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Community Pushback Is Stalling $64 Billion in Data Center Development Nationwide, Report Shows
As Elena Schlossberg of Prince William County, Virginia, sees it, the community effort to fight the richest companies in the world seeking to build data centers began about a decade ago when opposition coalesced in the early days of the industry’s development. Then, a couple of years ago, when people began to learn much more about the warehouse-like server farms proliferating at double the earlier rate, the fight strengthened with a meeting in Warrenton. ... Such community opposition is the focal point of a recent report by Data Center Watch, a research organization tracking data center opposition. A key finding: “$64 billion in U.S. data center projects have been blocked or delayed by a growing wave of local, bipartisan opposition.”
VCU hires outside firm to oversee federal anti-DEI compliance
Virginia Commonwealth University has hired an outside firm to review its compliance with a federal mandate to eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives. That’s in addition to the university’s own review, which has resulted in the shuttering and changing of multiple programs and some job reassignments or layoffs. Provost Fotis Sotiropoulos said the university hired Cozen O’Connor because federal guidance isn’t clear about which programs are allowed — and said the firm will assist in identifying programs “that either illegally discriminate or are perceived to be illegally discriminating.”
Fort Eustis is set to lose a major command as part of an Army shakeup
The headquarters for the Army Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) is expected to leave Fort Eustis as part of a large reorganization. The command has been headquartered at Fort Eustis since 2011. Army Chief of Staff Gen. Randy George recently told the House Appropriations Defense Subcommittee that the headquarters at Fort Eustis will be combined with Army Futures Command in Austin, Tx. to form the new Army Transformation and Training Command.
Jay Jones, running for attorney general, launches ad featuring former Gov. Ralph Northam
Jay Jones, one of two Democratic candidates for attorney general, is launching a new campaign ad featuring former Gov. Ralph Northam on Tuesday. Backed by a six-figure ad buy, the commercial will air on TV in the Richmond, Norfolk and Roanoke broadcast markets, as well as statewide on streaming services.
A veterans’ reunion sits at the center of an online storm in Norfolk
An online flyer promoting a trio of controversial speakers at an upcoming reunion of the survivors of the 1967 bombing of the USS Liberty is fake, organizers say — but one of the speakers named in the flyer is scheduled to speak. The Liberty Veteran’s Association will hold its 58th anniversary reunion from June 6-9 at the Sheraton Waterside in Norfolk. This year, the small, private event and the hotel became the focus of days of criticism as pictures of the flyer circulated online. . . . The flyer has ricocheted around social media for at least the past two weeks, prompting calls for boycotts of the hotel and condemnations of the veterans’ organization.
Jan. 6 rioter who assaulted police charged with burglary near Richmond
A Fairfax County man who assaulted police at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and smashed the glass pane through which Ashli Babbitt climbed before she was fatally shot, has been arrested again outside of Richmond. Zachary J. Alam is accused of breaking into a home this month while the residents were there. He appears to be the first Capitol rioter arrested on new charges after President Donald Trump granted clemency to the roughly 1,600 people charged for their roles in the insurrection.
Poor water quality in Hampton River could soon be improved by oyster reefs
Poor water quality in the Hampton River is a problem, but restoration projects are starting to change that. ... Plastic wrappers, water bottles, cigarette butts and other trash commonly wind up in the river. Polluted runoff from densely populated streets, parking lots and buildings also is one of the city’s biggest threats to clean water. For years, researchers at Hampton University have studied the water near campus to understand the existing oyster population and develop strategies for restoring the river. As a result of this decade of work, the Chesapeake Bay Foundation and university researchers are turning to oysters to help improve the river’s water quality.
Richmond residents must contact mortgage lenders to resolve city’s tax error, officials say
City officials over the weekend said they’d accidentally issued thousands of real estate tax bills directly to homeowners — rather than to mortgage lenders, which is the standard practice. It’s up to residents who received the errant bills to resolve the issue, officials said. The mistake came after employees in the city’s finance department updated loan data in MUNIS, the system used to administer real estate taxes. Records for at least 33,000 taxpayers “failed to import completely,” a city spokesperson said, and as a result, MUNIS was unable to link some taxpayers to their mortgage lenders.
Jennifer McDonald attorneys say judge’s errors at trial are grounds for appeal
Attorneys for Jennifer McDonald, the former executive director of the Front Royal-Warren County Economic Development Authority, are asking that an appellate judge vacate the judgment against her and remand her case back to the lower court. U.S. District Judge Elizabeth K. Dillon sentenced McDonald on May 29 in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Virginia to 14 years in prison for committing financial crimes while she was head of the EDA. ... Dillon also ordered McDonald as part of the sentence to pay $2,744,268.60 in restitution to the EDA and to forfeit $5,201,329 to the government.
Local food banks have lost 1.4M meals to Trump’s cuts
Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains area is largely rural and conservative, with Donald Trump carrying all but two counties that checker the central and western part of the state in the 2024 election. It is also a place where it has become increasingly difficult for people to find enough to eat. Every free meal counts there, said Michael McKee, the CEO of Blue Ridge Area Food Bank, which is the main provider of food assistance to 25 counties in the region. But after the U.S. Department of Agriculture paused $500 million in funding for programs related to food in March, Blue Ridge and other food banks have been struggling to meet the growing needs of their communities.