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Inside the Port of Virginia’s $450 million plan to lead in era of super-sized ocean containerships

By LORI ANN LAROCCO, CNBC

The Port of Virginia is on track to become the functionally widest and deepest port on the U.S. East Coast by early 2025, as massive ocean containerships upend the economics of port terminals. Norfolk Harbor will be the only waterway channel on the East Coast with Congressional authorization for 55-foot depth from end to end and side to side. While there are channels on the East Coast that are wider than the Port of Virginia, they are not uniformly deep from end to end and side to side, regardless of tide. A $450 million dredging project at the Port of Virginia, which began in 2019, completed its widening measures in March, allowing two ultra-large container vessels (ULCVs) to pass each other at the same time.

VaNews May 10, 2024


Yancey: 37 years ago, one of the Republican Senate candidates tried to run in Roanoke. Here’s what happened.

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

None of the five candidates seeking the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate to run against Democrat Tim Kaine have ever held public office. In some quarters, that’s considered a plus. Some of them, though, have tried. One of them has tried more than any other. In 2010, Virginia Beach attorney Chuck Smith ran for the U.S. House of Representatives against Rep. Bobby Scott, D-Newport News, in the 3rd District but lost, as Republicans typically do in that strongly Democratic district. In 2012, Smith ran for the Kempsville district seat on the Virginia Beach City Council, but finished fourth out of a field of four candidates. In 2017, he unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination for attorney general but failed to qualify for the ballot. In 2021, Smith did far, far better ...

VaNews May 10, 2024


The Buc-ee’s stops here? Stafford residents put off by potential gas giant

By JONATHAN HUNLEY, Fredericksburg Free Press

The mascot for Buc-ee’s may be the beaver, but many Stafford residents aren’t eager for the business to come to the county. Buc-ee’s, a Texas-based chain of large gas station/convenience stores, is seeking a permit to build what would be its third Virginia location near the intersection of Interstate 95 and Courthouse Road in Stafford. The initial public hearing on the proposal likely won’t be held until late fall or early winter at the earliest, but some Stafford residents who live near the proposed site have already begun voicing their opposition to it with county officials.

VaNews May 10, 2024


Dominion expects to connect 15 new data centers in Northern Virginia this year

By JESS KIRBY, Loudoun Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

After connecting 15 data centers totaling 933 megawatts of capacity last year, Dominion Energy Virginia expects to connect 15 more data centers in Northern Virginia to the power grid in 2024, according to its quarterly earnings report. Since 2019, Dominion has connected 94 data centers with greater than 4 gigawatts of capacity, the report said. This reflects a trend of both growing data center buildings and campuses as a whole — the power demand of individual data centers has increased from 30 MW to 60-90 MW, and data center campuses are ranging anywhere from 300 MW to “several GWs.”

VaNews May 9, 2024


Shenandoah County Fair pig scramble called ‘unfair and unjust’

By RYAN FITZMAURICE, Winchester Star (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

The Shenandoah County Fair pig scramble was scrutinized during Woodstock’s Town Council’s meeting Tuesday night after a Lorton resident made the 90-minute drive to speak against the popular event. The pig scramble is held annually, with over 300 local children participating in last summer’s rendition. Children from 3 to 8 years old, their hands covered in lard, are tasked to catch one of a group of running pigs. If a child manages to capture one of the 3-month-old pigs up for grabs, it is theirs to take home.

VaNews May 9, 2024


Google’s $1 billion data center investment could be good news for tech in Arlington

By DANIEL EGITTO, ArlNow

As Google plans to funnel $1 billion into Northern Virginia data centers, places such as Arlington may have renewed opportunities to attract tech investment. Although the data center expansions announced last week are based in Loudoun County and Prince William County, they impact the entire area, said Terry Clower, director of George Mason University’s Center for Regional Analysis. With a torrent of funds for similar infrastructure flowing into the D.C. area, and Amazon still planning its HQ2 expansion in Arlington, the region could be primed to solidify its status as a “cluster of activity” for big tech.

VaNews May 9, 2024


Powhatan school leaders address racism concerns with policy change

By SIERRA KRUG, WRIC-TV

Ripped papers and a mother’s desperate tears for change flooded the room at Tuesday night’s Powhatan County School Board meeting. Parents and students pleaded with the board to take more drastic measures towards fighting ongoing racism they say they’ve continued to witness in Powhatan schools.

VaNews May 9, 2024


In rural Virginia, sea-level rise swamps septic systems. A local partnership is testing a solution.

By KATHERINE HAFNER, WHRO

On Virginia’s rural Middle Peninsula, Jamie Miller is the guy you call when something goes wrong with the least glamorous part of your home. “‘I can’t flush my toilet. I have sewage backing up in my house,’” Miller said, listing off some of the typical calls he receives. … A lifelong resident of Gloucester, Miller was born into the sewage business. He owns Miller’s Services, a plumbing company first started by his grandparents in the 1970s. But in recent years, the nature of the work has changed. Many homes in rural regions of Virginia rely on standalone septic tanks to handle wastewater because they aren’t connected to a municipal sewer system. When he took over in 2001, Miller said, the business was usually called to maintain working septic systems. Now, more and more septic systems are failing altogether, Miller said, flooding homes and yards with sewage that can threaten residents’ health and the local environment. The problem lies underground.

VaNews May 9, 2024


Louisa Co. supervisors reverse decision to cut Piedmont Virginia Community College funding over Jewish film

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

What exactly Piedmont Virginia Community College President Jean Runyon said to convince the Louisa County Board of Supervisors that a documentary called “Israelism” by two Jewish filmmakers wasn’t antisemitic remains unclear. Though it must have done the trick, as the board unanimously voted Monday night to overturn the resolution it had passed just one week prior that cut off the county’s funding to the school, a sum of $6,000 this year.

VaNews May 9, 2024


Loudoun in preliminary ‘priority’ corridor for new electricity transmission lines

By JESS KIRBY, Loudoun Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

The U.S. Department of Energy released May 8 a list of potential “priority” corridors for new transmission infrastructure that would give a federal commission the authority to overrule state agencies when ruling on transmission projects. One possible corridor includes existing transmission rights-of-way across Loudoun County along with a new path through western Loudoun. The maps of the possible new transmission line corridors are “rough approximations,” according to the department, and provide little detail. The department did not respond May 8 to a request for the detailed mapping data used to create the high-level maps ...

VaNews May 9, 2024