Back to Virginia

SB556 • 2026

Child abuse & neglect; mandatory reporting for certain persons in their prof. or official capacity.

A BILL to amend and reenact § 63.2-1509 of the Code of Virginia, relating to child abuse and neglect; obscenity and related offenses; mandatory reporting for certain persons in their professional or official capacities; public and private school athletics program coaches, directors, and adult volunteers; penalty.

Children Education
Enacted

This bill passed the Legislature and reached final enactment based on the latest official action.

Sponsor
Perry
Last action
2026-03-09
Official status
Failed
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The official source material does not provide specific details on penalties for non-compliance with the mandatory reporting requirements.

Expanding Child Abuse Reporting Requirements

This law expands the list of people who must report suspected child abuse and neglect to include coaches, directors, and adult volunteers in school athletics programs.

What This Bill Does

  • Adds public and private school sports program coaches, directors, and adult volunteers to the list of people required to report suspected child abuse or neglect.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Coaches, directors, and adult volunteers involved with school sports programs

Terms To Know

Mandatory reporting
The legal requirement for certain individuals to report suspected child abuse or neglect.

Limits and Unknowns

  • Does not specify what happens if someone fails to report suspected abuse or neglect.
  • The effective date is not provided in the official summary.
  • It does not address how training for reporting will be conducted or funded.

Amendments

These notes stay tied to the official amendment files and metadata from the legislature.

SB556AS1

2026-02-13 • Committee

Rehabilitation and Social Services Amendment

Plain English: The amendment removes certain existing laws and replaces them with a new law related to reporting requirements for professionals who suspect child abuse or neglect.

  • Removes the current text from line 100 through '18.2' on line 101.
  • Inserts a reference to a new section, § 18.2-374.3.
  • The exact content and requirements of the new law (§ 18.2-374.3) are not provided in the amendment text.
  • It is unclear what specific changes this removal and insertion will make to existing reporting obligations for professionals.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-09 Appropriations

    Tabled in Appropriations (22-Y 0-N)

  2. 2026-02-26 Health & Human Resources

    Assigned HAPP sub: Health & Human Resources

  3. 2026-02-26 Social Services

    Subcommittee recommends reporting and referring to Appropriations (8-Y 0-N)

  4. 2026-02-26 Health and Human Services

    Reported from Health and Human Services and referred to Appropriations (21-Y 0-N)

  5. 2026-02-23 Social Services

    Assigned sub: Social Services

  6. 2026-02-20 House

    Placed on Calendar

  7. 2026-02-20 Health and Human Services

    Referred to Committee on Health and Human Services

  8. 2026-02-20 House

    Read first time

  9. 2026-02-18 Senate

    Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (SB556)

  10. 2026-02-16 Senate

    Read second time

  11. 2026-02-16 Senate

    Engrossed by Senate as amended Block Vote (Voice Vote)

  12. 2026-02-16 Senate

    Rules suspended

  13. 2026-02-16 Senate

    Blank Action

  14. 2026-02-16 Rehabilitation and Social Services

    Rehabilitation and Social Services Amendment agreed to

  15. 2026-02-16 Senate

    Engrossed by Senate Block Vote (Voice Vote)

  16. 2026-02-16 Senate

    Constitutional reading dispensed Block Vote (on 3rd reading) (39-Y 0-N 0-A)

  17. 2026-02-16 Senate

    Read third time and passed Senate Block Vote (39-Y 0-N 0-A)

  18. 2026-02-13 Rehabilitation and Social Services

    Reported from Rehabilitation and Social Services with amendment (13-Y 0-N)

  19. 2026-02-13 Senate

    Rules suspended

  20. 2026-02-13 Senate

    Passed by for the day

  21. 2026-02-13 Senate

    Constitutional reading dispensed Block Vote (on 1st reading) (34-Y 0-N 0-A)

  22. 2026-02-10 Senate

    Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (SB556)

