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Shenandoah County School Board set to vote on school names Thursday

By TREY RORIE, Northern Virginia Daily

The Shenandoah County School Board will vote Thursday whether to restore the names of two schools in the southern end of the county that were once named after Confederate generals. … In 2020, the school board renamed Stonewall Jackson High School and Ashby Lee Elementary School, both in Quicksburg, to Mountain View High School and Honey Run Elementary School. The decision, the school board said at the time, was made in an effort to condemn racism and affirm the school division’s commitment to an inclusive environment for all.

VaNews May 7, 2024


Data center project proposed for 120-acre site in Powhatan County

By JACK JACOBS, Richmond BizSense

A large assemblage in Powhatan once eyed for a mixed-use project is now being pitched as the county’s first data center campus. California-based developer Province Group is seeking zoning approval for a 1.5 million-square-foot data center project on 120 acres on the Powhatan-Chesterfield line. The project site consists of three parcels, one of them being 1318 Page Road. The project would rise near Anderson Highway’s intersection with Page Road.

VaNews May 7, 2024


Student safety is an obligation, and ignoring that invites consequences

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

Let no one underestimate the seriousness of the Clery Act, the federal law that requires institutions that participate in federal financial-aid programs to provide timely reporting of statistics about various types of crime and other information about campus safety. The U.S. Department of Education underscored its importance last month when it imposed a staggering $14 million fine on Liberty University in Lynchburg for what the department called a “systemic and persistent” failure to comply with that campus-safety law.

VaNews May 7, 2024


Yancey: Shenandoah County set to vote on whether to restore Confederate names

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

The Shenandoah County School Board is set to vote Thursday on whether to restore Confederate names to two schools. What used to be Stonewall Jackson High School is now Mountain View High School. What used to be Ashby Lee Elementary is now Honey Run Elementary. The 2020 name changes have not sat well with some in the county. Those who opposed the name changes in the first place remain on the school board; those who favored them are now gone and a new school board might well take the unusual step of returning Confederate names to public buildings.

VaNews May 7, 2024


Rozell: Youngkin, Dems wasted months on political theater. Can they pass a budget?

By MARK J. ROZELL, published in Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

During the one-day reconvened General Assembly session in which legislators consider gubernatorial amendments and vetoes, Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin and Democratic legislative leaders said out loud the part we knew all along — it was finally time to compromise. Perhaps we should rejoice that the realization sank in late instead of too late to meet the June 30 deadline for finalizing a new budget to direct state government spending for the next two fiscal years.

Rozell is the dean of the Schar School of Policy and Government at George Mason University where he holds the Ruth D. and John T. Hazel Chair in Public Policy.

VaNews May 7, 2024


Coyner: Hospitals backstop our mental health. We must keep them open

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

Most people tend to think of hospitals as a place you go to seek treatment for serious or life-threatening physical injuries. We think of the emergency departments whose doors are open 24/7, every day of the year, ready to provide acute and comprehensive care. But in addition, hospitals are also increasingly providing a different kind of crucial safety net: backstopping our mental health services.

Del. Coyner, a Republican, represents parts of Chesterfield and Prince George counties.

VaNews May 7, 2024


Interior Department defends Va. offshore wind farm in court

By NIINA H. FARAH, E&E News

The Biden administration and the developer of a $9.8 billion wind farm off of Virginia Beach, Virginia, assured a federal court Friday that the project has all necessary approvals, amid claims that construction would harm the endangered North Atlantic right whale. The joint court filing from the Interior Department and Dominion Energy comes in response to a request to halt work on the massive Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project, which is slated to include 176 turbines and is the largest project of its kind currently under development in the United States.

VaNews May 7, 2024


Where is Jim Ryan?

By REYNOLDS HUTCHINS, Daily Progress Editorial (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

University of Virginia President Jim Ryan would like you to know that he found the entire episode on Grounds this past Saturday “upsetting, frightening, and sad.” Only imagine how he might have felt if he had been there. But no one saw hide nor hair of Mr. Ryan Saturday, even though his official residence at Carr’s Hill is steps away from the epicenter of the violence that unfolded as state police encircled and then raided a quiet and, frankly, meager attempt at a protest on a soggy patch of grass by the University Chapel.

VaNews May 7, 2024


‘Virginia is not New York’: Attorney general says arrests at U.Va. necessary, as protesters express outrage

By IVY LYONS, WTOP

The state’s attorney general said the move to arrest and remove pro-Palestinian protesters from the University of Virginia campus was necessary after weeks of lawless acts that some students dispute. Twenty-five people were arrested Saturday at the Charlottesville campus after police clashed with protesters. On Sunday morning, Attorney General Jason Miyares spoke in support of the state police action, calling student claims that the police response was disproportionate as “good PR spin by those on the other side.”

VaNews May 7, 2024


Chesapeake Bay watershed not likely to meet some pollution reduction goals by 2025

By ELIZA NOE, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Virginia did not reach its 2023 pollution reduction targets for nitrogen and phosphorus, according to modeling tools from the Chesapeake Bay Program, but the state is on track for reducing sediment in the bay. Too much nitrogen, phosphorus and sediment in the Chesapeake Bay contribute to poor quality of the water. Nitrogen and phosphorus fuel the growth of algae blooms, and sediment can block sunlight from reaching underwater grasses, suffocating shellfish. Between 2022 and 2023, pollution loads for nitrogen fell 3.3%, phosphorus fell 4.5% and overall sediment levels decreased by 1% across six states and DC. Those seven entities are part of the Chesapeake Clean Water Blueprint.

VaNews May 7, 2024