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As federal job losses mount, Fairfax leaders sound alarm

By MICHAEL MARTZ, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Is Fairfax County — long the economic engine of the Northern Virginia and the state economy — facing an “unemployment crisis?” Fairfax Board Chairman Jeff McKay and Senate Majority Leader Scott Surovell, D-Fairfax, think so. They are pointing the finger at President Donald Trump for the county’s rising unemployment rate. They are faulting Gov. Glenn Youngkin, a close Republican ally of the president, for not doing more to protect the state and region from mounting losses of federal government jobs and contracts since Trump took office in January.

VaNews July 17, 2025


Yancey: New VCU poll gives Spanberger a lead of 12 percentage points. Here’s what to know about that.

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

This has not been a good month for Virginia Republicans. Last week CNBC released its annual rankings of best states for business, in which Virginia dropped from first to fourth. This wouldn’t be a big deal except that Republicans have spent the past year bragging about how their policies helped return Virginia to the top spot; now CNBC says it’s Republican policies — or, more specifically, the policies of one particular Republican, Donald Trump — that have cost the state its No. 1 position.

VaNews July 17, 2025


Virginia, Maryland rejoin bid for Commanders stadium as DC Council lets exclusivity clause expire

By ITTAI SOPHER AND ALEXIS WAINWRIGHT, WUSA-TV

Maryland and Virginia are reportedly off the bench as the state and commonwealth's bids to house the Commanders stadium have reportedly been resurrected. Hesitation within DC Council has pushed the District past a major deadline. While Washington, D.C. remained the frontrunner for the deal, with support from the Commanders franchise and NFL executives, the exclusivity clause that kept its stately neighbors from making their bids expired Tuesday. Leaving the ball in anyone's court -- or field, if you will. Despite the expiration of a key negotiation deadline, D.C. officials say a deal to bring the Washington Commanders back to the old RFK Stadium site is far from dead.

VaNews July 17, 2025


ICE arrests surge in Northern Virginia, prompting emergency planning among immigrant families

By CHRIS REMINGTON AND NATALIE YURAVLIVKER, WAMU-FM

Northern Virginia has become a focal point in the federal government’s aggressive immigration enforcement strategy. ICE arrests have skyrocketed 350% over the past year across the Commonwealth, according to The New York Times, with the vast majority of them taking place in the suburbs of D.C. Fairfax County alone has seen twice as many arrests compared to any other county in Virginia. Rohmah Javed, the legal director of the Immigrant Justice Program at the Legal Aid Justice Center, says her office is inundated with calls from families trying to piece together what happened to loved ones who never made it home from work.

VaNews July 16, 2025


Judge dismisses Thoroughfare cemetery case against Prince William County, landowners

By SÉBASTIEN KRAFT, Inside NOVA

A U.S. District Court judge on Friday denied plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction and granted a motion to dismiss in the case of Frank Washington v. International Investments LLC. Washington, a trustee for Scott Cemetery in Thoroughfare, filed the suit against the county government and International Investments for alleged failure to protect and eventual desecration of the private, historically-recognized cemetery in Thoroughfare belonging to the families of freed slaves and indigenous Native Americans. The plaintiffs claimed the property owned by International Investments had been disturbed by development and gatherings at the site.

VaNews July 16, 2025


College of William and Mary changes chief diversity officer title to senior advisor to the president

By MADIGAN WEBB, Flat Hat

Tuesday, July 1, the College of William and Mary changed former Chief Diversity Officer Fanchon Glover’s title to Senior Advisor to the President. The College also renamed the Center for Student Diversity to the Student Center for Inclusive Excellence. The change comes after the Board of Visitors took a neutral stance on DEI initiatives in the April 25 passage of HC-3 titled “Merit-based excellence, student opportunity and freedom from discrimination.” In the meeting, the Board voted for the resolution to support the College’s “merit-based” approach to education without directly eliminating DEI or changing the Office of Diversity and Inclusion or the Center for Student Diversity at the time.

VaNews July 16, 2025


Hopewell sewage spill highlights need for spending on wastewater. Will federal funds dry up?

By PATRICK LARSEN, VPM

The Hopewell Water Renewal wastewater treatment plant released over 1 million gallons of untreated sewage into the James River on Friday night following an electrical failure. The spill resulted in an advisory warning against swimming, fishing or otherwise coming into contact with the river from the Old City Waterfront Park to the Berkley Plantation. The advisory will likely be in place until Friday, giving the section of river time to flush or settle out the contaminants. In 2024, over two-thirds of the water treated by Hopewell Water Renewal came from industrial sources, which is contaminated with different chemicals than domestic sewage.

VaNews July 16, 2025


State police launch investigation of Richmond candidate’s campaign finance filings

By SAMUEL B. PARKER, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Virginia State Police are investigating Tavares Floyd — the former 6th District City Council candidate whose campaign finance filings came into question last October after multiple alleged donors told The Times-Dispatch they made no such contributions. The Times-Dispatch on Monday submitted a request under the Virginia Freedom of Information Act for any and all interview notes related to state police’s probe into Floyd’s campaign. A state police FOIA officer responded by immediately invoking the seven-day extension to FOIA. But early Tuesday morning, the FOIA officer reached out again to mark the request closed.

VaNews July 16, 2025


Is there power in a union? Why Norfolk Botanical Garden workers think so

By NICK MCNAMARA, WHRO

Norfolk Botanical Garden workers are considering forming a union to push for better pay, a safer workplace and more input on garden policy. “They love what they do,” said Bridget Fitzgerald, the union organizer working with Norfolk garden employees. “They sometimes get frustrated with the fact that they don’t feel as if they’re being heard.” For instance, workers complain the current inclement weather policy can be unclear, leaving workers uncertain if a weather event will mean the garden will close.

VaNews July 16, 2025


Falling to No. 4 on CNBC business ranking no reason to overreact

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

Cable news channel CNBC set the hearts of Virginia officials aflutter last year when it ranked Virginia the top state in the nation for business. Both Democrats and Republicans framed the honor as an endorsement of their work in Richmond, and ads for recruiting new companies to the commonwealth virtually wrote themselves. That Virginia slipped to fourth this year is a setback, but nothing that should prompt a wholesale change in how we cultivate a dynamic and welcoming climate conducive to business startups, growth, recruitment and retention. This remains an advantageous destination, thanks to bipartisan cooperation on programs and policies that adeptly balance the needs of employers and labor.

VaNews July 16, 2025