Take a look at this week's top VPM News stories.
Spotlight on VPM Original Content
Virginia News
NPR News
Virginia News
-
County officials cite complaints over unrestrained dogs.
-
The city has 30 days to respond, provide requested information.
-
An executive order halts all new federal leases and permits for offshore wind projects.
-
The springs’ water was tested until the 1970s, a Valentine curator says.
-
Superintendent says “hard choices” are coming for the division.
-
More than 650 people requested fare-free rides in December.
NPR News
-
DOGE's push to cut some federal surveys conducted by the Census Bureau may be duplicating a White House agency's oversight work and weaken U.S. data infrastructure, experts warn.
-
Shira Perlmutter's termination came shortly after the Copyright Office published a long-anticipated report on artificial intelligence.
-
This comes in response to a lawsuit Harvard filed on Friday morning, challenging the Trump administration's abrupt move to revoke the school's ability to enroll foreign students.
-
The White House budget office rejected the conclusion of a nonpartisan congressional watchdog that said the Trump administration is breaking the law by not spending funds as directed by Congress.
-
Five years after George Floyd was murdered by a Minneapolis police officer, the future of the intersection where it happened is uncertain. Today, a memorial is set up in the partially blocked street. But some want to move on. How does a community reckon with its past and confront its future?