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Citizens Warn of Data Center Impacts in Rural Virginia

By MIKE MCCOOL, Royal Examiner

What started as a community conversation quickly turned into a passionate call to action. On Saturday afternoon, May 10th, Warren County residents met at the Warren County Community Center to hear firsthand how data centers—the massive, windowless facilities that power cloud computing and artificial intelligence—are reshaping rural Virginia. For many in the room, it was the first time they had heard the full scope of the issue.

VaNews May 12, 2025


Virginia unemployment claims rise amid federal layoffs

By BETH JOJACK, Virginia Business

A recent spike in Virginia unemployment claims can likely be traced to sweeping federal layoffs under the second Trump administration. For the week ending May 3, the number of individuals filing initial claims for unemployment was 2,720, according to a Thursday news release from the Virginia Department of Workforce Development and Advancement, which is also known as Virginia Works. That’s an 8.1% increase in claims over the previous week and an 8.9% increase over a comparable week in 2024.

VaNews May 12, 2025


Feds undo Federal Executive Institute decision in Charlottesville

By HANNAH DAVIS-REID, VPM

Just over a week after it awarded the former Federal Executive Institute campus to Charlottesville City Schools, the US Department of Education has reversed course and announced that it will instead transfer the property to the University of Virginia. In a letter sent Friday to CCS Superintendent Royal Gurley, USED management analyst Barbara L. Shawyer wrote the department believes “that UVA will meet Presidential Executive Orders and that the University best meets the Secretary’s priorities for property reuse.” It was not immediately clear what US Education Secretary Linda McMahon’s “priorities for property reuse” are.

VaNews May 12, 2025


VCU withholds degrees of several students over Pro-Palestinian gathering

By VICTORIA LUCAS, WRIC-TV

Several Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) students [participated] in commencement ceremonies but with degrees currently withheld pending an investigation. “I think these policy violations shouldn’t have happened in the first place, they shouldn’t have been given out to us,” said Sereen Haddad, a senior at VCU. According to VCU officials, the matter pertains to a gathering on the lawn of the Cabell Library on April 29, 2025 where about 40 students were gathered.

VaNews May 12, 2025


Manassas GOP Calls for Action on Jail’s Immigration Policy Ahead of Meeting

Potomac Local (Subscription Required)

The Manassas City Republican Committee is calling on residents to fill the room at the next Prince William-Manassas Regional Jail Board meeting, pushing for the jail to renew its 287(g) immigration enforcement partnership with federal authorities. . . . The city’s Republican committee says the jail’s decision to end the 287(g) program in 2020 amounts to a “sanctuary” policy, a claim they say was confirmed by Governor Glenn Youngkin’s office. The group is calling for full cooperation with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to process all undocumented immigrants charged with crimes.

VaNews May 13, 2025


Legislature narrows use of noncompetes

By JASON BOLEMAN, Virginia Lawyers Weekly (Subscription required for some articles)

In recent years, federal and state governments have embraced a push toward restricting the use of noncompete agreements by employers, most notably with the ultimately unsuccessful 2024 Federal Trade Commission rule that attempted to ban noncompetes nationwide. While noncompetes are still enforceable in Virginia, recent legislation passed by the General Assembly will further narrow which employees can be subject to noncompetes. During the Legislature’s regular session earlier this year, the General Assembly passed Senate Bill 1218, which expands the definition of “low-wage employee” to an employee who is entitled to overtime compensation under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act.

VaNews May 13, 2025


Curran announces write-in bid for lieutenant governor

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

John Curran, who did not qualify for the GOP primary for lieutenant governor, announced Monday that he is launching a write-in campaign for the general election in November. "My decision is not to split the ticket but to save it," Curran said in a statement, apparently referring to the controversy over John Reid, the party's nominee for lieutenant governor. He added: "This decision is not about my opponent being gay."

VaNews May 13, 2025


Virginia Lt. Gov. race: Republican John Curran announces write-in campaign

By KATE SELTZER, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

John Curran, a business consultant from James City County, announced Monday that he intends to reenter Virginia’s lieutenant governor race as a write-in candidate. Curran initially ran for the Republican nomination for lieutenant governor but did not turn in enough signatures to qualify for the ballot ahead of the April deadline. He alleges he had gathered 10,000 signatures but many of them were stolen by a former campaign staffer, a matter he says Virginia State Police are investigating. “I know that write-ins are historically a long shot,” he said.

VaNews May 13, 2025


More resignations at Virginia’s embattled Birth Injury Fund

By LUCA POWELL, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

A total of five employees have resigned from the Virginia Birth Injury Fund in the past month — an exodus that has gutted the small agency’s finance team as it tries to rebuild after an insider embezzled millions of dollars meant for the families of disabled children. The latest resignation is that of Kan Cheung, who was hired earlier this year to work as the fund’s director of finance and investments. Cheung was only hired in April, according to a former employee at the fund who asked to speak on the condition of anonymity.

VaNews May 13, 2025


Study: Coal, natural gas retain roles in Southwest Virginia’s economy

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

Despite its decline in recent decades, Southwest Virginia’s coal industry still accounted for a $1.8 billion total economic impact in 2024, supporting over 5,000 area jobs, according to a new study by Chmura Economics & Analytics. Additionally, the economic impact of the natural gas industry accounted for over $480 million and supported over 1,100 Southwest Virginia jobs, the study shows. Commissioned by the Virginia Coalfield Economic Development Authority, the study breaks down how the energy sector continues playing a role in the region’s economy.

VaNews May 13, 2025