Javascript is required to run this page
VaNews

Search


The behind-the-scenes story of how Gov. Glenn Youngkin amended the skill games bill

By MARKUS SCHMIDT, Cardinal News

Aaron Rouse was just about to sit down for a sushi dinner with his family in the late afternoon of Friday, April 5, when he received a call from Jeff Goettman, Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s chief of staff. Goettman wanted to know if Rouse, a Democratic state senator from Virginia Beach, was available for a phone call the next day to discuss his SB 212 that was sitting on the governor’s desk, awaiting his action. The measure, which would establish a regulatory framework and tax structure for so-called skill games in Virginia, had passed in the Senate by a 32-8 bipartisan vote. “When I got the call I was very surprised,” Rouse said in a phone interview. “In my mind I’m thinking, tomorrow is Saturday. OK, sure, I’m here. I was expecting they might want to discuss a couple of amendments, but it turns out they wanted a complete rewrite of the bill — and that’s when I was like, wait a minute, this isn’t how we do things.”

VaNews April 17, 2024


Lawmakers should act boldly by rejoining emissions program

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

State lawmakers have an opportunity today to protect vulnerable communities from destructive and recurrent flooding by voting to return Virginia to the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative. The proceeds from this market-based cap-and-trade program represent a lifeline for Hampton Roads, among other parts of the commonwealth. Gov. Glenn Youngkin has made it his mission to withdraw from this multistate program despite its success, but lawmakers need not be so short-sighted. RGGI membership is making a difference in Virginia and lawmakers can make certain it continues to do so by taking bold action during Wednesday’s veto session.

VaNews April 17, 2024


Kuhn Family Proposes Donation of White’s Ferry to Montgomery County

By NORMAN K. STYER, Loudoun Now

After a three-year stalemate, the Kuhn family is hoping to get White’s Ferry running again by donating it to Montgomery County, MD. Chuck and Stacy Kuhn bought the ferry in early 2021 after it closed following a Loudoun County Circuit Court ruling that the longtime owners did not hold legal authority to use the ferry’s Virginia landing at Rockland Farm. At the time, the Kuhns hoped to quickly restart the operation that provided an important economic and commuter link since 1786. Today it is the only Potomac River crossing between Point of Rocks and the American Legion Bridge.

VaNews April 17, 2024


Internet data centers are fueling drive to old power source: Coal

By ANTONIO OLIVO, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

A helicopter hovers over the Gee family farm, the noisy rattle echoing inside their home in this rural part of West Virginia. It’s holding surveyors who are eyeing space for yet another power line next to the property — a line that will take electricity generated from coal plants in the state to address a drain on power driven by the world’s internet hub in Northern Virginia 35 miles away. There, massive data centers with computers processing nearly 70 percent of global digital traffic are gobbling up electricity at a rate officials overseeing the power grid say is unsustainable unless two things happen: Several hundred miles of new transmission lines must be built, slicing through neighborhoods and farms in Virginia and three neighboring states. And antiquated coal-powered electricity plants that had been scheduled to go offline will need to keep running to fuel the increasing need for more power, undermining clean energy goals.

VaNews April 17, 2024


Toscano: Virginia’s may be the most powerful legislature of them all

By DAVID J. TOSCANO, published in Daily Progress (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

Virginia’s legislature and governor are embroiled in a “two scorpions in a bottle” fight over the new biennial budget, which must be passed by June 30 to fund the government. On Wednesday, both sides returned to Richmond for the “reconvened” or “veto” session. Budget battles in the commonwealth are not unusual, but this one is unique, both in the number of changes Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin proposed to the bipartisan spending plan and the rhetoric that has accompanied the process.

Toscano, an attorney and former mayor of Charlottesville, served 14 years in the House of Delegates representing Charlottesville and Albemarle County, including seven as minority leader.

VaNews April 17, 2024


Fledgling Greene County Water & Sewer drowning in debt

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

When it rains, it pours, and the storm is not letting up for the Greene County Water & Sewer Department. Since withdrawing from the Rapidan Service Authority less than a year ago, the county-run service has incurred more than $20 million in debt — and it has proposed initiatives that could increase that figure eightfold. Greene County residents have complained of paying “an outrageous amount of money,” often hundreds of dollars more than they previously paid under the Rapidan Service Authority, for water bills that arrive months late with inaccurate meter readings.

VaNews April 17, 2024


Va. congressman calls on Metro to hand over documents requested by safety commission

By TOM ROUSSEY, WJLA-TV

Northern Virginia Congressman Gerry Connolly is calling on Metro to hand over documents to the commission overseeing safety after the transit agency refused a request for them. “It’s not a matter of voluntary compliance,” Connolly (D – VA 11th District) told 7News in an interview Tuesday afternoon. “Metro must comply.” … The Washington Metrorail Safety Commission (WMSC) – which was created in part by Connolly and other members of Congress to bring independent oversight to Metro – said it requested documents related to drug and alcohol testing of Metro employees, hazardous materials, and other safety-related issues.

VaNews April 17, 2024


State budget deal uncertain ahead of reconvened session

By JAHD KHALIL, VPM

A day before legislators are set to return to Richmond, Democratic leadership in the General Assembly and Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin seemingly have not reached a budget agreement. Lawmakers on Wednesday will consider Youngkin’s actions on legislation, after he amended 116 bills and vetoed a record 153 others. They’ll also consider his 242 recommendations on the budget, which center around maintaining current tax levels and funds Democrats’ priorities at a lower level than what they proposed.

VaNews April 17, 2024


View the 5 casino plans being pitched for Petersburg

By SEAN JONES, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

Several years after Petersburg joined the fight for the right to operate Virginia’s fifth and final casino, residents and city leaders watched Sunday as five developers bid to show that they had the best project for the city. Each proposal promised jobs, an economic spur for the financially stressed city and millions of dollars in tax revenue. The five companies in the running are Bally’s, Penn Entertainment, the Warrenton Group, Rush Street Gaming and The Cordish Companies, which has partnered with former NFL and Virginia Tech football Hall of Famer Bruce Smith.

VaNews April 17, 2024


Report: Christiansburg middle schoolers seem happier without cellphones

By MIKE GANGLOFF, Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

Students at Christiansburg Middle School were told a month ago to give up their cellphones and other electronic devices during school hours – and seem happier without them, said a report presented Tuesday to the Montgomery County School Board. There also have been numerous phones confiscated after students used them despite the ban, the report said. “I’m seeing smiles on faces instead of the cellphone zombies walking down the hallways and not paying attention to what’s going on around them,” Christiansburg Middle School Principal Danny Knott told school board members.

VaNews April 18, 2024