resulted in the prospective employee's conviction of a crime and(ii) the crime of which he was convicted bears a rational relationship to the duties and responsibilitiesof the position. A private employer who violates the provisions of this section is subject to a civilpenalty not to exceed $100 for each violation.

    HB422 Davis

    Prohibiting certain local government practices that would require contractors to providecertain compensation or benefits. Prohibits local governing bodies from establishing provisionsthat would require a wage floor of any other employee benefit or compensation, above what isotherwise required by state or federal law, to be provided by a contractor to its employees as part ofcertain local government contracts. Contracts for landscaping or janitorial services are excluded fromthe prohibition. The bill provides that its provisions shall have no impact on service contractsexecuted prior to January 31, 2014 and shall not prohibit a locality from entering into contracts in

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    which a company receiving economic development incentives is required to maintain a certain wagelevel.

    HB536 PlumMinimum wage. Increases the minimum wage from its current federally mandated level of $7.25 perhour to $8.25 per hour effective July 1, 2014, and to $9.25 per hour effective July 1, 2015, unless ahigher minimum wage is required by the federal Fair Labor Standards Act.

    HB794 LeMunyon

    Nonsolicitation agreements. Establishes five requirements for a valid and enforceablenonsolicitation agreement between an employer and an employee, including a requirement that therestrictions imposed by the agreement are protective of the employer's legitimate business interest.The requirements do not apply to nonsolicitation agreements between an employer and an employee

    who owned greater than five percent of the ownership interests of the employing business entity.Absent an agreement to the contrary, the solicitation activities that are restrained, prohibited, orotherwise restricted by a nonsolicitation agreement shall not be increased or expanded as a result ofthe employer being acquired by merging with another business entity. The measure requires courtsin actions seeking enforcement of, or challenging the enforceability of, a nonsolicitation agreement toaward attorney fees and costs to the prevailing party. The measure does not apply in proceedings todetermine the enforceability of agreements entered into prior to July 1, 2014.

    HB833 Keam

    Safe days for employees. Requires private employers to allow an employee safe days, with pay, ifthe employee or a family member is a victim of domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking or is afamily member of a victim of domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking. Employers are required toprovide employees with 32 hours per year of safe day time i f the employee has less than 120 monthsof employment with the employer, and 40 hours per year of safe day time if the employee has 120 ormore months of employment with the employer. Safe leave is leave from work that is used to allow

    the employee to obtain for the employee or the employee's family member, as applicable, (i) medicalattention needed to recover from physical or psychological injury or disability caused by domesticviolence or sexual assault; (ii) psychological or other counseling; (iii) relocation due to the domesticviolence, sexual assault, or stalking; or (iv) legal services. Employers are prohibited from dischargingordiscriminating against an employee because the employee exercises the right to safe days.

    SB590 MarsdenMinimum wage. Increases the minimum wage from its current federally mandated level of $7.25 perhour to $8.25 per hour effective July 1, 2014, and to $9.25 per hour effective July 1, 2015, unless ahigher minimum wage is required by the federal Fair Labor Standards Act.

    EnergyBill Patron Summary Position

    HB363 Kory

    Electric utility regulation; approval of generation facilities.Requires the State CorporationCommission, in its consideration of an application for approval of an electrical generation facility, to

    consider environmentaleffects not expressly governed by a permit or expressly considered by apermitting authority, including carbon emissions and the overall impacts of new and existing facilitieson the health and welfare of the residents of the Commonwealth. The measure also removesprovisions that prohibited the Commission from imposing additional conditions with respect to suchmatters.

    HB949/SB519

    Hugo/Wagner

    Natural gas utilities; upstream supply infrastructure projects.Authorizes a natural gas utility torecover eligible costs of eligible natural gas supply infrastructure projects. A plan for recovery of suchcosts may provide the utility with an option to receive the gas or sell the gas at market prices. Themeasure also (i) provides that the transportation of natural gas by pipeline, without providing serviceto end users within the territory, shall not be considered operating in the territory of another certificateholder; (ii) bars the State Corporation Commission from approving the construction of a natural gascompressor station in an area without the locality's certification only if the area is zoned exclusively

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    for residential use; and (iii) expands the definition of a strategic natural gas facility to include a naturalgas transmission company that adds design day deliverability or designed send out of at least100,000 dekaTherms per day in the aggregate.

