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The Buc-ee’s stops here? Stafford residents put off by potential gas giant

By JONATHAN HUNLEY, Fredericksburg Free Press

The mascot for Buc-ee’s may be the beaver, but many Stafford residents aren’t eager for the business to come to the county. Buc-ee’s, a Texas-based chain of large gas station/convenience stores, is seeking a permit to build what would be its third Virginia location near the intersection of Interstate 95 and Courthouse Road in Stafford. The initial public hearing on the proposal likely won’t be held until late fall or early winter at the earliest, but some Stafford residents who live near the proposed site have already begun voicing their opposition to it with county officials.

VaNews May 10, 2024


Shenandoah County School Board votes to restore Confederate names of schools

By MIKE STALEY, WHSV-TV

For the first time in United States history, a school district that changed the name of schools that honored Confederate generals, voted to restore the Confederate names years later. The Shenandoah County School Board held a public hearing on May 9 at Peter Muhlenberg Middle School to discuss restoring the names of Mountain View High School and Honey Run Elementary School to Stonewall Jackson High School and Ashby Lee Elementary School. At the hearing, residents voiced their opinions on the school’s current names and whether they agreed with the restoration or were against it.

VaNews May 10, 2024


Senate passes five-year FAA bill that would expand Reagan National flights

By ORIANA PAWLYK AND CHRIS MARQUETTE, Politico

The Senate on Thursday passed a five-year, $105 billion bill that will reauthorize the FAA, after a bruising fight over whether to expand long-haul flights at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport … The measure, H.R. 3935, was passed 88-4. In the end, over the strenuous objections of the Maryland and Virginia delegations, the bill retains language that would expand those flights by five round trips per day.

VaNews May 10, 2024


Workers extending Chesterfield County road encounter unmarked burial site

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

Workers extending Nash Road in the county’s court house area have unearthed what appears to be a potential centuries-old burial ground, officials said Thursday. At least one gravesite has been confirmed, and the county said the spot where it was found has been cordoned off to allow for further exploration. Experts used ground-penetrating radar to scan the area, “and have found underground anomalies that could be additional gravesites,” according to a county statement.

VaNews May 10, 2024


Commonwealth’s NIL rule for college sports should be national model

Virginian-Pilot Editorial (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Nearly four years since the NCAA appropriately decided that student-athletes should be free to receive compensation for their names, images and likenesses (NIL), the landscape of college athletics has been profoundly transformed by the absence of clear, firm rules about those opportunities. Virginia recently has moved to bring order to the chaos with a law that should protect students and ensure stronger oversight in a previously untamed environment. Other states looking to do the same — and Congress, which has dithered on the issue — would do well to follow the commonwealth’s lead and adopt similar models.

VaNews May 10, 2024


Portsmouth casino exceeds projections in first year

By DAVID MCGEE, Bristol Herald Courier (Metered Paywall - 15 articles a month)

Fourteen months after opening, the Rivers Casino Portsmouth has generated more than $86 million in state and local tax revenues and about $340 million in total revenues, a new report shows. Virginia’s first permanent casino reported $329 million in adjusted gaming revenues and $11.2 million in food and beverage revenues during the period from its opening in late January 2023 through March 31, 2024, according to a report filed with the Virginia Lottery Board.

VaNews May 10, 2024


Candidate for U.S. Senate in Virginia responds to super PAC allegations about funds

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

After months of dodging questions, embattled Republican candidate for U.S. Senate Hung Cao addressed allegations that he misrepresented how money raised by the Unleash America super PAC would be spent. Instead of explaining why the money raised by the super PAC did not go to Virginia Republican candidates for state office in 2023, Cao called the report that prompted the allegations a “hit job” by “the left," on Tuesday's episode of The John Fredericks show, a live conservative radio and TV show.

VaNews May 10, 2024


Pro-Palestinian demonstrators say Israeli drones use Virginia Tech hardware; evidence doesn’t support claim

By TAD DICKENS, Cardinal News

A specific accusation arose during the student-led demonstrations on the Virginia Tech campus late last month. Protesters accused the university, through its drone program, of complicity in Israel’s war against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip. “Virginia Tech is the drone capital of the world,” one student said in a video posted to X, the site formerly called Twitter. “Every single drone that is in Gaza, targeting civilians right now and killing them, has Virginia Tech engineering ware in it.”

VaNews May 10, 2024


Congresswoman Speaks Candidly About Her Incurable Brain Disease: ‘I’m Too Young for This’

By KYLER ALVORD, People

Jennifer Wexton was gearing up for her third term as a United States congresswoman in late 2022 when she received the difficult news that, even if she felt she had a lot left to give to the people of Virginia’s 10th Congressional District, her body didn’t. “Cognitively, I’m the person I’ve always been,” Wexton, 55, tells PEOPLE, her voice muffled and speech somersaulting. “But there are things that it takes me a lot longer to do.” Less than two years ago, the rising Democrat from Leesburg, Va., had a clear vision for her future. She entered Congress in 2018 with a few key bipartisan goals — including fighting childhood cancer in honor of a young girl in Wexton’s community who died of an inoperable brain tumor.

VaNews May 10, 2024


Yancey: 37 years ago, one of the Republican Senate candidates tried to run in Roanoke. Here’s what happened.

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

None of the five candidates seeking the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate to run against Democrat Tim Kaine have ever held public office. In some quarters, that’s considered a plus. Some of them, though, have tried. One of them has tried more than any other. In 2010, Virginia Beach attorney Chuck Smith ran for the U.S. House of Representatives against Rep. Bobby Scott, D-Newport News, in the 3rd District but lost, as Republicans typically do in that strongly Democratic district. In 2012, Smith ran for the Kempsville district seat on the Virginia Beach City Council, but finished fourth out of a field of four candidates. In 2017, he unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination for attorney general but failed to qualify for the ballot. In 2021, Smith did far, far better ...

VaNews May 10, 2024