Tuesday, November 4, 2014
State and Local Stories
Ask any longtime friend or associate to recall the late Del. Clifton A. “Chip” Woodrum and the first thing you’ll hear about was his uncanny sense of humor and rapier wit. By profession, Woodrum was a lawyer. As a part-time lawmaker from 1980 through 2003 he balanced a keen mind and legendary manners with a big heart and uncommon good sense. He probably could have been one of America’s top comedians, too. Lesser known is Woodrum’s passion for citizens’ ability to gather and analyze information about the bureaucracies that govern their daily lives. Not only did he advocate for open government, he was one of the Virginia General Assembly’s few champions of it. It’s that trait that will be front and center shortly. The Virginia Coalition for Open Government has announced a new internship named in Woodrum’s honor. Next week, they’ll throw a reception here in Roanoke to raise money to help fund that. During each two-month Virginia General Assembly session, the coalition will hire one college student, part-time, to that year’s Chip Woodrum Legislative Internship. The students selected will have a front-row seat to the legislative process. Al Casteen of the Smithfield District is not pleased to learn about it.
Dan Casey, Roanoke Times
As a reported way to save money, Isle of Wight County ceased advertising legal notices in both The Tidewater News and The Smithfield Times effective this past summer. The notices serve, for example, to inform people when different departments of county government will have public meetings. Instead, since July the notices have been published in The Daily Press, which is based in Newport News.
Tidewater News
The Richmond School Board has formally censured member Tichi L. Pinkney Eppes, of the 9th District, for breaching student confidentiality. During its work session Monday in City Hall, the board formally reprimanded Eppes for sharing confidential student information with a school system vendor in September. In a special meeting Oct. 16, the board agreed to the censure. It was done publicly again to “memorialize” the action during a regularly scheduled meeting.
Times-Dispatch
Local philanthropist David M. Rubenstein announced Saturday that he is giving $10 million to Montpelier, the historic Orange, Va., home of the nation’s fourth president, James Madison. The donation comes on the heels of Rubenstein’s gifts of $5 million to the White House Visitor Center in September and $12.3 million to Arlington House, the home of Robert E. Lee, in July. He also paid $7.5 million of the $15 million cost of the repairs to theWashington Monument after the 2011 earthquake.
Washington Post
David Poole is the executive director of the Virginia Public Access Project, a nonpartisan tracker of money in Virginia politics. Poole is a Florida native and a graduate of the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. He founded VPAP in 1997 after a 14-year career as a newspaper reporter. His last assignment was covering state politics for Landmark Communications, which at the time owned The Roanoke Times and The (Norfolk) Virginian-Pilot.
Times-Dispatch
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