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Faculty Senate Executives hear from Rector Sheridan and Vice Rector Wilkinson

By XANDER TILOCK AND GRACE TRAXLER, Cavalier Daily

The Faculty Senate Executive Council held an emergency meeting with members of the Board of Visitors Wednesday to continue discussions of the tumultuous fallout of President Jim Ryan’s resignation. A majority of the two-hour meeting was spent engaging in conversation with Rector Rachel Sheridan and Vice Rector Porter Wilkinson both of whom began their terms July 1. The meeting was the first time that representatives of the Board openly engaged with faculty members in a formal setting following Ryan’s resignation. Many of the questions posed by faculty were met with no comment.

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


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


U.Va. Faculty Senate overwhelmingly adopts a no confidence vote in Board of Visitors

By XANDER TILOCK, Cavalier Daily

The Faculty Senate held an emergency meeting Friday as part of ongoing discussions surrounding the University’s next steps towards choosing a new president. In the meeting, the Faculty Senate passed a resolution for a vote of no-confidence in the Board. The resolution passed 46 to 6, with eight senators abstaining.

VaNews July 14, 2025


University Of Virginia Faculty Vote No Confidence In Governing Board

By MICHAEL T. NIETZEL, Forbes

The University of Virginia Faculty Senate has voted that it has no confidence in the school’s Board of Visitors. The resolution of no-confidence in the Board passed 46 to 6, with eight senators abstaining. The vote occurred on Friday, July 11, the same day that UVA President Jim Ryan officially stepped down from his post and released a video of farewell and gratitude to the campus community.

VaNews July 14, 2025


UVa faculty deliver overwhelming vote of no confidence in board

By CAROLINE KING, Daily Progress (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

After more than an hour of debate at an emergency meeting Friday, the University of Virginia Faculty Senate held a vote of no confidence in the school's governing Board of Visitors for “not protecting the University and its president from outside interference, and for not consulting with the Faculty Senate in a time of crisis." That crisis, referred to in the resolution the vote approved, refers to President Jim Ryan's resignation under pressure from the Trump administration Department of Justice.

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


As U-Va. president leaves, faculty say board failed to protect university

By DAN ROSENZWEIG-ZIFF, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

University of Virginia faculty passed a vote of no confidence Friday in the school’s governing body, saying it failed to protect against “outside interference” by the Trump administration that led to the eventual resignation of President James E. Ryan. The vote by the U-Va. faculty senate — which came on Ryan’s last day in office — called on the board to provide faculty with an “immediate and complete accounting” of its response to inquiries by the Justice Department in recent months.

VaNews July 14, 2025


Holbrook and Williams: Sentara should invest more to improve regional health

By BRUCE HOLBROOK AND ARMISTEAD WILLIAMS, published in Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

A billion here, a billion there, pretty soon you’re talking real money,” said the late Sen.Everett Dirksen. Now comes the shocking news that Sentara Health System lost $1.5 billion on health insurance ventures according to its 2024 publicly available audited financials. One of these was Sentara Holdings Florida, an HMO bought for $225 million in December 2022 which lost $290 million over the next two years. All that “real money” would have made a profound impact if it had been invested back into Hampton Roads where it came from. Yes, we are thankful for Sentara’s pledge to give $35 million annually for 10 years to the Macon and Joan Brock Virginia Health Sciences at Old Dominion University, but it should have been much more and should have been given much earlier.

Holbrook of Norfolk is president of Bruce Holbrook Consulting, Inc. Williams of Norfolk is a neurologist and a former board member of Sentara Hospitals, Norfolk, and of Old Dominion University.

VaNews July 14, 2025


Atkinson: Halt menhaden harvest until studies determine its effects

By STEVE ATKINSON, published in Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

With summer in full swing, Chesapeake Bay fishermen, birders and environmentalists are once again faced with the harsh reality that menhaden, the most important fish in the sea, are scarce. Even Omega Protein, the Canadian-owned menhaden reduction fishery (i.e. reduces the fish to animal feed), and its partner Ocean Harvesters, with its spotter planes and huge purse seine nets, is having trouble finding them.

Atkinson is chairman of the Virginia Saltwater Sportfishing Association in Virginia Beach.

VaNews July 14, 2025