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House panel consolidates three voting‑representation bills into omnibus higher‑education substitute

February 09, 2026 | 2026 Legislature VA, Virginia


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House panel consolidates three voting‑representation bills into omnibus higher‑education substitute
The House Education, Higher Education subcommittee on Tuesday reported an omnibus substitute that combines several bills to add voting faculty, staff and student representatives on the boards of Virginia’s public colleges and universities.

Delegate Laufer, sponsor of one of the measures, told the committee the change would “ensure that the people who implement crucial decisions made by the governing body are in the room actively participating in that vote.” Delegate Franklin, who led the substitute, said the package “was also introduced at the request of the governor and this bill aims to bring back trust to our higher education Board of Visitors.”

Supporters — including faculty associations, student leaders and the United Campus Workers — argued voting members would strengthen shared governance, improve transparency and keep affordability on the agenda. Brian Turner of the Virginia conference of the American Association of University Professors said the group “strongly support[s] HB 10‑69,” favoring language that allows a single faculty member selected by peers to serve as a voting representative.

Student speakers described closed‑door decisionmaking and urged voters’ inclusion. Abdul Mohammed of the VCU NAACP and student leaders said faculty and student votes would help prevent decisions made out of public view. Cecilia Parks of United Campus Workers said she supported the bills and favored language letting workers directly select representatives.

Universities and national governance groups opposed portions of the package. Ross Muckler, president of the National Association of Governing Boards for Colleges and Universities, told the committee that best practice typically does not make faculty or student members voting board representatives and raised concerns about “fiduciary responsibility, conflicts of interest” that can “undermine public trust and complicate board deliberations.” Several university representatives asked for careful drafting to address conflicts and legal issues.

The patrons and stakeholders worked to resolve differences in the substitute. After discussion and public testimony, Delegate Lavere Bowling moved to incorporate HB 7‑80, HB 9‑39 and HB 10‑69 into HB 13‑85 and report the consolidated substitute to the full Education Committee; the motion was seconded and the subcommittee reported HB 13‑85 as substituted.

The committee’s action forwards the omnibus language for further consideration by the full committee and, if advanced, to subsequent stages in the legislative process.

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