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Yancey: How Democrats could influence the 5th District Republican primary (but shouldn’t)

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

After the presidential primary in March, some readers (primarily Donald Trump supporters) suggested to me that Nikki Haley’s totals were inflated by Democrats who had crossed over to cast ballots in the Republican primary. I discounted that, but after my recent column where I listed five factors that would determine the outcome of the hotly contested 5th District Republican primary between Rep. Bob Good and state Sen. John McGuire, I heard from a reader who felt I had ignored what he called “The Trojan Elephant” in the room: the prospect of Democratic crossover voting influencing that outcome.

VaNews June 4, 2024


Youngkin appointees to be majority of UVa board beginning in July

By DAVE CANTOR, VPM

The University of Virginia Board of Visitors will hold its final regular meeting Thursday prior to Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s appointees representing a majority of the panel. It will also be the first regular meeting since an on-campus antiwar protest was broken up May 4, resulting in 27 arrests — which included students and faculty members. A May 10 meeting largely took place in closed session as the university’s administration and law enforcement officials briefed board members following the protests.

VaNews June 4, 2024


Developers behind mid-county data center project donated tens of thousands to key Prince William supervisors

By PETER CARY, Piedmont Journalism Foundation

The developer and landowners involved in the controversial Mid-County Industrial Park, which could bring three, 90-foot-tall data centers just north of Va. 234 and Minnieville Road, have put tens of thousands of dollars into the campaign coffers of three key supervisors in the past year, according to available campaign finance reports. Supervisors Yesli Vega, Margaret Franklin and Andrea Bailey benefited from more than $70,000 collectively from developers and landowners associated with the project.

VaNews June 3, 2024


Palm: On SB 237 and the morning-after pill

By EDWARD F. PALM, published in News & Advance (Metered Paywall - 18 articles a month)

Did you catch the article about the bills Gov. Glenn Youngkin has vetoed? I did. He has set a dubious record by vetoing 201 bills to date. That’s more in one year than other governors have racked up in four years. (“Youngkin kills contraception rights bills,” May 21, 2024). I’m especially concerned about Youngkin’s veto of Senate Bill 237, which would have guaranteed the right to contraception. The problem is the bill contains “no conscience clause protections.” That’s what Youngkin objects to.

A former enlisted Marine and a Vietnam veteran, Palm retired from the Marine Corps as a major and went on to an academic career. He lives in Forest.

VaNews June 3, 2024


From VPAP Now Live: PACs’ Pre-Primary Campaign Finance Reports

The Virginia Public Access Project

VPAP has posted pre-primary disclosures from Virginia PACs. We rank each type of committee by most raised and cash on hand for the covered time period. If you are interested in a specific committee, you can drill down for a sortable list of donors reported from April 1 to May 25. A new law implemented last year created a different filing schedule for state PACs, with filing dates that do not always align with candidate reporting deadlines.

VaNews June 4, 2024


Fare-free bus service coming to Loudoun Co. in 2025; commuter bus fares to D.C. to rise

By NEAL AUGENSTEIN, WTOP

Local bus services in Loudoun County, Virginia will be free starting in 2025, as the county tries to harness the power of Metro’s Silver Line, and ensure low income, elderly and disabled residents have options for navigating the fast-growing county. However, fares will go up on the county’s commuter bus service to downtown D.C., the Pentagon, Rosslyn and Crystal City.

VaNews June 3, 2024


School division’s legal bills for lawsuit against Bedford County parent reach almost $30,000

By LISA ROWAN, Cardinal News

Bedford County Public Schools has spent nearly $30,000 on a lawsuit against a parent that was filed in March. The suit was filed during a period when the school board has been closely examining the division’s expenditures, and it has drawn attention because several school board members have said it was filed without their authorization. The school board sued David Rife for damages of $600,000 in late March, alleging he used crude language and threatened police and legal action during repeated calls to the school district about his son.

VaNews June 3, 2024


Democrats smell blood amid vicious GOP primary battle in the 5th District

By MARKUS SCHMIDT, Cardinal News

Crozet resident Paul Riley, an intelligence analyst and U.S. Army veteran, faces Gary Terry, also a veteran and engineer from Danville, and Gloria Witt, a businesswoman and community activist from Amherst County, in the June 18 Democratic primary election. All three are political newcomers. But unlike the bitterly fought contest between incumbent Rep. Bob Good, R-Campbell County, and his challenger, state Sen. John McGuire, R-Goochland County, the Democratic nomination contest in Virginia’s 5th Congressional District has been mostly muted, and if the recent candidate forums in Danville and Arrington are an indication, quite civil.

VaNews June 3, 2024


Dozens rally in Reston against Virginia’s ‘unchecked’ expansion of data centers

By REBECCA TURCO, WJLA-TV

More than 70 people rallied outside a data center in Reston on Sunday against data center expansion demonstrators are calling “harmful” and “unchecked.” “The data center industry is tricky and well-funded,” Alexandria resident Tyler Ray said into a megaphone during the afternoon rally. A data center and electrical substation are set to be built less than 250 feet from some residences in Ray’s housing development, he told 7News. Because the project proposal is permitted “by right,” it can be built without a public hearing if the developer follows county regulations and doesn’t request any special exceptions.

VaNews June 3, 2024


Virginia crab management committee requests opening winter season for dredging

By CHARLIE PAULLIN, Virginia Mercury

The 2024 Bay-wide Blue Crab Winter Dredge Survey revealed last week shows the crustaceans are still below desired population levels, as the state’s Marine Resources Commission considers a request to maintain the same crabbing regulations in Virginia and opening a winter dredge season. The VMRC Crab Management Advisory Committee voted last Wednesday afternoon to have the larger body consider allowing catches past December at its June meeting. Currently, crabbing is only allowed between March through the middle of December in Virginia. The state had a winter dredging season up until 2008, when it was closed down following population lows that necessitated an emergency declaration.

VaNews June 3, 2024