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William & Mary to raise tuition for second year in a row

By SAM SCHAFFER, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

William & Mary will increase tuition for the second year in a row after years of the price remaining the same. Tuition will increase by 2.5% for in-state undergraduate students and by 3.3% for out-of-state undergraduate students for fiscal years 2025 and 2026, according to a resolution passed by the W&M Board of Visitors on Friday.

VaNews April 29, 2024


2 Bedford County School Board members say board wasn’t aware of lawsuit against parent

By LISA ROWAN, Cardinal News

Three of seven Bedford County School Board members have spoken up in a Facebook group about a lawsuit filed last month against a parent, with two saying the school board didn’t sign off on the suit bearing its name as plaintiff. The suit seeks $600,000 in damages from Moneta resident David Rife, alleging he used crude language and threatened police and legal action during repeated calls to the school district about his son.

VaNews April 29, 2024


Arrests underway at pro-Palestinian Virginia Tech protest, school says

By MARTIN WEIL, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

Arrests were underway early Monday at a pro-Palestinian protest at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, the school said. “They are being made,” a school spokesman said in an email early Monday. The numbers of those arrested and of those demonstrating could not be learned immediately. Posts on X indicated that hundreds were demonstrating and that several had been arrested.

VaNews April 29, 2024


Many Hampton Roads families are struggling to get students back in class.

By NOUR HABIB, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

One day, Judith Burkett of Portsmouth received a call from her grandson’s school: Did she know where Jakob was? He hadn’t attended in months. Months before, the boy — his mother, her partner and three younger brothers — had been living with Burkett. But Burkett’s daughter and her partner had a drug problem and the family suddenly left in fall 2022, a couple of months into Jakob’s third grade year. Burkett started asking friends and family to help look. She found out where they were living and alerted the school. The school attendance liaison became “a godsend.” “She was like a pit bull until she got him back in school.”

VaNews April 29, 2024


Metro board approves new budget, but Virginia funding remains a question mark

By ANGELA WOOLSEY, FFXnow

The cost of riding Metro trains and buses will go up, starting July 1, when the transit agency’s new budget takes effect. The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority’s (WMATA) board of directors approved a $4.8 billion fiscal year 2025 budget yesterday (Thursday) that will increase fares by 12.5%, including by ending the flat $2 rate for weekend and late-night rides introduced in 2021 and expanded in 2022.

VaNews April 29, 2024


Rep. Good brings ‘Freedom Fighters’ tour to Amherst, addresses Ukraine funding bill

By JUSTIN FAULCONER, News & Advance (Metered Paywall - 18 articles a month)

At a campaign event in Amherst County on Wednesday, U.S. Rep. Bob Good, R-5th District, described his intra-Republican Party battle with a state legislator challenging his allegiance to former President Donald Trump as “the highest-profile primary race in the country.” Good, chair of the House Freedom Caucus who was among the group in Congress who engineered the historic ouster of former U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy last fall, is trying to secure a third term in the June 18 primary against newly elected state Sen. John McGuire, R-Goochland.

VaNews April 29, 2024


Aird rips Petersburg’s casino pick, blasts council for choosing self-service over serving citizens

By BILL ATKINSON, Progress Index (Metered paywall - 10 articles a month)

The chief patron of the successful legislation that brought the long-pursued casino referendum has blasted Petersburg City Council over the choice of its former collaborator as the winning bidder for the business. In a scathing statement Friday night, Sen. Lashrecse Aird also pushed back at the city’s earlier claim that it wrote but never sent a letter of intent to one of the other four vendors “under duress” so that Aird would have a name to use as a bargaining chip in Richmond.

VaNews April 29, 2024


Yancey: Here’s what readers recommended visitors see on the way to Southwest Virginia

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

Y’all sure know how to make someone feel welcome. Not me. I’m already here. I’m talking about the Arlington reader who contacted me recently, said he’d never been west of Roanoke and hoped soon to rectify that. He was writing in response to my column in defense of Southwest Virginia which, in turn, was a response to a story in Axios Richmond that made dismissive reference to “whatever the hell is west of Roanoke.” I told our prospective visitor that I’d give him some recommendations on what to see and do and then promptly turned to the best source for that — you.

VaNews April 29, 2024


Warner meets with first responders to discuss mental health issues

By JONATHAN HUNLEY, Fredericksburg Free Press

It was about a year and a half ago, right before Christmas, when a Fredericksburg police officer had a life-changing moment. He was responding to a call for service at an apartment complex, and he was first on the scene. An 8-year-old boy had been walking back from a playground with a family member when he saw that his parents had just gotten back home. The boy ran over to see his mother and father, but he was struck by a car coming through the parking lot.

VaNews April 29, 2024


VPAP Visual Presidential Donations by Precinct

The Virginia Public Access Project

See how much money each presidential candidate has raised in each of Virginia’s 2,544 voting precincts, along with the number of donors, from Jan. 1, 2023, through March 31, 2024.

VaNews April 30, 2024