Javascript is required to run this page
VaNews
May 14, 2024
Top of the News

Virginia lawmakers approve bipartisan spending plan

By GREGORY S. SCHNEIDER AND LAURA VOZZELLA, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

Weeks of Virginia state budget drama ended Monday with pledges of bipartisan goodwill as the General Assembly passed a compromise two-year spending plan that boosts funding for education and other priorities without increasing taxes. Votes in both the Senate and the House of Delegates were nearly unanimous. Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R), who had raised the specter of an unprecedented state government shutdown by vowing not to sign the budget the legislature passed in March, rushed Monday to sign the new document after a special one-day legislative budget session.


Virginia’s skill game debate could stretch into the summer

By GRAHAM MOOMAW, Virginia Mercury

After finishing work on almost everything else taken up during the 2024 session, the Virginia General Assembly and Gov. Glenn Youngkin have decided to keep talking about skill games. The governor and several lawmakers said Monday that they’ll continue seeking a way to get the slot machine lookalikes taxed and regulated in response to a major lobbying push by business owners and the companies that make and distribute the games. “What we decided was that we would pick that up at another day,” Youngkin said Monday as he signed a bipartisan budget deal that didn’t address the legality of skill games. “That’s a commitment that we’ve made.”


State budget includes $50M for broadband deployment

By TAD DICKENS, Cardinal News

Virginia’s recently passed law to speed broadband deployment to rural areas now has a financial component. Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s signature on the General Assembly’s budget bill will move $50 million over two years from the general fund to the Virginia Telecommunication Initiative, or VATI. The money, earmarked to help cover construction costs for private sector broadband service providers, follows the so-called make-ready bill passed in April to solve disputes and speed work toward getting internet to the commonwealth’s rural residents.


Virginia lawmakers to study campus safety policies after series of protests

By NATHANIEL CLINE, Virginia Mercury

The Virginia House of Delegates has formed a select committee on maintaining campus safety and allowing students to exercise their First Amendment rights, after more than 125 arrests at four of Virginia’s college campuses. According to Sen. Ghazala Hashmi, D-Richmond, the Senate will announce its plans to form a similar committee on Tuesday. “I’ve heard very different scenarios from those who were on the ground and in encampments either as students or as community members that were part of those protests,” Hashmi said. “I think it’s important to get a very clear picture of what’s happened.”


Virginia Tech student helps lead push for women’s health legislation

By PAYTON WILLIAMS, Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

At 20 years old, Aarushi Khanna played a central role in getting new legislation passed in Virginia. The Virginia Tech student is an ambassador for the Pad Project, a nonprofit dedicated to expanding access to menstrual products in places where supplies are limited, and to increasing education on women’s menstrual health. Khanna was one of several activists who pushed for the passage of House Bill 1221, which would allow for all schools in Virginia to provide menstrual education as part as overall health instruction for students middle school-age and up.

The Full Report
21 articles, 15 publications

EXECUTIVE BRANCH

GOP attorneys general, including Miyares, sue Biden administration over rules on gas-powered trucks

By MARGERY A. BECK AND SUMMER BALLENTINE, Associated Press

A large group of Republican attorneys general on Monday took legal action against the Biden administration and California over new emissions limits for trucks. Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers is leading the group of GOP attorneys general who filed a petition with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to overturn an Environmental Protection Agency rule limiting truck emissions. … States that joined Nebraska’s latest action against the EPA [include] … Virginia.

GENERAL ASSEMBLY

General Assembly passes budget with funds for priorities, no tax hike

By MICHAEL MARTZ AND DAVE RESS, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

The General Assembly found a way to compromise with Gov. Glenn Youngkin on tax policy while paying for such priorities as raises for teachers and state employees in a $188 billion two-year budget that the legislature adopted on Monday. The House of Delegates voted 94-6 to pass the spending plan for July 1, 2024, through June 30, 2026. In the Senate, the vote was 39-1. The budget compromise avoids a showdown with Youngkin over modernizing Virginia’s tax code and returning the state to a multistate compact for reducing the greenhouse gases that scientists link to global warming and climate change. It also sidesteps — for now — an unresolved debate over whether to allow electronic “skill” games in convenience stores ...


Virginia lawmakers pass bipartisan budget that leaves tax policy unchanged

By GRAHAM MOOMAW, CHARLIE PAULLIN AND NATHANIEL CLINE, Virginia Mercury

After months of partisan combat over different priorities, Virginia lawmakers approved a bipartisan budget deal Monday with no major tax changes, funding boosts for education and mental health and salary increases for teachers and state employees. Both chambers of the General Assembly approved the new two-year budget plan by wide margins. In the House of Delegates, the vote was 94-6. The state Senate approved it 39-1.


Virginia governor swiftly signs compromise budget deal

By SARAH RANKIN, Associated Press

Public schools will get more funding, teachers and other government workers will see a pay bump and Virginia’s tax policy will remain as is under compromise budget legislation the Democratic-led General Assembly sent Monday to Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin, who swiftly signed it. Youngkin and legislative leaders last week negotiated an end to their long-running standoff over the state’s next two-year spending plan, agreeing to use higher-than-expected revenues to help fund key priorities without implementing a hotly debated new sales tax on digital goods, such as streaming services and computer software.


