
“…he told a businessman he would write a letter to the editor in the local newspaper about the incident and the county might not do business with him.”
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For nearly an hour last week, city employees talked to Virginia Beach City Council members about how they were doing in the aftermath of the May 31 mass shooting at the Municipal Center in which 16 people were shot, with 12 killed. Councilwoman Sabrina Wooten arranged the session after she spoke with staff members who wanted to have an open dialogue with the council. The problem was the meeting turned out to be illegal. During a July 2 workshop, Councilwoman Jessica Abbott pointed out that the event would need to be advertised as a public meeting if more than two council members showed up, which City Attorney Mark Stiles confirmed. Five council members — Sabrina Wooten, Bobby Dyer, Barbara Henley, Rosemary Wilson and Michael Berlucchi — attended, according to City Clerk Amanda Barnes.
The Virginian-Pilot
A divided Pittsylvania County Board of Supervisors voted to terminate Coy Harville, who represents the Westover District on the Pittsylvania County Service Authority Board. The board, following a closed meeting, chose to terminate Harville because of comments he made to a local businessman in December. The board did not name the businessman nor did it explain the initial incident that led to the comment. Harville, addressing the board, said he told the businessman he would write a letter to the editor in the local newspaper about the incident and the county might not do business with him. Supervisor Ronald Scearce characterized the interaction with the businessman as “good old boy bully stuff.”
Register & Bee
Front Royal Town Council members on July 15 held a roughly 15-minute work session before heading into a closed meeting regarding the Town’s disposition of publicly held real property. Specifically, Town Council members needed to discuss an application by Front Royal Town Councilman Chris Holloway, who owns the privately held Chris Holloway Construction LLC in Front Royal, Va., to purchase or have a portion of an unimproved right-of-way on Carter Street vacated by the Town. While further details were scant on Monday night, the right-of-way request went behind closed doors because “discussion in an open meeting would adversely affect the bargaining position or negotiating strategy of Town Council,” according to the work session agenda.
Royal Examiner
The Front Royal-Warren County Economic Development Authority and its former executive director Jennifer McDonald are disputing what documents should be presented in the authority’s $17.6 million embezzlement and misappropriation civil case against her and eight other defendants. The EDA’s attorneys recently filed a motion in circuit court asking that McDonald, along with MoveOn8 and DaBoyz — two limited liability companies she owned — to turn over a number of documents. Even if the motion to get the request for insurance policies is thrown out, McDonald’s lawyers will nonetheless receive them. Dan Whitten, county and EDA attorney, said that her lawyers filed a Freedom of Information Act request seeking the insurance policies, which was to be approved and turned over Monday.
The Northern Virginia Daily
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