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State budget includes money to study tapping into natural gas pipeline in Tazewell and Russell counties

By SUSAN CAMERON, Cardinal News

Studies that will explore the economic development benefits of extending natural gas from a major pipeline in Southwest Virginia to Tazewell and Russell counties were funded in the state budget approved last week. Each county will receive $100,000 from the general fund for fiscal year 2025 for its own study. Originally, the budget amendment filed by state Sen. Travis Hackworth, R-Tazewell County, asked for a total of $250,000 just for Tazewell County, where officials have been working for more than a decade to tap into a pipeline that runs through the county. Tazewell County is the third largest producer of natural gas in the state, but businesses and residents there have little access to it.

VaNews May 20, 2024


Loudoun schools scrap 2-hour delay proposal

By EVAN GOODENOW, Loudoun Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

Loudoun County Public Schools is no longer considering starting school two hours late on 16 days next year to accommodate state-mandated training for teachers. In a division-wide letter to parents on May 17, Superintendent Aaron Spence said LCPS received nearly 2,000 comments from parents after administrators first announced the proposal at a May 14 School Board meeting. Officials are now exploring alternatives, he said.

VaNews May 20, 2024


Dominion approved for 3 long-term battery storage pilots

By PATRICK LARSEN, VPM

Dominion Energy recently received state regulatory approval to use developing battery storage technologies that could have major implications for the commonwealth’s renewable energy transition. The projects include two battery systems at Darbytown Power Station, a natural gas plant in Henrico County. One will utilize an iron-air battery system; the other, a zinc-hybrid technology. An additional project to help power Virginia State University’s Multi-Purpose Center will use metal-hydrogen batteries. Battery storage is expected to double on the United States electric grid in 2024.

VaNews May 20, 2024


Who were the mysterious ‘men in black’ at the UVa encampment?

By JASON ARMESTO, Daily Progress (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

Who were the men in black? In the fallout since the University of Virginia’s controversial decision to have Virginia State Police break up a small encampment of anti-war protesters on May 4, UVa officials have cited a number of justifications. Among them is a claim that four mysterious men in black, wearing helmets and backpacks, joined the encampment the night before. “At least two of these [men] were known to law enforcement personnel as participating in violent acts elsewhere in the commonwealth,” UVa President Jim Ryan said in a "virtual town hall" days after the incident. “This became a safety and security issue, especially when the four men came in on Friday night.” Since then, the university has offered almost no further details on the mysterious quartet ...

VaNews May 20, 2024


Youngkin vetoes bills on contraception access, skill games, Confederate heritage rollbacks

By GRAHAM MOOMAW, CHARLOTTE RENE WOODS, CHARLIE PAULLIN AND NATHANIEL CLINE, Virginia Mercury

Last week, Gov. Glenn Youngkin vetoed 48 more bills passed by the Democratic-led General Assembly, blocking legislation aimed at preserving contraception access, ending state perks for Confederate heritage groups and legalizing slot machine lookalikes known as skill games. Friday was the governor’s deadline to act on a final batch of bills the General Assembly had returned to him in April. Most of the vetoes dealt with legislation Youngkin tried to amend in ways the legislature opposed.

VaNews May 20, 2024


Prince William supervisors mull eliminating data center overlay district

By PETER CARY, Piedmont Journalism Foundation

A proposal to eliminate Prince William County’s data center overlay district, a 10,000-acre zone south of Manassas where numerous data centers have been built in recent years because they are largely allowed by right, is being debated by the Board of Supervisors. Gainesville Supervisor Bob Weir, whose district includes much of the county’s data centers, introduced a zoning text amendment to undo the district due to the intensity of development in recent years.

VaNews May 20, 2024


Second lawsuit is filed against Luna Innovations, alleging securities fraud

By TAD DICKENS, Cardinal News

A newly filed federal lawsuit seeking class-action status against Roanoke-based Luna Innovations Inc. is looking to expand the timeline of the company’s alleged securities fraud. Plaintiffs’ lawyers accuse the fiber-optic sensing company of issuing financial reports that illegally inflated Luna’s stock price. The suit — which identifies Luna, its former chief executive officer, Scott Graeff, and two former chief financial officers, Eugene J. Nestro and George Gomez-Quintero, as defendants — makes allegations similar to a case filed in April.

VaNews May 20, 2024


Loudoun Schools Abandon Delayed Start Training Plan Amid Parental Pushback

Loudoun Now

Just days after presenting a plan to the School Board to have 16 two-hour delayed school days to accommodate more than 36 hours of state-required teacher training, division administrators announced Friday they are changing course after receiving nearly 2,000 responses from the community. “After carefully reviewing the feedback and recognizing that the adjusted arrival schedule is not an ideal option for the majority of the families we heard from, we are reconsidering our approach,” according to the emailed announcement.

VaNews May 20, 2024


Virginia’s Republican U.S. Senate candidates face off in Staunton ahead of primary

By ELIZABETH BEYER, News Leader (Metered Paywall - 3 to 4 articles a month)

Four Republican candidates lobbed attacks at Democratic incumbents, Sen. Tim Kaine and President Joe Biden, and appeared to jockey for former President Donald Trump’s endorsement in the Virginia Senate primary race during a candidate forum on Friday. Scott Parkinson, Johnathan Emord, Eddie Garcia, and Chuck Smith met each other on stage Friday morning in front of roughly 100 people at Victory Worship Center and World Outreach, a church on a hill that overlooked a cow pasture and I-64 in Staunton.

VaNews May 20, 2024


How the Shenandoah County School Board Decided to Restore Confederate School Names

By NATHANIEL CLINE, Virginia Mercury

Proud and satisfied, or sad and embarrassed. However citizens of the commonwealth view Shenandoah County School Board’s recent decision, Virginia appears to be the first in the nation to restore Confederate school names, after years of vigorous community engagement, a controversial renaming process, and a change in board priorities related to race, diversity and inclusion.

VaNews May 20, 2024