    HB1224 OQuinn Natural gas-fueled electric generation facilities; incentives.

    HJ76 Herring

    Study; mandatory renewable energy portfolio standard program; report.Directs theCommission on Electric Utility Regulation to study the establishment of a mandatory renewableenergy portfolio standard program for the Commonwealth. The study will (i) address issues

    associated with transitioning from the existing voluntary renewable energy portfolio standard programto a mandatory program, (ii) determine the costs and benefits that would be associated with requiringelectric utilities to meet varying levels of renewable energy portfolio standard goals, (iii) recommendmeasures to address electric utilities that do not meet the program's goals, and (iv) determine if it isfeasible and advisable to require that all electric utilities in Virginia participate in a mandatoryrenewable energy portfolio standard program.

    EnvironmentBill Patron Summary Position

    HB1261/SB615

    Chafin/Carrico

    Virginia Energy Plan; carbon dioxide emission control impact; schedule.Requires the VirginiaEnergy Plan to include, with regard to any regulations proposed or promulgated by the U.S.Environmental Protection Agency to reduce carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuel-fired electricgenerating units under Section 37 111(d) of the Clean Air Act, an analysis of the costs and benefits

    for energy producers and electric utility customers; the effect on energy markets and reliability; andthe commercial availability of technology required to comply with such regulations. The measurepostpones the due date for quadrennial updates to the Virginia Energy Plan from July 1 to October 1.Interim updates on the Plan are required to be provided by October 1 of the third year of eachadministration. The measure also requires the Division of Energy of the Department of Mines,Minerals and Energy, in Plan updates starting in 2014, to set forth energy policy positions relevant toany potential regulations of the State Air Pollution Control Board to reduce carbon dioxide emissionsfrom fossil fuel-fired electric generating units under Section 111(d) of the Clean Air Act. The Divisionis required to address policy options for establishing separate standards of performance for carbondioxide emissions from existing fossil fuel-fired electric generating units to promote the Plan's overallgoal of fuel diversity. The Plan is also required to (i) examine policy options for state regulatory actionto adopt less stringent standards or longer compliance schedules than those provided for inapplicable federal rules or guidelines and (ii) identify options, to the maximum extent permissible, forany federally required regulation of carbon dioxide emissions from existing fossil fuel-fired electricgenerating units.

    SB48 Stuart

    Prohibition on oil and gas drilling.Prohibits the drilling for oil and gas in the Eastern VirginiaGroundwater Management Area. When the General Assembly enacted the GroundwaterManagement Act in 1973, it declared that the continued, unrestricted usage of groundwater iscontributing and will contribute to pollution and the shortage of groundwater, thereby jeopardizing thepublic welfare, safety, and health. The Act recognized that the state has the right to the reasonablecontrol of all groundwater resources in order to conserve, protect, and beneficially utilize thegroundwater of the Commonwealth. The bill would apply to groundwater and the associated aquifersin the coastal plain of Virginia. The bill would also require the Department of Environmental Quality toadopt regulations protecting surface and ground water resources before the Department of Mines,Minerals and Energy issues a drilling permit in those areas of Tidewater where such activity isallowed.

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    General BusinessBill Patron Summary Position

    HB167 Ramadan

    Virginia Business One Stop electronic portal program; participation by State CorporationCommission. Requires the State Corporation Commission (SCC) and the Department of SmallBusiness and Supplier Diversity (DSBSD), by December 1, 2014, to implement a hyperlink from theSCC's eFile system to the Business Permitting Center that will facilitate the collection of a user'sinformation to populate any forms that will be required to be completed at a future date. The measurealso requires that SCC and DSBSD meet as necessary to further such collaboration. The Secretaryof Commerce and Trade is directed to oversee DSBSD's implementation of the provisions. TheSecretary of Commerce and Trade and the Secretary of Technology shall have the opportunity toparticipate in such meetings.

    HB168 Ramadan

    Clerk of the State Corporation Commission; secure online system; articles of dissolution.Requires the State Corporation Commission limit the submission of data and documents on behalf ofa business entity through its eFile electronic registration system to any user (i) designated to makesuch submission on behalf of the business entity and (ii) whose identity has been establishedsatisfactorily through a verification process by July 1, 2018. After July 1, 2014 and until this has beenimplemented by the Commission, no articles of dissolution of a business entity or data or documentsthat contain officer or director changes shall be accepted through the Commissions eFile electronicregistration system.

