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Higher costs, fewer jobs likely at Danville casino

By JOHN R. CRANE, Danville Register & Bee

It looks like numerous changes will be made to Danville’s agreement with Caesars Virginia, including an increase in the casino project’s cost to $750 million and language allowing the company to hire fewer workers than initially promised. The changes also propose elimination of a promised separate entertainment venue. Instead, the venue would occupy a 40,000-square-foot conference center included in the project. The Danville City Council will consider whether to approve the revisions, along with several others, during its Tuesday meeting.

VaNews May 6, 2024


Virginia law expands shared solar into coal country

By ELIZABETH MCGOWAN, Energy News Network

After languishing since 2022, a revamped measure to launch a shared solar program in Southwest Virginia found daylight this year. The General Assembly gave the go-ahead to a pair of measures (SB 255, HB 108) directing utility regulators to set up Appalachian Power’s inaugural 50 megawatt program by Jan. 1. Despite the modest size laid out in the new law, Charlie Coggeshall, Mid-Atlantic regional director with the Coalition for Community Solar Access, is content with the breakthrough into a part of the state historically dependent on the coal industry.

VaNews May 6, 2024


Letter signed by at least three dozen UVa. professors condemns school leaders over police response

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

At least three dozen history professors at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville signed an open letter on Sunday condemning “the repression of a peaceful protest of our students” by the police, a day after officers in riot gear clashed with pro-Palestinian demonstrators, spraying chemical irritants and arresting at least 25 people. In the letter, which was particularly scathing toward President Jim Ryan and Ian Baucom, the provost, the professors also demanded answers about the intensity of the police response, who approved it and why, and whether protesters at the school could be guaranteed the ability to protest peacefully.

VaNews May 6, 2024


Yancey: Protesters want Virginia Tech to divest from Israel. Why divestment is easier said than done.

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

The pro-Palestinian protesters at Virginia Tech want the school to divest of any investments tied to Israel. This will not happen. Even if Virginia Tech wanted to do this, divestment from Israel is easier said than done. Let’s look further at each of these. The reason Virginia Tech will not divest from Israel is simple: politics. Technically, a public school’s investment funds are managed by a nonprofit foundation — in this case, the Virginia Tech Foundation, which is governed by its board. However, we all know that these foundations are closely tied to the universities they support. The foundation’s board includes the Tech president and the rector of the board of visitors, the gubernatorial-appointed board that governs the school. The board also includes three other top Tech officials. As a practical matter, the foundation is not going to do something the school doesn’t want.

VaNews May 6, 2024


Police forcefully clear encampment at UVa., detain protesters

By THOMAS BAXTER AND FINN TRAINER, Cavalier Daily

Over 50 police officers, including state troopers in riot gear, cleared the pro-Palestinian encampment near the University chapel Saturday afternoon and detained at least 25 protesters. The removal of the encampment marked the end of a days-long protest that called on the University to disclose its investment portfolio and divest from institutions benefiting from Israeli occupation in Palestine, among other demands.

VaNews May 6, 2024


Prosecutor seeks to drop charges against five deputies in Irvo Otieno death

By SALVADOR RIZZO, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

The Virginia prosecutor investigating the death of Irvo Otieno is seeking to withdraw charges against five law enforcement officers who were indicted on murder counts last year, curtailing the scope of what was once a sprawling case to just three defendants. Otieno, a 28-year-old Black man whose family said he was in mental distress when he arrived at Central State Hospital for treatment, died there of asphyxia as Henrico County sheriff’s deputies and hospital workers restrained him for 11 minutes, according to surveillance video and the medical examiner. Authorities in Virginia’s Dinwiddie County initially charged 10 people in Otieno’s death.

VaNews May 6, 2024


Locke: Youngkin administration actions undermine academic freedom

By MAMIE LOCKE, published in Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Back in the fall of 2021, while teaching a unit on the presidency in an American government class, I encountered a question from a student about why I would even address Donald Trump. My response was straightforward: “Because he was a president.” This simple exchange illustrates the essence of academic freedom — a principle that is currently under threat in Virginia. The question didn’t arise from mere curiosity; it stemmed from a broader political critique, suggesting a “thinly veiled attempt to incorporate the progressive left’s groupthink on our students.”

Sen. Locke represents the 23rd District, which includes Hampton and part of Newport News.

VaNews May 6, 2024


Election workers fear threats and political interference. Listen to them.

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

Six months before Americans cast their ballots for president, members of Congress and a host of local offices, election workers are deeply concerned about their safety and worried that unscrupulous officials will interfere with the vote. Those are among the findings of a recent survey conducted by the Brennan Center for Justice, which makes for grim reading. Virginia recently took an important step to protect poll workers, but they also need responsible leaders to build trust in the system rather than maligning it for political gain.

VaNews May 6, 2024


VCU should embrace peaceful dissent, not send in the riot police

Richmond Times-Dispatch Editorial (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

No matter one’s religious or political beliefs, there is no denying the anger and passion fueling the recent nationwide surge in student protests over the Israel-Hamas war. In the city, after a violent clash between police and demonstrators at Virginia Commonwealth University on Monday night, the streets are once again littered with proverbial eggshells. To this point, Richmond is but a snippet. The pro-Palestinian movement has been slowly building in RVA for months, but so far most of the violent imagery flashing across our screens is from elsewhere.

VaNews May 6, 2024


25 arrested at UVa. after clashes with police

By RUBY CRAMER, MARIANNA SOTOMAYOR AND SUSAN SVRLUGA, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

Authorities arrested 25 pro-Palestinian demonstrators during a sustained confrontation at the University of Virginia on Saturday, university officials said, after dozens of law enforcement officers in riot gear surrounded a student encampment and used pepper spray to disperse people from the area. The clash, which U-Va. President James E. Ryan described in a letter to the school community Saturday evening as “upsetting, frightening and sad,” marked the latest escalation during the past several weeks of protests on campuses over the Israel-Gaza war.

VaNews May 6, 2024