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Legislators call for revisiting Clean Economy Act as rural Virginia rejects large solar farms

By STEPHEN FALESKI, Smithfield Times (Paywall)

Five years after the General Assembly enacted the Virginia Clean Economy Act, which mandates Dominion Energy transition to 100% carbon-free power sources by 2045, two Republican legislators who represent Isle of Wight and Surry counties say the goal is easier said than done. It’s a position two of the state’s top Democrats, who voted to enact the 2020 law when their party held both legislative chambers and the governor’s office, say they’ve come to share.

VaNews June 26, 2025


Va. unemployment rate sees longest rise since ’08 crisis

By ANNA SPIEGEL, Axios

Virginia's unemployment rate is on a steady five-month increase — the longest streak since the 2008 Great Recession. The Trump administration's federal job slashing and freezing of grants, contracts and medical research may be to blame. Virginia's unemployment rate climbed to 3.4% in May, per new U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data. While still below the national average (4.2%), the uptick marks the state's highest unemployment level since August 2021. The state's total labor force decreased by more than 11,500 compared with last May, according to new Virginia Works household survey data.

VaNews June 26, 2025


In first big federal relocation, HUD will move to Virginia

By KATIE SHEPHERD, LAURA VOZZELLA, RACHEL SIEGEL, TEO ARMUS AND MEAGAN FLYNN, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

The Trump administration announced on Wednesday that the Department of Housing and Urban Development will be the first major federal agency to relocate its headquarters outside of D.C., part of a larger plan to restructure the federal government’s real estate footprint. HUD Secretary Scott Turner, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) and Michael Peters, commissioner of the General Services Administration’s Public Buildings Service, said at a news conference that the agency will move 2,700 workers from a building in such a state of disrepair that the ceiling appears to be crumbling to a more modern building in the city of Alexandria.

VaNews June 26, 2025


HUD announces relocation to National Science Foundation building in Alexandria

By RYAN BELMORE, Alx Now

The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) will relocate its headquarters to the National Science Foundation (NSF) building in Alexandria, displacing approximately 1,800 NSF employees over the next two years, officials announced Wednesday. HUD Secretary Scott Turner, Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin, and General Services Administration (GSA) Commissioner Michael Peters made the announcement at the NSF headquarters at 2415 Eisenhower Ave. on Wednesday (June 25), emphasizing taxpayer savings and improved working conditions for HUD employees.

VaNews June 26, 2025


Arlington’s controversial ‘missing middle’ housing policy to stay in place following court ruling

By TISHA LEWIS, Fox 5

The controversial saga of the "missing middle" housing policy continues in Arlington after a Virginia appeals court reversed and kicked a case back down to the lower court. Ultimately, developers can tear down a single-family home and replace it with multi-family homes, all in an attempt to expand access to affordable housing in Arlington County. This latest court ruling reverses a block on the missing middle, allowing development of multi-unit buildings to proceed—at least for now. Some say the latest court ruling is a big win for affordable housing and developers. But critics assert that homes built under the missing middle are far from affordable.

VaNews June 26, 2025


Wagner: Stop the PREVAIL Act from raising drug prices

By YVONNE WAGNER, published in Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Recently, the Virginia General Assembly took a big step in lowering prescription drug prices. A bipartisan bill passed both the House and the Senate that would create a board to oversee prescription drug prices, identify excessively priced medications, and recommend strategies to lower costs, including potential price caps. This bill represented a long-overdue recognition that the status quo is unsustainable and unfair to working families.

Wagner of Norfolk is a retired educator, a former member of the Norfolk School Board and a former vice president of Edward Waters University in Jacksonville, Florida.

VaNews June 26, 2025


Williams: Trump’s phony Confederate name game is child’s play

By MICHAEL PAUL WILLIAMS, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

In 1964, singer-songwriter Shirley Ellis penned a hit song of nonsensical rhymes called “The Name Game,” whose second verse went like this: Lincoln! Lincoln, Lincoln, bo-bin-coln Bo-na-na fanna, fo-fin-coln ... Her song came to mind as the Trump administration does its bit to restore Confederate surnames to Army bases, with a puerile twist. In the process, it’s reversing changes made several years ago through an act of Congress.

VaNews June 26, 2025


Yancey: Earle-Sears and Spanberger ditch a Virginia tradition. Will they even debate at all?

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

Virginia, like the seasons, once had four great political traditions. All now seem to be discarded, trampled over by changing times. The great springtime rite of passage once was the Shad Planking, a fish roast (shad cooked on wooden planks over an open fire) in Sussex County that was more remembered for the political speeches than the cuisine.

VaNews June 26, 2025


Preliminary plan unveiled for Norfolk schools to be closed, repurposed, rebuilt

WTKR-TV

Ten Norfolk schools are set to consolidate, and after a series of meetings, a preliminary plan — that still needs to be voted on by the school board — has been provided to the committee spearheading the effort. In March, Norfolk City Council tasked the school district with developing a plan to consolidate and close 10 schools, while opting to renovate or repurpose others. The resolution, passed unanimously by the city council, asks the school board to come up with a plan by Aug. 1. The district would then close two schools a year starting before the 2026-2027 school year.

VaNews June 26, 2025


Charles City County defers data center decision amid public outcry

By JACKIE DIBARTOLOMEO, Richmond BizSense

Charles City County has again deferred a decision on a planned 500-acre data center campus. The county Board of Supervisors unanimously decided Tuesday to delay voting on the proposed Roxbury Technology Park, after previously postponing the decision in May. Kansas-based Diode Ventures first submitted plans for the park last November and is seeking to rezone around 515 acres about 20 miles due east of Richmond to allow for the campus.

VaNews June 26, 2025