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AI Laws in Roanoke, Virginia

As of 2026-07-15, AI Laws USA tracks 29 AI rules that apply to people and businesses in Roanoke, Virginia: 10+ federal protections, 18 Virginia state-level rules, and 1 local Roanoke ordinance. Coverage is strongest on consumer protection, data-center siting and energy, police and surveillance AI, and government use of AI. 16 of these rules are already in effect. Each entry below links to its official source.

Roanoke local AI rules

1 local AI rule specific to Roanoke, Virginia.

  1. In effect Moderate protection

    Roanoke City VA Data Center Special Exception Zoning Ordinance

    Roanoke, VA · Effective 2026-07-07 · Roanoke City, VA City Council unanimous vote, July 7, 2026, data center special exception zoning ordinance

    On July 7, 2026, the Roanoke City (VA) City Council unanimously passed a new zoning ordinance setting rules for where and how data centers can be built in the city. The ordinance requires data centers to obtain a special exception permit, which triggers a public hearing before the Planning Commission and City Council before any approval. Roanoke is an independent city in the Roanoke Valley of southwestern Virginia, separate from Roanoke County.

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Virginia-level AI rules most relevant to Roanoke

18 Virginia state rules apply to residents and businesses in Roanoke. Showing the 8 most relevant to Roanoke's local picture; 10 more are on the Virginia jurisdiction page.

  1. In effect Moderate protection

    VA SCC Data Center Rate Case

    VA · Effective 2024-11-13 · Va. SCC Case No. PUR-2024-00144

    Virginia's State Corporation Commission opened a formal investigation into how data center load growth — driven by AI compute demand — should be allocated across electricity rate classes, to keep residential customers from subsidizing AI data centers. Includes minimum-billing demands and special tariffs.

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  2. In effect Limited protection

    VA Data Center Cost-Allocation Law

    Virginia · Effective 2026-07-01 · Va. SB 253 (2026) (Sen. Lucas); companion Va. HB 1393 (2026); related Va. HB 507 (2026, generator air permits). Signed with gubernatorial amendments, May 2026; effective July 1, 2026.

    Virginia's 2026 data-center cost-allocation law (SB 253, by Sen. L. Louise Lucas, with companion HB 1393). As amended by Gov. Spanberger and signed in May 2026, it lets the State Corporation Commission (SCC) shift certain electricity costs — PJM capacity-auction purchases and the financing of distribution lines and substations that mainly serve data centers — onto data centers and other very large (25 MW+) customers in their rate class, instead of spreading them across residential bills. The governor's amendments made the cost-shift SCC-discretionary rather than automatic, so the real-world savings depend on future SCC rate cases. The bill also extends Dominion and Appalachian Power low-income weatherization programs.

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  3. In effect Moderate protection

    VA PDD Act (2017 — first)

    Virginia · Effective 2017-07-01 · Va. Code §§ 46.2-100, 46.2-908.1:1

    Virginia was the first U.S. state to legalize sidewalk delivery robots. PDDs may operate on sidewalks and crosswalks (10 mph cap, 50 lb cargo limit), must carry $100,000 liability insurance and a visible operator ID, and localities may further regulate them. Starship Technologies' deployment at George Mason in 2019 traces back to this law.

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  4. In effect Limited protection

    VA Data Center Tax Exemption

    Virginia · Effective 2010-07-01 · Va. Code § 58.1-609.3(18)

    Virginia exempts qualifying data centers from sales and use tax on servers and related equipment — a key driver of the world's largest data center market in Northern Virginia. Operators must meet capital investment and job-creation thresholds; the exemption runs through mid-2035 with extensions for very large investments.

    View full entry →  ·  Official source ↗

  5. Vetoed Proposed or pending

    VA Data Center Siting Bill (Vetoed)

    Virginia · Va. HB 1601 (2025) (vetoed May 2, 2025)

    A bipartisan 2025 bill that would have required data center developers to perform site assessments covering water, noise, and historic resources before local land-use approval, including noise studies for homes and schools within 500 feet. Governor Youngkin vetoed it on May 2, 2025.

    View full entry →  ·  Official source ↗

  6. In effect Limited protection

    Virginia VCDPA (opt out of profiling, $7,500/violation)

    Virginia · Effective 2023-01-01 · Va. Code 59.1-575 to 59.1-585 (esp. 59.1-577, 59.1-580, 59.1-584); HB 2307 / SB 1392 (2021)

    Virginia's comprehensive privacy law gives consumers the right to opt out of 'profiling' used to make decisions producing legal or similarly significant effects, such as automated decisions affecting credit, housing, employment, or essential services. Businesses must obtain heightened consent before processing the data of a known child (via federal COPPA) and must conduct documented data protection assessments for higher-risk processing, including certain profiling. The Attorney General enforces the law and may seek up to $7,500 per violation; there is no private right of action.

