Consultation with federally recognized tribes; permits and reviews, etc.
<p class=ldtitle>A BILL to amend and reenact §§ 2.2-401.01, 10.1-104.02, 10.1-1186.3:1, 10.1-1322, 10.1-2205.1, 10.1-2302, 10.1-2305, 28.2-104.01, 33.2-258, 56-265.2:1, 62.1-44.38:1, and 62.1-248 of the Code of Virginia and to amend the Code of Virginia by adding a section numbered 33.2-257.2, relating to consultation with federally recognized tribes; permits and reviews with potential impacts on environmental, cultural, and historic resources.</p>
Enacted
This bill passed the Legislature and reached final enactment based on the latest official action.
Sponsor
Krizek
Last action
2026-02-18
Official status
Failed
Effective date
Not listed
Plain English Breakdown
The official source material does not provide specific details about the requirement for the Department of Historic Resources to obtain tribal consent regarding burial sites, which was included in the candidate explanation. This claim has been removed as it is unsupported by the provided information.
Consultation with Federally Recognized Tribes
This bill requires state agencies to consult with federally recognized tribes on environmental, cultural, and historic issues before issuing permits or making decisions that could affect these resources.
What This Bill Does
Adds duties for the Ombudsman for Tribal Consultation to help communicate between tribes and state agencies.
Requires certain departments like Transportation, Conservation and Recreation, Environmental Quality, Historic Resources, and Marine Resources Commission to consult with tribes on specific issues.
Makes it necessary for these departments to show they have tried their best to get meaningful feedback from the tribes.
Who It Names or Affects
Federally recognized tribes in Virginia
State agencies like Transportation, Conservation and Recreation, Environmental Quality, Historic Resources, and Marine Resources Commission
Terms To Know
Ombudsman for Tribal Consultation
A person who helps with communication between federally recognized tribes and state agencies.
Limits and Unknowns
This bill was left in Committee Appropriations as of February 18, 2026.
It is not clear if the bill will be enacted into law based on its current status.
Amendments
These notes stay tied to the official amendment files and metadata from the legislature.
Plain English: The amendment changes the term 'American Indian' to 'Virginia recognized' and removes 'in Virginia' when referring to tribes in certain sections of the Code of Virginia.
Changes 'American Indian' to 'Virginia recognized' in specific parts of the code.
Removes 'in Virginia' after mentioning tribes.
The full impact and context of these changes are not clear without additional information about how they will affect existing laws.
Plain English: The amendment changes references to 'American Indian' and removes mentions of 'tribes in Virginia' from certain sections of the Code of Virginia.
Changes 'American Indian' to 'Virginia recognized' in relevant parts of the bill text.
Removes the phrase 'in Virginia' after 'tribes'.
The full impact and context of these changes are not fully explained by the amendment text alone.
Bill History
2026-02-18House
Left in Committee Appropriations
2026-01-26General Laws
Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (HB367)
2026-01-26Appropriations
Referred to Committee on Appropriations
2026-01-26House
Read first time
2026-01-22General Laws
Reported from General Laws with amendment(s) (21-Y 0-N)
2026-01-20ABC/Gaming
Subcommittee recommends reporting with amendment(s) (9-Y 0-N)
2026-01-20ABC/Gaming
House subcommittee offered
2026-01-20ABC/Gaming
House subcommittee offered
2026-01-20ABC/Gaming
House subcommittee offered
2026-01-19ABC/Gaming
Assigned HGL sub: ABC/Gaming
2026-01-12House
Prefiled and ordered printed; Offered 01-14-2026 26100442D
2026-01-12General Laws
Referred to Committee on General Laws
Official Summary Text
Consultation with federally recognized tribes; permits and reviews with potential impacts on environmental, cultural, and historic resources.
Adds to the duties of the Ombudsman for Tribal Consultation requirements to (i) facilitate communication between federally recognized tribes and relevant state agencies and local governments to ensure an opportunity for meaningful and timely consultation on environmental, cultural, and historical permits and reviews; (ii) assist the Department of Transportation in developing consultation policies; (iii) make recommendations to the Governor on the basis of communications with federally recognized tribes about (a) circumstances under which tribal consent should be required for issuance of certain permits and (b) additional agencies that should develop policies and procedures to ensure meaningful, timely, and appropriate consultation with federally recognized tribes; (iv) provide training at least once a year to certain state agency personnel on issues of concern to the federally recognized tribes to support effective communication, collaboration, and positive government-to-government relations between the Commonwealth and the federally recognized tribes; and (v) submit an annual report to the Secretary of the Commonwealth on the activities undertaken to implement such provisions and the issues that have arisen in that pursuit. The bill also requires the Department of Conservation and Recreation, Department of Environmental Quality, Department of Historic Resources, Department of Transportation, and Marine Resources Commission to engage in consultation with federally recognized tribes on certain issues. During such consultation, the burden is on the agency to show that it has made a good faith effort to elicit meaningful and timely feedback, including formal communication between agency employees and the federally recognized tribe. When a burial permit will result in the disturbance of a burial site of an individual that has a cultural affiliation with a particular federally recognized tribe, the bill requires the Department of Historic Resources to acquire the consent of such federally recognized tribe before issuing a permit for the archaeological excavation of human remains. This bill is a recommendation of the Commission on Updating Virginia Law to Reflect Federal Recognition of Virginia Tribes.
Current Bill Text
Read the full stored bill text
HB 367
GENERAL LAWS
1. Line 23, introduced, after
of
strike
American
Indian
insert
Virginia recognized
GENERAL LAWS
2. Line 23, introduced, after tribes
strike
in Virginia