    HB313 D. Marshall

    Clerk of the State Corporation Commission; unauthorized filings.Authorizes the clerk of theState Corporation Commission, upon determining that a person who executed or delivered abusiness entity document to the clerk's office lacked the authority to act on behalf of the business

    entity, to refuse to accept the document for filing. The clerk is further authorized under suchcircumstances to summarily remove a filed document, correct the records, and notify the affectedbusiness entity. The measure also includes stylistic and technical changes.

    Health CareBill Patron Summary Position

    Medicaid Reform and Expansion through market based principles.

    HB33/SB484

    Habeeb/Stuart

    Pediatric oral health benefits; reasonable assurance of provision.Declares that a health carrierthat makes available in the small group market or individual market a health benefit plan that doesnot include the minimum essential pediatric oral health benefits required under the federal AffordableCare Act shall be deemed to have obtained reasonable assurance that the pediatric oral healthbenefits are provided to the plan's purchaser if (i) at least one qualified dental plan offers suchbenefits and is available for purchase, (ii) the health carrier prominently discloses that its plan doesnot provide the required benefits, and (iii) the entity offering the qualified dental plan providing therequired benefits is licensed to provide them in the Commonwealth.

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    LegalBill Patron Summary Position

    HB30/SB30

    Jones/Stosch

    Support additional funding to fill existing judicial vacancies.

    HB375/

    SB150

    OQuinn/

    Stuart

    Patent infringement; assertions made in bad faith. Prohibits any person from making in bad faithan assertion of patent infringement. The Attorney General or an attorney for the Commonwealth isempowered to accept assurances of voluntary compliance and seek injunctive relief. The Attorney

    General is authorized to issue civil investigative demands. The measure does not apply to a demandletter or assertion of patent infringement that includes a claim for relief arising under 35 U.S.C. 271(e)(2) or 42 U.S.C. 262.

    HB398 Fariss

    Statutes of limitation; accrual.Provides that in civil actions to recover for damage to property orinjury to person, if the injury was not reasonably discoverable on the date it was sustained, thestatute of limitations does not begin to run until the date that injury was discovered or should havebeen discovered. Under current law, in most cases the limitations period begins to run from the datethe injury was sustained. No change is made to the law governing limitations periods in medicalmalpractice cases.

    SB232 PetersenService of process on domestic corporations.Allows process on a Virginia corporation to beserved on its registered agent by posting a copy of the process on the front door or main entrance ofthe corporation's registered office.

    SB251 McEachinGrand larceny; threshold.Increases from $200 to $1,000 the threshold amount of money taken orvalue of goods or chattel taken at which the crime rises from petit larceny to grand larceny. The billincreases the threshold by the same amount for the classification of certain property crimes.

    Military & Veterans AffairsBill Patron Summary Position

    HB30/SB30

    Jones/Stosch

    Item 461 (F)--Funding to support the Virginia Values Veterans Program.

    HB30/

    SB30

    Jones/

    Stosch

    Item 144 (M)Funding to support pilot program to assist Virginia veterans and military members in

    completing degree and professional programs

    HB730 Lingamfelter

    Secretary of Public Safety; Secretary of Veterans Affairs and Homeland Security; transfer ofcertain powers and duties. Renames the Secretary of Public Safety as the Secretary of PublicSafety and Homeland Security and reassigns duties currently assigned to the Secretary of VeteransAffairs and Homeland Security relating to homeland security. The bill renames the Secretary ofVeterans Affairs and Homeland Security as the Secretary of Veterans and Defense Affairs. The billalso incorporates portions of the JLARC report relating to improvements to Vi rginia's homelandsecurity activities. The bill contains numerous amendments to accomplish this transfer of powers andduties. The bill contains an emergency clause.

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    SB18 Locke

    Unemployment compensation; quit to follow military spouse.Provides that good cause forleaving employment exists if an employee voluntarily leaves a job to accompany the employee'sspouse, who is on active duty in the military or naval services of the United States, to a new military-related assignment established pursuant to a permanent change of duty order from which theemployee's place of employment is not reasonably accessible. The measure applies only i f the stateto which the spouse is transferred has a similar provision, unless the transfer involves members ofthe Virginia National Guard relocated within the Commonwealth. Benefits paid to qualifying claimantsshall be charged against the pool rather than against the claimant's employer. The measure alsorepeals Chapter 878 of the 2009 Acts of Assembly, which is similar to this measure but did not takeeffect because the contingency in its third enactment was not satisfied.

