Javascript is required to run this page
VaNews

Search


Professor, civil rights icon Owen Cardwell, who desegregated E.C. Glass, dies

By MARK HAND, News & Advance (Metered Paywall - 18 articles a month)

Owen Cardwell Jr., who joined Lynda Woodruff as the first two Black students to attend previously all-white E.C. Glass High School in 1962, died Monday at the age of 78. The son of a top official with the local chapter of the NAACP, Cardwell, at the age of 14, was one of the students picked when a call went out for Dunbar High School students interested in participating in a desegregation lawsuit in Lynchburg.

VaNews May 16, 2025


Trump administration’s cancellation of internet access grants will cost SW and Southside Virginia, officials say

By TAD DICKENS, Cardinal News

An Abingdon nonprofit organization, looking to expand broadband access and literacy, put its blueprints in place. People Inc. of Virginia used $55,000 in federal money and worked with multiple Southwest Virginia nonprofits to create a plan that would help a variety of Southwest Virginia residents with digital literacy, coding and consumer protection, and would provide devices for doing schoolwork to children living below the poverty line, among other actions. People Inc. set up similar plans in Northern and Central Virginia locations with another $70,000.

VaNews May 16, 2025


Youngkin signs bipartisan child welfare reforms and sets new goals for foster care

By MARKUS SCHMIDT, Virginia Mercury

Katie Jones was 11 the last time she saw her childhood home, where her father, an alcoholic, stayed between jail stints and her mother struggled with heroin addiction. One day after school, just moments after she had settled in with a bag of chips and her homework, police and social services workers pulled up outside. Within minutes, Jones and her five siblings were loaded into vehicles, separated from each other, and plunged into the foster care system — an experience that would shuffle her through five homes, three schools, and years of uncertainty before she aged out at 18, never adopted.

VaNews May 16, 2025


Fairfax leaders angered at being left out of funding for future Va. transportation projects

By SCOTT MCCAFFREY, FFXnow

Fairfax County leaders believe they and other Northern Virginia leaders are getting an unfair deal when it comes to state transportation funding. The Board of Supervisors voted Tuesday (May 13) to send a letter to Virginia Secretary of Transportation Sheppard Miller III, expressing concern about being passed over in the latest round of “Smart Scale” funding for transportation improvements. The state program allows localities to submit proposals, which are then scored to see how they meet designated criteria. Final approval is given by the Commonwealth Transportation Board (CTB).

VaNews May 16, 2025


Supporters of Loudoun County theater teacher ask Virginia attorney general to investigate his removal

By EVAN GOODENOW, Loudoun Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

Supporters of Rock Ridge High School theater teacher Tony Cimino-Johnson are asking the Office of the Virginia Attorney General to investigate why he was placed on leave from his job by Loudoun County Public Schools April 1, and to investigate alleged wrongdoing by LCPS. In a May 12 letter to Virginia Attorney General Jason S. Miyares, a Republican, supporters say Cimino-Johnson's removal from class was retaliation for actions he has taken. Cimino-Johnson has taught at the school in Loudoun Valley Estates since 2014.

VaNews May 15, 2025


Denied for dissent?

Richmond Free Press Editorial

Several Virginia Commonwealth University students who did everything they needed to do to graduate were denied their degree for sitting on the wrong patch of grass on April 29. The students were part of an event, which VCU officials said was unauthorized, that marked the one-year anniversary of a prior pro-Palestinian protest on the campus. The 2024 pro-Palestinian protest at VCU led to a clash between student demonstrators and law enforcement. It wasn’t a good look for a university that prides itself on promoting free expression and diversity of thought.

VaNews May 16, 2025


Virginia’s retention of recent college graduates needs improvement

Virginian-Pilot Editorial (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Every May, university campuses across the commonwealth are filled with shouts of joy and raucous applause as thousands of young people receive their degrees. Graduating college is a laudable achievement — the product of hard work, persistence, curiosity and determination — which should make the heart swell with pride. Yet studies show that in a matter of years, a good many of these graduates will leave Virginia, taking their skills and talent to other states. It’s a persistent problem here and one that officials, policymakers and university officials must work together to address.

VaNews May 16, 2025


Sparks fly during Hopewell City Council meeting over recent city terminations

By VICTORIA LUCAS, WRIC-TV

Tensions flared at Tuesday evening’s Hopewell City Council meeting, as protesters were escorted out by sheriff’s deputies and one councilman voluntarily left. The contention stems from the terminations of former city clerk Brittani Williams and former city manager Dr. Concetta Manker, from a 4 to 3 council vote on May 1. Two rallies were held ahead of Wednesday night’s meeting featuring local and national activists.

VaNews May 15, 2025


Yancey: 5 things the Virginia committee investigating impact of federal cuts didn’t hear (but maybe should have)

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

When the House of Delegates “emergency committee” on federal government cuts met in Wytheville earlier this week, legislators didn’t hear a lot of specifics. Impacts on international tourism? Too soon to tell, said Virginia tourism chief Rita McClenny. Impacts on agriculture? Too soon to tell, said Jason Grant of the Center for Agricultural Trade at Virginia Tech. Impacts of tariffs on economic development? Too soon to tell, said Virginia economic development chief Jason El-Koubi.

VaNews May 15, 2025


Confrontation between Misjuns, Faraldi interrupts Lynchburg council meeting

By MARK HAND, News & Advance (Metered Paywall - 18 articles a month)

The circus-like atmosphere surrounding Lynchburg City Council over the past two years was fully on display again Tuesday night as the council’s meeting had to go into recess to deal with a confrontation between Ward IV Councilman Chris Faraldi and At-large Councilman Martin Misjuns. Yelling could be heard coming from behind the dais in the Council Chamber during the public comment period, leading people in the audience to avert their attention from the speaker. Police were then directed to see what was going on.

VaNews May 16, 2025