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Adkins: 250 years later, Native Americans have a chance to reclaim the narrative

By STEPHEN R. ADKINS, published in Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

The 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence is a momentous occasion for the United States. It’s a time to celebrate the ideals enshrined in that document — life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. However, for the Chickahominy people and other Native American tribes, this anniversary carries a more complex weight. The declaration, for all its eloquence, wasn’t written with us in mind. It spoke of freedom from tyranny, a right blatantly denied to my ancestors through broken treaties and forced removal from our lands.

Adkins is chief and tribal administrator of the Chickahominy Tribe in Providence Ford, a member of the Virginia American Revolution 250 Commission and chair of the commission’s Tribal Nations Leadership Advisory Council.

VaNews May 3, 2024


These are the people who will decide Metro’s future

By NATE DOUGHTY, Washington Business Journal (Subscription required for some articles)

The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority and the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments (COG) have created a task force charged with developing a unified vision for the region’s transportation system and coming up with a sustainable funding model for Metro that is palatable to political leaders in D.C., Maryland and Virginia. The task force, dubbed DMV Moves, was unveiled in D.C. Wednesday at the first-ever joint board meeting of two organizations. The 20-person task force will be made up primarily of political leaders across D.C., Virginia and Maryland appointed by the Council of Governments as well as four representatives appointed by Metro.

VaNews May 3, 2024


Friday Read Centuries ago, Black freedmen found refuge harvesting oysters. A descendant carries on their legacy.

By KATHERINE HAFNER, WHRO

On a warm spring morning, Mary Hill is on a boat working her oyster grounds just north of the Crittenden Bridge in Chuckatuck Creek. “I’ve got about 500 acres out here,” she says, pointing to markers dotting the creek, which feeds into the Nansemond River. Thousands of oysters in buckets already line the boat’s perimeter while Hill and two colleagues lower a dredge into the water. The metal cage scrapes the bottom of the oyster beds. The crew raise it up, dump the bounty and start sifting through oyster shells, tossing small ones back into the water to replenish the reefs. To Hill, these mornings out on the water are more than just a job. It’s her family legacy.

VaNews May 3, 2024


Yancey: Cumberland County teacher is a model for how he’s led students to research state’s history

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

In March 2023, a historical marker was unveiled at Roanoke College. The subject matter was unusual enough: It recognized Kim Kyusik, a leader in the Korean independence movement, who had been a student at the Salem school in the early 1900s. At a time when segregation was the order of the day in Virginia, Roanoke College had made a concerted effort to recruit students from Korea. Between 1894 and 1930, some 30 Korean students matriculated at Roanoke College. Research by Roanoke College professors Whitney Leeson and Stella Xu suggests that Roanoke College at the time had more Korean students than any other college in the United States.

VaNews May 3, 2024


Virginia Tech protesters call for charges, disciplinary action to be dropped

By PAYTON WILLIAMS, Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

A group of pro-Palestinian protesters who were arrested decried Virginia Tech’s move to clear their encampment and urged the school to drop all legal charges and threats of disciplinary action against those who participated during a news conference Thursday. It was held on the Graduate Life Center lawn – where the encampment was located. Desiree Poets, an assistant professor of political science at Virginia Tech who was arrested on Sunday, said: “We, the faculty of Virginia Tech, demand from Virginia Tech, that they drop all charges against the peaceful protesters arrested on April 28 and 29. We additionally demand that they reinstate and that they protect students’ and faculty’s right to assembly, free speech, and protest moving forward.”

VaNews May 3, 2024


Luna Innovations considers options including sale or merger as it reports latest executive turnover

By TAD DICKENS, Cardinal News

Luna Innovations Inc., a publicly traded Roanoke-based technology company, will consider a sale or merger among its options going forward, in the wake of financial reporting irregularities that led to the resignations of its chief executive officer and chief financial officer, and the firing of its chief technology officer. The company announced on Wednesday that it has found that former CEO Scott Graeff, who resigned in late March, had engaged in conduct that constituted “cause” under his contract, so Luna will cancel his severance payments and take back stock from him.

VaNews May 3, 2024


Lerch: Va. counties step up to meet solar energy demand

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

There’s been considerable discussion recently regarding county review and approval of utility-scale solar projects. We would like to provide some context to this important conversation on behalf of Virginia counties. Members of the Virginia Association of Counties are accommodating this emerging and intensive land use in a responsible and inclusive manner. Over the past decade, Virginia local governments have approved 260 projects totaling 11,640 megawatts in capacity generation. That’s 69 counties, eight cities and six towns that have said yes to utility-scale solar ...

Lerch is director of local government policy for the Virginia Association of Counties.

VaNews May 3, 2024


Rural Loudoun Residents Hear Opposition Strategies to NextEra Power Line

By HANNA PAMPALONI, Loudoun Now

Nearly 200 residents filled the banquet hall at the Lovettsville Fire and Rescue Station Wednesday night for a meeting hosted by the Lovettsville chapter of the Loudoun Transmission Line Alliance about the proposed transmission line by NextEra Energy expected to cut through the western part of the county to Leesburg. The meeting was led by Alliance member Mary Terpak and included presentations by Piedmont Environmental Council Senior Land Use Planner Tia Earman, Waterford Foundation President Sue Manch and Scenic Loudoun Legal Defense representative Tom Donahue.

VaNews May 3, 2024


UVa student protest diminishes in size as it enters third day

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

A student-led protest at the University of Virginia remained peaceful but had noticeably diminished in size as it entered its third day Thursday. UVa’s demonstration stands in stark contrast to how larger anti-Israel protests have unfolded across the country and the commonwealth. As of Thursday evening, there were roughly 40 protesters on UVa Grounds, mostly concentrated near the chapel adjacent to the university’s landmark Rotunda.

VaNews May 3, 2024


Virginia attorney general joins efforts to fight back against Title IX changes

By NATHANIEL CLINE, Virginia Mercury

Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares has joined a multi-state effort to stop new Title IX rules from going into effect. The list of new rules designed to protect victims of campus sexual assaults and the rights of LGBTQ+ students has come under attack by Republican attorneys general in several states. Miyares called the changes a “dangerous overhaul” of Title IX, and said the new rules would negatively impact students, families and schools in the commonwealth. The ruling also comes after Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s administration overhauled the commonwealth’s transgender student policies.

VaNews May 3, 2024