EXECUTIVE BRANCHVIRGINIA’S FIRST LADY VISITS LOCAL SCHOOLS
By DAVID BROYLES,
Carroll News
First Lady Pamela Northam visited early childhood education programs and elementary schools in each of the Commonwealth’s eight Superintendent Regions this week, highlighting the importance of school readiness. Two local locations she visited Aug. 21 were St. Paul Elementary and Independence Elementary. STATE ELECTIONSHARDING ISSUES SENATE DEBATE CHALLENGE TO DEEDS
By MIKE BOLLINGER,
Highland Recorder
(Subscription required)
Independent Elliott Harding, who is challenging incumbent Creigh Deeds (D-Bath) for the 25th district seat in the Virginia Senate, has proposed a series of six debates between the two beginning the week of Sept. 23. FEDERAL ELECTIONSTRUMP CAMPAIGN SEEKS TO MOBILIZE WOMEN IN 2020 BATTLEGROUND STATES
Reuters
President Donald Trump's re-election campaign hosted events in 2020 battleground states on Thursday to mobilize and train suburban women, an important voting bloc that defected from Republicans during last year's congressional contests....Jessie Jane Duff, a member of the advisory board for the Trump campaign's women coalition, told about 100 mostly white women packed into the basement of the Fairfax County Republican Party headquarters in Virginia that "the greatest threat to Democrats are right here. Women." STATE GOVERNMENTVIRGINIA SUPREME COURT UPHOLDS CIRCUIT COURT DECISION IN HHHUNT LAWSUIT AGAINST HENRICO COUNTY
By C. SUAREZ ROJAS,
Richmond Times-Dispatch
(Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)
The Virginia Supreme Court on Thursday upheld a circuit court ruling favorable to Henrico County in a dispute with the development arm of HHHunt Corp. The company initially sued Henrico two years ago after Wyndham residents successfully lobbied the county’s Board of Supervisors to abandon plans to extend a road there into a proposed development across the Hanover County line. ECONOMY/BUSINESSFAUQUIER MAN AMONG 955 CERTIFIED HEMP FARMERS IN VIRGINIA
By DON DEL ROSSO,
Fauquier Now
Eager for a new career, the Marshall-based contractor has plunged into the hemp production business. “I think I’ve had enough of going up to Northern Virginia, making the commute to look for work,” explained Travis Lane, 29, who owns a pool construction and landscaping company. TRANSPORTATION‘IT’S A WASTE OF TIME’: WASHINGTON IS NO. 3 IN TRAFFIC CONGESTION, STUDY SAYS
By DANA HEDGPETH,
Washington Post
(Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)
It comes as no surprise to commuters: The nation’s traffic is bad and getting worse. Drivers in the Washington region are feeling their share of road congestion, spending more time sitting in traffic, on average, than anyone outside of California. Washington drivers spend 102 hours each year in traffic delays, the third-highest amount in the nation, according to a report released Thursday by the Texas A&M Transportation Institute. VIRGINIA OTHERACROSS VIRGINIA, BELLS WILL HONOR FIRST AFRICAN ARRIVALS
By MEL LEONOR,
Richmond Times-Dispatch
(Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)
Bells will toll for four minutes Sunday at Fort Monroe in Hampton and throughout the state to mark the four centuries that have passed since the arrival of the first Africans to English North America. ENVIRONMENTAL GROUPS SEEK TOTAL HALT TO WORK ON MOUNTAIN VALLEY PIPELINE
By LAURENCE HAMMACK,
Roanoke Times
(Metered Paywall - 10 articles a month)
A voluntary suspension of work on parts of the Mountain Valley Pipeline does not adequately protect endangered species, environmentalists say in their latest legal strike against the besieged project. In a motion filed late Wednesday, seven organizations asked a federal appeals court to stay a 2017 approval for the pipeline by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. REPORT: PENNSYLVANIA CITY RESPONSIBLE FOR SENDING LARGE AMOUNTS OF POLLUTION INTO CHESAPEAKE BAY
By SCOTT DANCE,
Baltimore Sun
Baltimore frequently gets the blame for millions of gallons of wastewater that flows from its sewers into waterways, but there is another city responsible for sending large amounts of such contamination and bacteria into the Chesapeake Bay, according to a new report. Overflows from the antiquated sewer system in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, sent more than 1 billion gallons of sewage-tainted wastewater down the Susquehanna River in 2018, LOCALCONTRACTOR WARNED SCHOOL OFFICIALS OF UNCLEANED HVAC UNITS
By JIM MCCONNELL AND RICH GRISET,
Chesterfield Observer
Months before the Virginia Department of Health began investigating an increase in cases of Legionnaires’ disease in Chesterfield, the contractor hired to service HVAC units at county schools repeatedly alerted school officials about significant maintenance problems and recommended testing for Legionella bacteria, documents show. ROANOKE POLICE HAND OUT $250 TICKETS FOR HOLDING A PHONE IN A WORK ZONE
By JEFF STURGEON,
Roanoke Times
(Metered Paywall - 10 articles a month)
When the police officer asked Theresa Passeretti, “Do you know why I pulled you over?” she said she honestly didn’t know. Police have been ticketing motorists for driving in highway construction zones while holding a phone, an act that’s now against the law in Virginia. BOARD TABLES RESOLUTION ON I-81 FUEL TAX
By SHERESE GORE,
Smith Mountain Eagle
The Franklin County Board of Supervisors tabled a resolution that would have requested that the Virginia General Assembly re-evaluate Interstate 81 fuel tax legislation. FRAUD INVESTIGATOR KEEPS EYE ON SOCIAL SERVICES
By LINDA CICOIRA,
Eastern Shore Post
The diligent work of fraud investigator Frances Bailey, of the Accomack County Department of Social Services, is saving thousands of dollars for the local agency. Bailey reported Tuesday that she kept $8,350 in cooling assistance benefits from being fraudulently distributed in the last three months by making sure that only those who were eligible received air-conditioning units for their homes. EDITORIALSHEARINGS EXTEND INACTION ABOUT GUNS
Virginian-Pilot
Editorial
(Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)
When, in the wake of the deadly shooting at the Virginia Beach Municipal Center that claimed 13 lives, Gov. Ralph Northam called lawmakers to Richmond for a special legislative session on gun violence, many of the bills proposed for consideration were quite familiar to lawmakers. THE FRIDAY READA WOMAN’S QUEST TO DISCOVER WHAT HAPPENED TO HER JAPANESE GRANDFATHER AFTER WORLD WAR II
By DENISE WATSON,
Virginian-Pilot
(Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)
Regina Boone pulled the papers out of the fireproof bag. For more than 20 years, she protected the thick package through her moves from teaching in Japan, to her years as a graduate student in Ohio, then as a photojournalist in Richmond, Norfolk, and now, on this December night in 2016, in Detroit. She'd skimmed the pages before but she was finally ready to make good on her promise. |
|