General Assembly Update: Where the Collective Bargaining Bills Stand
February 20, 2026
February 20, 2026
The House (HB1263) and Senate (SB378) have each passed their own version of a statewide collective bargaining bill. The bills are similar in many ways, but are no longer identical. Over the next few weeks, lawmakers will negotiate a final version that will make its way to Governor Spanberger.
As you may know, collective bargaining rights for public employees currently depend on where you live. Some school divisions allow bargaining. Others don’t.
These bills would create a statewide framework so educators and other public employees would have the right to:
Just as important: these bills aren’t only about bargaining. They also protect collective action, meaning your right to act together to improve your working conditions.That includes things like:
We’ve seen situations where workers faced retaliation for acting together. Clear statewide protection would make a meaningful difference in these cases.
Nothing is final yet.
Despite some frustrating changes, both versions still:
That last point is important: membership has no expiration date. Building membership now strengthens our position later.

Our honest assessment
We want to be clear with members:
At the same time:
This is the biggest question we’re hearing. Both bills require the new Public Employee Relations Board (PERB) to write regulations before certification elections can happen.The House bill sets a clear deadline: PERB must adopt regulations by July 1, 2028, and cannot accept certification petitions before then. Based on the state rulemaking process, July 2028 is a realistic timeline. What that means: a request for recognition as exclusive bargaining representative will not be entertained until mid-2028.
We don’t yet know how PERB will define valid authorization cards or how long they will last.
Under federal practice, cards are often valid for about one year. If PERB begins accepting petitions on July 1, 2028, the earliest it would likely make sense to collect cards would be around July 1, 2027. Until we have final rules, that’s the safest assumption.
Right now, the priority is membership. Membership support counts. It does not expire. And strong membership will determine how successful we are when certification becomes possible.
Between now and March 14, lawmakers will negotiate the final bill. We are pushing for:
We will continue to update you as this moves.
The average pay of Virginia public school teachers in 2023-24 was $65,830. That is $4,260 below the national average of $70,090.
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