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Federal program that helps low-income residents pay for internet is ending, affecting more than 346,000 Virginians

By TAD DICKENS, Cardinal News

A federal program that gives discounts on internet service to low-income households is ending this month, with no immediate plan to replace it. The Affordable Connectivity Program for two years provided discounts of $30 a month, or $75 a month for people on tribal land. The $14.2 billion Congress made available through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law has run out, and the Federal Communications Commission accepted its final application on Feb. 8. The program also included one-time $100 discounts on laptop, desktop or tablet purchases. Despite multiple requests to extend the program — including from lawmakers and the FCC chairwoman — neither the Senate nor the House of Representatives is on schedule to address it.

VaNews April 22, 2024


Hopewell ex-city attorney raises delinquent-tax issue concerning treasurer

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

Hopewell’s outgoing city attorney has recommended that the Virginia attorney general’s office look into claims by an alleged department employee that the city’s treasurer improperly removed herself from a state agency’s list of delinquent taxpayers without attempting to settle her own tax debts. The allegations against Shannon Foskey were brought up in a letter sent last week to Commonwealth’s Attorney Rick Newman and cited in an April 18 memo from now-former city attorney Danielle Smith to City Manager Dr. Concetta Manker.

VaNews April 22, 2024


Yancey: 5 ways the battery plant planned for Lynchburg is significant

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

The news that broke late last week about the U.S. government loaning $100 million to a California company to open a lithium-ion battery plant in Lynchburg is much bigger than the 100 or so jobs it will involve. Let’s count the ways. 1. This helps put Virginia in the “battery belt.” Dixie is the new Detroit: The Southeast has been quietly building a hub of auto-related plants for decades. The Roanoke and New River valleys are part of that, with truck-building operations at Mack Truck in Roanoke County, Volvo in Pulaski County and lots of suppliers in between.

VaNews April 22, 2024


Biden Earth Day Event Will Try to Reach Young Voters, a Crucial Bloc

By ZOLAN KANNO-YOUNGS AND BRAD PLUMER, New York Times (Metered Paywall - 1 to 2 articles a month)

President Biden will travel to a national park in Virginia on Monday, Earth Day, to spotlight his clean energy investments, with an eye on bolstering support among young voters disillusioned with their choices for the 2024 election. Against the backdrop of the park, Prince William Forest, Mr. Biden will announce $7 billion in grants to fund solar power for hundreds of thousands of homes in primarily disadvantaged communities, according to the White House. He will be joined by future members of the American Climate Corps, a new work force for young people hoping to combat climate change.

VaNews April 22, 2024


Roanoke Valley landfill readying for natural gas production

By LUKE WEIR, Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

Your trash becomes gas. It happens gradually, as mountains of our garbage decompose at Smith Gap Regional Landfill in Roanoke County. That’s where the Roanoke Valley Resource Authority hauls all the waste — more than 500 million pounds per year — from Roanoke, Salem, Roanoke County and Vinton. Among rotten banana peels and other decaying organic material sealed inside the landfill, methane-rich fumes are captured by a system of buried vacuum tubes ...

VaNews April 22, 2024


Roanoke-based Luna Innovations says more financial statements are unreliable

By MATT BUSSE, Cardinal News

The Roanoke-based fiber-optic technology company Luna Innovations Inc. on Friday added more than a year’s worth of previous financial statements to the list of those that it says are no longer reliable. Luna said in a news release that a committee formed by its board of directors has determined that the company’s financial statements from 2022 and the first quarter of 2023 “cannot be relied upon and need to be restated due to identified accounting errors relating to revenue recognition.”

VaNews April 22, 2024


Town of Blacksburg launches new public information system

Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

The town of Blacksburg is streamlining the process of making and responding to Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests. It launched a new records management software called JustFOIA, according to a town news release. JustFOIA is designed for state and local government entities to modernize public records management and accessibility, according to the release.

VaNews April 22, 2024


DOJ: Richmond man, a Patriot Front member, arrested in connection to Jan. 6 insurrection

By RYAN NADEAU, WRIC-TV

A Richmond man and member of the white nationalist group Patriot Front was arrested Friday and hit with several charges relating to his alleged conduct during the Jan. 6 insurrection, including impeding and physically assaulting officers. According to the Department of Justice, 26-year-old Nathaniel Noyce was arrested on Friday, April 19, in connection to his alleged participation and disorderly, disruptive conduct during the breach of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

VaNews April 22, 2024


Faction of GOP is holding Congress hostage, say former Reps. Comstock and Payne

By JASON ARMESTO, Daily Progress (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

The United States Congress is broken. So said L.F. Payne, a Virginia Democrat who represented Virginia’s 5th Congressional District in the House of Representatives from 1988 to 1997, during a special visit to Charlottesville Friday. “In the last Congress, I think there were over 500 pieces of legislation that were passed,” Payne said, adding that’s on track with recent history. “This Congress by comparison, now three-fourths of the way through, has passed 69 pieces of legislation. So it is clearly by many measurements dysfunctional.” ... Now serving as president of Former Members of Congress, or FMC, a bipartisan nonprofit group, part of Payne’s job is to help remedy that dysfunction.

VaNews April 22, 2024


Virginia senators want flight expansion at DCA halted

By DAN RONAN, WTOP

Thursday’s near collision at Reagan National Airport is raising concerns about plans to increase the number of flights at the airport. Virginia Senators Mark Warner and Tim Kaine said Thursday morning’s close call at Reagan National is another reason not to expand the number of flights at the airport as some other senators are attempting to do. “It’s just plain crazy that some are pushing to add more flights to DCA’s overburdened runway,” Warner said to the Senate Friday.

VaNews April 22, 2024