Javascript is required to run this page
VaNews

Search


Chesterfield County Jail first institution to implement new device aiding opioid recovery

By SAHARA SRIRAMAN, WRIC-TV

The Chesterfield County Jail has become the first institution in the nation to adopt a new FDA-approved device aimed at alleviating withdrawal symptoms among inmates struggling with opioid addiction. The Masimo Bridge device utilizes neuromodulation technology to significantly reduce the discomfort associated with drug withdrawal. The device sends electrical impulses to certain parts of the brain that contribute to withdrawal symptoms.

VaNews May 8, 2024


As new Roanoke recovery house opens, advocates say many more are needed

By DAVID SEIDEL, WVTF-FM

Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that has flooded the United States and driven a surge in deadly drug overdoses. It’s also ballooned the demand for treatment and recovery services. Roanoke marked National Fentanyl Awareness Day Tuesday by dedicating a new recovery house. Before organizers and First Lady Suzanne Youngkin cut the ribbon on the Four Truths Recovery house on Staunton Avenue they laid out the troubling facts—Roanoke has one of the highest fatal overdose rates in the state, according to the Virginia Department of Health. And a recent study found the region needs more than 900 recovery program beds.

VaNews May 8, 2024


Loudoun Schools to Launch New Pathways Lab with George Mason, NOVA

By ALEXIS GUSTIN, Loudoun Now

George Mason University is partnering with Loudoun County Public Schools and the Northern Virginia Community College to launch a lab school to increase help for at-risk students as they transition from high school to college and on to high-demand careers. The Accelerated College and Employability Skills Academy, to be known as ACCESS, will be inside some Loudoun high schools with funding provided by the Virginia Board of Education. Chief Academic Officer Ashely Ellis said the partnership happened quickly, with GMU reaching out to the division about partnering with them.

VaNews May 8, 2024


Rozell: Youngkin, Dems wasted months on political theater. Can they pass a budget?

By MARK J. ROZELL, published in Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

During the one-day reconvened General Assembly session in which legislators consider gubernatorial amendments and vetoes, Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin and Democratic legislative leaders said out loud the part we knew all along — it was finally time to compromise. Perhaps we should rejoice that the realization sank in late instead of too late to meet the June 30 deadline for finalizing a new budget to direct state government spending for the next two fiscal years.

Rozell is the dean of the Schar School of Policy and Government at George Mason University where he holds the Ruth D. and John T. Hazel Chair in Public Policy.

VaNews May 7, 2024


Youngkin and Vance: Fentanyl is a community threat. It’s time for the community to respond

By SUZANNE S. YOUNGKIN AND DESTINNEE VANCE, published in Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

Fentanyl has played a role in more than 75% of all drug overdose deaths in Virginia. In the last three years alone, some 6,000 people in our commonwealth have been killed by fentanyl. More than 300 of them lived in the Roanoke area. An estimated five Virginians will die from a fentanyl overdose every day this year: mothers, fathers, children, friends and coworkers. Each and every one of these losses is a tragedy. There’s no such thing as “not our problem” with fentanyl. It’s a Roanoke problem, a Virginia problem — an everyone problem.

Youngkin is the First Lady of Virginia. Vance is a Junior Ambassador, Peer Recovery Specialist for the Partnership of Community Wellness and RAYSAC Board Member.

VaNews May 7, 2024


Energy Developers Want Reforms to Va.’s Process for Connecting Renewables to Grid

By SARAH VOGELSONG, Inside Climate News

As Virginia solar developers and Dominion Energy continue to clash over requirements for tying new small and mid-sized renewables into the electric grid, some environmental groups and grid experts say changing how the state approaches interconnection costs could ease long-standing issues. “It’s a solution to a big problem that’s been stifling a lot of solar projects,” said Josephus Allmond, an attorney with the Southern Environmental Law Center. Virginia, like other states that have adopted ambitious renewables goals, has seen increasing tension in recent years over interconnection, the process of connecting new power sources to the electric grid.

VaNews May 7, 2024


Study: Opioid use disorders are undertreated among formerly incarcerated Virginians on Medicaid

By MEGHAN MCINTYRE, Virginia Mercury

A new Virginia Commonwealth University study shows that opioid use disorders are underdiagnosed and undertreated among formerly incarcerated Virginians enrolled in Medicaid. Among the 4,652 adults released from state prisons in 2022, the study shows 85% were enrolled in Medicaid within one month of their release. While 13%, or 514 of these adults had a diagnosis of opioid use disorder, only a quarter received medication treatment through Medicaid. By comparison, 78% of all Medicaid members with an opioid use disorder in state fiscal year 2021 received treatment.

VaNews May 7, 2024


Where is Jim Ryan?

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

University of Virginia President Jim Ryan would like you to know that he found the entire episode on Grounds this past Saturday “upsetting, frightening, and sad.” Only imagine how he might have felt if he had been there. But no one saw hide nor hair of Mr. Ryan Saturday, even though his official residence at Carr’s Hill is steps away from the epicenter of the violence that unfolded as state police encircled and then raided a quiet and, frankly, meager attempt at a protest on a soggy patch of grass by the University Chapel.

VaNews May 7, 2024


Chesapeake Bay watershed not likely to meet some pollution reduction goals by 2025

By ELIZA NOE, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Virginia did not reach its 2023 pollution reduction targets for nitrogen and phosphorus, according to modeling tools from the Chesapeake Bay Program, but the state is on track for reducing sediment in the bay. Too much nitrogen, phosphorus and sediment in the Chesapeake Bay contribute to poor quality of the water. Nitrogen and phosphorus fuel the growth of algae blooms, and sediment can block sunlight from reaching underwater grasses, suffocating shellfish. Between 2022 and 2023, pollution loads for nitrogen fell 3.3%, phosphorus fell 4.5% and overall sediment levels decreased by 1% across six states and DC. Those seven entities are part of the Chesapeake Clean Water Blueprint.

VaNews May 7, 2024


Interior Department defends Va. offshore wind farm in court

By NIINA H. FARAH, E&E News

The Biden administration and the developer of a $9.8 billion wind farm off of Virginia Beach, Virginia, assured a federal court Friday that the project has all necessary approvals, amid claims that construction would harm the endangered North Atlantic right whale. The joint court filing from the Interior Department and Dominion Energy comes in response to a request to halt work on the massive Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project, which is slated to include 176 turbines and is the largest project of its kind currently under development in the United States.

VaNews May 7, 2024