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Metro’s board approves budget, averts big service cuts

By SARAH Y. KIM, WAMU-FM

Metro’s Board of Directors approved a budget Thursday that will enable the agency to close its deficit for the next fiscal year and avert service cuts that would have been disastrous to the region. That’s due to a $463 million combined contribution from D.C., Maryland, and Virginia. Those funds are in addition to annual subsidies the jurisdictions are already legislatively required to contribute.

VaNews April 26, 2024


Yancey: Roanoke named ‘welcoming city’ for immigrants, 100 years after U.S. tried to shut the doors to many

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

Roanoke, a seven-time winner of the All-America City designation, recently won another title. The Star City was named a “Certified Welcoming” city by Welcoming America, a nonprofit dedicated to welcoming immigrants. Roanoke is the first locality in Virginia to earn this distinction and one of just 24 across the country. It’s also the fifth smallest community on that list, which is otherwise dominated by major metros. Given the tenor of the national conversation about immigration, you would not expect to find a small city on the edge of Appalachia to be an officially “welcoming” city for immigrants, yet there Roanoke is. This is just one of many data points about Roanoke that show how it’s different.

VaNews April 26, 2024


More lab schools approved, but not without some controversy

By BRAD KUTNER, WVTF-FM

Governor Glenn Youngkin is still looking to spend $100 million on new lab schools across Virginia, and a handful of applications were approved Thursday. But there were concerns about the viability of at least one of the programs. Lab schools were authorized by the legislature in 2022. They aim to partner with colleges to provide real world experience to students so they can enter the job field more quickly upon graduation. And while the spirit of the program is supported by many, the funding— directly from the state and given to public and private colleges— has been a source of budget fights.

VaNews April 26, 2024


With casino vendor choice made, Petersburg focuses on preparing for the referendum

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

With Wednesday’s approval of The Cordish Companies and Bruce Smith Enterprises as Petersburg’s casino vendor of choice, city officials say the next step in the process is getting the Virginia Lottery Board and a Circuit Court judge on its side in approving the November referendum that ultimately decides the future of legalized gambling here. In an email Thursday afternoon, city spokesperson Joanne Williams said Petersburg and Cordish/BSE will draw up the paperwork to submit to the lottery board, the state agency that governs Virginia’s casino operations.

VaNews April 26, 2024


In Norfolk, Broken Neighborhoods And Broken Trust

By ELIZABETH MCGOWAN, Virginia Center for Investigative Journalism

The red brick apartment building Zenobia Wilson called home for a dozen years was a ringside seat to a noisy, polluting, 14-lane jumble of Interstate-264 overpasses, cloverleaf interchanges and ramps whizzing around the majority-Black St. Paul’s neighborhood. But when the mother of three moved out of Tidewater Gardens in August 2022, it wasn’t by choice. Norfolk was advancing another long-simmering initiative to “deconcentrate poverty,” christened the St. Paul’s Transformation Project. Its initial $400 million phase called for demolishing all 618 units of the deteriorating, barracks style public housing. Everybody had to relocate.

VaNews April 26, 2024


Hashmi and Sickles: Thanks to the Affordable Care Act, health care is becoming more accessible

By GHAZALA HASHMI AND MARK SICKLES, published in Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

This March, we celebrated the 14th anniversary of one of the most landmark health care laws passed in our lifetimes, the Affordable Care Act. As the chairs of our respective health committees in the General Assembly, we are tasked with considering every bill impacting health policy in Virginia. This year, our Democratic majorities passed bills that build on the progress of the ACA by lowering health care costs, including for prescription drugs (although a bill to create a Prescription Drug Affordability Board was unfortunately vetoed by Gov. Glenn Youngkin).

Sen. Hashmi, D-Chesterfield, chairs the Senate Education and Health Committee. Del. Sickles, D-Fairfax, chairs the House Health and Human Services Committee.

VaNews April 26, 2024


Before picking Cordish casino, Petersburg letter said city preferred Bally’s

By GRAHAM MOOMAW, Virginia Mercury

A week before the Petersburg City Council voted unanimously to pick Cordish Companies to potentially build a casino, City Manager John Altman Jr. signed a letter saying the city council intended to pick a competing company, according to a copy of the document obtained by The Virginia Mercury. The April 17 letter of intent addressed to Bally’s, a national casino company that was one of five finalists for the Petersburg project, said the pending deal would still depend on outside factors. However, the letter clearly indicated Bally’s was the city’s initial choice … The city claims the letter was signed under duress as the General Assembly pressured local officials to pick a certain casino company or risk losing the project entirely.

VaNews April 26, 2024


Port of Virginia still expects traffic despite Baltimore port partially reopening after bridge collapse

By ERIKA CRAVEN, WTKR-TV

Roughly one month after a container ship hit and collapsed the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore, the first vessels passed through the Baltimore port after a temporary deep channel opened. The collapse had a ripple effect in Hampton Roads as ports, including the Port of Virginia, absorbed the Baltimore traffic. Even with Baltimore’s port partially reopened, Virginia will still see additional traffic. Our port is expected to get 18,000 to 20,000 containers of cargo from Baltimore this month.

VaNews April 26, 2024


General Assembly updates relationships with federal Virginia Indian tribes

By JAHD KHALIL, VPM News

Two bills passed by the General Assembly this year will affect the commonwealth’s relationship with Native American tribes, after yearslong policy delays. As a result of the legislation, Virginia will consult with federally-recognized tribes on projects with environmental, cultural or historical impact, after the General Assembly accepted amendments from Gov. Glenn Youngkin on legislation. State lawmakers will also have more time to explore how to update Virginia law in light of federal recognition.

VaNews April 26, 2024


Loudoun County Public Schools officials criticize new state-mandated training

By EVAN GOODENOW, Loudoun Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

Training mandated by the Virginia Literacy Act, passed by the General Assembly in 2022, will keep Loudoun County Public Schools teachers busy over the next year. Jeff Rounsley, the LCPS director of teaching and learning, outlined the professional development requirements from the Virginia Department of Education to the School Board at its April 23 meeting. … For reading specialists for kindergarten through third grade, that means 27 to 54 hours of new training, Rounsley said. All elementary school teachers and all middle school English teachers must complete 18 to 27 hours. And other middle school teachers will be required to have nine to 18 hours of training in math, science and social studies.

VaNews April 26, 2024