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Sea levels in Hampton Roads continue to rise, but at a steady pace
Hampton Roads continues to see rising tides linked to climate change and sinking land. But the rate of change in recent years has stayed in line with past forecasts, according to the latest “sea level rise report card” from William & Mary’s Batten School and Virginia Institute of Marine Science. “We are accelerating at a high rate compared to a lot of the rest of the country, but that rate hasn't been changing, really,” said Molly Mitchell, an assistant research professor. “It's been a pretty consistent rate.”
Prince William School Board ratifies ‘historic’ collective bargaining wage agreement
The Prince William County School Board on May 7 approved the school division’s collective bargaining agreement with the local teachers' union, bringing the addition of a wage agreement. The School Board ratified the school division’s inaugural collective bargaining agreement in March 2024, but wages — a sticking point between the two sides — were not included in those negotiations or the agreement. The union — the Prince William Education Association — and the division ultimately went back to the negotiating table to nail down a wage agreement.
Norfolk to vote on allowing city attorney to prosecute misdemeanor shoplifting
Norfolk City Council members plan to vote on an ordinance Tuesday that will allow the city attorney’s office to prosecute misdemeanor shoplifting charges. ... The code change was first proposed by Mayor Kenny Alexander at his annual State of the City address in April. Alexander said Commonwealth’s Attorney Ramin Fatehi and his office were not doing enough to prosecute misdemeanor shoplifting cases. Fatehi has disputed the claims, saying his office prosecutes every felony shoplifting case. He said the issue is his office doesn’t receive enough funding from the city or state to prosecute misdemeanor shoplifting cases.
Augusta County Sheriff’s Office gets body, dash cameras
The Augusta County Sheriff's Office has become the third local law enforcement agency to utilize body-worn cameras, nearly a year after the devices were approved. The sheriff's office began using the Axon cameras at the beginning of April and continue to roll out dash cameras for its vehicles. . . . The sheriff's office was a little late to the party as both the Staunton and Waynesboro police departments have had body cam devices in use for about a decade. Calls for the recording devices in the county became amplified in 2021 following two shootings in May of that year.
Yancey: Rural communities are keeping Va. from becoming an exporter of people. That’s where population growth is.
Virginia lies over top of an earthquake zone, something we’re occasionally reminded of. Some of us felt the 2011 earthquake near Mineral in Louisa County that shook even the Washington Monument and damaged two schools in Louisa so severely they were closed for the rest of the school year. Others felt the much smaller earthquake that originated near Dillwyn in Buckingham County. The strongest Virginia quake in recorded times was in 1897 near Narrows in Giles County; that tremor brought down chimneys as far away as Bedford County and damaged others from Lexington down into North Carolina. We are now living through another seismic event, except this one doesn’t involve geology; it involves demography.
Parastaran: Recovery schools can help teens battling addiction
In 2023, the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s annual survey on drug use and health estimated that 2.2 million adolescents aged 12-17 — about 8.5% of this age group — had a substance use disorder. Yet, a staggering 1.8 million received no treatment. Do the math and you’ll find a concerning picture for education: In an average classroom of 30 students, two are likely struggling with an unaddressed addiction. And the future of those students all-too-often includes a spiral leading to academic failures, dropouts and juvenile delinquency. Fortunately, there are initiatives to break this cycle.
Virginia signals it’s ready to explore geothermal energy with new legislation
Republican Governor Glenn Youngkin is working with Democrats who control the General Assembly to increase renewable energy. It's the hottest new energy source, literally. Geothermal energy is created by boring deep into the ground to release heat from the earth's crust. And now Republican Governor Glenn Youngkin [signed] a bill that would add geothermal energy to Virginia's renewable energy portfolio standards – essentially encouraging geothermal energy production in Virginia. The bill was introduced by Senator Jeremy McPike, a Democrat from Prince William County.
Virginia state lawmakers briefed on potential impacts of federal Medicaid cuts
A bipartisan group of Virginia delegates were briefed Monday on the impact Medicaid cuts could have across the state and local communities. The meeting, the third for the Emergency Committee on the Impacts of Federal Workforce and Funding Reductions, was held one day after congress unveiled legislation that targeted $880 billion in cuts centered around Medicaid. Currently, there are 1.9 million Virginians enrolled in Medicaid across its Base, FAMIS and Expansion programs.
Tariff deal with China doesn’t end uncertainty in Virginia
What does the owner of a beloved Richmond toy store do when almost all of the merchandise it sells ultimately comes from China? For Thea Brown, owner of World of Mirth in Carytown, all she could do was pay the $1,200 tariff imposed on the $5,000 cost of the merchandise she had ordered. “For no reason,” she said. But there was a reason: the trade war that President Donald Trump launched soon after taking office on Jan. 20 that has affected imported goods from almost all of the United States’ trading partners, especially China.
Va. teacher salaries increase, but there is much left to do
Virginia’s leaders don’t strive for a middling commitment to economic development, transportation, law enforcement or any other government responsibility that shapes the state’s quality of life. But the middle is precisely where the commonwealth lands in a new national ranking of teacher salaries — signaling a need to expand major initiatives in recent years to boost classroom pay. Average teacher salaries in Virginia increased 5.1% in 2023-24 and 3% in 2024-25, but the average pay in the state last year — $66,327 — still ranks 26th in the nation ...