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Williams: Stoney's ambitions ran aground in Richmond

By MICHAEL PAUL WILLIAMS, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Richmond was going to be a problem for former mayor Levar Stoney even before the city’s water system ran dry in early January. Stoney, a former secretary of the commonwealth and protege of former Gov. Terry McAuliffe, once appeared destined for big things as an energetic millennial mayor riding the wave of a resurgent capital city. He seldom bothered to camouflage his ambition.

VaNews June 23, 2025


Hating on Stoney won’t help Spanberger

Richmond Times-Dispatch Editorial (Subscription Required)

If this week felt good to you — Richmond’s long-clueless ex-mayor got his comeuppance, didn’t he? — I have some bad news. Sure, the city probably averted becoming a political punching bag. Levar Stoney, if he’d won the Democratic primary for lieutenant governor, would have given current Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears and the MAGA boys fresh meat — a once-great racist city, built on the backs of the enslaved, driven into the ground by another liberal, woke mayor.

VaNews June 23, 2025


Youngkin orders assessment of federal sexual assault prevention programs in Virginia National Guard

By ITTAI SOPHER, WUSA-TV

Hoping to provide oversight for existing federal sexual assault prevention programs in the military, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin issued an executive order Friday that would establish a commonwealth work group. Youngkin said he hoped the order would provide an assessment the Sexual Assault Prevention Response (SAPR,) a federal program introduced in the 2000s to respond to sexual violence claims in all branches of the military, as well as the National Guard.

VaNews June 23, 2025


Same-sex marriage key topic in first stop of Virginia Democrats’ ‘Worst of Winsome Tour’

By KATE NUECHTERLEIN, WVIR-TV

The battle to become Virginia’s next governor came to Charlottesville on Friday, as part of a statewide tour aimed at criticizing the Republican nominee, current Lieutenant Governor Winsome Earle-Sears. The topic Democrats zeroed in on at Friday’s rally outside City Hall is one with ties to Charlottesville and strong opinions on both sides: same-sex marriage. “It’s fundamental,” Llezelle Dugger, the Clerk of Court for Charlottesville’s Circuit Court, told 29News. “It’s a fundamental right for us.”

VaNews June 23, 2025


Judge approves settlements for 5 babies hurt at Henrico Doctors’ NICU

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

A judge in Salem approved settlements Friday that resolved likely lawsuits from the families of five toddlers, who as newborn babies suffered broken bones and other injuries while being cared for at Henrico Doctors’ Hospital. Circuit Judge David Carson said he was keeping confidential the amounts of money to be placed in trust accounts structured to provide payments to the victims, once they come of age, “over quite a long period of time.” The civil settlements are related to the criminal case of Erin Strotman, a former nurse at the Richmond-area hospital, who is facing 20 felony counts of child abuse and malicious wounding of the patients under her care.

VaNews June 23, 2025


Bray: Federal ‘choice’ bill would harm local public schools

By NATALIE BRAY, published in Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

There’s nothing wrong with a family choosing to send their child to a private school; that’s their right and choice. However, a component of the federal budget reconciliation bill called the Educational Choice for Children Act (ECCA) brings Virginia Beach to a crossroads in educational reform. This legislation would have serious consequences for our neighborhood public schools and threatens our community.

Bray of Virginia Beach is a wife and mother of three daughters, a gallery educator at the Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art, chair of communications for the Virginia Beach Democratic Committee and a founding member of Little Neck Moms for Progress.

VaNews June 23, 2025


Miller: What responsibility does higher education have to America?

By SCOTT D. MILLER, published in Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

If you haven’t noticed, the future of education in the United States is suddenly looking much more uncertain than at any point in the past half-century. For some students, changing economic indicators are causing them to reconsider whether attending college is the best next step on their career path. Meanwhile, shrinking population numbers are contributing to an upcoming “enrollment cliff” that education leaders have been preparing for since the early 2000s. But the most unexpected complication of all has been the sudden interest the federal government has taken in dismantling certain functions and freedoms of education that America has taken for granted since its inception.

Miller is president of Virginia Wesleyan University in Virginia Beach.

VaNews June 23, 2025


Virginia’s cellphone ban will return students’ focus to education

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

Mark July 1 on your calendar (which is probably in your cellphone). That’s the day a state law goes into effect mandating that public school students not use cellphones during the school day. When the new 2025-26 school year starts toward summer’s end, that new reality may take a little getting used to, but before long it should promote learning and student engagement. It should make teachers’ jobs a bit easier. The ban also should reduce the emotional and mental stress that constant attention to the world as presented by mobile phones can inflict on adolescents.

VaNews June 23, 2025


Virginia Beach police to launch drones as first responders at the Oceanfront

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

Before the first police officer sets foot on the ground of a possible crime scene, officials may already have gathered critical information with the help of a self-flying drone. Drones as first responders is a growing program in police departments across the country, and Virginia Beach will soon be the first Hampton Roads city to use the technology.

VaNews June 23, 2025


Richmond’s 4th Circuit upholds federal ban on handgun sales to young adults

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

The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Wednesday upheld a federal law barring gun shops from selling handguns to individuals under the age of 21. The ruling is another flashpoint in a yearslong saga by Second Amendment advocates to allow young adults to buy handguns — an issue that has divided Virginia’s federal judiciary since 2018, when a young Republican political organizer first alleged an infringement of his rights. ... Wednesday’s ruling came in response to a lawsuit brought in June 2022 by Palmyra resident John Corey Fraser.

VaNews June 23, 2025