Youngkin signs 2-year state budget, which includes toll relief for Hampton Roads

By KATIE KING, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Gov. Glenn Youngkin signed an $188 billion state budget proposal Monday, moments after it was passed by the General Assembly. The two-year spending plan nixes a potential new tax on digital goods — a priority for Youngkin, who initially suggested the idea before reversing course — but still manages to fund most of the projects prioritized by Democrats, including massive investments in education. Senate Finance and Appropriations Committee Chair Louise Lucas, who sat beside the governor as he signed the proposal into law, called the plan a “big win” for Virginia.


Youngkin signs bipartisan state budget, ending stalemate

By MARKUS SCHMIDT, Cardinal News

The General Assembly on Monday approved a budget compromise for fiscal years 2024-26, ending a stalemate between Gov. Glenn Youngkin and Democrats that began in early March, when the legislature adjourned its regular session. The $188 billion spending plan, which includes no new tax increases, no additional tax relief and more than $2.5 billion in K-12 funding, passed in the House of Delegates 94-6 and in the Senate 39-1. The agreement averted an unprecedented government shutdown that loomed large ahead of July 1, when the new fiscal year begins.


Gov. Glenn Youngkin signs $188B, 2-year budget in quick special session

By JAHD KHALIL, VPM

Virginia lawmakers passed a $188 billion budget Monday, using unexpected tax money to fund spending increases General Assembly Democrats proposed in April, instead of a new digital sales tax that they had been at loggerheads over with Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin. When compared to the last two-year budget, the budget increases education funding by $2.5 billion; has a 3% raise for state employees, teachers, and support staff; and increases funding for child care by $500 million, according to a Senate summary.


State budget excludes funding for Health Wagon

By DAVID MCGEE, Bristol Herald Courier (Metered Paywall - 15 articles a month)

A new state biennial budget does not include $800,000 originally earmarked for the Health Wagon, a Southwest Virginia medical provider. On Monday state lawmakers approved a compromise agreement with Gov. Glenn Youngkin during a special called session in Richmond. The Health Wagon funding was recently removed following controversy over sharp increases in the salaries of Health Wagon executives which recently came to light.

FEDERAL ELECTIONS

Republican group takes rare step of targeting GOP incumbent who voted to oust McCarthy

By KEVIN FREKING, Associated Press

A political action committee that helps Republicans get elected to Congress is doing the unusual — spending more than $450,000 to defeat a GOP incumbent. That incumbent, conservative two-term Rep. Bob Good, R-Va., voted to remove former Rep. Kevin McCarthy as House speaker last fall. It’s just the latest example of how money is flowing into races involving some of the eight Republican lawmakers who voted along with Democrats to oust McCarthy. About $3.3 million has been spent on ads in the Virginia race going into Friday, according to the media tracking firm AdImpact.

STATE GOVERNMENT

Virginia could see more days with worse air quality ratings. Here’s why.

By KATHERINE HAFNER, WHRO

Virginians could start seeing more days rated with poorer air quality, the state says. But that’s because of changes in the standards – not the air. The Virginia Department of Environmental Quality puts out daily forecasts that grade air quality based on public health threats from pollution emitted by sources like cars, power plants and wildfires. … The department said last week that residents might notice an uptick in days marked as moderate as opposed to good. That’s because a recent revision of federal pollution standards is stricter about what constitutes good air.


VDOT buys Hanover building for $33.5M

By BETH JOJACK AND ROBYN SIDERSKY, Virginia Business

The Virginia Department of Transportation has purchased the Mechanicsville headquarters of Owens & Minor for $33.5 million, with plans to move the state agency’s central office there in summer 2025. Much of VDOT’s staff will move from the Annex building at 1401 E. Broad St. into the new building at 9120 Lockwood Blvd. in Hanover County, according to Jessica Cowardin, assistant director of communications for the state agency. The 160,000-square-foot campus in Atlee Station Business Park was built by Timmons Group in 2006. VDOT also purchased an additional 50 acres, according to Newmark Group, which brokered the deal.

ECONOMY/BUSINESS

New N. Va. data center firm sees big opportunities — outside N. Va.

By DAN BRENDEL, Washington Business Journal (Subscription required for some articles)

Two regional real estate pros have launched a new company specializing in tapping data center demand outside Northern Virginia, citing local officials' cooling interest in the area's continuing to be home to the data center industry’s explosive growth. “Data center development is being choked off in Northern Virginia,” Ross Litkenhous, who recently co-founded Oasis Digital Properties LLC with Nick Over ... The new firm currently has eight deals in the works in King George and Wise counties, as well as other undisclosed places in southwestern Virginia.


Ship departs for Virginia Beach offshore wind farm site to install monopiles

By TREVOR METCALFE, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

After a short delay, the first batch of wind turbine foundations is now travelling to the Virginia Beach offshore wind farm construction site, a Dominion Energy spokesperson said Monday. The enormous steel monopiles, each almost as long as a football field, are headed to the construction site 27 miles off the coast of Virginia Beach. The monopiles were loaded last week and the ship is now travelling to the site of the Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project, Dominion Energy spokesperson Jeremy Slayton said in a text message.


