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Spencer: Despite Medicaid pledges, Wittman and Kiggans folded

By JIM SPENCER, published in Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

“We cannot and will not support a final reconciliation bill that includes any reduction in Medicaid coverage for vulnerable populations.” That is what U.S. Reps. Rob Wittman and Jen Kiggans, along with 10 other Republican House members, wrote in a letter to House Speaker Mike Johnson on April 14. On May 22, Wittman and Kiggans voted for a House budget reconciliation bill that the Congressional Budget Office says could leave 16 million people without health insurance over the next decade. Millions of those people will lose coverage because of $803 billion in cuts to Medicaid ...

Spencer of Williamsburg is a former Virginian-Pilot reporter, columnist for the Daily Press and Denver Post, and Minnesota Star Tribune Washington correspondent.

VaNews June 17, 2025


Volunteers keep watch over Smith Mountain Lake’s water quality for nearly four decades

By JEFF BOSSERT, WVTF-FM

For nearly 40 years, volunteers and environmental experts have made sure Smith Mountain Lake is ready for a season of fishing, swimming, and other recreational use. And while finding help over that time is rarely a problem, concerns about Harmful Algae Blooms are bringing new focus to their work. Ferrum College laboratory supervisor Carol Love has been monitoring Smith Mountain Lake since the late 1990’s.

VaNews June 17, 2025


New documents show Averett’s finances in dire straits in 2024, but optimism in 2025

By LISA ROWAN, Cardinal News

Averett University’s financial situation last summer raised serious concerns about its ability to operate, according to a draft audit prepared for the university. But the private university in Danville has had recent fundraising successes that may help pave its path forward. ... The Danville school started cutting costs a year ago, at the tail end of fiscal 2024, in response to its discovery of a budget shortfall caused by what Averett officials have said were unauthorized withdrawals from its endowment. Averett has laid off staff, eliminated academic programs and begun selling property to keep the university afloat.

VaNews June 17, 2025


Environmental groups in Hampton Roads at odds with Army Corps over proposed wetlands mitigation project

By KATHERINE HAFNER, WHRO

For decades in Hampton Roads, officials have used a legal mechanism called mitigation banking to protect local ecosystems. If a developer or locality impacts wetlands or river bottom when building a project, they must compensate by paying to restore it elsewhere. Organizations that conduct restoration work can sell credits to developers to meet those requirements – hence the bank-like system. The goal is for the compensatory work to serve the same river or watershed that is affected by the original development action. But local environmental groups and some federal scientists now worry that an impending decision by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers could upend that system.

VaNews June 17, 2025


From VPAP June Primary: Who’s on Your Ballot?

The Virginia Public Access Project

Enter your address to find out who is on your ballot and where your polling place is for today's primary elections. Statewide primaries are being held to choose the Democratic nominees for lieutenant governor and attorney general, and Republican and Democratic primaries are being held in some areas for the House of Delegates and local offices.

VaNews June 17, 2025


2020 red flag laws rarely used by most Va. localities

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

In 2018, police arrested Brandon Lee Rhodes in Chesterfield and charged him with assault and battery of a family member. In April 2023, he was charged again, this time after lighting the house on fire and assaulting his mother, according to a police report. That report said the attack left fingermarks on her neck. His mother explained that Rhodes suffers from mental illness. He was placed under court-ordered probation in lieu of a jail sentence. This January, Chesterfield police again rushed to the family’s home in Matoaca, where Rhodes was arrested on suspicion of second-degree murder. Family said that Rhodes, during a mental health episode, took his brother’s gun from an unlocked gun cabinet and shot his mother’s best friend.

VaNews June 17, 2025