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Holland and Rafia: Alleviate the oral health workforce crisis in Virginia

By SARAH BEDARD HOLLAND AND KAZ RAFIA, published in Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Good oral health is crucial for overall well-being, yet access to high-quality care remains a persistent challenge for many Virginians. Virginia’s Medicaid program offers comprehensive dental coverage to all members, for example, but slightly more than half of enrolled children saw a dentist last year — and even fewer adults received care. Access issues are multifaceted ... The gap assessment offers actionable recommendations for policy changes to address the workforce crisis; during the recent General Assembly session, legislators and the governor took steps in support of these goals ...

Holland of Richmond is CEO at Virginia Health Catalyst. Rafia of Boston is chief dental officer and executive vice president at CareQuest Institute for Oral Health.

VaNews June 7, 2024


Voyles: Not outsourcing Virginia’s lawmaking to California bureaucrats is a good thing

By TRAVIS VOYLES, published in Cardinal News

This week, Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced, and Attorney General Jason Miyares confirmed in an official opinion, that the commonwealth will no longer be legally bound to follow California’s electric vehicle mandate at the end of this year. Announcing the expiration of a regime where unelected bureaucrats in California dictate Virginia’s policy has inexplicably met some pushback — all of which is unfounded. In 2021, Virginia Democrats, then in control of the governorship and General Assembly, passed a law authorizing Virginia to adopt California’s costly and burdensome vehicle emission standards. These standards are set by the California Air Resources Board (CARB), a group of unelected bureaucrats.

Voyles is Virginia Secretary of Natural and Historic Resources.

VaNews June 7, 2024


Virginia Beach Republican Party chair indicted on charge of intercepting wire communications

By PRESTON STEGER, WVEC-TV

The chairwoman of the Virginia Beach Republican Party has been indicted on a felony charge of intercepting wire communications, online court documents show. Laura Hughes was indicted by a grand jury on Monday with an offense date of Feb. 21. It’s unclear what the charges stem from.

VaNews June 7, 2024


How Hampton Roads leaders are looking at transit to help boost the region’s economy

By RYAN MURPHY, WHRO

When Hampton Roads leaped into the public competition to host Amazon’s second headquarters, its application included a laundry list of the region’s best features and the changes it would make for the megacorporation. There were promises that if Amazon needed a huge campus location, Hampton Roads could run a water taxi and dedicated bus line for Amazon employees to Suffolk. If the company wanted to be close to the beach, there were already plans to build light rail to connect downtown Norfolk with the Virginia Beach Oceanfront. … That part of the region’s pitch was clear: Hampton Roads was willing to build a more robust transit system to attract big business.

VaNews June 7, 2024


Yancey: Dwight Eisenhower’s mother grew up in Augusta County, but no historical marker remembers her

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

Eighty years ago Thursday morning, Americans woke up to the news that Allied forces had crossed the English Channel and were fighting on the beaches of Normandy — the day we now remember simply as D-Day. The first indications came shortly after midnight Eastern time, from a suspicious source: German radio. American news organizations were rightly skeptical until 3:32 a.m. — 9:32 a.m. at the landing sites — when radio stations interrupted their programming to bring a message from Col. Richard Dupuy … By then, the fighting was three hours old, and many of the Virginians who were in those first waves were already dead or dying — but the liberation of Europe had begun.

VaNews June 6, 2024


Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Bristol pushes back grand opening to later in year

By FAITH LITTLE, WJHL-TV

Leaders with the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Bristol announced on Wednesday that the grand opening of the permanent casino and resort space, initially intended for July, has been pushed back to later this year. A news release from the casino said a new timeline for the permanent casino and resort’s completion was rolled out, which involves a late-year grand opening.

VaNews June 6, 2024


Chesapeake-based Dollar Tree looking at options for Family Dollar, including possible sale of segment

By MICHELLE CHAPMAN, Associated Press

Discount retailer Dollar Tree says it’s looking at strategic options for the Family Dollar stores that it owns, including a possible sale of the segment. Dollar Tree said Wednesday that alternatives also include a spinoff or other disposition of the business. Dollar Tree acquired Family Dollar nearly a decade ago for more than $8 billion after a bidding war with rival Dollar General. But the company has had difficulty incorporating Family Dollar into its business and recently announced that it would close nearly 1,000 stores, with most of them being Family Dollar locations.

VaNews June 6, 2024


State review of failed Richmond development calls for changes at VCU Health

By JONATHAN SPIERS, Richmond BizSense

A year after a Richmond BizSense report revealed that backing out of an ill-fated downtown development cost VCU Health $80 million and counting, a state review is calling for significant changes to the health system’s leadership structure. At a meeting Wednesday of the Joint Legislative Audit & Review Commission, the oversight agency of the Virginia General Assembly, JLARC staff presented the findings and recommendations from a monthslong study of VCU Health aimed at improving the health system’s governance and process for reviewing and approving capital projects.

VaNews June 6, 2024


Tearful testimony opens first trial of man who participated in 2017 torch-carrying mob at UVa

By HAWES SPENCER, Daily Progress (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

The tearful testimony of a Jewish University of Virginia alumna was the first evidence presented in the trial of Jacob Joseph Dix, an Ohio man charged with using fire to racially intimidate for his role in the 2017 torch-carrying mob at the University of Virginia the night before the deadly Unite the Right rally-turned riot. Diane D’Costa told the jury about Aug. 11, 2017, the day she moved into her room on UVa’s hallowed Lawn, the center of Founding Father Thomas Jefferson’s Academical Village, when she heard chanting outside her door.

VaNews June 6, 2024


Youngkin moves to lift Virginia’s strict auto emissions standards

By GREGORY S. SCHNEIDER, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) said Wednesday that he will withdraw the state from participation in California’s tough auto emissions standards at the end of this year, citing an opinion from Virginia Attorney General Jason S. Miyares (R) as justification for undoing an action taken by the General Assembly but causing Democrats to accuse him of overreach.

VaNews June 6, 2024