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Kaine: In vitro fertilization access must be protected

By TIM KAINE, published in Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Judy and Roger Carr got married in 1973, hoping to have a big family. Over the following years, Judy suffered three ectopic pregnancies that left her unable to conceive the traditional way. This was 40 years ago — the earliest days of in vitro fertilization (IVF). At the end of 1980, only a handful of babies had been born via IVF worldwide, and none in the United States. The Carrs were destined to have the first in America.

Kaine is a Democrat representing Virginia in the U.S. Senate.

VaNews June 12, 2024


Youngkin wants to discard another climate law without legislative consent

Virginian-Pilot Editorial (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Three years ago, the General Assembly voted to adopt emissions standards for new vehicles purchased in the commonwealth, favoring the strict rules developed by California over those enforced by the federal government. Last week, Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced that his administration would abandon those standards, and one need not be enthusiastic about the rules to be troubled by the controversial way Virginia’s chief executive did so.

VaNews June 12, 2024


Virginia NAACP sues school board for reinstating Confederate names

By BEN FINLEY, Associated Press

The Virginia NAACP sued a county school board Tuesday over its reinstatement of Confederate military names to two schools, accusing it of embracing segregationist values and subjecting Black students to a racially discriminatory educational environment. The school board in Shenandoah County voted 5-1 last month to revert the name of Mountain View High School back to Stonewall Jackson High School, and that of Honey Run Elementary to Ashby Lee Elementary. The vote reversed a 2020 decision to remove the original names against a backdrop of nationwide protests over racial injustice.

VaNews June 12, 2024


DMV transit task force hosts inaugural meeting to discuss top priorities

By MATTHEW TORRES, WUSA-TV

The DMV Moves task force held its first meeting Monday since it was created six weeks ago to address future plans on how to provide consistent funding and world-class transit service as a region. The 23-member task force, compiled by WMATA and the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments, includes local, state and regional officials. Having a partnership like this to look into gaps in the system and figure out ways to grow is a first of its kind, founders say.

VaNews June 12, 2024


Amazon adds $1.4 billion to affordable housing fund for regions where it has corporate offices, including Virginia

By HALELUYA HADERO, Associated Press

Amazon is adding $1.4 billion to a fund it established three years ago for preserving or building more affordable housing in regions where the company has major corporate offices, CEO Andy Jassy announced Tuesday. The Seattle-based company said the new sum would go on top of the $2.2 billion it had already invested to help create or preserve 21,000 affordable housing units in three areas: the Puget Sound in Washington state; Arlington, Virginia; and Nashville, Tennessee. When it launched its Housing Equity Fund in January 2021, Amazon said it aimed to fund 20,000 units over five years. The additional money will go to the same regions with a goal of building or maintaining 14,000 more homes through grants and below-market-rate loans.

VaNews June 12, 2024


Columbia Gas of Virginia proposal would raise average residential bill by $9

By MATT BUSSE, Cardinal News

Columbia Gas of Virginia is asking state regulators for a revenue increase that would raise the average residential customer’s monthly bill by about $9. If the request is approved, the average monthly bill of a residential customer using 5.1 dekatherms of gas would go from $76.26 to $85.17, an increase of 11.7%. Regulators say the proposed increase cannot take effect until at least October, at which time Columbia Gas will be allowed to enact it on an interim basis, subject to potential refunds.

VaNews June 12, 2024


Va. Board of Education panel hits pause on Norfolk State lab school application

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

The Virginia Board of Education’s lab school committee did not approve an application from Norfolk State University, making it almost certain that the university will not receive any money from the state’s lab school fund by the end of the fiscal year. Lab schools, which are K-12 schools that partner with higher education institutions, are Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s signature school choice initiative. The schools are free and open to the public and set their own curricula and budgets, similar to charter schools.

VaNews June 12, 2024


Military families plead with Virginia lawmakers to keep dependents’ tuition program intact

By STACY PARKER, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

When Donna Lewis’ daughter Grace graduates from First Colonial High School on Thursday, she’ll have a picture of her father in her cap instead of one of him standing next to her. Jason Lewis was killed in 2007 while serving as a Navy SEAL in Iraq. Because of her father’s death, Grace Lewis was eligible for college tuition assistance through a Virginia program that covers higher education costs for some military families. But the rising college freshman may not be able to receive the financial assistance because state lawmakers recently scaled back eligibility standards for the program ...

VaNews June 12, 2024


Virginia joins request to American Bar Association to drop its DEI standards

By ALIXEL CABRERA, Virginia Mercury

Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares signed a letter with 20 of his Republican counterparts asking the American Bar Association to drop its diversity and inclusion standards for law schools. DEI efforts implemented in the schools directs their administrators to violate both the Constitution and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, which “prohibits employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex and national origin,” the states argued.

VaNews June 12, 2024


City of Lynchburg accuses council member of witness intimidation 6 weeks before federal lawsuit trial

By RACHEL MAHONEY, Cardinal News

The city of Lynchburg has sought a restraining order against a member of its own city council following a social media post it claims constitutes a “threatening and sinister” case of witness tampering leveled against the deputy superintendent of Lynchburg City Schools. Filed in U.S. District Court on Friday, the city’s motions call into question the conduct of at-large council member Marty Misjuns leading up to the scheduled July trial for a free speech lawsuit he filed against the city in 2021. At the time, he was a captain with the Lynchburg Fire Department. He had posted cartoons on his Facebook page that some considered transphobic. The city disciplined him, he filed suit, and the city later fired him. It’s that suit that is now coming to trial.

VaNews June 12, 2024