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Youngkin, lawmakers seek fresh start on budget in May special session

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

Gov. Glenn Youngkin and General Assembly leaders are starting with a clean slate in an effort to reach a new state budget, avoid a potential government shutdown and buy time to determine how much new revenue they will have to spend over the next two years. Youngkin and assembly leaders of both parties gathered in the state Capitol around Houdon’s statue of George Washington on Wednesday afternoon to declare a working truce in their ongoing battle over taxes and spending. They have been at odds over the $188 billion two-year budget that the Democratic-controlled legislature adopted last month and the Republican governor tried unsuccessfully to amend this week.

VaNews April 18, 2024


Virginia legislature will consider reworked state budget in May 13 special session

By NATHANIEL CLINE AND CHARLIE PAULLIN, Virginia Mercury

Gov. Glenn Youngkin and lawmakers have agreed to work together on the biennium budget, after clashing for weeks over two distinctly different spending plans. A special session will be held on May 13, Youngkin and lawmakers in both chambers announced Wednesday, to consider the revamped budget and prevent a shutdown ahead of July 1, when the current budget expires. On Wednesday, the House of Delegates voted to reject all 233 of the governor’s amendments to the budget, and agreed to seek a new budget to present to the legislature May 13, with voting on it expected May 15. They also took up the governor’s other bill amendments and 153 vetoes.

VaNews April 18, 2024


NextEra Power Line Route Opposed by Supervisors

By HANNA PAMPALONI, Loudoun Now

The Board of Supervisors on Tuesday unanimously approved a resolution opposing the preliminary route of a proposed electric power transmission line across western Loudoun. The action comes two weeks after supervisors voted to intervene in the State Corporation Commission’s review of a separate Dominion Energy application to construct new transmission lines across eastern Loudoun. The western Loudoun line is planned by Florida-based NextEra Energy and has been approved by PJM Interconnection, the organization that coordinates power transmission in the region.

VaNews April 18, 2024


Goldman: Stoney’s $280 million stadium bet is a gamble RVA cannot afford

By PAUL GOLDMAN, published in Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

Mayor Levar Stoney and City Council members — soon to leave office — are hellbent to use their waning power to put Richmond taxpayers on the hook for $280 million in unprecedented baseball stadium debt financing. Stoney unveiled his proposal on April 8. He and his Council majority say they will ram it through at a Council meeting on May 8. But having the right to do it doesn’t make it the right thing to do.

Paul Goldman is a lawyer, former chairman of the Virginia Democratic Party and author of “Remaking Virginia Politics.”

VaNews April 18, 2024


Yancey: Confrontation between governor and General Assembly over budget fizzles into cooperation

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

Winston Churchill once said: “You can always count on the Americans to do the right thing, after they have exhausted all the other possibilities.” That quote comes to mind after Gov. Glenn Youngkin and the General Assembly defied all expectations and came to an agreement Wednesday on the state budget. To be sure, there isn’t a budget yet — but neither is there a dramatic confrontation looming between the two branches of government, with the state’s prized AAA bond rating hanging in the balance. The Democratic legislature did not reject the governor’s 233 budget amendments and send the original spending plan back to him with a dare: Sign it or veto it. Instead, Democrats and Republicans agreed to work together on a revised budget ...

VaNews April 18, 2024


Trains, Trucks and Tractors: The Race to Reroute Goods From Baltimore

By PETER EAVIS, New York Times (Metered Paywall - 1 to 2 articles a month)

New John Deere tractors made their way last week through the sprawling port of Brunswick, Ga., their distinctive green paint glinting in the sunshine. Stevedores drove the tractors up a ramp into the belly of the Leo Spirit, a ship that would take them to Asia. As orderly as everything looked, the tractor convoy was an example of the enormous lengths to which East Coast ports, railways, truckers and shipping lines have gone to remake supply chains after a container ship crashed into the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore last month. The bridge’s collapse closed most of the Port of Baltimore, which last year handled 1.3 million tons of farm and construction machinery and 850,000 cars and light trucks.

VaNews April 18, 2024


UVa. Jewish Leadership Advisory Board criticizes politicization of Jewish student experiences

By THOMAS BAXTER, Cavalier Daily

The Jewish Leadership Advisory Board, an elected organization of Jewish student leaders, criticized the (UVa.) Board of Visitors for politicizing the experiences of Jewish students at the University in an April 3 letter acquired by The Cavalier Daily. The letter came after the March 1 meeting of the Board of Visitors, where Bert Ellis, Board member and College and Darden alumnus, criticized the University and Rector Robert Hardie for their responses to allegations of rising antisemitism on Grounds. JLAB is composed of students elected to govern the Hillel Jewish Leadership Council.

VaNews April 18, 2024


Powhatan School Board in planning phase to address alleged racial discrimination

By MADISON MOORE, WRIC-TV

Dozens of Powhatan County residents, teachers and parents showed up to yet another packed Powhatan County School Board meeting Tuesday night, with many voicing their frustrations about the alleged ongoing racial discrimination taking place in the school district. The public outcry comes in response to a series of recent incidents, including a racist death threat scrawled on a Powhatan High School student’s arm that went viral on social media in February. “There is a wildfire raging in Powhatan schools and you [Powhatan School Board] are allowing it to escalate,” said a Powhatan resident at the meeting.

VaNews April 18, 2024


White’s Ferry may reopen after owners offer to donate it to Md. county

By JUSTIN WM. MOYER, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

Montgomery County officials said Wednesday that they hope to reopen White’s Ferry — a centuries-old service between Maryland and Virginia that was shut down in 2020 amid a legal dispute — after the owner this week offered to donate it to the county. Chuck Kuhn, chief executive of JK Moving Services, and his wife Stacy Kuhn — who purchased the ferry in 2021 — said in a statement Tuesday that they are offering to donate the ferry to Montgomery County “contingent on Montgomery and Loudoun counties working together to find a solution to gain access to the Virginia shoreline and reopen the ferry in a timely manner.” At a news conference Wednesday, County Executive Marc Elrich (D) said it could take a year to get it reopened.

VaNews April 18, 2024


Too many cubicles, too few homes spur incentives to convert offices to housing

By TIM HENDERSON, Stateline

Juan Ramirez, watching his dog play in Chandon Park here in suburban Virginia on a Saturday morning, tries to imagine the massive office buildings next to the park becoming apartments and townhouses. “I guess it’s inevitable. People don’t use offices as much now. I hope it’s affordable. Maybe it’ll bring more young people to town, more taxes for parks,” said Ramirez, 38, who grew up in the area and returned recently to take a restaurant management job after living in Minnesota and Ohio. Cities and suburbs around the country are struggling with vacant office space as remote work becomes an established post-pandemic reality.

VaNews April 18, 2024