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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


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


Hashmi cites record of wins in bid for lieutenant governor

By LAURA VOZZELLA, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

Virginia state Sen. Ghazala F. Hashmi will announce Thursday that she is seeking the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor in her party’s June 2025 primary. A former literature professor and community college administrator, Hashmi (Chesterfield) became the first Muslim in the Virginia Senate and the first Muslim woman in either chamber after flipping a redrawn suburban Richmond district in 2019.

VaNews May 2, 2024


New rules for ‘forever chemicals’ mean challenges, high costs for Fauquier County

By HUNTER SAVERY, Fauquier Times

Fauquier County has until 2029 to remove “forever chemicals” from public drinking water to comply with new EPA standards, but it’s going to be a heavy lift. This month, the Environmental Protection Agency released a first-of-its-kind standard for regulating PFAS compounds; it places strict limits on the concentration of chemicals allowed in public drinking water. PFAS, known as “forever chemicals,” are man-made chemical compounds that are incredibly difficult to destroy and do not break down naturally.

VaNews May 2, 2024


Demonstrators take to streets in Richmond

By CHARLOTTE RENE WOODS, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

Two days after police and pro-Palestinian protesters clashed at VCU, demonstrators took to the streets on Wednesday night. Demonstrators gathered at Abner Clay Park in the Jackson Ward neighborhood around 7 p.m. A group of about 60 marched from the park to VCU Police Headquarters at Broad and Third streets, and then returned to the park. A few hours later, a few people on bicycles briefly tried to block law enforcement vehicles near Madison and Clay streets before police turned on their sirens and lights.

VaNews May 2, 2024


Montgomery County manufacturer to invest $1.6M to increase capacity

By BETH JOJACK, Virginia Business

ESS Technologies, which specializes in packaging line design, equipment manufacturing and integration for the pharmaceutical, nutraceutical, cosmetic and consumer packaging goods industries, will invest $1.6 million to increase capacity at a new facility in Montgomery County, Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced Wednesday.

VaNews May 2, 2024


D.C.-area senators try to stop more flights at Reagan National Airport

By TED BARRETT, CNN

A group of Washington-area Senate Democrats who oppose adding more longer-distance flights in and out of DC’s Reagan National Airport — which was included in a bipartisan FAA bill released this week — are pressing for an amendment vote to strip it out of the legislation, which is being debated on the floor now. “The proposal flies in the face of known safety concerns and known congestion concerns so we are going to push very hard for this amendment,” said Sen. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland who warned that he and the other local senators may oppose the bill in the end if they don’t get a vote.

VaNews May 2, 2024


Virginia’s Planned Parenthood seeing more clients as Florida ban goes into effect

By STEVE WALSH, WHRO

The Virginia League Planned Parenthood is trying to gauge how many patients will now head north. Virginia is now the only southern state that has not imposed additional restrictions on abortion after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe vs. Wade, said Paulette McElwain, Chief Executive Officer of Virginia League for Planned Parenthood.

VaNews May 2, 2024


CEO of free clinic serving Appalachia saw pay package nearly double over 2 years, tax forms show

By EMILY SCHABACKER, Cardinal News

The director of the Health Wagon, a nonprofit free clinic that serves one of the poorest and medically underserved areas in the state, earned $520,000 in 2022, a pay package that nearly doubled over the last two years and was 12 times that of the average income of the people she serves. The increase places her compensation well beyond that of comparable executives in wealthier regions of Virginia, who are paid between $100,000 and $200,000.

VaNews May 2, 2024


Early voting starts Friday for June primaries; 13 on ballots in 7th District

By CATHY DYSON, Free Lance-Star (Metered Paywall - 10 articles a month)

Early voting starts Friday for the June 18 primary elections, which feature a crowded field of candidates. Seven Democrats and six Republicans are in the running for the 7th District seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. Abigail Spanberger, a Democrat from Henrico County, has held the post since 2018 and is running for Virginia governor in 2025.

VaNews May 2, 2024