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  7. In effect Limited protection

    Va. Code 19.2-11.14 (humans, not AI, must decide bail/sentencing/parole)

    Virginia · Effective 2025-07-01 · Va. Code 19.2-11.14; HB 1642 (2025), Va. Acts c. 637

    Virginia requires that key criminal-justice decisions be made by a human being, even when an AI tool produces a recommendation or prediction. The rule covers pretrial detention or release, prosecution, adjudication, sentencing, probation, parole, correctional supervision, and rehabilitation. No such decision may be made without a human decision-maker, and any AI-generated recommendation is subject to any challenge or objection allowed by law.

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  8. In effect Limited protection

    VA DOI AI Bulletin

    VA · Effective 2024-07-22 · Virginia SCC Bureau of Insurance Administrative Letter 2024-01 (2024-07-22)

    The VA Department of Insurance adopted the NAIC Model Bulletin on Use of Artificial Intelligence Systems by Insurers. Insurers licensed in VA must maintain a written AI program with governance, risk-management, testing, third-party-AI oversight, and documentation controls. The bulletin operationalizes existing unfair-trade-practice and unfair-discrimination law as applied to insurers' AI use cases — underwriting, pricing, claims, fraud detection, and marketing.

    View full entry →  ·  Official source ↗

See all 18 Virginia AI rules →

Federal AI rules that apply in Roanoke, Virginia

These federal protections apply everywhere in the United States, including Roanoke, Virginia. Showing the 10 strongest and most recent.

  1. In effect Stronger protection

    Bartz v. Anthropic

    N.D. Cal. · Effective 2025-09-05 · Bartz v. Anthropic PBC, No. 3:24-cv-05417 (N.D. Cal.)

    Authors Andrea Bartz, Charles Graeber, and Kirk Wallace Johnson sued Anthropic over its use of pirated-book datasets to train Claude. In June 2025 Judge William Alsup ruled that training on lawfully purchased books was fair use. The piracy claims (LibGen ingestion) were not adjudicated to a final ruling — they proceeded toward settlement. In September 2025 Anthropic agreed to a $1.5 billion class settlement, though Judge Alsup denied preliminary approval without prejudice pending additional information on the claims protocol and attorney fees.

    View full entry →  ·  Official source ↗

  2. In effect Stronger protection

    Benavides v. Tesla (Autopilot)

    S.D. Fla. · Effective 2025-08-01 · Benavides v. Tesla, Inc., No. 1:21-cv-21940 (S.D. Fla. Aug. 1, 2025)

    A Florida federal jury found Tesla 33% liable in August 2025 for the 2019 death of Naibel Benavides Leon, in a crash involving Autopilot. The jury awarded $243M ($129M compensatory + $200M punitive); in February 2026 the court denied Tesla's post-trial motions and upheld the verdict in full — the first Autopilot wrongful-death verdict against Tesla.

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  3. In effect Stronger protection

    COPPA + 2025 Rule (childrens data)

    United States · Effective 2025-06-23 · 15 U.S.C. §§ 6501–6506; 16 C.F.R. Part 312

    COPPA requires online services aimed at children under 13 to get verifiable parental consent before collecting kids' personal data. The 2025 rule update — fully in effect since April 22, 2026 — adds biometric identifiers (like face templates and voiceprints, which matter for AI tools), requires separate parental consent before sharing children's data for targeted advertising, and tightens data retention limits.

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  4. In effect Stronger protection

    TAKE IT DOWN Act

    United States · Effective 2025-05-19 · Pub. L. No. 119-12 (S. 146)

    Makes it a federal crime to knowingly publish intimate images of someone without consent, including AI-generated deepfakes. Social media and similar platforms must give victims a way to request removal and must take the content (and known copies) down within 48 hours. The platform removal requirement became enforceable May 19, 2026, and the FTC has already begun enforcement.

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  5. Blocked / in litigation Stronger protection

    NetChoice v. Yost (Ohio)

    S.D. Ohio · Effective 2025-04-16 · NetChoice, LLC v. Yost, No. 2:24-cv-00047 (S.D. Ohio Apr. 16, 2025)

    Ohio's Social Media Parental Notification Act — requiring parental consent for minors' social-media use, including algorithmic feeds — was preliminarily enjoined on February 12, 2024, then permanently enjoined on April 16, 2025 when the district court granted summary judgment for NetChoice. The state appealed to the Sixth Circuit, which vacated the district court's injunction in 2026.

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  6. In effect Stronger protection

    Thaler v. Perlmutter (Copyright)

    D.C. Cir. · Effective 2025-03-18 · Thaler v. Perlmutter, 130 F.4th 1039 (D.C. Cir. 2025)

    The companion copyright case: Stephen Thaler sought to register a copyright with 'Creativity Machine' (his AI) as the author. The D.C. Circuit affirmed in March 2025 that the Copyright Act's human-authorship requirement is dispositive as a matter of statutory law. AI cannot be a copyright author under U.S. law.

