From VaNews <[email protected]>
Subject Special Saturday Edition
Date March 28, 2020 2:48 PM
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VaNews
March 28, 2020

Today's Sponsor:


** Virginia Hospital Association
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Virginia’s hospitals, health systems, and dedicated health care professionals are on the front lines responding to the COVID-19 pandemic. Community hospitals are there for you and your family 24/7/365. Learn more at vhha.com ([link removed]) [link removed]

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Top of the News


** Virginia, Maryland governors warn that hospitals soon may be overwhelmed ([link removed])
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By ANTONIO OLIVO, OVETTA WIGGINS AND FENIT NIRAPPIL, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

The governors of Maryland and Virginia warned Friday that local hospitals soon could be overwhelmed with cases of the novel coronavirus, lacking enough ventilators, respirator masks and other equipment to meet the expected surge of patients....“The issue is very simple: We do not have enough testing materials or personal protective equipment for our medical staff and first responders,” Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam (D) said during a briefing for reporters. “If we act like this doesn’t apply to us, we will literally see more cases. We’ll see our hospitals overwhelmed.”
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** Avula: Virginia COVID-19 cases could jump 10X in next week and a half ([link removed])
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By KATE ANDREWS, Virginia Business

Dr. Danny Avula, director of the Henrico County and Richmond health departments, warned Friday, “We need to be prepared that we might have a 10x jump [in the number of COVID-19 cases] in the next week and a half” in the state, which would overwhelm hospitals.
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** Two more deaths at Canterbury Rehab ([link removed])
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By MICHAEL MARTZ, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

Two more residents of Canterbury Rehabilitation & Healthcare Center have died, but state health officials and the Henrico County nursing home can’t yet say their deaths were caused by COVID-19 as part of the coronavirus pandemic sweeping through Virginia. Canterbury said Friday that the two additional deaths were “presumed positive” cases but had not been confirmed as COVID-19, the severe respiratory disease caused by the coronavirus.
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** From VPAP Map, Timeline of COVID-19 in Virginia ([link removed])
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The Virginia Public Access Project

Numbers released this morning show confirmed COVID-19 cases grew to 739, up from 604. VPAP has a statewide map showing the number of cases by locality and a new tool showing which localities have the most cases per 100,000 people.
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** How will Virginia Beach, other cities keep large crowds off beaches? ([link removed])
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By STACY PARKER, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

With temperatures rising outside and families getting stir crazy, a day at the beach might seem like just what the doctor ordered. But with Virginia still in the throes of a coronavirus pandemic, a lazy beach day comes with a set of rules. Gov. Ralph Northam has forbidden groups of more than 10 people from gathering, and health officials are urging people to stay at least six feet apart. While private gyms and some public recreational outlets have shuttered — Virginia Beach on Thursday closed its playgrounds, basketball and volleyball courts, dog and skate parks — the governor stopped shy this week of buttoning up the state’s beaches. He left it up to localities to enforce his mandate.
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** As virus causes a changing world, government roles shift to adapt ([link removed])
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By CALEB AYERS, Danville Register & Bee

Mary Britton’s job as a crossing guard was suddenly obsolete when Gov. Ralph Northam mandated Virginia schools close for the rest of the academic year. She normally directs traffic at four different Danville schools. While the other four crossing guards elected to remain at home for the time being, Britton has taken on an entirely new role: assisting Penny Bryant, the quartermaster with the Danville Police Department, in locating cleaning supplies and personal protective equipment, which are difficult to find right now, as well as stocking the vehicles.
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** Sewing a good deed ([link removed])
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By TONIA MOXLEY AND ALICIA PETSKA, Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 18 articles a month)

Carol Davis doesn’t know exactly how she became the epicenter of a fast-spreading movement to put sewing machines to use to fight COVID-19. But the town resident is now working to organize a group of more than 80 people who want to help stave off shortages of crucial surgical-grade masks for health care workers. To do that, the NRV Mask Makers Facebook group is sewing cloth masks to distribute to facilities that use masks but won’t be on the front lines of coronavirus response.
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The Full Report
38 articles, 25 publications

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** FROM VPAP
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** VPAP Visual Presidential Fundraising in Virginia ([link removed])
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The Virginia Public Access Project

New Federal Election Commission data shows how much President Trump and Democrats Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders raised from Virginia donors in the two months leading to the 'Super Tuesday' Democratic presidential primary on March 3.


