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Mingle: UVa's board of visitors must be held to account

By JAMES J. MINGLE, published in Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

As a former general counsel for the University of Virginia and other major universities, I have worked closely with many presidents and board members. One board chair I worked with used to open orientation sessions for new members with this imperative: “The most important responsibility of the board is selecting the university’s president.” And I would remind them of another essential governance responsibility: “Protecting the university’s independence against undue governmental interference.” ... If recent media reports detailing how the UVa Board of Visitors forced president James Ryan’s resignation in lockstep with a federal agency are accurate, it's clear this current UVa board did not.

Mingle served as general counsel for the University of Maryland system, the University of Virginia and Cornell University.

VaNews July 11, 2025


Jemaine: Virginia should reject false choice about our economy

By KIM JEMAINE, published in Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

I’ve worked in politics and policy in Virginia for more than a decade. I started out working on election campaigns, eventually shifted to environmental and clean energy policy, and now run a national climate and clean energy advocacy organization. My career is deeply rooted in the belief that government can and should improve the lives of everyday people. That means addressing the kitchen table issues that are plaguing people every day, from the cost of groceries to the cost of child care to the availability of good paying jobs. But, it also means solving for the big challenges quickly coming over the horizon.

Jemaine of Richmond is managing director of Counterspark, a national climate and clean energy advocacy organization.

VaNews July 11, 2025


Yancey: Virginia loses its CNBC ranking as the No. 1 state for business. Here’s why.

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

The champion has been dethroned. Virginia, which last year was CNBC’s “best state for business,” and which has occupied the No. 1 spot a record six times, has been demoted in this year’s rankings to fourth place. It’s the state’s worst showing since 2018. This is an awkward moment for Virginia Republicans.

VaNews July 11, 2025


As expansion proceeds, a light at the end of the (bridge-)tunnel

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

With the travel season in full swing, our region’s perpetually congested roads require a little extra patience from everyone. Frustrating as it may be, traffic congestion is as much a feature of life in Hampton Roads as the waterways that define our landscape. However, there’s good news for those who spend an inordinate amount of time idling on our highways: Some relief is on the way. Expansion of the Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel — long a regional goal and a sought-after dream of those who use it daily — is on schedule and, remarkably, on budget.

VaNews July 11, 2025


Bristol, Va. files complaint to start Virginia Intermont property transfer

By MURRY LEE, WJHL-TV

The City of Bristol, Virginia has started the legal process to acquire the former Virginia Intermont College (VI) campus from its owner. After a massive fire destroyed a large part of the campus in December 2024, the city’s leadership has been exploring options to regain ownership of VI. State Sen. Todd Pillion filed a bill at the urging of the Bristol, Virginia City Council. The bill was later signed into law by Gov. Glenn Youngkin and allowed localities to petition the circuit court to appoint a special commissioner. That commissioner would then oversee and execute a transfer of ownership of a blighted and vacant property.

VaNews July 11, 2025


Residents look to historical tourism to preserve Cumberland County’s past and create economic opportunities for its future

By CHARLES PAULLIN, Cardinal News

Robin Stocks is 69 and lives in Midlothian but grew up in Cumberland County. A Black Army veteran, she said her life wouldn’t be what it is today if it weren’t for the Pine Grove School she was allowed to attend during the era of Jim Crow segregation. “Everything about the school molded us for the rest of our lives,” Stocks said. . . . That school’s history — as well as that of the other schools, churches and homes the African American community relied on in the central Virginia rural community — is what several community members are pushing to preserve as an economic driver in the region instead of a proposed landfill: historical tourism.

VaNews July 11, 2025


Richmond finance director Sheila White resigns

By MICHAEL PHILLIPS, The Richmonder

Sheila White, who oversaw Richmond's Department of Finance for the last four years, submitted her resignation on Thursday. Her last day will be July 25. White was appointed by former Mayor Levar Stoney, who said at the time that White was "the right (person) at the right time to continue the successful management and upward trajectory of our city.” However, her department has been in the middle of a number of controversies in recent months. Real estate tax refund checks were sent incorrectly, and then tax bills went out to mortgage holders instead of lenders.

VaNews July 11, 2025


Richmond finance department Director Sheila White resigns

By SAMUEL B. PARKER, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Sheila White, director of City Hall’s Department of Finance, has resigned, a city spokesperson told The Times-Dispatch on Thursday evening. Her last day will be July 25. The resignation came on new Chief Administrative Officer Odie Donald II’s second day on the job. Former Mayor Levar Stoney tapped White to lead the department in May 2021. Her tenure has been marked with controversy, including issues with the city’s meals tax collection and real estate tax rebate delivery.

VaNews July 11, 2025


Friday Read What Ken Burns Won’t Say About the American Revolution

By NATHANIEL MOORE, Politico

“If I have a problem with you,” Ken Burns said, “it’s my fault. If you have a problem with me, it’s still my fault. My mother taught me that.” It was startling to hear this ethos of humility and personal responsibility from a man who had won two Grammys, 15 Emmys, a Peabody and the National Humanities Medal. Not just because of the impossibly large burden this duty put on his shoulders, but because in that moment it was hard to imagine anyone having a problem with him. The documentarian was addressing a Colonial Williamsburg ballroom, crowded with a diverse group of civic educators looking up at him with reverence. They had gathered for A Common Cause to All, a convention organized to find fresh answers to a question as old as America itself: How to help the new generation find meaning in the country’s founding revolution?

VaNews July 11, 2025


Appalachian Power seeks state approval of measure to reduce electricity bills

By LAURENCE HAMMACK, Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

Appalachian Power Co. is seeking state approval to spread out the cost for some of its assets, a move the company says will save its average residential customers about $11 a month. An application filed Thursday with the State Corporation Commission seeks to securitize the costs of restoring power cut off by bad weather, and the Virginia share of the debt and equity on two West Virginia coal-burning power plants that provide a large share of the electricity the utility sells.

VaNews July 11, 2025