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Richmond Mayor Stoney drops Va. governor bid, seeks lieutenant governor post

By LAURA VOZZELLA, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

Richmond Mayor Levar M. Stoney announced Tuesday that he is dropping out of next year’s race for Virginia governor and running for lieutenant governor instead. Stoney, who has faced a tough contest against U.S. Rep. Abigail Spanberger (Va.) for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination, had been calling donors, supporters and others in recent days to say he would bow out of that race. He made it official with an early-morning news release Tuesday.

VaNews April 24, 2024


Va. AG listens to families seeking justice for gun deaths

By CONOR HOLLINGSWORTH, WTKR-TV

If you took a look around the room at the New Hope Christian Community Center on Tuesday night, you’d see a room of people still grieving from losing a loved one. “It’s a nightmare,” said Radia Capehart, who lost her 15-year-old son, Shayne, to gun violence in 2022. “It’s an absolute nightmare you cannot wake up from. It’s just constant 24/7.”

VaNews April 24, 2024


Bill Moher moves Republican quest for Congress from 7th District to 4th

By MICHAEL MARTZ, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

Bill Moher ended one congressional campaign last month in Northern Virginia and resurfaced this month in Richmond as the Republican nominee in the 4th Congressional District. Moher, a technology and business consultant from Arlington County, will challenge Rep. Jennifer McClellan, D-Richmond, who is seeking her first full term after winning a special election last year to fill the 4th District seat left vacant by the death of Rep. Donald McEachin, D-4th.

VaNews April 24, 2024


Environmental groups challenge Mountain Valley Pipeline extension in federal court

By MATT BUSSE, Cardinal News

Eight environmental groups have filed a petition in federal court challenging regulators’ approval of a planned extension of the Mountain Valley Pipeline, arguing that the project’s scope has changed so much that an earlier approval is no longer relevant. The pipeline developers’ latest plans for the MVP Southgate extension from Pittsylvania County into North Carolina call for a shorter route and a wider pipe to transport nearly twice as much gas as previously planned. Developers have also abandoned plans for a new compressor station in Pittsylvania.

VaNews April 24, 2024


From VPAP Policy Matters: Your Window Into Virginia Politics with VPAP on VPM

The Virginia Public Access Project

This morning on VPM, Ben Dolle engages in a discussion with Chris Piper, Executive Director of VPAP, marking the debut of our monthly recap highlighting key stories from VaNews and showcasing the month’s most popular visual content. Don’t miss out on this discussion; tune in at 7:45 a.m.! If you missed it live, visit vpm.org to hear the recording.

VaNews April 25, 2024


Violent crime survivors, loved ones share stories with Virginia AG at forum

By MARTA BERGLUND, WVEC-TV

Shana Turner is the founder of Hampton Roads Mothers Against Senseless Killings (M.A.S.K.). She started the organization after her son, Shaquille, was killed in 2017. … Turner co-hosted a crime victims’ rights forum Tuesday night, alongside Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares, Pastor Calvin Durham of New Hope Church of God in Christ and local law enforcement leaders.

VaNews April 24, 2024


Judge nixes lawsuit challenging Virginia law on broadband crossings of railroads

By TAD DICKENS, Cardinal News

A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit that disputed a Virginia law governing internet service providers’ ability to string fiber across railroad lines. The lawsuit, which the Association of American Railroads filed last year on behalf of Norfolk Southern and CSX, was a response to a new state law that reduced the approval process time and costs to ISPs, particularly the state’s electric cooperatives, that were trying to reach rural customers across railway tracks.

VaNews April 24, 2024


Who in Virginia is running for Congress? Here are the 2024 candidates.

By PRESTON STEGER, WVEC-TV

Virginia is once again gearing up for primary elections, as voters across the Commonwealth will pick who they want to represent them in the U.S. Congress later this year. One of Virginia’s two seats in the Senate, and all 11 House of Representatives seats are on the ballot on Nov. 5, 2024. Primary elections for those seats will be held on June 18. Several races already have party nominees in place, since those candidates didn’t have anyone else running against them. The deadline to become a candidate in the Democratic or Republican primaries was April 4.

VaNews April 24, 2024


Speed cameras in Chesapeake, Suffolk have raked in millions in fines as lawsuit challenges use

By NATALIE ANDERSON, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Two cities in Hampton Roads with new speed cameras have raked in around $20 million in revenue since implementing the technology over the last two years. But the legality of the processes used to issue citations and collect fees is now being questioned in a lawsuit filed by a former state legislator who says it’s not exactly what the General Assembly intended when it crafted the legislation allowing municipalities to deploy speed cameras.

VaNews April 24, 2024


Former Ginter Park elementary in Richmond renamed to honor school’s first Black teacher, principal

By MEGAN PAULY, VPM

Relatives, friends and neighbors gathered along Chamberlayne Avenue on Tuesday to honor Frances W. McClenney — who the former Ginter Park Elementary School has been renamed after. The school, like Richmond’s botanical garden, was previously named for Confederate Maj. Lewis Ginter. A new school marquee with McClenney’s name was also unveiled. McClenney was the school’s first Black teacher, as well as its first Black principal. Her daughter, Jacqueline McClenney, said the positions came with death threats.

VaNews April 24, 2024