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Local food banks have lost 1.4M meals to Trump’s cuts

By KYLE SWENSON, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains area is largely rural and conservative, with Donald Trump carrying all but two counties that checker the central and western part of the state in the 2024 election. It is also a place where it has become increasingly difficult for people to find enough to eat. Every free meal counts there, said Michael McKee, the CEO of Blue Ridge Area Food Bank, which is the main provider of food assistance to 25 counties in the region. But after the U.S. Department of Agriculture paused $500 million in funding for programs related to food in March, Blue Ridge and other food banks have been struggling to meet the growing needs of their communities.

VaNews May 20, 2025


Poor water quality in Hampton River could soon be improved by oyster reefs

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

Poor water quality in the Hampton River is a problem, but restoration projects are starting to change that. ... Plastic wrappers, water bottles, cigarette butts and other trash commonly wind up in the river. Polluted runoff from densely populated streets, parking lots and buildings also is one of the city’s biggest threats to clean water. For years, researchers at Hampton University have studied the water near campus to understand the existing oyster population and develop strategies for restoring the river. As a result of this decade of work, the Chesapeake Bay Foundation and university researchers are turning to oysters to help improve the river’s water quality.

VaNews May 20, 2025


Logistics company laying off more than 50 people at Richmond warehouse

By JACK JACOBS, Richmond BizSense

A logistics company is cutting dozens of jobs at one of its two local warehouses. Saddle Creek Logistics Services is planning to lay off 54 employees at its facility at 4701 Commerce Road, according to state records. The Florida-based firm, which offers fulfillment, warehousing and transportation services, operates two local sites – one is the 460,000-square-foot warehouse on Commerce Road in South Richmond and the other is a 43,000-square-foot facility at 540 HP Way in Chester.

VaNews May 19, 2025


Virginia Coal Country Courts New Business With Old Mining Money

By BEN PAVIOUR, New York Times (Metered Paywall - 1 to 2 articles a month)

When Clyde Stacy bought the Bristol Mall in 2018, both the mall and the surrounding coal country of Southwest Virginia were in trouble. The mall, once the marquee shopping destination in the region, had become vacant, weeds punching up through its parking lot. And the city of Bristol, the self-described birthplace of country music, was buckling under the weight of more than $100 million in debt, forcing budget cuts to its schools. Nearby, mining counties across Virginia’s slice of Appalachia were reeling after decades of job loss. Mr. Stacy and his friend Jim McGlothlin, both former coal magnates, seized on what they called a “moonshot” solution: turning the mall into a casino, in a state where gambling was not yet legal.

VaNews May 19, 2025


Data Centers’ Hunger for Energy Could Raise All Electric Bills

By IVAN PENN, New York Times (Metered Paywall - 1 to 2 articles a month)

Individuals and small business have been paying more for power in recent years, and their electricity rates may climb higher still. That’s because the cost of the power plants, transmission lines and other equipment that utilities need to serve data centers, factories and other large users of electricity is likely to be spread to everybody who uses electricity, according to a new report. The report by Wood MacKenzie, an energy research firm, examined 20 large power users. In almost all of those cases, the firm found, the money that large energy users paid to electric utilities would not be enough to cover the cost of the equipment needed to serve them. The rest of the costs would be borne by other utility customers or the utility itself.

VaNews May 19, 2025


Va. sees nation’s second-largest drop in overdose deaths

By SABRINA MORENO, Axios

Virginia had the second-largest drop in overdose deaths in the country last year, according to preliminary CDC data released last week. For over a decade, fatal drug overdoses have been the leading cause of unnatural deaths statewide. And Richmond has consistently had one of the highest overdose death rates in the state. But for the past few years, Virginia's fatal drug overdose rates have fallen faster than the U.S. average. Over 1,500 Virginians died from drug overdoses in 2024, per CDC estimates. That's a nearly 39% drop from 2023. The only state with a greater decline in overdose deaths was West Virginia (-44%).

VaNews May 19, 2025


Jan. 6 rioter who assaulted police charged with burglary near Richmond

By TOM JACKMAN, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

A Fairfax County man who assaulted police at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and smashed the glass pane through which Ashli Babbitt climbed before she was fatally shot, has been arrested again outside of Richmond. Zachary J. Alam is accused of breaking into a home this month while the residents were there. He appears to be the first Capitol rioter arrested on new charges after President Donald Trump granted clemency to the roughly 1,600 people charged for their roles in the insurrection.

VaNews May 20, 2025


With Gaza facing starvation, Virginia Sens. Warner and Kaine press for U.S. action

By MARKUS SCHMIDT, Virginia Mercury

With Gaza on the brink of famine, U.S. Sens. Mark Warner and Tim Kaine, D-Va., are backing a renewed Senate push calling on President Donald Trump’s administration to take urgent diplomatic action to deliver food and emergency aid to civilians trapped in the war-torn enclave. The two lawmakers joined 27 of their Senate colleagues in introducing a resolution urging the administration to mobilize all available diplomatic tools to break the Israeli blockade that has prevented lifesaving assistance from reaching Palestinian civilians.

VaNews May 19, 2025


McClellan: GOP tax cuts would be on ‘backs of millions of Americans’

By ELIZABETH CRISP, The Hill

Rep. Jennifer McClellan (D-Va.) warned during an appearance on NewsNation’s “The Hill Sunday” that the tax cuts that have been floated in GOP budget proposals would hurt “millions of Americans” who rely on Medicaid and food stamps. “This budget is going to make the tax cuts permanent on the backs of millions of Americans losing their health care and millions of Americans losing access to SNAP benefits,” McClellan told host Chris Stirewalt on Sunday.

VaNews May 19, 2025


A veterans’ reunion sits at the center of an online storm in Norfolk

By GAVIN STONE, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

An online flyer promoting a trio of controversial speakers at an upcoming reunion of the survivors of the 1967 bombing of the USS Liberty is fake, organizers say — but one of the speakers named in the flyer is scheduled to speak. The Liberty Veteran’s Association will hold its 58th anniversary reunion from June 6-9 at the Sheraton Waterside in Norfolk. This year, the small, private event and the hotel became the focus of days of criticism as pictures of the flyer circulated online. . . . The flyer has ricocheted around social media for at least the past two weeks, prompting calls for boycotts of the hotel and condemnations of the veterans’ organization.

VaNews May 20, 2025