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Virginia State University left out in the cold after candidates determine debate schedule

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

Virginia State University said Wednesday it was "disappointed" over reports that VSU appears to have been dropped from the upcoming presidential debate schedule, yet hopeful that an arrangement can be worked out. "A presidential debate at VSU is a huge win, not only for our students and campus community but for the greater community in general," university spokesperson Gwen Williams Dandridge said in a statement.

VaNews May 16, 2024


Richmond inspector general investigating city’s elections office

By GRAHAM MOOMAW, Virginia Mercury

The Richmond Electoral Board met with the city’s inspector general in a closed session Wednesday following allegations of nepotism and financial improprieties in the election office led by Registrar Keith Balmer. Inspector General James Osuna and members of the electoral board declined to comment when they emerged from the closed-door meeting, saying an investigation opened by the inspector general’s office is not yet complete.

VaNews May 17, 2024


Fairfax County teachers voice frustration over reduced pay raises in new budget

By JAMES JARVIS, FFXnow

With just days to go before Fairfax County Public Schools finalizes its fiscal year 2025 budget, teachers voiced frustration this week with the news that school employees will get lower-than-expected pay raises. As it stands, the Fairfax County School Board is on track to adopt a revised budget that includes a 3% pay increase for all school employees, down from the initially proposed 6%, starting July 1.

VaNews May 17, 2024


Black waterman villages in Suffolk among Virginia’s most endangered historic places

By KATHERINE HAFNER, WHRO

For years, Mary Hill has watched her Suffolk community of Hobson slowly disappear. Hill is a seventh-generation descendant of Black freedmen who helped build the community centuries ago. They established a self-sufficient oyster industry that thrived along the Nansemond River until pollution devastated it starting around the 1960s. Since then, historical buildings once crucial to tight-knit community culture have been torn down, Hill said. Many who were alive in the village’s heyday have died, and some other descendants moved away and sold property passed down for generations. In their place, developers are building modern, more expensive homes that edge out historic ones. “You have a slow death” of the area, said Hill, who is in her early 60s. She now hopes a new designation will bring attention and funding to the area.

VaNews May 16, 2024


Report: Arlington’s homeless population is up 14% since 2023, despite improved shelter access

By JAMES JARVIS, ArlNow

Arlington’s homeless population grew by 14% in the past year, according to a recent report. However, the county’s efforts to expand shelter capacity and enhance outreach have led to more homeless individuals gaining access to shelter and fewer homeless survivors of domestic violence and transition-age youth, per a report released on Wednesday by the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments (COG)

VaNews May 17, 2024


Friday Read She left the CIA in frustration. Now her spy novel is racking up awards.

By KYLE SWENSON, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

She felt each boom like an electric jolt as she was trying to sleep in her Alexandria, Va., apartment. It was August 2006, and Ilana Berry was then a 30-year-old Central Intelligence Agency case officer. Outside, construction crews were beginning work on the Woodrow Wilson Bridge, knocking down the old expanse to make way for a new six-lane roadway. But each rumble threw Berry off the steady anchors of time and place, hurling her back to her last year stationed in war-rocked Baghdad.

VaNews May 17, 2024


246 Years Project launches at Morven Park to help African Americans research their ancestors

By BRUCE POTTER, Inside NOVA

When African Americans research their genealogy, they usually can find information only back to 1865. That’s because before slavery was abolished, many of their ancestors were considered “property.” As a result, their names are absent from many government records, such as the census and birth and death registers. A new project initiated at Morven Park is trying to change that – one record at a time.

VaNews May 17, 2024


Segregation skyrocketed among Virginia’s Latino students in past 30 years

By SABRINA MORENO, Axios

Richmond Public Schools had the highest levels of school segregation between white and Latino students in Virginia in 2022, according to a Stanford University analysis of federal data. The combination of ethnicity, poverty and language create a “triple segregation” among Latino students that’s been overlooked for decades and “left to fester,” said Gary Orfield, co-director of the UCLA Civil Rights Project. Latino students’ federal right to desegregation didn’t happen until nearly 20 years after the Brown v. Board ruling with the 1973 Supreme Court case Keyes v. School District No. 1, Denver.

VaNews May 16, 2024


Virginia governor asks president to bring back in-person work for federal employees

By MATT PUSATORY, WUSA-TV

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin is calling on the Biden administration to bring back in-person work for federal employees. Back in December, Youngkin wrote a letter to the Office of Personnel Management urging the administration to mandate and enforce a full return-to-work policy in an effort to boost Metro's ridership. Now he's asking again.

VaNews May 17, 2024


School segregation in Virginia is increasing 70 years after Brown v. Board ruling

By SABRINA MORENO, Axios

Racial segregation in Virginia’s public schools has increased over the last three decades, according to an Axios review of federal data. Segregated schools disproportionately hurt Black and Latino students because schools where they’re the majority often have fewer resources, more teacher shortages, higher student-to-school counselor ratios and greater suspension rates — all of which impacts quality of education. Seventy years after the Brown v. Board of Education ruling, which declared racially divided schools as unconstitutional, Virginia’s population is the most diverse it’s ever been.

VaNews May 16, 2024