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Petersburg mayor says city ‘told the truth’ about casino pressure from legislature

By GRAHAM MOOMAW, Virginia Mercury

Petersburg Mayor Sam Parham said Wednesday that he stands by the allegation that his city faced political pressure from the General Assembly to choose a particular casino developer or risk losing the opportunity to have a casino altogether. Sen. Lashrecse Aird, D-Petersburg, whom the Petersburg City Council has alleged had a hand in that pressure, has disputed the city’s characterization of events as “revisionist history.” Speaking with reporters late Wednesday afternoon following a closed council meeting on the casino project, Parham didn’t back down.

VaNews May 2, 2024


Number of incarcerated pregnant women increases amid opioid epidemic

By ALYSSA HUTTON, VCU Capital News Service

Karlee Clements was six months pregnant, “full on into addiction” and begging to go to jail because she was afraid she would kill her child. Soon after, she was incarcerated at Riverside Regional Jail for a violation. Because of her baby’s low heart rate, she was sent to Chippenham Hospital, where she spent the remainder of her pregnancy. Zip-tied to a hospital bed, with a Riverside officer next to her, Clements gave birth to a baby girl and spent three days with her, per Virginia law. Restraints are no longer allowed on inmates during labor, except under certain circumstances.

VaNews May 2, 2024


UVa. student protest remains subdued in its second day

By EMILY HEMPHILL, Daily Progress (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

A student-led protest at the University of Virginia remained peaceful as it entered its second day Wednesday, standing in stark contrast to how similar anti-Israel protests have unfolded across the country and the commonwealth. Roughly 80 protesters — a crowd including students, faculty and Charlottesville community members — spent the day on the school’s Lawn ...

VaNews May 2, 2024


Mayor defends accusations in Petersburg casino-choice resolution: ‘We told the truth’

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

Mayor Sam Parham vowed Wednesday that the city was moving forward with getting its casino referendum on the November ballot despite political “sideshows” from one of Petersburg's state legislators and a casino union who he says have tried to derail that progress. Parham’s comments came during an impromptu news conference after City Council amended and re-enacted, Wednesday night, a resolution picking The Cordish Companies and Bruce Smith Enterprise to build a multi-use casino-centric resort on 92 acres off Wagner Road. That resolution was originally adopted last week, but Wednesday's meeting was called to correct a clerical error.

VaNews May 2, 2024


Virginia moves into hydrogen economy as Danish firm invests in Chesterfield plant

By DAVE RESS, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

A Danish chemicals firm’s more than $400 million investment in a new Chesterfield County plant will bring Virginia into the business of making hydrogen as a clean energy source. The Topsøe Holding A/S plant will make a new kind of hydrogen fuel cell, one that the company says can generate clean energy for fossil-fuel users like steel mills and shipping companies that cannot simply electrify operations and that generate nearly a third of the world’s greenhouse gases.

VaNews May 2, 2024


Bill banning certain driveway, pavement sealants to take effect this July

By CHARLIE PAULLIN, Virginia Mercury

After attempting to ban the products in previous sessions, the Democratic legislature passed a bill Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin signed that bans the sale of pavement sealant containing a set of chemicals environmental groups say seep into the environment, causing health issues for wildlife and humans. The ban begins July 1. House Bill 985 prohibits the sale of the sealant used for driveways and parking lots that use certain concentrations of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons, or PAHs, chemicals commonly found in coal tar.

VaNews May 2, 2024


Metro budget includes ‘modest’ service cuts, fare increases

By JESS KIRBY, Loudoun Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority last week passed its $4.8 billion Metro budget for the upcoming fiscal year with “modest changes” in service and fare increases, avoiding the drastic cuts previously proposed as the transit agency faced a $750 million shortfall. Beginning July 1, a 12.5% fare increase across all modes of transit will take effect to “keep fares in line with inflation,” a Metro press release said. ... This means bus and base rail fares will increase from $2 to $2.25, and maximum rail fares — those that apply to most trips from Loudoun County — will increase from $6 to $6.75.

VaNews May 2, 2024


Yancey: Here are the numbers that show why Russell County is looking at closing schools

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

Every day, there are about 55 earthquakes around the world. Most are small, sometimes imperceptible except to seismic instruments, but the ground beneath our feet is always moving as the tectonic plates inside the earth shift back and forth. Our demographics change in much the same way — usually slowly, in ways we barely notice, until the pressure builds up enough that there’s a big ground-shaker and earth-splitter. Across Virginia, particularly the western part, we’re seeing the tremors caused by those changing demographics. Franklin County is closing two schools because there aren’t enough students. Bedford County and Lynchburg have looked at closing schools for the same reason, but so far elected officials there have managed to avoid that unpopular, although sometimes necessary, outcome.

VaNews May 2, 2024


C’ville residents: Comparing 2017 white supremacist rally to pro-Palestinian campus protests unfair

By MARGARET MANTO, Charlottesville Tomorrow

Rabbi Tom Gutherz of Congregation Beth Israel, Charlottesville’s only synagogue, says it’s “political theater” to compare the campus protests against U.S. involvement in the war in Gaza to the white supremacist rallies that took place in Charlottesville in August 2017 — which is what former president Donald Trump did last week. On April 24, after a day in a felony criminal trial in Manhattan, Trump criticized President Joe Biden’s handling of college protests by comparing them to the violent events in 2017, including the car attack by a neo-Nazi on counter-protesters that killed Heather Heyer and critically injured others.

VaNews May 2, 2024


Protest continues at Virginia Tech after encampment clearing

By PAYTON WILLIAMS, Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

Three days after an encampment at Virginia Tech’s Graduate Life Center was broken up by police resulting in more than 80 arrests, pro-Palestinian protesters continue to gather near the area. Everyone arrested has since been released, with court summons for the coming weeks. Some of the people who were arrested have stopped to sit with the current protesters. The newer gathering is much smaller. On Wednesday morning, there were six people sitting outside the Squires Student Center, though Zachary Weiss, a computer science student at Virginia Tech, said the numbers fluctuate throughout the day. “It all depends on when people have classes,” Weiss said. “People come and go.”

VaNews May 2, 2024