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Faculty Senate Executives hear from Rector Sheridan and Vice Rector Wilkinson

By XANDER TILOCK AND GRACE TRAXLER, Cavalier Daily

The Faculty Senate Executive Council held an emergency meeting with members of the Board of Visitors Wednesday to continue discussions of the tumultuous fallout of President Jim Ryan’s resignation. A majority of the two-hour meeting was spent engaging in conversation with Rector Rachel Sheridan and Vice Rector Porter Wilkinson both of whom began their terms July 1. The meeting was the first time that representatives of the Board openly engaged with faculty members in a formal setting following Ryan’s resignation. Many of the questions posed by faculty were met with no comment.

VaNews July 14, 2025


U.Va. Faculty Senate overwhelmingly adopts a no confidence vote in Board of Visitors

By XANDER TILOCK, Cavalier Daily

The Faculty Senate held an emergency meeting Friday as part of ongoing discussions surrounding the University’s next steps towards choosing a new president. In the meeting, the Faculty Senate passed a resolution for a vote of no-confidence in the Board. The resolution passed 46 to 6, with eight senators abstaining.

VaNews July 14, 2025


University Of Virginia Faculty Vote No Confidence In Governing Board

By MICHAEL T. NIETZEL, Forbes

The University of Virginia Faculty Senate has voted that it has no confidence in the school’s Board of Visitors. The resolution of no-confidence in the Board passed 46 to 6, with eight senators abstaining. The vote occurred on Friday, July 11, the same day that UVA President Jim Ryan officially stepped down from his post and released a video of farewell and gratitude to the campus community.

VaNews July 14, 2025


UVa faculty deliver overwhelming vote of no confidence in board

By CAROLINE KING, Daily Progress (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

After more than an hour of debate at an emergency meeting Friday, the University of Virginia Faculty Senate held a vote of no confidence in the school's governing Board of Visitors for “not protecting the University and its president from outside interference, and for not consulting with the Faculty Senate in a time of crisis." That crisis, referred to in the resolution the vote approved, refers to President Jim Ryan's resignation under pressure from the Trump administration Department of Justice.

VaNews July 14, 2025


Virginia Democrat on possible shutdown: ‘It’s time to stand up for the American people’

By SARAH FORTINSKY, The Hill

Rep. Suhas Subramanyam (D-Va.) said he supports Democrats’ threats to shut down the government if Republicans proceed with a planned rescissions package, saying his party should use all the leverage they can to prevent cuts to previously approved funding. “I say it’s time to stand up for the American people,” Subramanyam said in an interview on NewsNation’s “The Hill Sunday,” when asked what he thinks about a potential shutdown. . . . Republicans are ramping up efforts to pass a rescissions package that President Trump requested last month, which includes more than $9 billion in funding cuts for foreign aid and public broadcasting programs.

VaNews July 14, 2025


Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears visits Newport News

By ALEX LITTLEHALES, WVEC-TV

For the first time since Virginia's June primaries, Republican gubernatorial candidate and current lieutenant governor Winsome Earle-Sears answered questions from local media in Hampton Roads following a campaign stop at Newport News Shipbuilding. The visit comes weeks after the first appearance of the entire GOP statewide ticket, in which Sears, lieutenant governor candidate John Reid and Attorney General Jason Miyares appeared together for the first time.

VaNews July 14, 2025


No-fish story: Milde afraid that lack of menhaden is dooming osprey

By JONATHAN HUNLEY, Fredericksburg Free Press

Del. Paul Milde is concerned that a lack of a small, oily fish could be causing the collapse of the osprey population in the Chesapeake Bay, and he says the Democratic majority in the House of Delegates isn’t helping matters. Milde (R-Stafford) continues to push legislative efforts to have a study of menhaden fishing done as new research suggests that declining numbers of the species, which osprey eat, could be leading to a drop in the population of the birds. The lawmaker issued a statement late last month saying inaction on scrutiny of the menhaden is a result of partisan politics.

VaNews July 14, 2025


Drinking OK, swimming not: Advisories issued after raw sewage spill at Hopewell water plant

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

The Virginia Department of Health says water in Hopewell appears safe to drink but not to swim or play in after a power failure at the city wastewater plant July 11 forced a spillage of 1.38 million gallons of sewage into the James River and a few of the city’s waterways. On July 12, VDH and the Crater Health District issued a recreational swimming advisory for Gravely Run Creek and the James River from City Point to Berkeley Plantation.

VaNews July 14, 2025


Va. governors make board appointments; legislators confirm them. How’s the process work?

By NATHANIEL CLINE, Virginia Mercury

Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin and Virginia Democrats have brokered many deals during his soon-ending four-year term, but have also frequently been at odds on policy issues, reflected most recently in the legislature’s rejection of several of the governor’s appointments to Virginia’s governing boards and commissions. Virginia law gives governors the power to appoint and remove people to these groups. Like his predecessors, Youngkin has appointed hundreds of people to serve on roughly 300 public commissions and boards. Over the past year, Senate Democrats have rejected 30 of Youngkin’s appointments to boards and commissions . . .

VaNews July 14, 2025


Senate Democrats consider blocking more Youngkin university board appointments as he exerts influence

By ANDREW KERLEY, Virginia Scope

Gov. Glenn Youngkin made his latest round of university board appointments on June 20, giving him complete control over the bodies that govern Virginia’s institutes of higher education. Democrats are making moves to block Youngkin — who ran on education issues and has focused on removing race and gender-related concepts from K-12 — as they fear he may try to further his legacy of reforming higher education during the last year of his term. The new appointments come as Senate Democrats wage a legal battle over the confirmation status of eight previous appointees they rejected in a Senate panel on June 9. Democratic lawmakers are considering blocking more appointees as they say Youngkin is wielding them like proxies and exerting more influence on universities than previous governors.

VaNews July 14, 2025