** EXECUTIVE BRANCH
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** Northam calls on Trump to address supply shortage, open federal coronavirus testing site ([link removed])
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By MARIE ALBIGES AND SALEEN MARTIN, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Gov. Ralph Northam said Friday the state is competing with Virginia’s own healthcare systems, other states and other countries to buy personal protective equipment and coronavirus testing supplies, but that responsibility should fall on the federal government. “We are all out there bidding literally against each other,” Northam said at a news conference in Richmond.
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** 'We’re all out there bidding literally against each other' ([link removed])
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By STAFF REPORT, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

Gov. Ralph Northam is calling on the federal government to provide a “national solution” to address the critical shortage of masks, gloves and other protective equipment. At a news conference on Friday, Northam said that a stunted supply of personal protective equipment, in part due to manufacturing delays in China, has left Virginia and health care providers competing in the market for the needed goods.
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** Northam defends not issuing stay-at-home order for Virginians ([link removed])
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By KATE MASTERS, Virginia Mercury

Asked whether he would implement a shelter-in-place order to reduce further spread of COVID-19, the disease caused by a new coronavirus, Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam contended that the mandate was just another description for what he had already done....But some residents and local leaders have called on Northam to implement additional restrictions as COVID-19 continues to spread across the commonwealth. As of Friday, there were 604 positive cases, 83 hospitalizations and 14 deaths in Virginia.
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** Northam seeks federal funding for National Guard ([link removed])
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By AMY FRIEDENBERGER, Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 18 articles a month)

Virginia’s congressional delegation has asked President Donald Trump to swiftly approve federal funding for the Virginia National Guard to deal with problems caused by the COVID-19 outbreak. Gov. Ralph Northam is seeking to have the National Guard operate under a status that allows the state to continue to manage the troops but have the costs covered by the federal government.


** GENERAL ASSEMBLY
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** Localities: Delay minimum wage increase, other unfunded mandates, but protect K-12 funding ([link removed])
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By MICHAEL MARTZ, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

Virginia’s local governments say they face economic calamity unless the state delays new legislation — including an increase in the minimum wage, permission to allow collective bargaining for local government employees and expanded eligibility for workers’ compensation — that the General Assembly enacted this year before the coronavirus pandemic shut down many businesses and put thousands of Virginians out of work.


** STATE GOVERNMENT
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** Judicial Emergency extended in Virginia, pausing court cases across the state ([link removed])
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WTVR

The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Virginia has extended the length of a “judicial emergency” declared in response to the COVID-19 outbreak in the Commonwealth, and is delaying many types of court cases as a result. The extension, issued Friday, will extend the judicial emergency until April 26. It was initially scheduled to run until April 6.
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** Some non-violent inmates released from area jails amidst coronavirus pandemic ([link removed])
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By JAMES SCOTT BARON, Free Lance-Star (Metered Paywall - 10 articles a month)

A statement from the Virginia Department of Corrections said there are no known cases of COVID-19 within Virginia’s jails and prisons. But some inmates may be heading home as a safety precaution. “These are low-level inmates, all serving relatively light sentences,” said Eric Olsen, Stafford County’s commonwealth’s attorney. “I’m looking at this purely from a public safety issue, and we’re looking at each case carefully.”


** CONGRESS
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** Wexton bill to protect retirement savings included in coronavirus stimulus package ([link removed])
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By JOSH JANNEY, Winchester Star (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

Legislation introduced by Rep. Jennifer Wexton, D-10th, to safeguard Americans’ retirement savings in the midst of the financial crisis brought on by the coronavirus was incorporated into the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, signed by President Trump on Friday.
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** Western Virginia congressmen support $2 trillion coronavirus relief package ([link removed])
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By AMY FRIEDENBERGER, Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 18 articles a month)

The House of Representatives on Friday approved a historic $2 trillion coronavirus relief package, with Western Virginia’s three Republican congressmen supporting the legislation....Here’s what the three congressmen had to say about the new law


** ECONOMY/BUSINESS
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** $1 million fund established to help local businesses recover from coronavirus ([link removed])
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Winchester Star (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

Local businesses can now apply for a grant to help them recover from the effects of the coronavirus pandemic. Ogden Newspapers Inc., the parent company of The Winchester Star, has established a $1 million fund to help local businesses get back to full strength by subsidizing local marketing efforts through matching grants.