    ProcurementBill Patron Summary Position

    HB346/SB165

    James/Locke

    Public-Private Transportation Act of 1995; additional requirements for certain comprehensiveagreements. Provides that no comprehensive agreement providing for the lease, operation, ortransfer of ownership of a qualifying transportation facility under the Public-Private Transportation Actwith a total value of more than $1 billion and having a substantial negative impact on the taxrevenues of an affected jurisdiction or substantially increasing the taxes, fees, or expenses that willbe paid by residents of an affected jurisdiction may be executed by a state agency unless (i)approved by the Governor and (ii) a bill that includes a specific description of the proposedagreement and its anticipated expenditures and revenues is passed by the General Assembly.

    HB349 James

    Public-Private Transportation Act of 1995 and Public-Private Education Facilities andInfrastructure Act of 2002; additional requirements for comprehensive agreements.Provides

    that no comprehensive agreement providing for the lease, operation, or transfer of ownership of aqualifying transportation facility under the Public-Private Transportation Act or a qualified projectunder the Public-Private Education Facilities and Infrastructure Act with a total value of $1 bi llion ormore shall be executed by a state agency unless (i) approved by the Governor and (ii) a bill thatincludes a specific description of the proposed agreement and its anticipated expenditures andrevenues is passed by the General Assembly.

    HB1136 Joannou

    Public-Private Transportation Act of 1995; approval of schedule of tolls and fees.Prohibits theinclusion in a comprehensive agreement under the Public-Private Transportation Act of 1995 of aschedule of tolls or user fees for a road, highway, tunnel, or bridge unless the General Assembly, byjoint resolution, has approved the schedule. The measure also requires that any user fees providedfor in a comprehensive agreement be set forth in a schedule that has been approved by the GeneralAssembly.

    SB26 Alexander

    Public comment and access; presentation to Committees of the General Assembly.Increasestime periods for public comment and submission of competing proposals and transparency inagreements pursuant to the Public-Private Transportation Act of 1995. The bill also requires apresentation to the Transportation Committees, Senate Finance Committee, and HouseAppropriations Committee of the General Assembly for projects in excess of $1 billion.

    SB91 Alexander

    Comprehensive agreement; reduced rates for commuters.Requires comprehensive agreementsunder the Public-Private Transportation Act of 1995 to include a provision providing for reduced ratesfor commuters who use the facility at least 20 times per month during a 12-month period.

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    Small BusinessBill Patron Summary Position

    HB321/

    SB362

    Landes/

    Saslaw

    Entrepreneur-in-Residence Program. Creates the Entrepreneur-in-Residence Program, a pilotprogram administered by the Secretary of Commerce and Trade to improve outreach by stategovernment to the private sector. The objectives of the Program are to (i) strengthen coordinationand interaction between state government and the private sector on issues relevant to entrepreneursand small business concerns and (ii) make state government programs and operations simpler,easier to access, more efficient, and more responsive to the needs of small business concerns andentrepreneurs. Under the bill, entrepreneurs-in-residence serve without compensation but, at thediscretion of the head of the agency they were appointed to serve, may receive reasonable andnecessary expenses incurred in the discharge of their duties. The bill also provides that the Secretarymay contract with a public institution of higher education for the management and oversight of theProgram. The Program was created by Chapter 788 of the Acts of Assembly of 2013 but will notbecome effective unless reenacted by the 2014 Session of the General Assembly. The Program hasa 2017 sunset date.

    HB932/SB492

    Landes/McWaters

    Virginia Economic Development Partnership Authority; Department of Small Business andSupplier Diversity; administration of the Virginia Jobs Investment Program.Changes theadministration of the Virginia Jobs Investment Program from the Department of Small Business andSupplier Diversity to the Virginia Economic Development Partnership Authority.