  23. 2026-01-14 Senate

    Prefiled and ordered printed; Offered 01-14-2026 26104694D

  24. 2026-01-14 Rehabilitation and Social Services

    Referred to Committee on Rehabilitation and Social Services

Official Summary Text

Child abuse and neglect; obscenity and related offenses; mandatory
reporting for certain persons in their professional or official capacities; public and private school athletics program coaches, directors, and adult volunteers; penalty.
Expands the mandatory reporting requirements for certain enumerated persons in their professional or official capacities to include certain offenses related to children and certain obscenity and related offenses and applies all such mandatory reporting requirements to all public and private school athletics program coaches, directors, and adult volunteers, including those associated with interscholastic teams and clubs. Under current law, the mandatory reporting requirements apply to such enumerated persons who suspect that a child is an abused or neglected child and to public or private sports organization or team athletic coaches, directors, or adult volunteers.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
A BILL to amend and reenact §
63.2-1509
of the Code of Virginia, relating to child abuse and neglect; obscenity and related offenses; mandatory reporting for certain persons in their professional or official capacities; public and private school athletics program coaches, directors, and adult volunteers; penalty.
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. That §
63.2-1509
of the Code of Virginia is amended and reenacted as follows:
§
63.2-1509
. Requirement that certain injuries to children be reported by physicians, nurses, teachers, etc.; penalty for failure to report.
A. The following persons who, in their professional or official capacity, have reason to suspect that a child is an abused or neglected child, shall report the matter immediately to the local department of the county or city wherein the child resides or wherein the abuse or neglect is believed to have occurred or to the Department's toll-free child abuse and neglect hotline:
1. Any person licensed to practice medicine or any of the healing arts;
2. Any hospital resident or intern, and any person employed in the nursing profession;
3. Any person employed as a social worker or family-services specialist;
4. Any probation officer;
5. Any teacher or other person employed in a public or private school, kindergarten, or child day program, as that term is defined in §
22.1-289.02
;
6. Any person providing full-time or part-time child care for pay on a regularly planned basis;
7. Any mental health professional;
8. Any law-enforcement officer or animal control officer;
9. Any mediator eligible to receive court referrals pursuant to §
8.01-576.8
;
10. Any professional staff person, not previously enumerated, employed by a private or state-operated hospital, institution or facility to which children have been committed or where children have been placed for care and treatment;
11. Any person 18 years of age or older associated with or employed by any public or private organization responsible for the care, custody or control of children;
12. Any person who is designated a court-appointed special advocate pursuant to Article 5 (§
9.1-151
et seq.) of Chapter 1 of Title 9.1;
13. Any person 18 years of age or older who has received training approved by the Department of Social Services for the purposes of recognizing and reporting child abuse and neglect;
14. Any person employed by a local department as defined in §
63.2-100
who determines eligibility for public assistance;
15. Any emergency medical services provider certified by the Board of Health pursuant to §
32.1-111.5
, unless such provider immediately reports the matter directly to the attending physician at the hospital to which the child is transported, who shall make such report forthwith;
16. Any athletic coach, director
,
or other person 18 years of age or older employed by or volunteering with
(i)
a public or private sports organization or team
or (ii) the athletics program of a public or private elementary or secondary school, including interscholastic teams and clubs
;
17. Administrators or employees 18 years of age or older of public or private day camps, youth centers and youth recreation programs;
18. Any person employed by a public or private institution of higher education other than an attorney who is employed by a public or private institution of higher education as it relates to information gained in the course of providing legal representation to a client;
19. Any minister, priest, rabbi, imam, or duly accredited practitioner of any religious organization or denomination usually referred to as a church, unless the information supporting the suspicion of child abuse or neglect (i) is required by the doctrine of the religious organization or denomination to be kept in a confidential manner or (ii) would be subject to §
8.01-400
or
19.2-271.3
if offered as evidence in court; and
20. Any person who engages in the practice of behavior analysis, as defined in §
54.1-2900
.
If neither the locality in which the child resides nor where the abuse or neglect is believed to have occurred is known, then such report shall be made to the local department of the county or city where the abuse or neglect was discovered or to the Department's toll-free child abuse and neglect hotline.
