by James C. Sherlock
Delegate Rodney Willet, D-Henrico, is trying to do the right thing for the right reasons.
He has introduced HB 605 to amendย ยง 32.1-127. (Effective January 1, 2026) Regulations. ย He added a new section B. 35 to establish staffing standards for Virginia nursing homes. Del. Willett is joined by many members of the General Assembly of both parties who were stunned by the Colonial Heights Rehabilitation and Nursing Center scandal of a year ago. Discussions are underway to determine the exact staffing figures.
Whatever those staffing figures may turn out to be will prove irrelevant.
The nursing home lobby is on the other side of the negotiating table. But the author suspects that, after the negotiations, they are laughing over drinks at the bar. They know that, if passed, the bill would refer to the sanctions set forth in ยง 32.1-27.2. Administrative sanctions.
To the question of what sanctions a nursing home will face for failing to comply with the new staffing law, the answer is, as a practical matter, none. ย
Chains, which are by far the biggest issue in nursing home performance, are not even in the conversation, much less addressed in Virginia law.
That will remain the case even if Del. Willettโs bill passes.