Sea-level rise among port’s concerns

By ELIZABETH COOPER, Virginia Business

Over the years, scientists have warned about sea-level rise, especially in Norfolk, which has the highest rate on the East Coast. “Norfolk is very flat. When you see a small increase in water levels, a wide part of land floods in response,” says Molly Mitchell, a researcher at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, which issues annual sea-level report cards for 32 coastal communities in the United States. Hampton Roads as a whole will probably see between 1 and 3 feet in sea-level rise by 2050, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and Mitchell says that’s just the beginning.

VIRGINIA OTHER

An inside look at how AP African American Studies is taught at one Va. high school

By SCOTT GELMAN, WTOP

Standing in the front of his Lorton, Virginia, classroom in October, Sean Miller told his students that food would be a topic of conversation during the class period. He also said they would talk about the types of goods that emerged in ancient East and West Africa. Part of that would involve how the influence of gold shaped the development of certain African empires. But first, Miller advised the class to pay attention to the video he was about to play. As part of a conversation about the cultural implications of food, he asked the class the types of food they’d expect to see at a Black family reunion.


Federal official celebrates rural broadband effort in Stafford

By CATHY DYSON, Free Lance-Star (Metered Paywall - 10 articles a month)

Richland Baptist Church in Stafford County was crawling with federal officials and black SUVs on Monday, but the contingent was there to celebrate, not investigate. U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and her troops, along with Comcast and Stafford officials, descended on the property to tout a public–private partnership that brought high-speed broadband to the western part of the county. “While over 650 homes may seem like a small number to some, I assure you it is huge for us and means the world to our residents,” said Meg Bohmke, chair of the Stafford Board of Supervisors.


Yellen visits Stafford amid effort to ensure rural areas no longer lag behind with broadband access

By KATHY KNOTTS, Fredericksburg Free Press

Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen visited Stafford County Monday as part of President Joe Biden’s “Investing in America Agenda” to promote high-speed internet in rural areas. Representatives from Comcast walked Yellen through some examples of the equipment used to set up and maintain high-speed broadband networks, although much of the fiber-optic cable network is underground. The site on Richland Road represents nearly 700 homes in the western part of the county that now have access to service.

LOCAL

600-acre data center project in Henrico up for deciding vote

By JONATHAN SPIERS, Richmond BizSense

Two years after a previous rezoning attempt by another group fizzled out, local development firm Hourigan is one vote away from securing approval for a massive industrial development in Varina that’s planned to include multiple data centers. Henrico supervisors are slated to vote tonight on Hourigan’s request to rezone 622 acres southeast of the Interstate 64-295 interchange from agricultural use to the county’s Light Industrial district. The change would allow more than half of the largely wooded site to be developed for manufacturing, office and production uses, including advanced manufacturing and data centers.

 

EDITORIALS

Hutchins: Mr. Jefferson’s Tears, or how to quell a student rebellion

By REYNOLDS HUTCHINS, Daily Progress Editorial (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

It’s been days now since dozens of unruly masked students were cleared from University of Virginia Grounds. The school and the surrounding Charlottesville community are still coming to terms with what happened, how and why. Partisan newspapers across the country have blown the story out of proportion, claiming without evidence there was more violence and destruction than eyewitnesses remember. Politicians in Richmond and Washington have openly questioned the university’s direction. Some blame a weak-willed administration, others blame professors instructing students in thoroughly un-American studies and others blame the students themselves, too young, too spoiled, too choleric to control their baser instincts.

Hutchins is editor of the Daily Progress.

COLUMNISTS

Yancey: You can’t say this word in some movies. But you can put it in a sign for all to see.

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

A year ago, my home county of Botetourt — like many others — was roiled by a controversy over library books. The specific concern was that children could walk into any county library and, with no supervision, find books that some considered obscene — and which certainly had some sexual content. The group BRACE — Botetourt Residents Against Child Exploitation — said it was not advocating book banning. “What we ARE proposing,” the group says on its website, “is the establishment of sensible and reasonable community standards. … And this is not about free speech. The Supreme Court has ruled that the First Amendment does not protect obscenity.” People can differ about whether the books in question — the group listed 26 on its website, many with LGBTQ+ themes — are, indeed, obscene. However, we as a society have generally agreed that not everything is appropriate for all age groups.

OP-ED

Maxson: Access to contraceptives is about more than birth control

By AMY MAXSON, published in Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

In March, the Virginia General Assembly passed legislation to protect contraception access in the state. House Bill 609 requires insurers to cover contraceptive medications and devices with no out-of-pocket costs and guarantees the right to use them. Despite a petition signed by 37,000 Virginians in favor of the bill, Gov. Glenn Youngkin sent it back to the legislature requesting it be amended to allow insurance plan sponsors with religious objections to contraception to opt out of the requirement. In their reconvening, the legislature did not accept the amendment and returned the original bill to the governor for his signature or veto.

Maxson, who resides in Arlington County, is a public health professional with over a decade of experience working at the state and national levels.