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  7. In effect Stronger protection

    Thomson Reuters v. Ross

    D. Del. · Effective 2025-02-11 · Thomson Reuters Enterprise Centre GmbH v. Ross Intelligence, Inc., No. 1:20-cv-00613 (D. Del. Feb. 11, 2025)

    Thomson Reuters sued legal-research startup Ross Intelligence in 2020 for copying Westlaw headnotes to train a competing AI legal-research tool. In February 2025, Judge Stephanos Bibas (sitting by designation) granted summary judgment to Thomson Reuters on direct copyright infringement and rejected Ross's fair-use defense — the first definitive U.S. ruling on AI-training fair use. No jury trial occurred: a 2023 opinion had denied summary judgment and pointed toward trial, but the court invited renewed briefing and reversed course in the 2025 ruling.

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  8. In effect Stronger protection

    Louis v. SafeRent

    D. Mass. · Effective 2024-11-20 · Louis v. SafeRent Solutions, LLC, No. 1:22-cv-10800 (D. Mass.)

    SafeRent agreed in November 2024 to a $2.275M settlement and a five-year ban on using its 'SafeRent Score' for housing-voucher applicants, after a class action alleged its AI tenant-screening tool systematically denied housing to Black and Hispanic Section 8 voucher holders. The first major AI tenant-screening Fair Housing Act settlement.

    View full entry →  ·  Official source ↗

  9. In effect Stronger protection

    FTC Impersonation Rule (AI)

    United States · Effective 2024-04-01 · 16 C.F.R. Part 461; 89 Fed. Reg. 15017

    The FTC's Impersonation Rule lets the agency directly sue scammers who pretend to be a government agency or a real business — including those who use AI-cloned voices or generated images to do so. Civil penalties can reach $53,088 per violation. The FTC also issued a supplemental notice in February 2024 proposing to extend the rule to all individual impersonation.

    View full entry →  ·  Official source ↗

  10. In effect Stronger protection

    TCPA (AI voice calls)

    United States · Effective 2024-02-08 · 47 U.S.C. § 227; FCC 24-17

    Robocalls using AI-cloned or AI-generated voices are treated like other 'artificial voice' calls: callers need your prior express consent, must identify themselves, and must offer opt-outs for telemarketing. You can personally sue violators for $500 to $1,500 per illegal call.

    View full entry →  ·  Official source ↗

See all federal AI rules →

Frequently asked questions about AI laws in Roanoke, Virginia

Are there AI laws in Roanoke, Virginia?
Yes. We index 1 local AI rule that specifically apply in Roanoke, Virginia, including Roanoke City VA Data Center Special Exception Zoning Ordinance. On top of that, 18 Virginia state-level rules and 10+ federal AI protections apply throughout the city.
What federal AI rules apply in Roanoke?
Every federal AI protection in our index applies in Roanoke, Virginia. The highest-strength federal rules currently include Bartz v. Anthropic, Benavides v. Tesla (Autopilot), COPPA + 2025 Rule (childrens data). 10+ federal entries are tracked in total.
Does Virginia have an AI privacy law?
Virginia has 8 privacy- or automated-decision-related AI rules in our index, including VA warrantless drone ban and VA PDD Act (2017 — first). These apply to residents of Roanoke.
Are deepfakes illegal in Virginia?
Virginia has 3 deepfake- or AI-image-related laws in our index, including VA HB 2678 (2019, first deepfake-NCII criminal law) and Virginia HB 2678 (deepfake nude/explicit images become a crime). Additionally, the federal TAKE IT DOWN Act covers non-consensual intimate-image deepfakes nationwide.
Can my employer use AI to screen me for jobs in Roanoke?
Employer use of AI to screen job applicants in Roanoke, Virginia is governed by VA HB 2094 (vetoed). Federal civil-rights and EEOC guidance also applies.
How do I report an AI law violation in Roanoke?
Most AI rules are enforced by an agency listed on each individual entry. For Virginia state laws, the Virginia Attorney General's office is the usual starting point. For federal AI rules, file complaints with the relevant federal agency (FTC, EEOC, HUD, CFPB, etc.) named on each protection entry. We also accept tips at [email protected].
Are facial recognition cameras allowed in Roanoke?
Facial-recognition use in Roanoke, Virginia is addressed by Virginia § 15.2-1723.2 (facial recognition by local law enforcement, eff. July 1, 2026) and VA SB 1392 / HB 2031 (2021 FR moratorium, narrowed 2022). See those entries for what is allowed, who must comply, and enforcement details.
Is Roanoke regulated by Virginia's consumer privacy act?
Yes. Virginia state laws apply uniformly to residents and businesses operating in Roanoke. See the Virginia jurisdiction page for the complete list of consumer-protection and privacy rules.

Have we missed an AI rule in Roanoke?

This page is generated from our open civic dataset. If you know of a Roanoke ordinance, county rule, or local enforcement action we should add, email [email protected] or submit a correction. Every entry must include a verifiable source.