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Youngkin wants to keep talking on skill games

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

Gov. Glenn Youngkin still has concerns about legislation to legalize skill games — the slot machine-like devices that hundreds of convenience stores say keep them in business — but says he thinks an answer could come when the General Assembly meets next month to consider a new state budget. His big concern is to make sure skill games are not set up too close to schools or churches, and he thinks the bill aligns with the state’s casino gaming law, which bars additional historical horse racing gambling devices within 35 miles of a casino host city.

VaNews April 19, 2024


Aerospace/defense contractor to add 80 jobs with $41.2M Orange County expansion

By BETH JOJACK, Virginia Business

Florida-based aerospace and defense contractor L3Harris Technologies announced on Thursday a $41.2 million expansion and modernization of its Aerojet Rocketdyne facility in Orange County, with plans to add 80 employees. Over the next three years, L3Harris also plans to construct new facilities and buy new equipment for the facility, according to a statement from the company and another by Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin.

VaNews April 19, 2024


Loudoun Co. judge sets new jury trial for fired superintendent Ziegler; challenge possible

By NEAL AUGENSTEIN, WTOP

A Loudoun County, Virginia, judge set a new trial date for fired school superintendent Scott Ziegler and made no reference to Ziegler’s attorneys claim that the judge erred in ordering a new trial after setting aside a previous misdemeanor conviction. Thursday morning, Circuit Court Judge Douglas Fleming set Feb. 3, 2025, as the first of a possible five-day jury trial, six weeks after throwing out Ziegler’s conviction for the retaliatory firing of a teacher who reported that an elementary school student inappropriately touched her.

VaNews April 19, 2024


Supervisors: If Clarke County can’t get VDOT to improve Va. 7, maybe Loudoun can

By MICKEY POWELL, Winchester Star (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

Acquiring safety improvements for the stretch of Va. 7 (Harry Byrd Highway) on Blue Ridge Mountain ultimately could be an issue of who has more political clout in Richmond. Is it Clarke County, a small agricultural community of roughly 15,000 residents? Or, is it Loudoun County, an affluent suburb of Washington, D.C., with a population of about 420,000? Clarke failed in its attempt, so county officials are letting Loudoun try.

VaNews April 19, 2024


General Assembly sends four reproductive health care bills back to the governor

By ELIZABETH BEYER, News Leader (Metered Paywall - 3 to 4 articles a month)

Four reproductive health care bills were sent back to Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s desk for his signature or veto following the Wednesday General Assembly reconvene session, when lawmakers met to consider the governor’s action on legislation passed during the regular 2024 session. The legislative body sent four bills that the governor had amended back to his desk in their original form after rejecting the amendments, for his veto or signature. He has 30 days to act on the bills.

VaNews April 19, 2024


Legislature approves one gun safety amendment, sends six bills back to Youngkin

By ELIZABETH BEYER, News Leader (Metered Paywall - 3 to 4 articles a month)

One of Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s amendments was approved by the General Assembly, six were sent back to the governor’s desk for his signature or veto, and attempts to override the governor's veto on 22 gun safety related bills failed during Wednesday's reconvene session. The General Assembly accepted the governor’s amendment to SB 363, a bill that would prohibit the purchase, selling, or possession of a firearm with a removed, altered or defaced serial number. That bill will now be enacted into law.

VaNews April 19, 2024


Youngkin taps education official for Cannabis Control Authority

By ANNA BRYSON, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

A senior-level Virginia Department of Education official has left her post to serve as Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s special adviser to the CEO of the Virginia Cannabis Control Authority. Although she has no experience with cannabis policy, the Youngkin administration says Elizabeth Schultz is uniquely positioned to serve under the Secretary of Public Safety and Homeland Security, Terrance Cole.

VaNews April 19, 2024


In lawsuit limbo, Prince William Digital Gateway landowners face high tax bills

By PETER CARY, Piedmont Journalism Foundation

It seemed like a great deal when residents of rural northwest Prince William County decided in 2021 to sell their properties for a new data center alley known as the “Prince William Digital Gateway.” With contracts to sell for up to $900,000 an acre, they expected to split their real estate tax bills with their data center buyers upon sale and walk away with big profits. Now, however, that sweet dream has turned into a nightmare — at least, a tax nightmare. The supervisors rezoned the land for data centers, but two lawsuits have blocked the land sales, leaving landowners in limbo. Meanwhile, the land is now considered much more valuable and, therefore, their taxes due have spiked dramatically.

VaNews April 19, 2024


Harrisonburg Educator Helps Secure $1 Million In Federal STEM Funding For Virginia

By ASHLYN CAMPBELL, Daily News Record (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

A little more than $1 million in federal funding that Congress approved this March will go toward creating Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math hubs across Virginia — but the effort that got the Commonwealth there came from an educator in the Shenandoah Valley’s backyard. Amy Sabarre, the Harrisonburg City Public Schools STEM director and the president of the Virginia STEM Education Advisory Board, helped secure that $1,028,000 for STEM education, an accomplishment that took the teacher 10 years of persistence.

VaNews April 19, 2024


Board members bring back idea to rename Fort Monroe

By JOSH JANNEY, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

A proposal to rename Fort Monroe has been resurrected by board of trustees members who are concerned the current name ignores centuries of the site’s history and could be stifling fundraising efforts. The Fort Monroe Authority Board of Trustees considered the question of whether the site should be renamed Thursday morning as members met during a retreat. Some alternative suggestions floated for the 565-acre property and its affiliated organizations included “Old Point Comfort,” “Point Comfort,” and “Point Comfort at Fort Monroe.”

VaNews April 19, 2024