More than 1,200 regulations identified for elimination under 2018 regulatory reform bill

HouseGOPPress Releases

Virginia House of Delegates Speaker Kirk Cox announced on Friday that more than 1,200 regulations have been identified for elimination under a regulatory reform bill passed by the General Assembly in 2018, according to a preliminary report from the Secretary of Finance. Speaker Cox and General Assembly leaders received a report from Secretary Aubrey Layne identifying a “baseline count” of regulations not specifically required by state or federal law within the Department of Professional and Occupational Regulation (DPOR) and the Department of Criminal Justice Services (DCJS). The preliminary report identified 4,947 regulations within DPOR and DCJS that are not specifically required by state or federal law. House Bill 883 requires that 25 percent – or 1,237 – of those regulatory requirements be cut by 2021.

“I want to thank Secretary Layne for providing this update nearly a year ahead of schedule,” said Speaker Kirk Cox (R-Colonial Heights). “When we set out to craft this legislation we hoped to eliminate some of the burdens facing entrepreneurs and small businesses. Now, we have a concrete number of how many regulations we will be able to eliminate from these two departments. I am confident that at the completion of this pilot program we will have not only improved our regulatory climate but we will have laid the groundwork for similar cuts to be made across other departments.”

“Reducing regulatory requirements on small businesses and entrepreneurs has been a top priority of mine in the General Assembly, and it’s heartening to see the significant progress we made this year,” said Delegate Michael Webert (R-Fauquier), patron of House Bill 883. “We have laid the foundation for a systematic review and reduction of unnecessary regulatory requirements across state government.”

The official letter from Secretary Layne to the General Assembly can be found here.