    TaxBill Patron Summary Position

    HB30/SB30

    Jones/Stosch

    3-5.10 INTANGIBLE HOLDING COMPANY ADDBACK--Notwithstanding the provisions of 58.1-402(B)(8), Code of Virginia, for taxable years beginning on and after January 1, 2004:

    (i) The exception in 58.1-402(B)(8)(a)(1) for income that is subject to a tax based on or measuredby net income or capital imposed by Virginia, another state, or a foreign government shall be limitedand apply only to the portion of such income received by the related member, which portion isattributed to a state or foreign government in which the related member has sufficient nexus to besubject to such taxes; and

    (ii) The exception in 58.1-402(B)(8)(a)(2) for a related member deriving at least one-third of itsgross revenues from licensing to unrelated parties shall be limited and apply only to the portion ofsuch income derived from licensing agreements for which the rates and terms are comparable to therates and terms of agreements that the related member has actually entered into with unrelatedentities.

    HB480/SB515

    Villanueva/Wagner

    Domestic international sales corporations; income taxation.Exempts a domestic internationalsales corporation (DISC) and any income attributable to a DISC from income taxes.

    HB497 Head

    BPOL; appeal of business license tax classification.Permits a taxpayer to appeal to the TaxCommissioner or request a written ruling from him with regard to the classification of the business forBPOL tax purposes, regardless of whether the locality has conducted an audit, issued anassessment, or taken any other action.

    HB617 Davis

    Personal property tax; classification.Creates a classification for personal property tax ratepurposes of property owned by a business during its first two years of operation, if the business'sannual gross revenues do not exceed $100,000. A locality may impose a rate of tax on such propertythat is lowerthan the rate on the general class of tangible personal property.

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    HB1220/SB623

    Comstock/McDougle

    Research and development expenses tax credit. Increases beginning with taxable year 2014 theamount of the credit allowed from 15 percent of the first $167,000 to 15 percent of the first $234,000of Virginia qualified research and development expenses, and from 20 percent of the first $175,000to 20 percent of the first $234,000 of Virginia qualified research and development expensesconducted in conjunction with a Virginia institution of higher education. The bill increases themaximum annual amount of tax credits that may be issued each fiscal year from $5 million to $6million. The bill allows a pass-through entity to elect to receive and claim any credit at the pass-through entity level in lieu of the credit being allocated to the individual partners, members, orshareholders of the pass-through entity. Finally, the bill requires any taxpayer applying for the creditto provide information to the Department of Taxation relating to the number of full-time employees ofthe taxpayer; the taxpayer's industry sector; the area, discipline, or field of Virginia qualified researchperformed by the taxpayer; the taxpayer's total gross receipts for the relevant taxable year; andwhether the qualified research was performed in conjunction with a Virginia institution of highereducation. Further, regardless of how few taxpayers take the credit, the Department, upon request bythe General Assembly or any duly constituted committee of the General Assembly, must disclose thetotal aggregate amount of credits under 58.1-439.12:08 taken by all taxpayers.

    TechnologyBill Patron Summary Position

    HB30/SB30

    Jones/Stosch

    1-119Funding for the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Investment Authority; Foster developmentof Virginia-based technology, biosciences, and energy companies; expand initiatives in cybersecurity; expand broadband; and promote modeling and simulation in new growth industries.

    HB1270 Minchew

    Center for Rural Virginia created, pursuant to Virginia Code 2.2-2720, to prepare a ruralbroadband underserved area report.

    TourismBill Patron Summary Position

    HB460/SB46

    Kilgore/Watkins

    Income tax; motion picture production credit.Changes the motion picture production income taxcredit by (i) increasing the total biennium cap for all such credits from $5 million to $25 mi llion ($12.5million annually), and (iii) having the credit expire on December 31, 2018. The bill also requires theDepartment to publish information regarding the credit regardless if it does not prevent theidentification of the taxpayer claiming the credit.

    TransportationBill Patron Summary Position

    HB2 Stolle

    Allocations within highway construction districts.Provides for the development of a prioritizationprocess for projects funded by the Commonwealth Transportation Board. Such prioritization shallweight factors such as congestion mitigation, economic development, accessibility, safety, andenvironmental quality and be applied within each highway construction district.

    HB1090 Villanueva

    New technologies and innovations in statewide transportation programs.Requires theSecretary of Transportation and VDOT to incorporate new smart road technologies and innovationsin statewide transportation technology programs.

