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Biden, in Prince William, touts solar investments in Virginia on Earth Day

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

President Joe Biden on Monday celebrated the 54th anniversary of Earth Day with a return trip to Prince William County, announcing a $7 billion investment to help low- and middle-income families buy solar panels for their homes. The investment includes more than $156 million in grants for Virginia. A trio of progressive Democratic leaders — Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass. — joined Biden in a ringing commitment for the U.S. to lead the fight against climate change.

VaNews April 23, 2024


Richmond’s baseball stadium was billed as risk-free. Now leaders say there is risk.

By ERIC KOLENICH, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

For two years, the city of Richmond pitched a new minor-league baseball stadium as a project that would have no impact on the city’s taxpayers. This month, however, city leaders made a significant pivot. Deciding the old plan had become too expensive, they announced a new financing structure. The city will issue general obligation bonds and, if the worst-case scenario unfolds, the city would have to delay programs or raise taxes to pay off the debt.

VaNews April 23, 2024


Yancey: State says some rural counties are better able to pay for their schools than the most affluent localities

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

Craig County was home to just 4,892 people in the most recent census and is getting smaller in each subsequent estimate. The third least-populated county in the state, Craig is a beautiful land of mountains and valleys with virtually no industry — 78% of the workers leave the county every day to work. The state of Virginia also says it’s almost as capable of paying for its own school as Prince William County in Northern Virginia is, with one key difference. In the state’s funding formula known as the Local Composite Index, Prince William County, the land of more than 40 data centers where payrolls are calculated in the billions, saw its ability to pay for schools drop — while Craig County saw its supposed ability rise.

VaNews April 23, 2024


Bedford school board files $600K lawsuit against father of special needs student

By GRAHAM MOOMAW, Virginia Mercury

The Bedford County School Board filed a lawsuit seeking $600,000 in damages from the father of a special needs student, claiming the man’s abrasive communications with school staff about his son’s treatment over the last three years amounts to illegal intimidation and harassment. In court filings, Bedford resident David Rife insists he’s the one being intimidated, noting that the county school board sued him shortly after he filed a complaint with the Virginia Department of Education saying local school officials weren’t following the individualized education program, or IEP, designed to accommodate his son’s learning disability and improve his reading skills. When he filed the complaint, Rife told state officials he feared he would face retaliation locally, according to court documents.

VaNews April 23, 2024


Health plan costs to rise for some state workers

By DAVE RESS, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

Some Virginia state employees will pay more for health insurance beginning July 1, following the state’s latest review and projection of claims. Overall, the state Department of Human Resource Management proposed a 6.3% increase in total premiums for the next fiscal year. But full-time employee contributions — the sums taken out of paychecks — will rise by less than that. For some plans, there will be no increase at all.

VaNews April 23, 2024


England: Thankfully, Virginia rejects measures that would unleash chaos upon voters

By TRENT ENGLAND, published in Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

Virginia voters can have confidence in November that the election process will be simple and their votes will count. That’s because of the defeat of two radical election proposals pushed by well-financed lobbying groups. Each would have made voting less transparent and more confusing. Voters were spared the latest mess only by gubernatorial veto on April 8. That bill, Senate Bill 428, would have required the commonwealth to assist local implementation of an election system known as ranked choice voting, or RCV.

England is founder and executive director of Save Our States and co-chairman of the Stop Ranked-Choice Voting Coalition.

VaNews April 23, 2024


Powhatan County School Board adopts state’s model policy on transgender students

By ROSLYN RYAN, Powhatan Today

After previously voting it down, the Powhatan County School Board voted 4-1 on April 16 in favor of adopting a controversial policy related to the division’s treatment of students who identify as transgender or nonbinary. Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s “Model Policies on Ensuring Privacy, Dignity, and Respect for All Students and Parents in Virginia’s Public Schools,” had been opposed 3-2 by the Powhatan School Board last December, during the last meeting of the previously-elected board.

VaNews April 23, 2024


Warrenton town staff approves site plan for 220,000-square-foot Amazon data center project

By GRACE SCHUMACHER, Fauquier Now

Warrenton town staff has approved the site development plan for Amazon’s proposed 220,000-square-foot data center campus on the 42-acre plot of land at the intersection of Blackwell Road and Lee Highway off the Route 17 Spur in town. The approval, which came after staff’s fourth review and was detailed in a letter released Thursday, comes with 27 conditions and requirements. The conditions of approval, written with the intent of governing the project’s development, cover various aspects including adherence to approved plans, compliance with the 25 special use permit conditions and environmental considerations.

VaNews April 22, 2024


Hopewell ex-city attorney raises delinquent-tax issue concerning treasurer

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

Hopewell’s outgoing city attorney has recommended that the Virginia attorney general’s office look into claims by an alleged department employee that the city’s treasurer improperly removed herself from a state agency’s list of delinquent taxpayers without attempting to settle her own tax debts. The allegations against Shannon Foskey were brought up in a letter sent last week to Commonwealth’s Attorney Rick Newman and cited in an April 18 memo from now-former city attorney Danielle Smith to City Manager Dr. Concetta Manker.

VaNews April 22, 2024


Federal program that helps low-income residents pay for internet is ending, affecting more than 346,000 Virginians

By TAD DICKENS, Cardinal News

A federal program that gives discounts on internet service to low-income households is ending this month, with no immediate plan to replace it. The Affordable Connectivity Program for two years provided discounts of $30 a month, or $75 a month for people on tribal land. The $14.2 billion Congress made available through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law has run out, and the Federal Communications Commission accepted its final application on Feb. 8. The program also included one-time $100 discounts on laptop, desktop or tablet purchases. Despite multiple requests to extend the program — including from lawmakers and the FCC chairwoman — neither the Senate nor the House of Representatives is on schedule to address it.

VaNews April 22, 2024