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Loudoun Board Questions Sheriff Over ICE Agreement

By HANNA PAMPALONI, Loudoun Now

Sheriff Mike Chapman last week addressed the Board of Supervisors to dispel “misinformation” surrounding his agency’s recent agreement with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. He said the agreement formalizes a longstanding practice of the Sheriff’s Office to inquire with other agencies prior to releasing a person incarcerated at the Adult Detention Center. A formal Memorandum of Agreement was signed in late March, which prompted a community protest in front of the office’s Leesburg headquarters. “Let me explain what we do and what we don’t do when it comes to working with ICE,” Chapman said.

VaNews May 15, 2025


Virginia’s progress reducing overdose deaths is worth celebrating

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

Virginians have reason to feel encouraged by the latest reports from state and federal officials of the death count in the ongoing battle against fatal overdoses of fentanyl and other drugs. In April, the Virginia Department of Health Office of the Chief Medical Examiner announced that deaths from fentanyl overdoses in the commonwealth were down 44% from the previous year. They are down 46% from the worst year on record, 2021.

VaNews May 15, 2025


Williams: By punishing speech, VCU loses its moral compass

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

On the one-year anniversary of the storming of the VCU Gaza Solidarity Encampment by police in riot gear, more than a dozen Virginia Commonwealth University police officers converged upon the Cabell Library lawn and students were threatened with arrest for sitting on blankets. This absurd show of force on April 29 escalated what had been a low-key gathering of several dozen students commemorating the encampment — an event where participants were asked to bring blankets, schoolwork, art supplies, music and games.

VaNews May 15, 2025


Amazon fulfillment center in Goochland to create 1,000+ jobs

By KATE ANDREWS, Virginia Business

Gov. Glenn Youngkin participated Wednesday in a ceremonial groundbreaking for Amazon.com's 3.1 million-square-foot robotics fulfillment center in Goochland County, which is expected to create more than 1,000 full-time and part-time jobs. The fulfillment center will have a 650,000-square-foot footprint on a 107-acre parcel, according to the governor’s office, and will be Amazon’s fourth robotics fulfillment center in the state, joining others in Henrico County, Suffolk and Virginia Beach.

VaNews May 15, 2025


Norfolk prosecutor revokes city attorney’s authority on shoplifting charges following council vote

By TREVOR METCALFE, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Norfolk City Council members unanimously approved a code change this week that will let the City Attorney’s Office prosecute misdemeanor shoplifting cases, despite objections from some residents. But the change drew a swift rebuke from the city’s top prosecutor, who said he would revoke the city attorney’s authority to prosecute any misdemeanors in Circuit Court and would implement additional oversight of charges pursued in District Court.

VaNews May 15, 2025


Augusta County Sheriff’s Office gets body, dash cameras

By BRAD ZINN, News Leader (Metered Paywall - 3 to 4 articles a month)

The Augusta County Sheriff's Office has become the third local law enforcement agency to utilize body-worn cameras, nearly a year after the devices were approved. The sheriff's office began using the Axon cameras at the beginning of April and continue to roll out dash cameras for its vehicles. . . . The sheriff's office was a little late to the party as both the Staunton and Waynesboro police departments have had body cam devices in use for about a decade. Calls for the recording devices in the county became amplified in 2021 following two shootings in May of that year.

VaNews May 13, 2025


Martinsville administration defends city bank card charges

By BILL WYATT, Martinsville Bulletin (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

A city council meeting last week has resulted in the disclosure of bank card expenses from city officials showing thousands of dollars in travel, hotel stays, food, and conferences, including trips to Las Vegas and luxury resorts. Bank card statements, downloaded by the Martinsville Bulletin from a publicly available folder on the city of Martinsville’s OneDrive SharePoint server, contain redacted monthly statements from Bank of America from January 2024 through March of this year. City Councilman Aaron Rawls requested the statements under the Virginia Freedom of Information Act and shared them with the Bulletin.

VaNews May 13, 2025


Va. teacher salaries increase, but there is much left to do

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

Virginia’s leaders don’t strive for a middling commitment to economic development, transportation, law enforcement or any other government responsibility that shapes the state’s quality of life. But the middle is precisely where the commonwealth lands in a new national ranking of teacher salaries — signaling a need to expand major initiatives in recent years to boost classroom pay. Average teacher salaries in Virginia increased 5.1% in 2023-24 and 3% in 2024-25, but the average pay in the state last year — $66,327 — still ranks 26th in the nation ...

VaNews May 13, 2025


Tariff deal with China doesn’t end uncertainty in Virginia

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

What does the owner of a beloved Richmond toy store do when almost all of the merchandise it sells ultimately comes from China? For Thea Brown, owner of World of Mirth in Carytown, all she could do was pay the $1,200 tariff imposed on the $5,000 cost of the merchandise she had ordered. “For no reason,” she said. But there was a reason: the trade war that President Donald Trump launched soon after taking office on Jan. 20 that has affected imported goods from almost all of the United States’ trading partners, especially China.

VaNews May 13, 2025


Maryland, Virginia try to boost blue catfish harvest, with mixed success

By TIMOTHY B. WHEELER, Bay Journal

Maryland recently has taken a few tentative steps aimed at boosting commercial harvest of blue catfish(Ictalurus furcatus), the voracious nonnative predator devouring blue crabs and many native fish in the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries. Efforts to do likewise in Virginia, though, have been at least partially thwarted by resistance from recreational anglers and fishing guides who want to maintain them as lucrative trophy fish.

VaNews May 13, 2025