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There’s a Shortage of OB-GYNS Locally, Statewide, and Nationally

By ADELE UPHAUS, FXBG Advance

In mid-February, Dakota Richardson went to the emergency room at Stafford Hospital for abdominal pain. Ultrasound imaging revealed a large cyst on one of her ovaries. “They told me they were not going to remove it right away because it wasn’t an emergency yet,” Richardson told the Advance. “But they said, we want you to go to your gynecologist.” She did, and a follow-up ultrasound showed that the cyst was still there. She and her doctor decided to move forward with surgery at Mary Washington Hospital to remove it.

VaNews May 28, 2024


New flights are coming to Reagan National Airport. Where will they go?

By MICHAEL LARIS, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

An aviation law signed by President Biden this month will add five new round-trip flights to Reagan National Airport. The move followed a year of political struggle, with backers citing the benefits of adding nonstop destinations and boosting competition and critics warning of new delays and safety risks on the airport’s already overused primary runway in Arlington, Va.

VaNews May 28, 2024


12,000 Virginians who died in combat honored at War Memorial ceremony

By LUCA POWELL, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

Charles T. Lewis went 80 years without recognition. But last month, that clerical mistake was corrected, and Lewis, a Norfolk soldier who died fighting in Normandy during World War II, finally had his name etched in the Virginia War Memorial’s glass Shrine of Memory. His legacy — and that of nearly 12,000 other Virginians who died in combat — was at the heart of the 68th Memorial Day Ceremony held by the Virginia War Memorial.

VaNews May 28, 2024


Toxic sediment cleanup at Chesapeake’s Money Point finally entering last leg

By KATHERINE HAFNER, WHRO

The industrial area of Money Point in Chesapeake was once the most contaminated section of the Elizabeth River, and among the worst in the entire Chesapeake Bay watershed. Visitors could smell toxic creosote that covered the river bottom feet-thick, a tar-based substance used by industrial plants to preserve lumber coming from places like the Great Dismal Swamp. By the 1990s and early 2000s, the ecosystem was pretty much dead, said Marjorie Mayfield Jackson, executive director of the nonprofit Elizabeth River Project.

VaNews May 28, 2024


Youngkin joins veterans, families in commemorating Memorial Day at Virginia War Memorial

By TYLER ENGLANDER, WRIC-TV

Hundreds of Virginians joined veterans, their families and Gov. Glenn Youngkin at the Virginia War Memorial on Monday for the Commonwealth’s 68th Annual Memorial Day Ceremony. “On Memorial Day, it is not the death of our service members, but it is how they lived their lives, that we must celebrate,” Youngkin said. Youngkin was joined by Major General James Wing, who served as the Adjutant General of Virginia.

VaNews May 28, 2024


Loudoun Supervisors Advance Work-Group Approach to Dulles Airport Noise

By HANNA PAMPALONI, Loudoun Now

Residents near Dulles Airport raising concerns about noise from aircraft overflights might have a chance at some relief after the Board of Supervisors on Thursday voted to move forward with a process to propose mitigation options to the Federal Aviation Administration. The action is the latest in a series of efforts by county leaders to address the concerns of community members. In January 2023, the board directed the staff to open a dialogue with the FAA and in February sent a letter to the FAA seeking assistance in mitigating the noise. After being unable to open regular correspondence with the FAA, the board hired Vianair Consulting in June last year to help with that process.

VaNews May 28, 2024


Bill and Hillary Clinton to headline Virginia fundraiser for Biden, hosted by McAuliffe

By HANS NICHOLS, Axios

President Biden and former President Clinton will team up for a mega fundraiser inside the Beltway in late June, hosted by former Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe, Axios has learned. The event will be the third iteration of a successful fundraising formula that includes an evening with two (or three) Democratic presidents for the price of one. Scheduled for June 18, it follows the “three president” extravaganza in New York in April and a planned event with Biden, Clinton and former President Obama in mid-June in Los Angeles, hosted by George Clooney. The New York event brought in $26 million for Biden’s re-election effort.

VaNews May 28, 2024


Tennessee gives this hospital monopoly, which operates in SW Va., an A grade — even when it reports failure

By BRETT KELMAN, KFF Health News

A Tennessee agency that is supposed to hold accountable and grade the nation’s largest state-sanctioned hospital monopoly awards full credit on dozens of quality-of-care measurements as long as it reports any value — regardless of how its hospitals actually perform. Ballad Health, a 20-hospital system in northeast Tennessee and southwest Virginia, has received A grades and an annual stamp of approval from the Tennessee Department of Health. This has occurred as Ballad hospitals consistently fall short of performance targets established by the state, according to health department documents.

VaNews May 28, 2024


Haines: Youngkin fights bias in the opioid crisis. Why not maternal health care?

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

Last May, Gov. Glenn Youngkin signed an executive order to expand Naloxone access and combat opioid overdoses. As vice chair of the Chesterfield County School Board last year, I was grateful for the governor’s efforts to combat well-documented bias toward those who struggle with substance-use disorder. Bias has prevented school boards from stocking life-saving naloxone. The governor’s strategic decision to attend a Revive! Training at Stafford High School with the first lady gave political cover to Virginia school boards considering policies to stock naloxone in their schools.

Haines is health equity manager at the Virginia Interfaith Center for Public Policy.

VaNews May 28, 2024


D.C.-area parents worry about learning loss and teacher shortages, poll finds

By KARINA ELWOOD, LAUREN LUMPKIN, NICOLE ASBURY, SCOTT CLEMENT AND EMILY GUSKIN, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

Nearly half of Washington-area parents say learning loss from the pandemic and teacher shortages are major issues for local schools, a Washington Post-Schar School poll found, as districts continue to look for ways to boost student performance. When asked to rate how serious certain issues were in their communities’ schools, 46 percent of parents of schoolchildren across the region say learning loss from covid disruptions and not having enough teachers are major problems. More than half of parents in D.C. name each as major problems, along with roughly half in suburban Maryland and just over 4 in 10 in Northern Virginia.

VaNews May 28, 2024