** HIGHER EDUCATION
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** College professors make a rapid pivot to teaching online ([link removed])
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By NICK ANDERSON, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

Like many mathematicians, Ken Ono cherishes the dense Japanese chalk that brings his work to life on slate blackboards. The professor often hands those white Hagoromo sticks to students so they, too, can wrestle with theorems and proofs in front of the class. It is a tactile ritual, he believes, rooted in the math traditions of the ancient Arabs and Greeks. Now Ono must make do with a digital pen, an iPad and a Zoom video link as he launches a remote session of Math 3354 for the University of Virginia.
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** Liberty University to offer $1,000 credit to students who leave dorms by Saturday because of coronavirus ([link removed])
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By RICHARD CHUMNEY, News & Advance (Metered Paywall - 18 articles a month)

Liberty University will offer $1,000 credits to students who decide not to return to campus residence halls because of the coronavirus pandemic, the university announced Friday.


** CORONAVIRUS
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** Army Corps of Engineers scopes out possible field hospitals in Virginia as coronavirus cases rise ([link removed])
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By MATT JONES, Virginia Gazette (Metered Paywall - 4 Articles per Month)

The McCormack-Nagelsen Tennis Center at the College of William & Mary was busy, but not with tennis players. A team of engineers, wearing red U.S. Army Corps of Engineers shirts, set up shop in the lobby Friday afternoon before spreading out across the building. Their mission: to assess if the center could be turned into an alternative medical facility if the area’s hospitals are overwhelmed by the new coronavirus pandemic.
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** Envoy of Williamsburg won’t test residents for coronavirus, staff say ([link removed])
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By JULIA MARSIGLIANO, Williamsburg-Yorktown Daily (Metered paywall - 3 articles per month)

Some of the staff at the Envoy of Williamsburg are concerned after they say the facility recently changed its coronavirus (COVID 19) procedures. That’s according to Ellice Darien, a former LPN and unit manager for Envoy. She said the facility’s corporate office, Consulate Health Care, told staff they were not allowed to test patients with coronavirus symptoms at the 130-bed nursing home.
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** Fairfax County Reports Second COVID-19 Death ([link removed])
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By CATHERINE DOUGLAS MORAN, Reston Now

A man in his 60s is the second person to die from complications from COVID-19 in the Fairfax County, according to officials. The Fairfax County Health Department announced Friday evening that the man acquired COVID-19 through travel and later tested positive for the virus.
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** James City County positive cases go up; state now has 604. Half of the deaths were in the Peninsula ([link removed])
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By JULIA MARSIGLIANO, Southside Daily

Gov. Ralph Northam said Friday all Virginians must practice social distancing and urged residents to stay home except for essential needs for the next few weeks. . . . As of Friday, James City County remains to have one of the highest positive cases of coronavavirus in the state, according to the Virginia Department of Health. Virginia Beach has 29 cases, Newport News with 12, York at nine, Norfolk at eight, Hampton, Chesapeake and Williamsburg at five each, Portsmouth and Gloucester at three each and Isle of Wight and Accomack at two each.
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** Low area case count in SW Va. not due to lack of testing ([link removed])
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By DAVID MCGEE, Bristol Herald Courier (Metered Paywall - 15 articles a month)

Southwest Virginia continues to have a mere handful of confirmed cases of COVID-19, but that isn’t due to a lack of testing, according to Dr. Karen Shelton, director of the Mount Rogers Health District. As of Friday afternoon, there is one case each in Bristol, Washington County and the city of Galax in the Mount Rogers district. Lee County, which is in the Lenowisco district, has two cases.
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** Distance learning poses challenges for students, teachers ([link removed])
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By JIMMY O'KEEFE, Associated Press

Students and teachers at all levels of education are transitioning from classroom to computer as the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases continues to rise. Not every subject lends itself to a smooth transition to distance learning, as students and instructors have discovered. “I think we’re all really frustrated,” said Jordyn Wade, a fashion design major at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond. “But we know that our professors are doing what they can in a really unprecedented situation.”
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** Golfers travel to find open Virginia courses during coronavirus crisis ([link removed])
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By NEAL AUGENSTEIN, WTOP

Golf has always been a one-person game, with social distancing built into the 18-hole tour, around approximately 7,000 yards of grass, sand, water and trees — but COVID-19 has players traveling miles to find places to play. When Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam ordered the closure of nonessential businesses and public schools on March 23, he specified indoor recreation facilities, gymnasiums and fitness centers — but there was no mention of golf courses.
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** Chincoteague orders hotels, campgrounds, rentals to close — or face charges ([link removed])
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By TAYLOR GOEBEL, delmarvanow