    New technologies and innovations in statewidetransportation programs. Requires the Secretary of Transportation and VDOT to incorporate newsmart road technologies and innovations in statewide transportation technology programs.

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    HB1095 Peace

    Innovation and Technology Transportation Fund. Creates the Innovation and TechnologyTransportation Fund to fund pilot programs and fully developed initiatives pertaining to high-techinfrastructure improvements and requires the Commonwealth Transportation Board to allocatecertain moneys to the Fund.

    HJ122 LeMunyon

    Statewide transportation technology goals and plan of action.Requests the Secretary ofTransportation and VDOT to create and implement statewide transportation technology goals and afive-year plan of action. Such goals and plan are to be directed to enhancing the efficiency, safety,and convenience of all modes of transportation throughout the Commonwealth.

    Unemployment InsuranceBill Patron Summary Position

    HB22 Kory

    Unemployment compensation; benefit ratio. Provides that an employer's payroll, for purposes ofcalculating its benefit ratio and state unemployment tax rate, shall be deemed to be $1 when theemployer's taxable payroll for the applicable 12-month period is not more than $1. The measureeliminates the necessity of dividing the employer's benefit charges by a payroll amount of $0, whichproduces an infinite benefit ratio and results in an assessment of state unemployment taxes at thehighest rate.

    HB798 Lopez

    Unemployment compensation; Self-Employment Assistance Pilot Program; report.Establishesthe Self-Employment Assistance Pilot Program (Program), under which up to 100 unemployedindividuals receive unemployment compensation while they are establishing their own businessesand becoming self-employed. Participants receive an allowance in lieu of weekly regular benefitpayments and may use the allowance for entrepreneurial training, business counseling, and technicalassistance. The bill provides for the Virginia Employment Commission to develop and implement the

    program and to report annually to the Governor and the General Assembly on (i) the total number ofparticipants, (ii) the fiscal status of the Program, and (iii) any other information that will assist indetermining the viability of the Program.

    SB18 Locke

    Unemployment compensation; quit to follow military spouse.Provides that good cause forleaving employment exists if an employee voluntarily leaves a job to accompany the employee'sspouse, who is on active duty in the military or naval services of the United States, to a new military-related assignment established pursuant to a permanent change of duty order f rom which theemployee's place of employment is not reasonably accessible. The measure applies only if the stateto which the spouse is transferred has a similar provision, unless the transfer involves members ofthe Virginia National Guard relocated within the Commonwealth. Benefits paid to qualifying claimantsshall be charged against the pool rather than against the claimant's employer. The measure alsorepeals Chapter 878 of the 2009 Acts of Assembly, which is similar to this measure but did not takeeffect because the contingency in its thi rd enactment was not satisfied.

    SB110 Stanley

    Unemployment compensation; short-time compensation program.Establishes a short-timecompensation program that provides employers with the option of reducing the hours worked byemployees, while permitting the employees whose hours are reduced to receive p artialcompensation for lost wages. Program participation requires Virginia Employment Commissionapproval of a plan, which must provide that the reduction in hours of work is in lieu of a layoff of anequivalent percentage of employees and that employees' health and retirement benefits cannot bereduced or eliminated under the plan. The measure requires the Commission to submit reports onthe program's implementation and accomplishments, with recommendations to improve itseffectiveness. The measure becomes effective January 1, 2015.

    SB266 StanleyUnemployment benefits; financial literacy course; volunteer service.Allows recipients ofunemployment benefits to extend their benefits through completion of a financial literacy course andvolunteer service at a nonprofit organization.

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    Amended: Unemployment benefits; financial literacy course.Requires the Virginia EmploymentCommission (VEC), either by itself or in collaboration with workforce service partner entities, toprovide information to all unemployment benefits claimants and job seekers on courses in financialliteracy. Such courses shall be at no cost to claimants and to job seekers and may be offered onlineor in any other medium the VEC deems appropriate.

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    919 East Main Street Barry DuValSuite 900 President & CEORichmond, VA 23219 [email protected]

    www.vachamber.com Keith MartinVice President of Public Policy and General [email protected](804) 237-1456

    Ryan DunnVice President of Business & Government [email protected](804) 237-1455

    Samantha QuigManager of Government [email protected]

    (804) 237-1457

    Mark BarrettPublic Policy [email protected]

    (804) 237-1464

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