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Black waterman villages in Suffolk among Virginia’s most endangered historic places

By KATHERINE HAFNER, WHRO

For years, Mary Hill has watched her Suffolk community of Hobson slowly disappear. Hill is a seventh-generation descendant of Black freedmen who helped build the community centuries ago. They established a self-sufficient oyster industry that thrived along the Nansemond River until pollution devastated it starting around the 1960s. Since then, historical buildings once crucial to tight-knit community culture have been torn down, Hill said. Many who were alive in the village’s heyday have died, and some other descendants moved away and sold property passed down for generations. In their place, developers are building modern, more expensive homes that edge out historic ones. “You have a slow death” of the area, said Hill, who is in her early 60s. She now hopes a new designation will bring attention and funding to the area.

VaNews May 16, 2024


Virginia State University left out in the cold after candidates determine debate schedule

By ELIZABETH BEYER AND BILL ATKINSON, Progress Index (Metered paywall - 10 articles a month)

Virginia State University said Wednesday it was "disappointed" over reports that VSU appears to have been dropped from the upcoming presidential debate schedule, yet hopeful that an arrangement can be worked out. "A presidential debate at VSU is a huge win, not only for our students and campus community but for the greater community in general," university spokesperson Gwen Williams Dandridge said in a statement.

VaNews May 16, 2024


Search warrants claim ‘pattern of money laundering’ at some Va. cannabis-related stores

By SUSAN CAMERON, Cardinal News

Newly unsealed search warrants in Washington County allege that some of the cannabis-related stores that were targeted in a region-wide raid last fall were involved in money laundering. Dozens of stores across Southwest Virginia were raided in September. While the ownership structure of many of the shops is unclear, the search warrants show that the homes and banking records of two people who owned multiple locations also were searched. Among the items that were seized were a number of guns — pistols, rifles and shotguns — as well as ammunition, computers, cellphones and vehicles, including two Rolls-Royces.

VaNews May 16, 2024


Prince Edward schools that helped usher in Brown v. Board of Education still in disrepair

By MEGAN PAULY, VPM

A small group of Robert Russa Moton High School students in Farmville began gathering in secret months before an April 23, 1951, walkout to protest the unequal conditions of school facilities for Black students. “It was the same type of secrecy that was developed during the Manhattan Project,” said John Stokes, one of the walkout’s organizers. “We had to trust everyone so we could pull this thing off.” Students decided to report a fake disturbance downtown, luring Moton Principal M. Boyd Jones away from school on the day of the protest. … When Jones returned to school, the strike was in full force. About 400 students gathered in the auditorium to hear a speech from 16-year-old student Barbara Johns before walking out of the school in protest.

VaNews May 16, 2024


Virginia changes educational benefit for veterans’ families

By CATHY DYSON, Free Lance-Star (Metered Paywall - 10 articles a month)

Veterans and their family members who planned to use an educational benefit from the state are calling recent changes to the program “the largest rollback of veteran benefits in Virginia history.” The Friends of VMSDEP, which stands for Virginia Military Survivors and Dependents Education Program, are referring to state budget bills signed by Gov. Glenn Youngkin this week. The new legislation changes the nature of the benefit and shifts control from the Department of Veterans Services to the State Council of Higher Education Virginia, or SCHEV.

VaNews May 16, 2024


How Massive Resistance delayed school desegregation in Virginia

By KARRI PEIFER, Axios

Friday may mark 70 years since the Supreme Court’s landmark 1954 Brown v. Board decision, but Virginia schools wouldn’t see desegregation in any meaningful sense for nearly two decades. The architect of Massive Resistance — the concerted political effort to thwart racial integration of schools by any means necessary — was Sen. Harry Byrd Sr., the powerful Virginia politician whose influence stretched into state and local governments. A former state senator and Virginia governor, Byrd and his family essentially controlled state and local politics for more than half of the 20th century through what was dubbed the “Byrd Machine.”

VaNews May 16, 2024


School segregation in Virginia is increasing 70 years after Brown v. Board ruling

By SABRINA MORENO, Axios

Racial segregation in Virginia’s public schools has increased over the last three decades, according to an Axios review of federal data. Segregated schools disproportionately hurt Black and Latino students because schools where they’re the majority often have fewer resources, more teacher shortages, higher student-to-school counselor ratios and greater suspension rates — all of which impacts quality of education. Seventy years after the Brown v. Board of Education ruling, which declared racially divided schools as unconstitutional, Virginia’s population is the most diverse it’s ever been.

VaNews May 16, 2024


Congress clears major aviation policy bill adding flights to Reagan airport

By ORIANA PAWLYK, Politico

The House voted Wednesday to send the biggest aviation bill in five years to President Joe Biden’s desk. The bill, H.R. 3935, cleared on a 387-26 vote, would inject $105 billion into the Federal Aviation Administration over five years and guide policy for everything from drones and air taxis to technology intended to help planes avoid runway collisions. It will also add five long-haul, round-trip flights a day to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, despite objections from D.C.-area lawmakers.

VaNews May 16, 2024


Free Clinic looks to raise $1 million in one day

By CATHY DYSON, Free Lance-Star (Metered Paywall - 10 articles a month)

The Moss Free Clinic is asking the community to support its efforts by donating $1 million on Tuesday, May 28, during its inaugural Day of Giving. Donations will enable the clinic to continue to provide medical and dental care, screenings and treatments and free medications to uninsured and underinsured individuals. The clinic was established more than 30 years ago, but has faced the possible threat of closure as the long-term relationship between Moss and Mary Washington Healthcare has changed.

VaNews May 16, 2024


Former Sen. Amanda Chase in court for assault charge

By BRANDON JARVIS, Virginia Scope

Former state Sen. Amanda Chase, R-Chesterfield, was in court Monday for an assault and battery charge after an altercation earlier this year at a local GOP event. Chesterfield Republicans met in March to select new committee leaders, but a confrontation involving Chase became the main attraction. Chase was charged with assault and battery after a confrontation with Adaire Lazaro outside of the meeting.

VaNews May 15, 2024