If an employee of the local department is suspected of abusing or neglecting a child, the report shall be made to the court of the county or city where the abuse or neglect was discovered. Upon receipt of such a report by the court, the judge shall assign the report to a local department that is not the employer of the suspected employee for investigation or family assessment. The judge may consult with the Department in selecting a local department to respond to the report or the complaint.
If the information is received by a teacher, staff member, resident, intern or nurse in the course of professional services in a hospital, school or similar institution, such person may, in place of said report, immediately notify the person in charge of the institution or department, or his designee, who shall make such report forthwith. If the initial report of suspected abuse or neglect is made to the person in charge of the institution or department, or his designee, pursuant to this subsection, such person shall notify the teacher, staff member, resident, intern or nurse who made the initial report when the report of suspected child abuse or neglect is made to the local department or to the Department's toll-free child abuse and neglect hotline, and of the name of the individual receiving the report, and shall forward any communication resulting from the report, including any information about any actions taken regarding the report, to the person who made the initial report.
The initial report may be an oral report but such report shall be reduced to writing by the child abuse coordinator of the local department on a form prescribed by the Board. Any person required to make the report pursuant to this subsection shall disclose all information that is the basis for his suspicion of abuse or neglect of the child and, upon request, shall make available to the child-protective services coordinator and the local department, which is the agency of jurisdiction, any information, records, or reports that document the basis for the report. All persons required by this subsection to report suspected abuse or neglect who maintain a record of a child who is the subject of such a report shall cooperate with the investigating agency and shall make related information, records and reports available to the investigating agency unless such disclosure violates the federal Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (20 U.S.C. § 1232g). Provision of such information, records, and reports by a health care provider shall not be prohibited by §
8.01-399
. Criminal investigative reports received from law-enforcement agencies shall not be further disseminated by the investigating agency nor shall they be subject to public disclosure.
B. For purposes of subsection A, "reason to suspect that a child is
an
abused or neglected
child
" shall, due to the special medical needs of infants affected by substance exposure, include (i) a finding made by a health care provider within six weeks of the birth of a child that the child was born affected by substance abuse or experiencing withdrawal symptoms resulting from in utero drug exposure; (ii) a diagnosis made by a health care provider within four years following a child's birth that the child has an illness, disease, or condition that, to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, is attributable to maternal abuse of a controlled substance during pregnancy; or (iii) a diagnosis made by a health care provider within four years following a child's birth that the child has a fetal alcohol spectrum disorder attributable to in utero exposure to alcohol. When "reason to suspect" is based upon this subsection, such fact shall be included in the report along with the facts relied upon by the person making the report. Such reports shall not constitute a per se finding of child abuse or neglect. If a health care provider in a licensed hospital makes any finding or diagnosis set forth in clause (i), (ii), or (iii), the hospital shall require the development of a written discharge plan under protocols established by the hospital pursuant to subdivision B 6 of §
32.1-127
.
C.
For purposes of subsection A, "reason to suspect that a child is an abused or neglected child" includes any suspected violation of §§
18.2-370
through
18.2-370.6

[

and any suspected violation of Article 5 (§
18.2-372
et seq.) of Chapter 8 of Title 18.2

or §
18.2-374.3

]
involving a child.
D.
Any person who makes a report or provides records or information pursuant to subsection A or who testifies in any judicial proceeding arising from such report, records, or information shall be immune from any civil or criminal liability or administrative penalty or sanction on account of such report, records, information, or testimony, unless such person acted in bad faith or with malicious purpose.
D.
E.
Any person required to file a report pursuant to this section who fails to do so as soon as possible, but not longer than 24 hours after having reason to suspect a reportable offense of child abuse or neglect, shall be fined not more than $500 for the first failure and for any subsequent failures not less than $1,000. In cases evidencing acts or attempted acts of rape, sodomy, aggravated sexual battery, or object sexual penetration as defined in Article 7 (§
18.2-61
et seq.) of Chapter 4 of Title 18.2, a person who knowingly and intentionally fails to make the report required pursuant to this section is guilty of a Class 1 misdemeanor.
E.
F.
No person shall be required to make a report pursuant to this section if the person has actual knowledge that the same matter has already been reported to the local department or the Department's toll-free child abuse and neglect hotline.