                                 CODE OF VIRGINIA

DEFINITIONS (§ 59.1-198)

As used in this chapter, unless the context requires a different meaning:
		&#8220;Business opportunity&#8221; means the sale of any products, equipment,
supplies, or services that are sold to an individual for the purpose of enabling
such individual to start a business to be operated out of his residence, but
does not include a business opportunity that is subject to the Business
Opportunity Sales Act (§ 59.1-262 et seq.).
		&#8220;Children&#8217;s product&#8221; means a consumer product designed or
intended primarily for children 12 years of age or younger. In determining
whether a consumer product is primarily intended for a child 12 years of age or
younger, the following factors shall be considered:

1. A statement by a manufacturer about the intended use of such product,
including a label on such product if such statement is reasonable;

2. Whether the product is represented in its packaging, display, promotion, or
advertising as appropriate for use by children 12 years of age or younger;

3. Whether the product is commonly recognized by consumers as being intended for
use by a child 12 years of age or younger; and

4. The Age Determination Guidelines issued by the staff of the Consumer Products
Safety Commission in September 2002, and any successor to such guidelines.
			&#8220;Consent&#8221; means the same as that term is defined in &#xA7;
59.1-575.
			&#8220;Consumer transaction&#8221; means:

1. The advertisement, sale, lease, license, or offering for sale, lease, or
license, of goods or services to be used primarily for personal, family, or
household purposes;

2. Transactions involving the advertisement, offer, or sale to an individual of
a business opportunity that requires both his expenditure of money or property
and his personal services on a continuing basis and in which he has not been
previously engaged;

3. Transactions involving the advertisement, offer, or sale to an individual of
goods or services relating to the individual&#8217;s finding or obtaining
employment;

4. A layaway agreement, whereby part or all of the price of goods is payable in
one or more payments subsequent to the making of the layaway agreement and the
supplier retains possession of the goods and bears the risk of their loss or
damage until the goods are paid in full according to the layaway agreement;

5. Transactions involving the advertisement, sale, lease, or license, or the
offering for sale, lease, or license, of goods or services to a church or other
religious body; and

6. Transactions involving the advertisement of legal services that contain
information about the results of a state or federal survey, inspection, or
investigation of a nursing home or certified nursing facility as described in
subsection E of &#xA7; 32.1-126.
			&#8220;Cure offer&#8221; means a written offer of one or more things of
value, including but not limited to the payment of money, that is made by a
supplier and that is delivered to a person claiming to have suffered a loss as a
result of a consumer transaction or to the attorney for such person. A cure
offer shall be reasonably calculated to remedy a loss claimed by the person and
it shall include a minimum additional amount equaling 10 percent of the value of
the cure offer or $500, whichever is greater, as compensation for inconvenience,
any attorney&#8217;s or other fees, expenses, or other costs of any kind that
such person may incur in relation to such loss, provided, however, that the
minimum additional amount need not exceed $4,000.
			&#8220;Defective drywall&#8221; means drywall, or similar building material
composed of dried gypsum-based plaster, that (i) as a result of containing the
same or greater levels of strontium sulfide that has been found in drywall
manufactured in the People&#8217;s Republic of China and imported into the
United States between 2004 and 2007 is capable, when exposed to heat, humidity,
or both, of releasing sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, carbon disulfide, or
other sulfur compounds into the air or (ii) has been designated by the U.S.
Consumer Product Safety Commission as a product with a product defect that
constitutes a substantial product hazard within the meaning of &#xA7; 15(a)(2)
of the Consumer Product Safety Act (15 U.S.C. &#xA7; 2064 (a)(2)).
			&#8220;Goods&#8221; means all real, personal, or mixed property, tangible or
intangible. For purposes of this chapter, intangible property includes but shall
not be limited to &#8220;computer information&#8221; and &#8220;informational
rights&#8221; in computer information as defined in &#xA7; 59.1-501.2.
			&#8220;Person&#8221; means any natural person, corporation, trust,
partnership, association, and any other legal entity.
			&#8220;Reproductive or sexual health information&#8221; means information
relating to the past, present, or future reproductive or sexual health of an
individual, including:

1. Efforts to research or obtain reproductive or sexual health information
services or supplies, including location information that may indicate an
attempt to acquire such services or supplies;

2. Reproductive or sexual health conditions, status, diseases, or diagnoses,
including pregnancy, menstruation, ovulation, ability to conceive a pregnancy,
whether an individual is sexually active, and whether an individual is engaging
in unprotected sex;

3. Reproductive and sexual health-related surgeries and procedures, including
termination of a pregnancy;

4. Use or purchase of contraceptives, birth control, or other medication related
to reproductive health, including abortifacients;

5. Bodily functions, vital signs, measurements, or symptoms related to
menstruation or pregnancy, including basal temperature, cramps, bodily
discharge, or hormone levels;

6. Any information about diagnoses or diagnostic testing, treatment, or
medications, or the use of any product or service relating to the matters
described in subdivisions 1 through 5; and

7. Any information described in subdivisions 1 through 6 that is derived or
extrapolated from non-health-related information such as proxy, derivative,
inferred, emergent, or algorithmic data.
			&#8220;Reproductive or sexual health information&#8221; does not include
health information that is protected under the federal Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (42 U.S.C. &#xA7; 1320d et seq.),
health records for the purposes of Title 32.1, or patient-identifying records
for the purposes of 42 U.S.C. &#xA7; 290dd-2.
			&#8220;Services&#8221; includes but is not limited to (i) work performed in
the business or occupation of the supplier, (ii) work performed for the supplier
by an agent whose charges or costs for such work are transferred by the supplier
to the consumer or purchaser as an element of the consumer transaction, or (iii)
the subject of an &#8220;access contract&#8221; as defined in &#xA7; 59.1-501.2.
			&#8220;Supplier&#8221; means a seller, lessor, licensor, or professional that
advertises, solicits, or engages in consumer transactions, or a manufacturer,
distributor, or licensor that advertises and sells, leases, or licenses goods or
services to be resold, leased, or sublicensed by other persons in consumer
transactions.

HISTORY: 1977, c. 635; 1981, c. 205; 1987, c. 464; 1988, c. 485; 1992, c. 278;
2001, cc. 741, 762; 2004, cc. 41, 90; 2009, cc. 359, 700; 2010, c. 143; 2011, c.
615; 2019, cc. 291, 292; 2025, c. 591.