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Monumental data center project revealed for Pittsylvania County

By CHARLES WILBORN, Danville Register & Bee

A mammoth data center proposed in the Ringgold area — representing up to $5 billion in investment and at least $120 million in tax revenue over a 10 to 15 year period — cleared its first hurdle Tuesday night with a unanimous recommendation by the Pittsylvania County Planning Commission. The details of the project were aired by Tom Gallagher, representing Anchorstone Advisors SOVA, seeking to rezone about 946 acres located off U.S. 58 and Cedar Road to an Industrial District. ... Speaking in favor of the project — and shedding light on the extreme scope — was Joey Faucette, chair of the Pittsylvania County Industrial Development Authority.

VaNews June 6, 2024


VCU, Rao should further separate from health system, state watchdog says

By ERIC KOLENICH, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

Virginia Commonwealth University and its health system should further separate from one another, the state legislature’s investigative body said Wednesday. In response to the health system’s failed deal to redevelop the Public Safety Building in downtown Richmond, the Joint Legislative Audit & Review Commission, or JLARC, determined VCU and its president, Michael Rao, have too much influence over the health system. The review suggested changing Rao’s role with the health system, hiring new staffers focused on real estate and reimagining the board of directors that governs the health system.

VaNews June 6, 2024


General Assembly taps 8 for judgeships

By JASON BOLEMAN, Virginia Lawyers Weekly (Subscription required for some articles)

In a special session on May 13, the General Assembly elected eight individuals to fill seats on the circuit court, general district court and juvenile and domestic relations district court.

VaNews June 6, 2024


Virginia man’s brothers died in WWII, but French admirers keep their memory alive

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

Donald Stevens couldn’t make it to Normandy this year for the 80th anniversary of D-Day on Thursday, but he considers his spirit to be there anyway. It’s there with his brother Paul, killed two weeks after landing at Omaha Beach in the Allied invasion. And it’s there with another brother, Bill, killed nearly a year later in Germany as the war neared its end. Donald Stevens, now 97, was the youngest of the three. When he became the sole survivor on active duty, the military told the teenage seaman second class to go home to prevent more deaths in one family. He refused and wound up relegated to a dead-end assignment in Philadelphia, angry and bereft.

VaNews June 6, 2024


Against backdrop of car dealership, Youngkin announces reversal of California-driven electric-car sale rules

By BILL ATKINSON, Progress Index (Metered paywall - 10 articles a month)

Saying he was “unleashing the power” of Virginia consumers, Gov. Glenn Youngkin said he planned to do away with a California-driven initiative requiring that a percentage of vehicle purchases in the state be electrically-powered cars by the end of the year. “We are ending once and for all the California Electric Vehicle Mandate in Virginia,” Youngkin said to thunderous applause Wednesday afternoon in an appearance at Loyalty Toyota.

VaNews June 6, 2024


Youngkin pulls Virginia out of California electric vehicle mandate

By DAVE RESS, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

Virginia will stop following a California mandate for electric vehicles as of the end of this year, Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced Wednesday. That’s when California’s current mandate is superseded by new California Air Resources Board targets. The new California mandates step up the pace to require that all new car, truck and SUV sales be zero emission vehicles by 2035, with 35% of new sales being electric vehicles in model year 2026.

VaNews June 6, 2024


Virginia legislators express concern over medical school’s treatment of baboons

By JOE DODSON, Courthouse News Service

A group of three state legislators sent leadership at Eastern Virginia Medical School a letter expressing concerns over the treatment of pregnant olive baboons used for experiments. “We are especially troubled by the school’s history of repeated noncompliance with federal animal welfare regulations,” the lawmakers wrote. The letter comes after People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals filed a complaint with the city of Norfolk Commonwealth’s Attorney Ramin Fatehi, calling for a criminal probe on May 14. PETA obtained extensive records showing that school researchers subjected mother baboons to traumatic, invasive procedures without legally required adequate care.

VaNews June 6, 2024


Charlottesville Police Civilian Oversight Board Can Request Police Reports Again—But Issues Remain

By ANASTASIIA CARRIER, Charlottesville Tomorrow

After eight months of being essentially non-functioning, the Charlottesville Police Civilian Oversight Board got some of its teeth back — it can now request access to police records it needs for proper misconduct oversight. But the long awaited resolution has some issues. On Friday, May 31, Charlottesville City Manager Sam Sanders signed new standard operating procedures providing detailed guidance on information sharing, ending a prolonged period during which the Charlottesville Police Civilian Oversight Board (PCOB) was unable to access any police records or investigate potential cases of police misconduct.

VaNews June 6, 2024


Proposed data center project could bring billions in investment to Pittsylvania County

By GRACE MAMON, Cardinal News

Billions of investment dollars could be coming to Pittsylvania County with the development of a data center that was unanimously recommended by the planning commission at its Tuesday meeting. The project could represent up to $5 billion in investment, according to the Pittsylvania County Industrial Development Authority. It could also contribute up to $120 million in tax revenue over a 10- to 15-year period, though it’s too early to say for sure, said Matt Rowe, the economic development director for the county. The data center, which would be the first of its kind in Pittsylvania, could also create up to 500 jobs.

VaNews June 6, 2024


Tearful testimony opens first trial of man who participated in 2017 torch-carrying mob at UVa

By HAWES SPENCER, Daily Progress (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

The tearful testimony of a Jewish University of Virginia alumna was the first evidence presented in the trial of Jacob Joseph Dix, an Ohio man charged with using fire to racially intimidate for his role in the 2017 torch-carrying mob at the University of Virginia the night before the deadly Unite the Right rally-turned riot. Diane D’Costa told the jury about Aug. 11, 2017, the day she moved into her room on UVa’s hallowed Lawn, the center of Founding Father Thomas Jefferson’s Academical Village, when she heard chanting outside her door.

VaNews June 6, 2024