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Brandon, Capps and Sandel: Future of Virginia's community colleges is embracing collaboration

By ROBERT BRANDON, JOHN CAPPS AND ROBERT SANDEL, published in Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

Around the country, colleges such as ours recently celebrated Community College Month, an annual recognition of the vital roles that community, junior and technical colleges play in American life. . . . While it’s incumbent on each college to adapt to the unique needs of the geographical area it serves, a growing trend here in Virginia is to reach across the traditional boundaries of established service regions and pool resources to accomplish more than would be possible for any one college alone.

Brandon is president of New River Community College. Capps is president of Central Virginia Community College. Sandel is president of Virginia Western Community College.

VaNews May 9, 2025


Youngkin’s signature sets stage for Virginia health insurance to cover IVF treatment in the future

By CHARLOTTE RENE WOODS, Virginia Mercury

A bill that can help people start and grow their families through fertility treatments like in vitro fertilization will become law, after Gov. Glenn Youngkin signed it along with several other measures he initially tried to amend. House Bill 1609 by Del. Dan Helmer, D-Fairfax, will require the Health Insurance Reform Commission (HIRC) to consider coverage for diagnosis and treatment of infertility and procedures like IVF in its 2025 review of essential health benefits covered by health insurance.

VaNews May 9, 2025


Amid DOGE cuts, families struggle with bills, consider leaving D.C. area

By OLIVIA GEORGE, SCOTT CLEMENT AND EMILY GUSKIN, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

There’s the fired federal contractor scrambling for a new job in his 60s and the meteorologist tightening his budget by eating more rice and beans. The nonprofit administrator who lies awake at night worried she’ll lose her grant funding and the masters student wondering what job prospects, if any, will exist upon graduation. As the Trump administration and the U.S. DOGE Service, which stands for the Department of Government Efficiency, wield a chain saw to the federal government, they’ve also yanked away the tablecloth upon which many in the D.C. region laid their lives.

VaNews May 9, 2025


Southwest, Southside Virginians could bear the brunt of Medicaid cuts

By ADRIENNE HOAR MCGIBBON, VPM

More than one-third of Virginia’s rural hospitals are operating in the red, and federal threats to Medicaid funding could put many hospitals that mainly serve residents in Southwest and Southside Virginia at risk. Virginia has 28 health care facilities that fit the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ definition of “rural hospitals.” They serve populations that are older, with higher rates of chronic illness and poverty. Many of their patients have a greater reliance on government-funded health insurance programs like Medicaid and Medicare, according to a Virginia Hospital and Healthcare Association report.

VaNews May 9, 2025


James Madison University students protest DEI’s dissolution during new president meet and greet

By CHARLIE BODENSTEIN, The Breeze

Recently-selected JMU President James “Jim” Schmidt, alongside Vice President for Student Affairs Tim Miller, planned to speak to Dukes on Thursday so he could acclimate himself to campus and get to know the student body, but as he arrived to the Warner Commons in front of D-hall, he was met with a group of students protesting JMU’s dissolution of its diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) division last month. . . . Holding pamphlets with QR codes to a change.org petition, Puerto Rican flags, and signs that read “DEI IS NOT A CRIME” and “REJECT FASCISM,” students continuously chanted “knowledge is power, inclusion is strength” across from Schmidt, who was conversing with Dukes and other faculty. The students said the protest’s proximity to Schmidt was intentional.

VaNews May 9, 2025


Lego announces plans for massive distribution center in Prince George

By JACK JACOBS, Richmond BizSense

As it pieces together a $1 billion factory in Chesterfield, Lego Group has another sizable build in the works in a neighboring county. The Danish toymaker announced plans this week to build a $366 million warehouse and distribution facility in the Crosspointe Business Centre in Prince George County. The 2 million-square-foot project would rise on a 200-plus-acre site at 8800 Wells Station Road, across from the former Rolls-Royce manufacturing facility.

VaNews May 9, 2025


Lego to invest $366M in 2 million-square-foot Virginia warehouse

By ALEXANDRA KOCH, Fox Business

The Lego Group is continuing to build its empire, investing $366 million to build a new 2 million-square-foot warehouse in Prince George County, Virginia. Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced Thursday the warehouse will employ over 300. "The Lego Group is not just a household name, it’s a symbol of creativity, innovation and quality that resonates globally," Youngkin said in a news release. "Three years after choosing Virginia to establish its U.S. manufacturing plant, the Lego Group’s decision to expand into Prince George County is an exciting new chapter in this partnership, bringing 305 new, high-quality jobs to the region."

VaNews May 9, 2025


Spanberger splits the middle on right-to-work, opposes full repeal

By BRANDON JARVIS, Virginia Scope

Democratic gubernatorial nominee Abigail Spanberger said she opposes a full repeal of Virginia’s right-to-work law, though she’s open to reforms. In an interview with WRIC’s Tyler Englander, Spanberger said she supports making changes to the decades-old statute but would not sign legislation that eliminates it entirely. ... Spanberger’s Republican opponent, Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, has made defending the law a central part of her platform.

VaNews May 9, 2025


Virginia Beach GOP chair ousted in bitter party feud over control and transparency

By MARKUS SCHMIDT, Virginia Mercury

In a dramatic late-night vote that capped more than a year of escalating infighting, the Republican Party’s 2nd Congressional District Committee voted Wednesday to remove Laura Hughes as chairwoman of the Virginia Beach GOP, accusing her of mismanagement and failing to perform her duties. But Hughes says the move was political payback — and an affront to the grassroots Republicans who elected her. “This was a ‘screw you’ to the Virginia Beach voters,” she said of her detractors’ actions in a phone interview Thursday, “because they wanted this small little group who likes to stay in charge, and they installed a chair that will do their bidding. And I am most likely going to file an appeal with the state Republican party.”

VaNews May 9, 2025


Port of Virginia CEO says port should endure Chinese tariffs better than most

By RYAN MURPHY, WHRO

Port of Virginia CEO Stephen Edwards said the port is a “blueprint” for the future of the supply chain and will be able to weather the ongoing trade war with China better than others in the nation. New tariffs will certainly affect Virginia’s port, but Edwards doesn’t expect major changes as a result. “We’re in the somewhat fortunate position of being the least-exposed major U.S. port on trade with China,” Edwards told government and industry leaders at the Virginia Beach Marriott Thursday. About 19% of the port’s business comes from China. It’s the port’s second-largest trading partner after the European Union.

VaNews May 9, 2025