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Professor responds to new GMU federal investigation over alleged discriminatory hiring practices

By MATTHEW TORRES, WUSA-TV

George Mason University (GMU), Virginia’s largest public university, is under federal investigation over its hiring practices, marking the second time in a month the institution has come under scrutiny by the U.S. Department of Education. The Trump administration's latest inquiry accuses GMU of racial bias in its hiring practices, alleging the university prioritized diversity over credentials. The probe continues a broader nationwide campaign targeting diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives at universities that uses funding from the federal government. ... Faculty concern grew louder Monday after VA-AAUP released a sharply worded letter condemning the federal probe as a politically motivated “hit job.”

VaNews July 15, 2025


JLARC says some school districts are incorrectly citing a 2022 law when removing books from libraries

By BRANDON JARVIS, Virginia Scope

The Joint Legislative and Audit Review Commission (JLARC) presented a report to members of the General Assembly on Monday about books that are being removed from school libraries across Virginia. The report found that school divisions have the authority to select and remove books from libraries, but some are misinterpreting a 2022 law to justify removing titles. The state has no authority over which books school libraries carry, and current law offers no guidance to divisions on how to manage library collections, according to JLARC. The Board of Education requires each school to maintain a library with materials that support instruction, research, inquiry and general student interest.

VaNews July 15, 2025


Greene County staff permitted to speak to press after pushback from First Amendment groups

By HEATHER PRICE IVES, Daily Progress (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

Greene County leaders now say staff are free to talk to the press after multiple county employees said they were previously gagged under county "policy." Those leaders, who have denied there ever was such a policy, were prompted to speak after First Amendment lawyers and advocates sent a letter to the county supervisors last month demanding they rescind the policy. "It remains a mystery how Greene County employees came to believe they were strictly prohibited from speaking to the press if no such thing was ever communicated to them,” Seth Stern, director of advocacy for the New York-based Freedom of the Press Foundation and one of the letter's signatories, told The Daily Progress in an email.

VaNews July 15, 2025


Free Narcan, fentanyl testing available through new Richmond vending machines

By GWYNDOLYN MILES, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Richmond is installing new harm reduction vending machines across the city, equipped with free Narcan, fentanyl testing strips and personal hygiene products. “This life-saving program is about meeting people where they are, with compassion and dignity,” Mayor Danny Avula said. The machines are part of the city’s Office of Opioid and Substance Use Response. Officials say the goal is to prevent overdoses and support Richmonders living with substance abuse disorders.

VaNews July 15, 2025


Yancey: 223 book titles pulled from school library shelves in Virginia, but 75% were in just 5 places

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

Across Virginia over the past five years, 223 different books have been removed from school library shelves, many of them by more than one school system. However, those removals have been concentrated in a relative handful of communities. Hanover County has removed more books from its school library shelves than any other locality in the state — 125 in all. That one county accounts for more than one-third of the book removals in the state. Along with another four counties — Rockingham County, which removed 57 books, Goochland County with 34, Madison County with 23 and Spotsylvania County with 19 — those five counties alone accounted for 75% of the book removals in the state.

VaNews July 15, 2025


Sites slated for mystery data center projects in Chesterfield sell for nearly $60M

By JACK JACOBS, Richmond BizSense

Entities involved in plans to build proposed data center campuses in western Chesterfield have dropped tens of millions of dollars in recent days to secure the project sites. More than 1,200 acres between the two sites, one near Moseley and the one near Westchester Commons, have changed hands for a combined total of about $60 million in multiple transactions that closed in late June, according to Chesterfield courthouse records.

VaNews July 15, 2025


Norfolk cleared to start construction on first phase of floodwall

By KATHERINE HAFNER, WHRO

People passing through the eastern edge of downtown Norfolk will soon see construction for the first phase of the city’s massive floodwall project with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The Norfolk Planning Commission recently approved designs for Phase 1A of the more than $2.6 billion project, which the city calls Resilient Norfolk. The effort aims to protect the city from catastrophic flooding during major storms and is part of the Army Corps’ wider Coastal Storm Risk Management program developed after 2012’s Hurricane Sandy. Virginia Beach and the Peninsula are working on CSRM projects but are still in the study phase.

VaNews July 15, 2025


Prince William supervisor’s PAC receives another $100K, this time from Dumfries data center backer

By SÉBASTIEN KRAFT, Inside NOVA

Prince William County Supervisor Yesli Vega earlier this month received a $100,000 campaign donation via her political action committee, YES PAC, from a real estate developer with ties to a recently-pitched data center project near the Four Seasons at Historic Virginia retirement community in Dumfries.

VaNews July 15, 2025


Data center demand brings first gas substation to Nokesville

By JILL PALERMO, Prince William Times

Western Prince William County needs an infusion of electricity to avoid getting close to running out of power by as soon as 2027 due to soaring demand from power-hungry data centers. That will mean big changes for a stretch of Vint Hill Road that’s already a tangle of high-voltage power transmission lines. Dominion Energy plans a major upgrade of an existing electrical substation near Vint Hill Road and Reid Lane in Nokesville. That’s where a picturesque, mostly rural roadway is interrupted by a confluence of three high-voltage power transmission lines with giant metal poles and towers.

VaNews July 15, 2025


Judge rules in favor of Norfolk city attorney in feud with commonwealth’s attorney

By TREVOR METCALFE, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

The Norfolk city attorney’s office earned a win in its ongoing feud with Commonwealth’s Attorney Ramin Fatehi over which office has the authority to prosecute misdemeanor cases. A Norfolk Circuit Judge Joseph Lindsey ruled last week the city attorney’s office could continue to prosecute a misdemeanor city code violation appeal. The case involves a man who was charged with being in a park after sunset, a Class 2 misdemeanor punishable by up to six months in jail and/or a fine of up to $1,000.

VaNews July 15, 2025