Javascript is required to run this page
VaNews

Search


Richmond real estate tax bills were sent to residents with mortgages; city is working on next steps

By MICHAEL PHILLIPS, The Richmonder

The city of Richmond sent real estate tax bills to "several thousand" homeowners with mortgages, even though those bills are traditionally paid by the lending company, officials announced Saturday. The Richmonder contacted the city on Friday night regarding the issue, and on Saturday morning, Mayor Danny Avula posted a message to social media. "I am now aware that this is a system error in terms of getting the right data into the right place," he said.

VaNews May 19, 2025


Virginia Coal Country Courts New Business With Old Mining Money

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

When Clyde Stacy bought the Bristol Mall in 2018, both the mall and the surrounding coal country of Southwest Virginia were in trouble. The mall, once the marquee shopping destination in the region, had become vacant, weeds punching up through its parking lot. And the city of Bristol, the self-described birthplace of country music, was buckling under the weight of more than $100 million in debt, forcing budget cuts to its schools. Nearby, mining counties across Virginia’s slice of Appalachia were reeling after decades of job loss. Mr. Stacy and his friend Jim McGlothlin, both former coal magnates, seized on what they called a “moonshot” solution: turning the mall into a casino, in a state where gambling was not yet legal.

VaNews May 19, 2025


With Gaza facing starvation, Virginia Sens. Warner and Kaine press for U.S. action

By MARKUS SCHMIDT, Virginia Mercury

With Gaza on the brink of famine, U.S. Sens. Mark Warner and Tim Kaine, D-Va., are backing a renewed Senate push calling on President Donald Trump’s administration to take urgent diplomatic action to deliver food and emergency aid to civilians trapped in the war-torn enclave. The two lawmakers joined 27 of their Senate colleagues in introducing a resolution urging the administration to mobilize all available diplomatic tools to break the Israeli blockade that has prevented lifesaving assistance from reaching Palestinian civilians.

VaNews May 19, 2025


McClellan: GOP tax cuts would be on ‘backs of millions of Americans’

By ELIZABETH CRISP, The Hill

Rep. Jennifer McClellan (D-Va.) warned during an appearance on NewsNation’s “The Hill Sunday” that the tax cuts that have been floated in GOP budget proposals would hurt “millions of Americans” who rely on Medicaid and food stamps. “This budget is going to make the tax cuts permanent on the backs of millions of Americans losing their health care and millions of Americans losing access to SNAP benefits,” McClellan told host Chris Stirewalt on Sunday.

VaNews May 19, 2025


Former governors pay tribute to Brown v. Board but disagree on how to continue its legacy

By VICTORIA A. IFATUSIN, The Richmonder

It was more than 70 years ago when 16-year-old Barbara Rose Johns and other students went on a strike to protest the poor conditions of their school – Robert Russa Moton High School – a segregated, tar paper shack high school located in Farmville. The walkout initiated a civil rights case – Davis v. County School Board of Prince Edward County – which later became one of the five cases consolidated into Brown v. Board of Education, where Supreme Court justices unanimously decided that segregation in public schools was unconstitutional. Saturday, seven Virginia governors gathered at Virginia Commonwealth University to commemorate the landmark ruling, discuss racial and educational progress and emphasize the need to do more work to address disparities in the state.

VaNews May 19, 2025


Va. sees nation’s second-largest drop in overdose deaths

By SABRINA MORENO, Axios

Virginia had the second-largest drop in overdose deaths in the country last year, according to preliminary CDC data released last week. For over a decade, fatal drug overdoses have been the leading cause of unnatural deaths statewide. And Richmond has consistently had one of the highest overdose death rates in the state. But for the past few years, Virginia's fatal drug overdose rates have fallen faster than the U.S. average. Over 1,500 Virginians died from drug overdoses in 2024, per CDC estimates. That's a nearly 39% drop from 2023. The only state with a greater decline in overdose deaths was West Virginia (-44%).

VaNews May 19, 2025


Early figures show local primaries are driving turnout

By MICHAEL POPE, WVTF-FM

Early voting started earlier this month, and so far, the numbers are showing a strong turnout in places that have primary elections for sheriff and commonwealth's attorney. That's according to numbers from the Virginia Department of Elections posted to the Virginia Public Access Project. Republican operative Jeff Ryer points to the hotly contested Republican primary for sheriff in Chesapeake.

VaNews May 19, 2025


Prosecutor Taylor, former Del. Jones vie for Democratic attorney general nomination

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

In a contest that pits prosecutorial vs. legislative experience, former Del. Jay Jones and Henrico County Commonwealth’s Attorney Shannon Taylor are vying for the Democratic nomination for attorney general. Both Democrats say they bring compelling résumés and hometown credibility, yet they draw clear contrasts between courtroom gravitas and the hustle of a political trailblazer. The winner in the June 17 primary will face Attorney General Jason Miyares, a Republican who is seeking reelection in November.

VaNews May 19, 2025


Seven Virginia governors celebrate Brown v. Board of Education; Wilder skips event

By DAVE RESS, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Virginia governors, past and present, gathered Saturday to mark the 71st anniversary of the Supreme Court ruling that was supposed to end school segregation, saying there’s still more work to do. The reason the governors, corralled by former Gov. Bob McDonnell, were there, he said, is in the preamble to the U.S. Constitution, “to form a more perfect union.” ... Doug Wilder, the nation’s first elected Black governor, skipped the event. He said in an interview that he is dismayed that Virginia’s commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion is fading under Gov. Glenn Youngkin.

VaNews May 19, 2025


UVa professor defends academic freedom amid Trump attacks at Final Exercises

By CAL TOBIAS, Daily Progress (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

As nearly 8,000 soon-to-be graduates sat on the University of Virginia Lawn Saturday thinking of their futures, they were asked to consider the past. UVa English professor Michael Suarez delivered an impassioned keynote address Saturday hearkening to the university’s founding 206 years ago and its place in the future of an American republic on the precipice of its 250th birthday next year. . . . “Our ability to pursue the truth and communicate it freely is a national asset,” said Suarez. “The American university must compromise neither its moral provision nor its vision.” Suarez’s words come at a time when many in American academia feel as though they have been asked to compromise their values.

VaNews May 19, 2025