Across Virginia, VA|News|
In Question-And-Answer Form, Author Explains Paxlovid And Its Effects
(By Patrick Jackson, an assistant professor of infectious diseases at Virginia.)
(By Patrick Jackson, an assistant professor of infectious diseases at Virginia.)
A new report shows there's still a persistent gap between teacher salaries in Virginia and the national average.
Who will benefit from the appeal of a federal court ruling?
The Virginia General Assembly's one-day veto session featured a secretive Democratic coup, and an accusation against Youngkin.
The estate of the late Virginia Sen. Miller, the first Black woman to serve in both chambers of the assembly, is suing a skill-game company.
For the second year in a row, Petersburg ranked as the least healthy locality in Virginia while Falls Church took over first place.
In Williamsburg, on the Environmental Protection Agency's map of radon risks, Virginia's coastal plain is a sunny shade of yellow.
Democrats in the Virginia Senate voted Wednesday to reject Gov. Glenn Youngkin's proposal for a gas tax holiday.
The Democratic caucus in the Virginia House of Delegates removed former Speaker Eileen Filler-Corn as their leader Wednesday.
(The author is executive director of the Local Energy Alliance Program.)
After a slow start, solar has been booming in Virginia.
Experts are urging Bristol, Va., to stop using its local landfill, after finding nearly a dozen deficiencies linked to air pollution.
It's been decades — at least three of them — with a continuous litany of embarrassments, mismanagement, tragedy, even death.
President Joe Biden's administration works to restore key components of a landmark environmental law altered under Trump.
Virginia's General Assembly won't be voting on a spending plan when they reconvene Wednesday, according to budget negotiators.
The visitors center at the Virginia Capitol will be closed a while as the state builds an underground tunnel and continues waterproofing.
For more than two years, COVID-19 has largely monopolized the time and resources of local health departments across Virginia.
Why should anyone believe Alex Jones ever tells the truth? He's an execrable conspiracy theorist, recently "making news" in Virginia.
Edwards's comment occurred not long into his “State of the Port” address before a packed oceanfront hotel ballroom in Virginia Beach.
Ostensibly a form of protection, Shin says, the end result of these amendments could be viewed as discrimination, she adds.