Javascript is required to run this page
VaNews

Search


DNC launches $1.5M investment in Virginia

By JULIA MANCHESTER, The Hill

The Democratic National Committee announced an initial $1.5 million investment in Virginia on Tuesday in an effort to help candidates up and down the ballot in November’s off-year elections. The investment in the state is one of the largest and earliest investments the committee has made to the Virginia Democratic Coordinated Campaign during an off election year, according to the DNC.

VaNews July 15, 2025


Leffel: When it comes to crypto, Virginia needs CLARITY

By GREG LEFFEL, published in Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Virginia has been a quiet leader in the blockchain and cryptocurrency revolution. From Shenandoah Valley vineyards using blockchain for weather tracking to family owned farms in Highland County accepting crypto to coworking clubs like mine in downtown Richmond selling memberships via Bitcoin, there are many local innovative businesses using this multipurpose technology. However, the legal clarity that would allow these local businesses to thrive has not always been there. Despite legislative efforts in the past, there are still questions on how to classify or separate these businesses and use cases.

Leffel is the founder and executive director of the Virginia Blockchain Council, a nonprofit with more than 1,400 members dedicated to educating and supporting the growth of blockchain technology in Virginia.

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


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


Arlington Electoral Board members debate when to make early-voting dropboxes available

By SCOTT MCCAFFREY, ArlNow

Arlington's two Republican members of the Electoral Board appear at loggerheads over how long early-voting dropboxes should be available before Election Day. Richard Samp, the senior Republican on the three-member panel and its vice chair, used the July 8 board meeting to press for a reduction from more than 40 days of use to just 10. Not everyone was in favor. Samp said the elections office was running its “own private mail service,” since it is required that each of the nine dropboxes scattered across Arlington be emptied every day.

VaNews July 15, 2025


Inside the Conservative Campaign That Took Down the U.Va. President

By STEPHANIE SAUL, New York Times (Metered Paywall - 1 to 2 articles a month)

The Jefferson Council, a band of conservative-leaning University of Virginia alumni, was impatient and fed up. For years, the group had railed against the university’s president, James E. Ryan, for his robust promotion of campus diversity initiatives. They had counted on Glenn Youngkin, the state’s Republican governor who vocally opposed D.E.I., to force a new direction at one of the country’s most prestigious public universities. But as 2025, the final year of Mr. Youngkin’s term, began, the university’s diversity, equity and inclusion apparatus was still in place. And time was running out, with polls showing that the governor’s race would be an uphill battle for a Republican candidate.

VaNews July 14, 2025


Certain Aetna health insurance plans leaving the Affordable Care Act marketplace next year

By CHARLOTTE RENE WOODS, Virginia Mercury

Starting next year, Aetna clients in Virginia and other states will no longer be able to purchase individual or family health insurance plans through the Affordable Care Act marketplace. The ACA is a 15-year-old federal law that allows people who don’t have employer-provided insurance to purchase their own through the ACA marketplace. Congress also created associated tax credits that have helped some offset those costs even further. Over 261,000 people in Virginia have Aetna healthcare, according to the Virginia Department of Medical Assistance Services.

VaNews July 14, 2025


Henrico’s housing trust fund wraps first year with homes sold, more on the way

By JONATHAN SPIERS, Richmond BizSense

One year in, Henrico’s multimillion-dollar investment to help improve housing affordability in the county is beginning to pay off. Henrico’s Affordable Housing Trust Fund program, launched last July with a $60 million cash contribution from the county, has finished out its initial year with its first homes sold and dozens more in the pipeline or under construction. . . . Henrico’s goal is to produce 750 new homes that are affordable to first-time buyers at as low as 60% AMI over the program’s first five years, using the $60 million in unbudgeted tax revenues that were generated specifically from data centers in the county.

VaNews July 14, 2025


Virginia Lottery continues to embrace its gaming oversight role

By DAVID MCGEE, Bristol Herald Courier (Subscription Required)

In just the past decade, Virginia has become one of the nation’s top states for gaming and most of the state’s oversight is handled through the Virginia Lottery — an agency that has grown 20% larger to accommodate those responsibilities. Today the lottery oversees its traditional lottery ticket sales and drawings, online iLottery play, the state’s three casinos — with another in Norfolk now under construction — and a robust sports betting program with 14 licensed operators.

VaNews July 14, 2025