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Petrine and Pace: What’s driving Virginia’s economy? It’s the talent.

By DEBORAH PETRINE AND MARK PACE, published in Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

Graduation season is upon us as carloads of family and friends made their way on Interstate 81 to Blacksburg and Radford to cheer on a new generation. They’re celebrating a milestone as thousands of Virginia students prepare to step into the workforce full of potential to shape their communities. Because they are products of Virginia’s higher education system, their chances of success are greater than their counterparts in other states.

Petrine is a former Rector of Virginia Tech’s Board of Visitors and Chair/CEO of healthcare company CCR Inc. Pace is a former vice rector of Radford University’s Board of Visitors and president of EC Pace Co. Both are board members of the VBHEC.

VaNews May 19, 2025


UVa professor defends academic freedom amid Trump attacks at Final Exercises

By CAL TOBIAS, Daily Progress (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

As nearly 8,000 soon-to-be graduates sat on the University of Virginia Lawn Saturday thinking of their futures, they were asked to consider the past. UVa English professor Michael Suarez delivered an impassioned keynote address Saturday hearkening to the university’s founding 206 years ago and its place in the future of an American republic on the precipice of its 250th birthday next year. . . . “Our ability to pursue the truth and communicate it freely is a national asset,” said Suarez. “The American university must compromise neither its moral provision nor its vision.” Suarez’s words come at a time when many in American academia feel as though they have been asked to compromise their values.

VaNews May 19, 2025


Two Virginia House of Delegates races have double primaries this year. One is in Hampton Roads.

By NATALIE ANDERSON, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

One of Virginia’s most competitive races in this year’s House of Delegates elections is in Hampton Roads. House District 89, which encompasses parts of Chesapeake and Suffolk, is up for grabs as one-term incumbent Baxter Ennis, a Republican, isn’t seeking reelection. Chesapeake represents nearly 70% of the overall district. It’s one of two districts in the state that will have a Republican and Democratic primary June 17. [The other is House District 49 in the Danville area.]

VaNews May 19, 2025


Pharrell’s canceled movie about Virginia Beach childhood never sought $12M in state incentives

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

Shortly after Pharrell Williams began production on a musical biopic about his upbringing in the Atlantis apartment complex in Virginia Beach, Virginia offered the project more than $12 million in state incentives aimed at enticing producers to shoot it in the state. However, Williams’ production team never submitted documentation for the incentives, according to state officials. The project, originally called “Atlantis,” filmed scenes in Richmond and at the Virginia Beach Oceanfront. But the project was canceled during post-production, Variety reported in February.

VaNews May 19, 2025


Democrats fight for nominations in five Richmond-area House primaries

By DAVE RESS, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

A June 17 primary will decide which Democrats run in five Richmond-area contests for the House of Delegates. Around the state there are five more Democratic House contests and eight Republican House primaries. The nomination contests set up the fall elections in which all 100 House seats are up for election. Democrats currently hold a 51-49 edge in the chamber. In the Richmond area, nine of the 11 hopefuls running in the five primary contests are seeking the chance to take on Republican incumbents.

VaNews May 19, 2025


Kroger building $40 million store on Mechanicsville Turnpike

By ERIC KOLENICH, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Grocery store chain Kroger broke ground Thursday on a long-planned, $40 million store on Mechanicsville Turnpike. The 123,000-square-foot Kroger Marketplace will sell clothing and feature a Starbucks, pharmacy, 18-pump gas station and more than 500 parking spots. It will also feature almost 10,000 square feet for retail shops adjacent to the grocery store. The new location, at Mechanicsville Turnpike and Compass Point Lane, will replace a smaller store just up the road in the Creighton Crossing shopping center. . . . The new location will have 300 employees, about twice as many as the closing store.

VaNews May 16, 2025


After Virginia clerk says Youngkin vetoes aren’t valid, a defiant governor digs in

By LAURA VOZZELLA, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

Gov. Glenn Youngkin insisted Thursday that he properly stripped three items from the state budget despite a finding by the clerk of the House of Delegates that his “purported vetoes” violate the state constitution. The Republican governor, up against a General Assembly fully but narrowly under Democratic control since the midpoint of his four-year term, has racked up more than 400 vetoes — more than any of his predecessors. Democrats have never mustered the supermajority needed to override any of them.

VaNews May 16, 2025


Virginia education department violated procurement rules in extending $83M contract

By ANNA BRYSON, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

The former leadership at the Virginia Department of Education failed to follow state procurement rules when it extended a major student assessment contract worth nearly $83 million, according to a finding by the Office of the State Inspector General. The state’s contract with the education company Pearson is one of the biggest and most politically sensitive in state government. It includes work to develop, administer, score and report statewide students’ assessments, including the Standards of Learning tests.

VaNews May 16, 2025


Youngkin signs bipartisan child welfare reforms and sets new goals for foster care

By MARKUS SCHMIDT, Virginia Mercury

Katie Jones was 11 the last time she saw her childhood home, where her father, an alcoholic, stayed between jail stints and her mother struggled with heroin addiction. One day after school, just moments after she had settled in with a bag of chips and her homework, police and social services workers pulled up outside. Within minutes, Jones and her five siblings were loaded into vehicles, separated from each other, and plunged into the foster care system — an experience that would shuffle her through five homes, three schools, and years of uncertainty before she aged out at 18, never adopted.

VaNews May 16, 2025


Ramadan: Spanberger displays a rare trait in politics – intellectual honesty

By DAVID RAMADAN, published in Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Last week, former Congresswoman Abigail Spanberger, now the Democratic candidate for governor of Virginia, made headlines by announcing she would not sign legislation that fully repeals Virginia’s right-to-work law if elected. Her decision may have removed a wedge issue from the campaign trail, but more importantly, it revealed something increasingly rare in politics: intellectual honesty.

Ramadan served in the Virginia House of Delegates from 2012 to 2016. He is a professor of practice at the Schar School at George Mason University and a scholar at the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia.

VaNews May 16, 2025