Javascript is required to run this page
VaNews

Search


City of Bristol, experts to review efforts to end odors from former landfill

By DAVID MCGEE, Bristol Herald Courier (Metered Paywall - 15 articles a month)

City leaders plan to review its efforts to eliminate odors from the quarry landfill, according to a statement issued Friday. Contractors have installed a $10 million sidewall odor mitigation system and expanded the gas collection efforts in the now shuttered landfill and workers continue refining those operations, a city official previously said. Despite that, the city received about 400 odor complaints during the first four months of this year.

VaNews May 6, 2025


Hopewell commonwealth’s attorney finds legal fault with council’s firing of city manager

By BILL ATKINSON, Progress Index (Metered paywall - 10 articles a month)

As dust continues to stir on last week’s firing of Hopewell’s city manager and city clerk, the city’s top prosecutor warned in a letter to City Council that the motion to terminate Dr. Concetta Manker may have been made improperly, and because it was, Manker should still be in office. Citing Rule 36 of Robert’s Rule of Order, Commonwealth’s Attorney Rick Newman said the motion made at the May 1 meeting did not follow the direction about either the time frame for making the order or the authenticity of the motion made by Ward 4 Councilor Ronnie Ellis.

VaNews May 6, 2025


Manassas Officials Caught Off Guard as Bank Tenant Sidesteps Millions in Data Center Taxes

By URIAH KISER, Potomac Local (Subscription Required)

A bank tenant inside a newly completed data center in Manassas has triggered a sweeping local tax exemption, upending financial expectations and leaving city officials blindsided. At the April 30, 2025, Manassas City Council meeting, Commissioner of the Revenue Tim Demeria revealed that a tenant inside the new Brickyard data center, operated by Digital Realty Trust, had filed paperwork identifying itself as a bank. Under Virginia Code §58.1-1202, banks are exempt from local Business, Professional and Occupational License (BPOL) taxes and the business personal property taxes that typically bring cities millions in revenue from data centers. The loss is significant.

VaNews May 6, 2025


Youngkin Takes Final Action on 2025 Legislation: How Loudoun Delegation Bills Fared

By HANNA PAMPALONI, Loudoun Now

Friday marked the deadline for Gov. Glenn Youngkin to make final decisions on legislation passed by the General Assembly during the 2025 session. In March, the governor took action on the 916 bills, with 53 of those coming from Loudoun’s legislators. He signed 30, vetoed 11 and sent 12 back with proposed amendments. The General Assembly convened for a one-day session April 2, sending back six Loudoun bills for a final decision by the governor.

VaNews May 6, 2025


VCU plans to demolish Grace Street buildings and downtown student center

By ERIC KOLENICH, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Virginia Commonwealth University plans to demolish a pair of buildings on its Monroe Park Campus and a student center on its MCV Campus for health sciences to make way for two new projects. On the Monroe Park Campus, VCU intends to tear down an office building and the BookHolders.com building on West Grace Street, which will become the site of a 1,000-bed residential building. On the downtown health sciences campus, the university expects to remove the Larrick Student Center, where VCU will build a new school of dentistry building.

VaNews May 6, 2025


Marshall and Pressley: Students hate it, teachers love it. Our research shows cellphone bans work

By DAVID MARSHALL AND TIM PRESSLEY, published in Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Over the past year, several states have moved to ban cellphones in school as part of an effort to eliminate distractions in the classroom, improve student mental health, and increase post-pandemic learning. Beginning Jan. 1, an executive order restricting student cellphone use in Virginia schools from bell to bell, including during lunch and in the hallways between classes, went into effect. Research on the effects of such bans is still emerging, so we partnered with a school division in Virginia to assess how the policy was working in practice.

Marshall is an associate professor in the College of Education at Auburn University, who earned his doctorate degree from VCU. Pressley is an associate professor of psychology at Christopher Newport University.

VaNews May 6, 2025


Most Virginia teachers are women, but most superintendents are men

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

Early in her administrative career, before she became the first female superintendent of Henrico County Public Schools in 2018, Amy Cashwell recalled being the only woman in a boardroom full of men. As they discussed a major project, one of the men asked if she would be hindered from giving a project her all. She looked at him with a puzzled expression. He said: “Well, you have kids.” She responded: “So do you.” It’s a moment many women in education leadership recognize — a quiet but persistent skepticism about whether they can lead and mother at the same time.

VaNews May 6, 2025


Republicans Hold Annual Lincoln-Reagan Dinner Amid Record Attendance

By ALAN GLOSS, Potomac Local (Subscription Required)

Republicans from across Prince William County gathered at Fox Chase Manor for their annual black-tie Lincoln Reagan Dinner, drawing a record crowd and laying out their strategy ahead of the 2025 election cycle. County GOP Chairman Jacob Alderman said the party sold more than 300 tickets for the fundraiser, which brought in over $30,000 to support local political efforts. . . . Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts launched a direct attack on Democratic gubernatorial candidate Abigail Spanberger, calling her voting record more extreme than that of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez or Bernie Sanders, despite her moderate branding. Roberts pledged that Heritage’s political action committee would invest heavily in the 2025 election to defeat Spanberger and promote conservative values across the state.

VaNews May 6, 2025


Bon Secours Harbour View Medical Center opens after 10 years in the making

By AVERY GOODSTINE, Suffolk News Herald

Bon Secours Harbour View Medical Center held its ribbon-cutting ceremony on [Monday], May 5, where they welcomed members of the Bon Secours family as well as local and state officials to view the completed building. The first patient is expected on [Tuesday], May 6. Market President for Bon Secours Hampton Roads Pat Davis-Hagens said the vision for this building started 10 years ago.

VaNews May 6, 2025


Virginia sees spike in superintendent turnover

By KARRI PEIFER AND RUSSELL CONTRERAS, Axios

More than 40% of Virginia's K-12 public school districts had at least one new superintendent between 2019 and 2024, according to national data collected by Superintendent Lab and reviewed by Axios. The Trump administration wants to empower local schools by dismantling the U.S. Department of Education. Turnover among systems' leaders is evidence of school districts' instability, as they struggle with teacher shortages and falling test scores.

VaNews May 6, 2025