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‘They literally blast horns’: Overnight Metro work keeps Virginia residents awake

By ADAM TUSS, WRC-TV

Track work on the southern end of Metro’s Blue Line is underway in Northern Virginia – and people who live nearby say it’s keeping them awake overnight. The Franconia-Springfield and Van Dorn Street stations are closed, with shuttle buses replacing usual rail service. Alexandria residents told News4 that overnight and in the early morning hours they hear power tools, blasting horns and conversations on workers’ radios.

VaNews July 15, 2025


From VPAP Now Live: Mid-Year Campaign Finance Reports

The Virginia Public Access Project

VPAP has posted all mid-year campaign finance disclosures filed by candidates, referendum committees, and party committees. Use our overview page to find what interests you — including candidates for statewide office, House of Delegates, and local offices on the November ballot. We rank each group by amount raised and cash on hand. If you're interested in a specific candidate or committee, you can drill down for a sortable list of donors and expenditures reported during the filing period.

VaNews July 16, 2025


Yancey: Nothern Virginia is ‘at a critical crossroads,’ which means rural Virginia is, too

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

An office complex in Fairfax County recently changed hands, and taxpayers across rural Virginia ought to be alarmed. Why should we care who owns Tysons International Plaza? We don’t. We should, though, care about what the new owners paid for it: 60% less than the previous owners had bought it for just eight years ago.

VaNews July 14, 2025


Virginia Intermont campus owners pay off Bristol taxes

By DAVID MCGEE, Bristol Herald Courier (Subscription Required)

The owners of the former Virginia Intermont College property, on Friday, paid off its current and delinquent Bristol, Virginia, tax bills — effectively negating a city lawsuit filed Thursday. John Kieffer, a local attorney representing U.S. Magis International Education Center, delivered cashier’s checks totaling $353,484 to city Treasurer Angel Britt’s office at noon Friday. ... The funds arrived at TACS on Thursday, the same day Bristol Virginia filed action in Circuit Court seeking control of the property due to non-payment of taxes under provisions of a new state law designed to address vacant, blighted properties.

VaNews July 14, 2025


Following shoplifting charge, bond revoked for ex-Middletown treasurer accused of embezzlement

By C. MAX BACHMANN, Winchester Star (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

Middletown’s former treasurer and town manager had her bond revoked Thursday after she was arrested last week for shoplifting from a Martin’s grocery store in Frederick County. Rebecca Louise Layman, 52, is set to stand trial in November on 12 felony counts of embezzling from Middletown. Authorities have not disclosed how much she allegedly took from the town, but Frederick County Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Heather Enloe said Thursday that the amount is “in the six figures.”

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


Spotsylvania approves water use agreement for data center

By SCOTT SHENK, Free Lance-Star (Metered Paywall - 10 articles a month)

Data centers require heavy use of water to cool the equipment in the facilities that power the Internet, something Spotsylvania County leaders have addressed while approving numerous developments. Before approving numerous data center developments, the county established an agreement with developers, including Amazon, to construct a re-use water system to be used to cool the facilities.

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


How Hampton Roads sheriffs are working with ICE

By NATALIE ANDERSON, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

As federal authorities ramp up immigration enforcement tactics across the country, data from local sheriffs’ offices shed light on how frequently Hampton Roads law enforcement have turned over inmates to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Immigration detainers are a key tool used by ICE to take custody of people arrested by local law enforcement. Detainers are requests to local law enforcement to hold a person in custody for up to 48 hours past their scheduled release to give federal authorities time to pick them up them for possible deportation proceedings. Most sheriff’s offices in the Hampton Roads region have policies in place that not only outline how to question an inmate’s immigration status, but also allow for 48-hour detainer holds.

VaNews July 14, 2025