More than 12,000 families remain on hold for funded slots across the state.
Spotlight on VPM Original Content
Virginia News
NPR News
Virginia News
-
City sets noon press conference; reservoir "almost at full capacity."
-
Officials issued the advisory after a pump failure at a water treatment facility.
-
Thousands are without power, water as temperatures hover around freezing.
-
Three special elections could determine control of the General Assembly.
-
Dozens of Virginians have been convicted or accused of crimes at the 2021 riot.
-
Energy and public safety are also among local officials’ top issues.
NPR News
-
President Trump wants to reframe how the country's stories are told. But historians are pushing back, saying the administration's actions amount to an attack on core institutions — and on history itself.
-
The car you drive years in the future might run off a battery being invented in a lab today. Companies in China and the United States are racing to perfect and scale up next-generation technologies.
-
NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with New York Rep. Mike Lawler about Republicans' divisions that threaten to derail the ongoing budget negotiations.
-
Five years after George Floyd's death, NPR's Michel Martin talks with Toluse Olorunnipa and Robert Samuels, the Pulitzer Prize-winning authors of His Name is George Floyd.
-
The Oval Office meeting went off the rails when President Trump started playing videos and repeating discredited claims about a "white genocide" in South Africa.
Arts & Culture
- Tara Roberts helps scuba divers uncover slave shipwrecks
- New Burying Ground honors enslaved labor at University of Richmond
- Museums, libraries and cultural groups grapple with federal humanities cuts
- ‘Idleness and boredom’: Virginia juvenile justice system strained by staffing shortages