Chincoteague, Virginia, is ordering all visitor accommodations to close by Sunday, March 29, and stay closed through April 27, to help slow the spread of the coronavirus. Those businesses include hotels, motels, cottages, bed-and-breakfasts, rental homes, Airbnb's and campgrounds, according to a statement by Mayor J. Arthur Leonard released Friday.
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** Surfers fend off coronavirus anxiety by getting barreled in Virginia Beach with help from an offshore wind ([link removed])
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By STACY PARKER, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Justin Owens tends to stay away from other surfers in the ocean even when there’s not a deadly virus going around. So when an offshore wind kicked up Friday morning, he and his family headed to the beach. Owens, 34, got barreled in the glassy face of a wave near the 1st Street Jetty, while his wife exercised on the shore.
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** A walk through town: Families, coronavirus and togetherness ([link removed])
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By DENISE LAVOIE, Associated Press

In a quiet suburb just north of Richmond, Virginia, a mother and her three children spend a weekday afternoon planting a small garden of spinach, red cabbage and lettuce. Across town, a dad teaches his kids how to play volleyball on an empty court. In a sprawling park, a father shows his son and daughter the perfect flick of the wrist to skip rocks in a stream.
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** Virginia Beach couple adopts dog after owner dies from coronavirus ([link removed])
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By KOFO LASAKI, WTKR

The dog days are far from over for 14-month-old Noah. In fact, they’re just beginning for the energetic pup and his new parents, Phil and Grace Wellman While families are losing a lot during this difficult time, the Virginia Beach family gained a tremendous gift— a St. Bernard who comes from a loving home in Florida.


** VIRGINIA OTHER
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** Federal reviews delay Mountain Valley Pipeline yet again ([link removed])
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By LAURENCE HAMMACK, Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 18 articles a month)

A winter hiatus in construction of the Mountain Valley Pipeline will last well into the spring. The latest delay came this week, with word that two federal agencies will take another month to review one of several approvals — set aside by legal challenges from environmental groups — that must be restored before work can ramp up on the highly disputed natural gas pipeline.


** LOCAL
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** Supervisors Pass Electronic Meetings Rule Amid Emergency ([link removed])
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By RENSS GREENE, Loudoun Now

County supervisors held an emergency meeting Wednesday, March 25 to pass an ordinance allowing them to hold remote meetings during the national, state and local state of emergency in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. In normal times, The Virginia Freedom of Information Act requires a quorum of members of a public body to be physically present in the room to conduct business, and to make the meeting open and accessible to the public. Under the emergency ordinance, public bodies, including the Board of Supervisors, the Planning Commission and other board-appointed government panels, do not need a quorum of members to be physically present; ...
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** Prince William County Patnering with MurLarkey Distillery to Provide Hand Sanitizer to Healthcare Workers ([link removed])
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Bristow Beat

Prince William County is partnering with MurLarkey Distillery in Bristow to make hand sanitizer that will go to first responders and healthcare workers. Mike Larkin, the president and one of MurLarkey’s founders, said the distillery recently made 30 gallons, or 300 units, in its first batch of hand sanitizer, but ran out of glycerin, one of the key ingredients in making hand sanitizer.
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** County government will seek $50-million credit line ([link removed])
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By DON DEL ROSSO, Fauquier Now

As a precaution, Fauquier’s board of supervisors Thursday afternoon agreed to seek a $50-million line-of-credit to offset the potential loss of tax revenue from real estate owners unable to make payments on federal-government backed mortgages because of the coronavirus pandemic. “This is reactive,” County Administrator Paul S. McCulla said in an interview. “We don’t expect to use it.”
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** Albemarle emergency ordinance allows virtual meetings ([link removed])
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By ALLISON WRABEL, Daily Progress (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

The Albemarle County Board of Supervisors and county authorities now may meet virtually during the COVID-19 pandemic without having to have a quorum in the same physical space. At a special meeting Friday morning, the Albemarle County Board of Supervisors passed an emergency ordinance to ensure continuity of government, and outlined procedures for public meetings, deadlines and succession, among other things.
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** Franklin County suspends superintendent search, citing pandemic ([link removed])
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By CLARE MITZEL, Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 18 articles a month)

