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Gigaland data center developer offers county $15M for land conservation

By PETER CARY, Fauquier Times

The developers of Gigaland, a seven-building, 2-million-square-foot data center campus proposed near Remington, are offering $15 million to Fauquier County’s land conservation program as part of a package of incentives to encourage county supervisors to approve it. The project initially included an offer of $1 million for county parks and trails, $1 million for Remington recreation programs and $500,000 to the nearby Meadows subdivision to mitigate its effects. With the additional $15 million, “it’s a bigger proffer package than the county's ever seen for anything ever, and certainly, the economics are very compelling,” said county Supervisor Ike Broaddus.

VaNews July 3, 2025


Dumfries data center proposal draws fervor at town hall

By SÉBASTIEN KRAFT, Inside NOVA

Residents of a Dumfries-area retirement community turned out in droves for a Tuesday town hall to discuss proposed data center development near their property, a relative novelty for eastern Prince William County compared with such projects on the county’s western end. Supervisor Andrea Bailey, a Democrat representing the Potomac District, hosted the town hall at her district office in Dumfries for residents of the Four Seasons at Historic Virginia 55-and-over community off Dumfries Road and west of Interstate 95. The project, dubbed “Lexora Park,” could include as many as five data centers, according to an April 9 concept plan.

VaNews July 3, 2025


Medicaid on the brink as Congress races toward budget deadline

By CHARLOTTE RENE WOODS, Virginia Mercury

With roughly $1 trillion in Medicaid funding at stake, Congress is racing to finalize a sweeping budget package, dubbed the “big, beautiful bill,” ahead of President Donald Trump’s July 4 deadline — but key decisions about cuts to the health care program remain up in the air. A preliminary review by the Congressional Budget Office has heightened concern, and a bipartisan chorus of lawmakers and hospital associations across several states is warning against adopting the Senate version of the bill, which they say could devastate Medicaid-dependent health systems. . . . A central dispute between the two chambers involves how the Senate version would restructure Medicaid funding, particularly in ways that could undercut Virginia’s hospitals and the state’s expanded Medicaid program.

VaNews July 3, 2025


GMU's Innovation District in Prince William receives $2.6M from state

By EMILY SEYMOUR, Inside NOVA

The Innovation District in Manassas is receiving a $2.6 million Growth and Opportunity for Virginia state grant in part to bolster George Mason University’s programming at its Science and Technology Campus. Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced the grant along with seven others June 27. . . . Specifically in Prince William, George Mason University is launching the Innovation District at its Science and Technology campus in Manassas to drive growth in life sciences, emerging technologies, aerospace and defense, cybersecurity and data infrastructure.

VaNews July 3, 2025


Feds reinstate $33 million for Virginia schools

By NATHANIEL CLINE, Virginia Mercury

Virginia and other states will regain the ability to use $33 million in emergency relief funds, after the federal government last week reversed course on a March decision that prohibited them from using the funds. U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon abruptly accelerated the deadline for schools to spend all allocated funds on March 28, leaving schools scrambling to make plans for the money. McMahon announced the rescission of that policy in a June 26 letter to chief state school officers, after several states sued the agency in the Southern District of New York, leading to injunctions that prevented the DOE from enforcing its policy. Virginia was not one of those states involved in the litigation, but its state education agency did file appeals with DOE.

VaNews July 3, 2025


Martinsville city manager responds to civil rights lawsuit

By DEAN-PAUL STEPHENS, Cardinal News

In a recently filed response, Martinsville City Manager Aretha Ferrell-Benavides disputes the majority of claims in a civil rights lawsuit stemming from City Councilor Aaron Rawls’ ejection from a public meeting. Ferrell-Benavides’ answer was filed Friday in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Virginia in Danville. Ferrell-Benavides is a defendant in the case, along with Deputy Reva Keen of the Martinsville Sheriff’s Office. As of Monday, the city manager’s response is the only one that has been filed.

VaNews July 2, 2025


Trump nominates Todd Gilbert as U.S. Attorney; Shenandoah County delegate to withdraw from House race

By RYAN FITZMAURICE, Winchester Star (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

Del. Todd Gilbert, R-Shenandoah County, has been nominated by President Donald Trump to become U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Virginia, a move that ends his nearly two-decade tenure in the Virginia House of Delegates. In a statement Tuesday, Gilbert expressed gratitude for the opportunity to continue serving the region. ... Gilbert confirmed he will formally withdraw his name from the November ballot for the 33rd House District and notify the local GOP committee to begin selecting a replacement candidate.

VaNews July 2, 2025


Va. GOP's ticket campaigns together, but not side-by-side

By ANNA BRYSON, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Virginia’s statewide GOP ticket appeared together for the first time Tuesday night — for about a minute — at a rally in Fairfax County, following a controversy that had prompted Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, the party’s nominee for governor, to keep John Reid, the Republican nominee for lieutenant governor, at arm’s length. Earle-Sears, Reid and Attorney General Jason Miyares, who is running for reelection, shared a brief moment on the stage together alongside Gov. Glenn Youngkin and many others at the end of the rally at the Vienna Volunteer Fire Department.

VaNews July 2, 2025


Samuels Public Library Opens New Chapter Without County Funding, But With Strong Community Support

By MIKE MCCOOL, Royal Examiner

Samuels Public Library began a new chapter today, one that library leaders call “unusual” but deeply meaningful. As of July 1, the library is operating without funding from Warren County for the first time in decades. Still, the halls were filled with smiling faces, coffee cups, and Apple House donuts as supporters streamed in for an open house celebrating community resilience and a commitment to keeping services alive. . . . Although the mood inside the library was cheerful, the backdrop to this event was serious. For over two years, Samuels Public Library has been at the center of a tense funding dispute with the Warren County Board of Supervisors, stemming from concerns over library content and operations.

VaNews July 2, 2025


The City of Charlottesville has to toss out its new zoning law — because its outside attorney made a mistake in an ongoing lawsuit

By ERIN O'HARE, Charlottesville Tomorrow

The City of Charlottesville has to abandon its new zoning rules after a judge ordered it to revert to the old ordinance. During a 10-minute hearing in Charlottesville Circuit Court on Monday, June 30, Judge Claude Worrell issued a default judgement in favor of a group of plaintiffs who, in January 2024, sued the city in an attempt to stop the implementation of the new zoning ordinance. The City Council voted unanimously to adopt that ordinance in December 2023, and it took effect in February 2024. The ruling came after the city’s outside counsel missed a June 2 filing deadline, Charlottesville Community Engagement reported June 30.

VaNews July 2, 2025