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Norfolk to vote on allowing city attorney to prosecute misdemeanor shoplifting

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

Norfolk City Council members plan to vote on an ordinance Tuesday that will allow the city attorney’s office to prosecute misdemeanor shoplifting charges. ... The code change was first proposed by Mayor Kenny Alexander at his annual State of the City address in April. Alexander said Commonwealth’s Attorney Ramin Fatehi and his office were not doing enough to prosecute misdemeanor shoplifting cases. Fatehi has disputed the claims, saying his office prosecutes every felony shoplifting case. He said the issue is his office doesn’t receive enough funding from the city or state to prosecute misdemeanor shoplifting cases.

VaNews May 13, 2025


Prince William School Board ratifies ‘historic’ collective bargaining wage agreement

By EMILY SEYMOUR, Inside NOVA

The Prince William County School Board on May 7 approved the school division’s collective bargaining agreement with the local teachers' union, bringing the addition of a wage agreement. The School Board ratified the school division’s inaugural collective bargaining agreement in March 2024, but wages — a sticking point between the two sides — were not included in those negotiations or the agreement. The union — the Prince William Education Association — and the division ultimately went back to the negotiating table to nail down a wage agreement.

VaNews May 13, 2025


Sea levels in Hampton Roads continue to rise, but at a steady pace

By KATHERINE HAFNER, WHRO

Hampton Roads continues to see rising tides linked to climate change and sinking land. But the rate of change in recent years has stayed in line with past forecasts, according to the latest “sea level rise report card” from William & Mary’s Batten School and Virginia Institute of Marine Science. “We are accelerating at a high rate compared to a lot of the rest of the country, but that rate hasn't been changing, really,” said Molly Mitchell, an assistant research professor. “It's been a pretty consistent rate.”

VaNews May 13, 2025


Virginia Commonwealth University using Siegel Center rentals to raise funds to pay student athletes

By ERIC KOLENICH, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Subscription Required)

Virginia Commonwealth University will start renting out the Siegel Center for concerts and events in an effort to generate revenue for athletes. VCU has partnered with a California-based event management company, ASM Global to manage the facility. The university expects to spend $5 million compensating its athletes beginning next year. For the first time, colleges will be able to directly and legally pay their players, pending final approval of a lawsuit against the NCAA.

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


Trump-China tariff reductions welcomed by Va. businesses

By BRAD KUTNER, WVTF-FM

Virginia business welcomed President Donald Trump’s reduction on tariffs with China announced Monday morning. They hope it could lead to more industry changes. Don Bright with the lumber company Meherrin River Forest Products in Lacrosse said he had containers of logs on the water, headed for China, when the tariffs kicked in a few weeks ago. He had to work with shipping companies to find new ports, sometimes diverting to further-out stops and transporting product over land to meet the tariff deadline. Other shipments weren’t as lucky.

VaNews May 13, 2025


The UVa shooter asked his mentor to tell his story. But that mentor isn’t talking.

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

"They not getting off this bus," the killer informed his mentor 100 minutes before unleashing the fusillade that claimed the lives of three fellow University of Virginia students and Cavalier football players, seriously injured two others and left a community searching for answers. ... Today, going on three years after those texts and that life-shattering blast of leaden horror inside a chartered bus returning to Charlottesville from a field trip to Washington, D.C., the full story remains untold. That's because the mentor, who sits on UVa's School of Education and Human Development Foundation, isn't speaking about what he did in those 100 minutes ...

VaNews May 13, 2025


Return of measles virus to Va. brings new risks for children

By KUNLE FALAYI, Virginia Center for Investigative Journalism

The first case of measles hit Virginia in April, raising risks for a troubling comeback 25 years after U.S. health officials declared the eradication of the virus. But the spread of the highly contagious virus and a growing anti-vaccine sentiment could leave one population increasingly at risk — kindergartners. Just half of Virginia’s public and private kindergarten classes reported a 95% vaccination rate — the key threshold for herd immunity — at the start of the 2024-25 school year, according to an analysis of state health data by the Virginia Center for Investigative Journalism at WHRO. The average measles vaccination rates for kindergartners include a 92% rate in Hampton Roads, 94% in Richmond, and 96% in Northern Virginia.

VaNews May 13, 2025


Virginia Democrats seek more hard data on federal cuts while Republicans see more optimism

By ELIZABETH BEYER, Cardinal News

Democrats on a special committee charged with exploring the effects of federal shake-ups on Virginia expressed concern with a lack of solid information from presenters from Southwest Virginia. Meanwhile, Republicans struck a more cautious tone during a meeting in Wytheville on Monday. Republicans noted that a lot of the presentations focused on estimations and speculations of potential impacts of the federal cuts. “The main thing that struck me today was a little room for optimism,” Del. Ellen Campbell, R-Waynesboro, said during the meeting.

VaNews May 13, 2025


New push from Kaine aims to close retirement gap for Virginia’s youngest workers

By MARKUS SCHMIDT, Virginia Mercury

U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., is backing bipartisan legislation aimed at helping workers as young as 18 — particularly those who enter the workforce straight out of high school — gain access to employer-sponsored retirement plans, a benefit many currently don’t receive until age 21. On Monday, Kaine, a member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee, teamed up with HELP Committee Chair Bill Cassidy, R-La., to reintroduce the Helping Young Americans Save for Retirement Act.

VaNews May 13, 2025