The Franklin County School Board has suspended its ongoing superintendent search due to the novel coronavirus pandemic. Superintendent Mark Church has agreed to serve through December.
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** Fairfax County Schools to Begin Online Learning on April 14 ([link removed])
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By FATIMAH WASEEM, Reston Now

Although schools will remain closed through the academic year due to a state order, Fairfax County Public Schools will kick off distance learning on April 14. Beginning next week, teachers will receive virtual training to begin the transition. Last week, elementary and middle school principals met with the school system’s leadership to receive updates on the overall plan for resuming instruction.
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** Aldrin Elementary Principal Hosts Online Storytime for Kids ([link removed])
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By ASHLEY HOPKO, Reston Now

Although schools are closed, Aldrin Elementary School Principal Shane Wolfe said he is trying to help his students regain a sense of normalcy by bringing people together through a shared love for storytime and feeling of community. Wolfe began hosting Facebook Live events on March 18, which he said quickly attracted the attraction of hundreds of kids from Aldrin Elementary and across the country.
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** Teacher Drive Through Spreads Joy During COVID-19 Outbreak ([link removed])
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By MEGAN PAULY, WCVE

More than 20 Southampton Elementary teachers lined up their cars in the school parking lot Thursday morning for a parade around student neighborhoods. “It’s good to see people! People are everywhere, yay people!” Nicole Benjamin exclaimed joyfully. Benjamin, a math interventionist at Southampton, had already been away from school for the first two weeks of March recovering from surgery. She was ready to go back to work, but then Benjamin got the call that school would be closed for two weeks. Since then, the closure was extended for the rest of the academic year.
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** Cougar Paw Parade helps Stuarts Draft Elementary staff stay 'heart-connected' to students ([link removed])
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By PATRICK HITE AND LEANNA SMITH, News Leader (Metered Paywall - 3 to 4 articles a month)

Averi Harris stood on the sidewalk in a Stuarts Draft subdivision Thursday afternoon. With her mom by her side, Harris held up a sign, waiting for the parade of teachers to drive past. Harris's sign read, "Mrs. Hall. Love you. Miss you."...The parade Harris was anxiously awaiting was made up of staff members from Stuarts Draft Elementary School. They wanted a chance to see their students one more time this school year. More than 40 cars were lined up in the school's parking lot Thursday, pulling out a little after 3 p.m., complete with an escort from the Augusta County Sheriff's Office.
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** Park Volunteers Continue Work While Social Distancing ([link removed])
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By JAKOB CORDES, WCVE

Even as the COVID-19 pandemic upends daily life, dedicated volunteers continue their fight against invasive plants in the James River Park System. Although they’ve had to make adjustments to limit coronavirus exposure risks, they say they can’t stop their work now.

Today's Sponsor:


** Virginia Hospital Association
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Virginia’s hospitals, health systems, and dedicated health care professionals are on the front lines responding to the COVID-19 pandemic. Community hospitals are there for you and your family 24/7/365. Learn more at vhha.com ([link removed]) [link removed]


** EDITORIALS
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** Local governments crucial to pandemic fight ([link removed])
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Winchester Star Editorial (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

Most of the news about government’s response to COVID-19 has been released at the state and federal levels. But as the epidemic spreads, local governments will become more and more critical. Some municipal and county officials in our area already have begun planning for that time. Those who have not should. We know lightning-quick reactions save lives.
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** Why isn't the nation's only doctor-governor a media star right now? ([link removed])
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Roanoke Times Editorial (Metered Paywall - 18 articles a month)

The COVID-19 pandemic has thrust America’s governors into the spotlight like never before. They are the ones on the front lines, so to speak, deciding whether schools should shut down, which businesses must close and which ones can stay open, sometimes issuing “stay-at-home” orders the likes of which haven’t been seen since the 1918 flu pandemic. This is not what any of them were elected for — they were all elected on the basis of some political platform not their expertise in epidemiology.


** COLUMNISTS
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** Schapiro: Northam bill review goes virtual because of virus ([link removed])
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By JEFF E. SCHAPIRO, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

After his livestream update to Virginians on Wednesday afternoon on the coronavirus, Gov. Ralph Northam returned to his office on the third floor of the Patrick Henry Building to meet with his policy staff on legislation sent to him by the General Assembly. Two members of the staff, Carter Hutchinson and Connor Andrews, were waiting for Northam — not in the conference room with its view of Old City Hall, but about two miles away, in their Fan District apartment, where they have been vetting bills, using a ping-pong table as a desk and a laundry hamper as a computer stand.
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