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Kaine, Warner criticize U.S. strikes on Iran; Youngkin backs Trump’s actions

By ANDREW CAIN, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Virginia’s U.S. Sens. Tim Kaine and Mark Warner criticized the U.S. bombing of Iranian nuclear sites without congressional authorization, while Gov. Glenn Youngkin supported President Donald Trump’s actions. Democrats in Virginia’s congressional delegation faulted the president for acting without congressional backing or consultation, while Republicans supported the U.S. effort to neutralize Iran’s nuclear threat.

VaNews June 23, 2025


What to Do With the Top of Afton Mountain?

By THERESA CURRY, Crozet Gazette

Augusta County wants a highway entrance that combines commercial development with a fitting welcome to the Valley; conservationists want to protect wildlife, the water supply, and open space; developers want a crack at a unique and desirable piece of property. Then there are nearby landowners, businesses, commuters, birdwatchers and hikers who all have their own interests in the possibilities ahead for the famously blighted 25 acres of mountain property uphill from Interstate 64 and Route 250. What the owners call the “lower mountain” is one of several scattered parcels in Albemarle and Augusta County that have had an uncertain future since the death of their owner, Phil Dulaney, in 2023.

VaNews June 24, 2025


Virginia Bar Association cancels gubernatorial debate after candidates don’t RSVP

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

The Virginia Bar Association has canceled its scheduled July 19 gubernatorial debate after neither candidate accepted an invitation before the organization’s June 9 deadline. The VBA said April 28 that it invited the two nominees, Democrat former U.S. Rep. Abigail Spanberger and Republican Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, to debate during the association’s summer meeting at the Omni Homestead Resort in Bath County. The VBA hosted debates for the statewide races for governor and U.S. senator from 1985 to 2020.

VaNews June 23, 2025


Fauquier Planning Commission recommends denial of Gigaland data center project in Remington

By GRACE SCHUMACHER, Fauquier Now

The Fauquier County Planning Commission voted 4-1 Wednesday night to recommend denial of a proposal for a data center campus near Remington. The vote followed a three-hour public hearing that drew significant community interest. The application, known as Gigaland, seeks approval for a 2.2-million-square-foot data center complex spanning 202 acres south of Lucky Hill Road, just outside Remington town limits. The project would include seven two-story buildings up to 80 feet in height — comprising a 65-foot structure with a 15-foot parapet — alongside public water infrastructure such as a water treatment facility, an aboveground water storage tank, two wells and four electrical substations.

VaNews June 23, 2025


Richmond election officials appear not to have enforced finance disclosure mandates

By DAVID M. POOLE, The Richmonder

Nearly half of the 16 candidates for Richmond School Board last year missed at least one deadline for campaign finance disclosures, according to a review of reports filed with the state Department of Elections. But it does not appear that the city's Office of Elections took any corrective action. The office issued no citations for late reports, which under state law calls for candidates to be assessed a civil penalty of $100. Shaking up the city’s lackadaisical approach to campaign finance is yet another issue for the city’s three-member Electoral Board to address following the tumultuous three-year tenure of city voting registrar Keith Balmer, who resigned in December. Board chair Starlet Stevens declined to discuss documentation gathered by The Richmonder showing various examples of lax oversight.

VaNews June 23, 2025


Virginia Democrats’ race to replace Rep. Connolly is a weeks-long sprint

By TEO ARMUS, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

Most Virginia voters could be forgiven for thinking they were done with political mailers and ads — at least for a while — following last week’s statewide primary elections. In the suburbs outside D.C., though, some campaigns are just getting started. Both Democrats and Republicans will be holding party-run nominating contests Saturday to select nominees to fill the term of Rep. Gerry Connolly, who died of esophageal cancer in May. With just a few weeks to launch campaigns, raise money and produce TV ads, the race would be a mad dash in any political climate.

VaNews June 23, 2025


Virginia hits record-low uninsured rate

By KARRI PEIFER AND ALEX FITZPATRICK, Axios

Uninsured rates hit record lows in Virginia and all U.S. states by 2023, driven by coverage expansions under the Affordable Care Act and related policy changes, per a new report. Virginia's drop in uninsured residents boosted its overall health score, leading to one of the biggest year-over-year ranking jumps in the country. The uninsured rate for working-age Virginia adults dropped from 17.3% in 2013 to 8.7% in 2023, according to an analysis of census data from the Commonwealth Fund, a health care foundation. Nationwide, the uninsured rate for U.S. adults dropped from 20.4% in 2013 to 11% in 2023.

VaNews June 23, 2025


Suffolk approves new rules for solar farms

By NICK MCNAMARA, WHRO

New solar farm regulations are a “good start” for a Suffolk farmer whose family and neighborhood became a case study for future solar development in the city. “With all the frustration that we’ve experienced and my neighbors have experienced, it’s good to see that anyone going forward may not have to go through this frustration,” Shane Alexander said during the Wednesday, June 18 city council meeting. The Alexanders have been at the forefront of advocacy about the sonic impact of large solar farms on surrounding communities since the 99-acre Stratford Solar farm went up across the street from their White Marsh Road property in 2022.

VaNews June 23, 2025


Controlled environment agriculture and vertical farming looking up in rural Virginia

By TAD DICKENS, Cardinal News

One by one the frizzle sizzles, brush strokes and violas make their way from plastic tubs to greenhouse beds. The tiny flowers rise just an inch or two out of rockwool, peat and oasis foam. They had germinated in a vertical grow room at the Controlled Environment Agriculture Innovation Center in Danville. Now that they’ve sprouted, plant science student Jacob Haymore carefully places each one in the greenhouse slots where they will grow for the next several weeks. Soon they’ll stand about 8 inches tall, ready to add color to a summer salad.

VaNews June 24, 2025


Chesley: Despite tough challenge, don’t underestimate Earle-Sears

By ROGER CHESLEY, Virginia Mercury

Many signs suggest a comfortable victory this fall for Democrat Abigail Spanberger against Republican Winsome Earle-Sears in Virginia’s gubernatorial contest. Spanberger had $14.3 million in cash on hand this month compared to just $3 million for Earle-Sears, the current lieutenant governor. Spanberger, a former congresswoman, has led in early polls, including a whopping 17-point advantage in a Roanoke College survey in May. (Yeah, I know, many Virginians aren’t tuned in yet, so that barometer is shaky.) Earle-Sears, meanwhile, is the standard-bearer for Donald Trump’s party in a state that’s voted against him three times in presidential contests. He’s tried to recklessly chop the federal workforce; some 341,000 federal workers lived here in 2023. Also, Black candidates have struggled to win statewide contests in Virginia – Earle-Sears’ own victory in 2021 notwithstanding.

VaNews June 23, 2025