Javascript is required to run this page
VaNews

Search


Henrico delays vote on data centers' expansion

By SEAN JONES, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

The Henrico Board of Supervisors has extended the deadline for its vote to restrict data centers in the county. In the interim, the board has asked for county staff to redraw the plan, making it more restrictive than initially planned. Henrico has been a hot spot for data centers over the past few years. The county has been courting these massive tax-generating properties since 2017. Most large-scale data centers have gone into Varina’s White Oak Technology Park.

VaNews May 20, 2025


Why Democrats Don’t Love Glenn Youngkin’s Latest Efforts to Shield Virginia From Trump’s Cuts

By AMELIA BENAVIDES-COLÓN, NOTUS

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, a Republican Trump ally, is at once publicly supporting the president’s agenda and taking steps to inoculate his state from it. Those actions include Youngkin’s recent use of his line-item veto power to cut $900 million in projects and programs from the state budget in order to put those funds in the state’s rainy day fund. The rainy day fund, according to Youngkin, needs bolstering as President Donald Trump tries to shrink the federal workforce and pursues a disruptive economic agenda. Democrats say Youngkin’s cuts to shield the state from the effects of the administration have quickly become a point of frustration.

VaNews May 20, 2025


Data Centers’ Hunger for Energy Could Raise All Electric Bills

By IVAN PENN, New York Times (Metered Paywall - 1 to 2 articles a month)

Individuals and small business have been paying more for power in recent years, and their electricity rates may climb higher still. That’s because the cost of the power plants, transmission lines and other equipment that utilities need to serve data centers, factories and other large users of electricity is likely to be spread to everybody who uses electricity, according to a new report. The report by Wood MacKenzie, an energy research firm, examined 20 large power users. In almost all of those cases, the firm found, the money that large energy users paid to electric utilities would not be enough to cover the cost of the equipment needed to serve them. The rest of the costs would be borne by other utility customers or the utility itself.

VaNews May 19, 2025


Educators push back after Youngkin vetoed bill that let African American history courses count toward graduation

By SAHARA SRIRAMAN, WRIC-TV

A bill that could have made African American history count as a required social studies credit in Virginia high schools was vetoed last month by Governor Glenn Youngkin. The decision drew sharp criticism from educators, lawmakers and scholars who say the move perpetuates the marginalization of Black history in public education. House Bill 18-24, introduced by Democratic Delegate David Reid, aimed to let students substitute either African American History or Advanced Placement African American Studies, for World History I or World Geography.

VaNews May 19, 2025


Del. Phillips cites family, faith, and economic vision in reelection bid

Henry County Enterprise

Eric Phillips, 49, is seeking re-election to the Virginia House of Delegates representing District 48 as the Republican nominee. He will face Melody Cartwright, the Democratic nominee and an opponent he previously defeated in the 2023 special election. If re-elected, Phillips said he plans to continue prioritizing the interests of the Martinsville-Henry County area. Phillips said he will maintain his focus on pro-life policies, economic development, and protecting Second Amendment rights.

VaNews May 19, 2025


‘Resilience Amid Resistance’: New marker reveals Virginia’s fraught journey to school integration

By NATHANIEL CLINE, Virginia Mercury

A state historical marker titled “Resilience Amid Resistance” now stands on the Western District U.S. Courthouse grounds in Harrisonburg, where a Virginia judge twice upheld the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to desegregate schools in America, allowing local Black students to attend white schools and access an equal education. Betty Kilby was the lead plaintiff in one of the Virginia cases stemming from localities’ failure to comply with the high court’s Brown v. Board of Education ruling, part of the state’s Massive Resistance policy to buck desegregation, history referenced in the marker unveiled on Saturday.

VaNews May 19, 2025


State regulators approve Columbia Gas increase

By MATT BUSSE, Cardinal News

State regulators have approved an increase for Columbia Gas of Virginia’s non-gas rates and charges that would add about $6 to the average residential customer’s monthly bill. The average customer using 5.1 dekatherms of gas monthly will see their bill increase from $76.26 to $82.47, up 8%, according to terms filed with regulators in December and approved on Thursday.

VaNews May 19, 2025


Jenkins: Academic freedom means rejecting book bans

By OVETA JENKINS, published in Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

While grading narrative essays in the school library when I was teaching, a parent tour entered. The parents focused on a bookcase full of books on display in the front of the library, with yellow caution tape draped across it — the same type you would see at a police crime scene. “Why is there caution tape across these books?” asked a parent.

Jenkins of North Chesterfield is a retired middle school English teacher.

VaNews May 20, 2025


It’s past time to prohibit personal enrichment by office holders

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

So many Americans seem to reflexively believe their elected officials are corrupt — at least two-thirds of adults, according to a recent poll by YouGov — it sometimes seems as if such suspicions are a requirement of citizenship. It certainly doesn’t help, though, when the president and lawmakers do less and less to avoid the appearance of wrongdoing or commit acts that, by any reasonable standard, defy the responsibilities of holding elected office. One of the most egregious examples of potential corruption lately is President Donald Trump’s direct involvement in peddling a meme coin called $Trump.

VaNews May 20, 2025


Virginia revenues still strong, with warning signs ahead

By MICHAEL MARTZ, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Virginia remains more than $200 million ahead of its forecast for tax revenues to meet its budget obligations with two months left in the fiscal year, but state policymakers remain concerned over the potential economic fallout from shifting federal government policies on spending and tariffs. State tax collections through April were $1.5 billion ahead of the same 10-month period a year ago, but the margin shrank to $211.1 million when compared to the revenue projections that Gov. Glenn Youngkin used to assemble a revised two-year budget that he introduced in December and signed earlier this month.

VaNews May 20, 2025