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Virginia District 7 Republican candidate for Congress pledges to join House Freedom Caucus

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

One of the top Republican candidates for Virginia’s 7th Congressional District has pledged his fealty to the House Freedom Caucus if elected to office in November. Cameron Hamilton made his pledge to join the U.S. House Republicans' far-right wing during a podcast interview and on X, formerly Twitter, in March.

VaNews May 2, 2024


Kaine wants to help immigrant health care workers in U.S.

By EMILY HEMPHILL, Daily Progress (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

In Uzbekistan, Dora was a well-respected oncologist with more than 25 years of experience taking care of cancer patients. In the United States, she was told that her medical license would not be accepted, that her English was too poor to work with patients. She was encouraged to get a job in a cafeteria or as a housekeeper. “That was a big humiliation for me because nobody had ever said those bad words to me. After that, I was depressed, I cried a lot,” Dora told The Daily Progress. Dora, who asked to use a different name to conceal her identity, found employment at a large-scale, chain grocery store in Charlottesville. Yet, as a former physician once in charge of an entire medical department, the job is “horrible for me.”

VaNews May 2, 2024


Report shows Va. teachers make less than national average

By MADDIE RHODES AND ADDY BINK, WAVY-TV

Educators have long called for higher salaries, and while efforts to achieve that were successful in some parts of the country in the last year, it isn’t enough to keep up with inflation, according to a new report. The National Education Association, the largest teachers’ union in the U.S., released its newest data on teacher salaries on Tuesday. On average, teachers in the U.S. are making $69,544.

VaNews May 2, 2024


Virginia offshore wind project hits whale trouble

By NIINA H. FARAH, E&E News

A federal judge has ordered the Biden administration to clarify its plans for protecting endangered whales during construction of one of the nation’s largest offshore wind farms. The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management has until Friday to file a report on whether NOAA Fisheries approved mitigation plans to protect the North Atlantic right whale. The order from Judge Loren AliKhan of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia comes as Dominion Energy prepares to lay the foundation for wind turbines off Virginia’s coast.

VaNews May 2, 2024


Chesapeake infrastructure projects will cost millions more due to inflation

By NATALIE ANDERSON, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

A new elementary school in Chesapeake will be $15 million more expensive than previously projected. The cost to widen George Washington Highway has increased $12 million. Those are two capital projects Chesapeake city leaders say are being impacted by high inflation rates that have been felt widely among consumers across the nation. As Hampton Roads cities finalize fiscal year budgets that will guide spending over the next year, local governments are feeling the pinch, too.

VaNews May 2, 2024


Virginia moves into hydrogen economy as Danish firm invests in Chesterfield plant

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

A Danish chemicals firm’s more than $400 million investment in a new Chesterfield County plant will bring Virginia into the business of making hydrogen as a clean energy source. The Topsøe Holding A/S plant will make a new kind of hydrogen fuel cell, one that the company says can generate clean energy for fossil-fuel users like steel mills and shipping companies that cannot simply electrify operations and that generate nearly a third of the world’s greenhouse gases.

VaNews May 2, 2024


Wilderness Battlefield back on list of Most Endangered Historic Places due to development

By ALLISON BROPHY CHAMPION, Culpeper Star Exponent (Metered Paywall - 20 articles a month)

An influential preservation coalition assembled near a crossroads of history Wednesday morning to announce the Civil War Wilderness Battlefield is back on the list of America’s “11 Most Endangered Historic Places.” The National Trust for Historic Preservation approved the designation due to the massive Wilderness Crossing development envisioned, over 40 years, on more than 2,500 acres … in eastern Orange County. … Allowing developers to build Wilderness Crossing with its thousands of new houses, commercial buildings and data centers threatens the area’s history, environment, natural resources and quality of life, according to the coalition.

VaNews May 2, 2024


Solar project proposed on Bent Mountain; Blacksburg’s ESS to expand

By JEFF STURGEON, Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

A Massachusetts renewable energy company has proposed placing solar panels on Bent Mountain. New Leaf Energy Inc. proposed construction of an energy facility at 9150 Reed Road that would begin generating electricity in 2027. The site is a former apple orchard — now mostly cleared for pasture — that belongs to Glenn Reed. The facility, which is described as small, will generate 3 megawatts or 4 megawatts of energy, the proposal said.

VaNews May 2, 2024


Virginia Beach denies collective bargaining of city employees

By STACY PARKER, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

The City Council denied collective bargaining of city employees in a 5-5 vote with one abstention Tuesday, and instead decided to establish employee relations committees for full-time city workers. Police officers, firefighters, emergency medical services and public works personnel wanted to negotiate better wages and enhanced employment conditions. But Mayor Bobby Dyer said the timing wasn’t right yet “given the budget constraints we have now.”

VaNews May 1, 2024


Virginia lawmakers want postmaster general to deliver on promises

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

U.S. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy may have bought time with an apology to a bipartisan Virginia congressional delegation that is irate over delays in mail deliveries — including essential medications — to people in the Richmond area. But U.S. Sens. Mark Warner and Tim Kaine, both Virginia Democrats, and Rep. Rob Wittman, R-1st, and Rep. Jennifer McClellan, D-4th, say they will not relax scrutiny of the Postal Service and its regional mail distribution center in Richmond.

VaNews May 1, 2024