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Richmond police cut off federal access to license plate readers

By LUCA POWELL, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

The Richmond Police Department cut off access to federal agencies seeking to use their license plate readers, the department announced Tuesday. “Moving forward, no federal agencies will have access to our license plate reader program,” said Richmond Police Chief Rick Edwards. “This tool is vital to solving serious crimes in our city, and we will ensure it is used lawfully, responsibly, and in alignment with Richmond’s values.”

VaNews July 9, 2025


Town Council votes to ban data centers from Warrenton

By TATE HEWITT, Fauquier Times

Warrenton's leaders have officially pushed the reset button on data centers. Just seven months after the citizens of Warrenton elected new council members opposed to the controversial developments, the Warrenton Town Council voted unanimously in favor of a zoning change that essentially erases data centers from the town code. . . . The move is just the latest attempt to turn the page on the special use permit the town council approved in February 2023 for the Amazon data center slated for Blackwell Road in Warrenton —a move which pulled the town into several lawsuits and cost some council members their seats.

VaNews July 9, 2025


Richmond has spent at least $6.7 million on water crisis

By RYAN NADEAU, WRIC-TV

January’s water crisis is estimated to have cost the city of Richmond at least $6.7 million, according to a memo provided to Richmond City Council in late June. From Jan. 6 to Jan. 11, a widespread water crisis left residents and businesses throughout Richmond — as well as Henrico, Hanover and Goochland counties — with little to no water. In the wake of this event, both city leaders and regulatory agencies have been looking into how to prevent such a catastrophe from happening again.

VaNews July 9, 2025


Fisher: Trump wins the ritual sacrifice of U-Va.’s president. So now what?

By MARC FISHER, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

When University of Virginia students return to campus this fall, everything will be different. Their school president will be gone, sacrificed on the altar of the MAGA movement’s campaign against the bogeyman of diversity, equity and inclusion. The school’s DEI programs will be history. The selection process for the next president will be underway, as Trumpian forces transform one of America’s premier universities into a place where students are no longer inculcated with identity politics, no longer infected with anti-Americanism, no longer submersed in leftist values. It will be a MAGA super-paradise come to life on, of all places, a college campus. Or maybe not.

VaNews July 9, 2025


Trump’s megabill slashes wind energy incentives, but Dominion’s Virginia Beach project spared

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

A late addition to President Donald Trump’s signature policy bill means Dominion Energy’s Virginia Beach wind farm will not be at risk of losing federal tax credits. The bill, which Trump signed into law Friday, slashes many of the solar and wind energy incentives enacted through the Inflation Reduction Act by former President Joe Biden and others. The bill quickly phases out clean energy tax credits for wind and solar projects. Now, projects that are not operational by 2027 will lose out on the tax credits.

VaNews July 9, 2025


Yancey: Two Virginia districts would be good targets for Musk’s new party, but what he really needs is ranked choice voting

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

Elon Musk wants to start a new political party. Good luck with that, pal. I will hardly be the first to point out the difficulties in that. While we’ve occasionally had third parties pop up around a galvanizing figure — Theodore Roosevelt and the Bull Moose Party in 1912, George Wallace and the American Independent Party in 1968, Ross Perot and the Reform Party in 1992 and 1996 — none have lasted in any serious form.

VaNews July 9, 2025


Registrar rejected original petitions by Roanoke County School Board candidate

By LILY KINCAID, Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

The Roanoke County registrar rejected election registration materials submitted by a longtime county school board member in May, citing “major defects” in his petition pages. Tim Greenway, current member of the Roanoke County School Board, first submitted his petition pages to get on the ballot on May 24. School board candidates must submit a petition signed by 125 qualified voters to be eligible for election.

VaNews July 9, 2025


Virginia politicians look outside the state for political punching bags

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

Republicans running for statewide office in Virginia have a couple of surefire ways to rile up crowds at campaign stops: mention New York City’s mayoral race or Maryland’s budget woes. “New York … has nominated a socialist!” GOP gubernatorial nominee Winsome Earle-Sears thundered last week at a rally in Vienna, drawing a cascade of boos directed at New York Democrat Zohran Mamdani. . . . Democratic nominee Abigail Spanberger has her own guaranteed crowd-riler: Washington, particularly Republicans’ cuts to Medicaid and other social relief programs. “We reject much of what we see coming out of Washington, D.C.,” Spanberger told a crowd last week in Lynchburg, turning the cheers to boos when she mentioned Republicans’ “terrible, terrible MAGA [budget] bill” that she said would lead to Virginia hospitals closing down.

VaNews July 9, 2025


Youngkin marks early success on regulatory reform, sets new goal for 35% reduction

By MARKUS SCHMIDT, Virginia Mercury

Sweat beaded on foreheads inside the sweltering warehouse of 84 Lumber on Richmond’s Southside Tuesday, but Gov. Glenn Youngkin appeared unfazed by the heat as he declared victory on one of his administration’s signature promises — slashing red tape across Virginia’s government by 25%. “The heart of the day is recognizing that when we reduce the burdens of excess regulations on businesses in Virginia, businesses come, businesses thrive, businesses grow,” Youngkin said to applause. . . . The benchmark, established in Executive Order 19 during his first year in office, set in motion a sweeping review of every agency’s rules, guidance documents, and permitting practices — an effort that culminated in the streamlining or repeal of nearly 89,000 regulatory requirements and the elimination of 11.5 million words from official documents, according to state officials.

VaNews July 9, 2025


Fredericksburg City School Board Has New Policy on Member Travel to Conferences

By ADELE UPHAUS, FXBG Advance

In a 4-2 vote, the Fredericksburg City School Board approved a new policy on Monday night governing School Board members’ participation in professional development. Jennifer Boyd, Ward 3, and Malvina Kay, Ward 4, voted against the new policy, BHB1, which was proposed in June. The policy states, “Attendance at all other conferences or professional development events [aside from VSBA conferences] by School Board members that require the use of School Board funds must be approved by the School Board in an open session prior to the event.”

VaNews July 9, 2025