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Analytics company to add nearly 250 jobs in Crystal City
Amid concerning local economic trends, there’s some good news. Arlington-based Technomics is investing more than $5 million to add nearly 25,000 square feet of space and 250 employees to its Crystal City office. Gov. Glenn Youngkin, County Board Chair Takis Karantonis, state Sen. Adam Ebbin and Del. Adele McClure touted the new jobs in an announcement ... Tuesday morning.
Reports: Virginia Democrats outdoing Republicans in raising campaign contributions
Democratic House of Delegates hopeful Kimberly Pope Adams raised the second-highest amount in Virginia of contributions to House campaigns for the latest campaign reporting period, according to the nonpartisan Virginia Public Access Project. Pope Adams, who has already locked up the Democratic nomination in the 82nd House District, reported a total of $262,048 in money raised for the April 1-June 5 window, based on data from the Virginia Department of Elections that was compiled by VPAP. That trailed only House Speaker Don Scott of Portsmouth, who raised just over $344,000 for the period.
Trump’s trade war impacting Va. port, reshoring hopes
As President Donald Trump’s tariff wars heat up, Virginia businesses and the industries that support them are feeling the burn. That’s according to the Virginia Advisory Committee on International Trade that met in Richmond Tuesday. When the committee last met in April, the word of the day was uncertainty. And according to Riverwind Advisors investment firm president Bob Feeser, not much has changed. “Most businesses can deal with almost any kind of trade policy regime and tariff, but there has to be some certainty that you can plan around,” he said at the meeting held at the Virginia Economic Development Partnership office.
Stoney points to predecessor as Richmond water crisis seeps into lieutenant governor race
Richmond’s water crisis is trickling into the lieutenant governor’s race. Former Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney says he wishes the city’s prior administration had fixed the city’s water plant issues that, among other things, led to the Jan. 6 breakdown that left much of the city without drinking water for six days. Referring to efforts to replace the water plant’s switchgear, a key piece of equipment in the breakdown, Stoney shifted some of the blame to his predecessor, Dwight Jones, who served as Richmond’s mayor from 2009 to 2016, before Stoney’s eight-year tenure.
Richmond spent $100K since 2023 on billboards boasting ‘safe, reliable’ drinking water
City officials since December 2023 spent nearly $100,000 on billboards proclaiming the safety of Richmond’s drinking water. But the billboard on display during the city’s second water crisis last month was an error, a city spokesperson told The Times-Dispatch. The six-month ad campaign included messaging on the controversial billboard located in a historic Black cemetery in Richmond’s North Side. Former Mayor Levar Stoney last year requested billboard giant Lamar take down the sign out of respect, but the company declined.
Henrico County adopts new approval process for companies looking to set up data centers
Henrico County has adopted a new approval process for companies looking to set up data centers. The Board of Supervisors voted to change regulations affecting one of Virginia's fastest-growing economic sectors—large warehouses that house servers and data storage equipment. The new regulations create a stricter approval processes for proposed data centers. Now, companies must obtain a provisional use permit, which means there will be public input and final approval from the Board of Supervisors. Previously, only approval from the planning commission was required.
VPAP Visual Statewide Fundraising, Pre-Primary
Choose an office to see fundraising totals at this point in the cycle for governor, lieutenant governor, and attorney general races compared with races since 2001. Scroll over each year to see the amount raised by each candidate at this point in the election cycle.
After big changes in Virginia’s child care industry, candidates for governor offer more fixes
Parents know getting child care is a challenge, even as Virginia takes steps to improve the system. And while accessibility and quality have both increased thanks to record state spending, the two candidates for governor have their own ideas to meet persisting challenges. “We listen to our friends talk about how much they’re paying for child care and it's an extra mortgage," Tamisha Williams told Radio IQ as she balanced her baby daughter on her lap. "So, we just pause.”
Va. lawmakers reject latest Youngkin appointees to university boards
Senate Democrats rejected several appointees to Virginia’s governing boards at various colleges on Monday, including former Virginia Attorney General Kenneth Cuccinelli and former state commerce and trade secretary Caren Merrick. The Monday vote by the Senate Privileges and Elections Committee removed all eight appointees made by Gov. Glenn Youngkin. The move, which Democratic leaders attributed to differences in political values, now puts the decision to find replacements in the governor’s hands once again.
Youngkin details mental health reform efforts
As Virginia’s effort to transform an overwhelmed behavioral health system moves from tackling the biggest gap — help for people in a crisis — to helping them before things get bad, a foundation that offers walk-in therapy is moving into Richmond. The Youth for Tomorrow facility in western Henrico County is the latest step in a continuing quiet buildout of Virginia’s Right Help Right Now behavioral health reform, said Gov. Glenn Youngkin, at a ceremony marking the nonprofit’s addition of a Richmond center to its eight Northern Virginia counseling centers.