A statewide group wants lawmakers to block Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s board appointments.
Spotlight on VPM Original Content
Virginia News
NPR News
Virginia News
-
Some residents could have new internet service by February 2025.
-
Take a look at this week's top VPM News stories.
-
City leaders do not have a plan or timeline for voting to formally adopt the statement.
-
Five families sued the school division over a policy they say violates students’ rights.
-
Tainted deli meat caused 10 deaths, 61 illnesses and the closing of a Southside Virginia plant.
-
Gov. Glenn Youngkin has argued the carbon market is a regressive tax.
NPR News
-
Some 20 cases remain to be decided — about a third of the total argued cases — many of them the most important of the term. But the shadow docket, with its own list of cases, looms over the other opinions.
-
A federal judge has temporarily halted the Trump administration's order to close America's 99 Job Corps centers, which provide residential training programs for 25,000 disadvantaged youth annually.
-
The last place Brad Larsen saw his mom before she died was at a diner in New York. A few years later, he went back. The bartender asked if he remembered their table, and invited him to sit there.
-
Israel says it has largely knocked out Iran's air defenses. In contrast, Israel still has strong air defenses in place, though some Iranian missiles are breaking through with lethal results.
-
Chesapeake Bay is at a turning point. Once severely polluted, the bay has seen major improvements in recent years. But President Trump's proposed budget would slash key programs.