Va. Code Ann. § 15.2-2512.1
A. For purposes of this section:
"Auditor" means the Auditor of Public Accounts.
"Emergency fiscal manager" means an official appointed by the Commission on Local Government to implement a remediation plan approved by the Commission under subsection H to restore fiscal health for a locality in the Commonwealth. The "emergency fiscal manager" shall have broad powers to rectify the financial emergency and to assure the fiscal accountability of the locality and the locality's capacity to provide or cause to be provided necessary governmental services essential to the public health, safety, and welfare.
"Fiscal distress" means a situation whereby the provision and sustainability of public services, or the ability to appropriately fund financial liabilities, is threatened by various administrative and financial shortcomings, including cash flow issues, inability to pay expenses, revenue shortfalls, deficit spending, structurally imbalanced budgets, billing and revenue collection inadequacies and discrepancies, debt overload, failure to meet obligations to authorities, school divisions, or political subdivisions of the Commonwealth, lack of trained and qualified staff to process administrative and financial transactions, or the inability to timely produce an audited financial report. "Fiscal distress" may be caused by factors internal to the locality or external to the locality, and in various degrees such conditions may or may not be controllable by management or the local governing body or its constitutional officers.
C. Based upon the criteria established by the Auditor, the Auditor shall establish a prioritized early warning system. Under the prioritized early warning system, the Auditor shall establish a regular process whereby it reviews audited financial data and other relevant factors and qualitative information on at least an annual basis to make a preliminary determination that a locality may meet the criteria for fiscal distress. As part of the early warning system, the Auditor shall use leading financial indicators based on key data from the locality's audited financial reports to evaluate information related to a locality's financial position, financial reserves, debt, and operating revenues and expenditures, along with other relevant factors as applicable. The Auditor shall further evaluate localities that are identified as needing additional evaluation based on their initial financial indicators on the basis of additional leading indicators that may include retirement liabilities, revenue growth, economic and property market value data, reports prepared by the Commission on Local Government on revenue fiscal stress, and other relevant qualitative information.
If a locality has not submitted its audited annual financial report, pursuant to §§ 15.2-2510 and 15.2-2511, within 18 months of the required December 15 deadline or provided a plan to do so, the Auditor shall notify the Governor, the Secretary of Finance, and the Chairmen of the House Committees on Appropriations and Counties, Cities and Towns and the Senate Committees on Finance and Appropriations and Local Government that the Auditor is unable to review the locality's financial data as part of the early warning system or evaluate its financial condition due to the locality's delay with submitting its audited annual financial report. A locality's inability to timely produce its required audited financial report within 18 months of the required deadline as specified in this subsection or to provide a plan to do so shall automatically effectuate the provisions pursuant to subsection D whereby the Auditor shall make a preliminary determination that the locality may meet the criteria for fiscal distress.
E.
2024, c. 426.