May 14, 2021
The Smithfield Times
Reversion will become a reality for Martinsville and much sooner than had been expected. Henry County Attorney George Lyle said late Thursday that attorneys for both Henry County and Martinsville informed the commission earlier in the day that “mediation produced general agreement on a number of issues and the two localities would like time to memorialize those agreements in a written document that could then be considered by the Commission.” Lyle said the details of the agreement have yet to be finalized, but they expect “public consideration of some of the issues could occur by the end of the month.” There were no other details provided at the commission’s regular meeting Thursday morning, but public meetings on the matter set for June now have been pushed to July.
Martinsville Bulletin
A Richmond-based accounting firm announced its findings to the King William Board of Supervisors and School Board at Tuesday night’s joint meeting after completing a five-month financial inquiry report on monetary transactions between the treasurer’s office and school division. Dixon Hughes Goodman LLP representative Brian Burns said through the firms’ inquest, from fiscal years 2015 to 2020, it found 95 transactions between the county’s treasury department and the school division. In the designated timeframe of the inquiry, it did not find any fraudulent transactions. Though state code requires all documentation and materials presented to public boards be immediately made available to the public, the Board of Supervisors had yet to do so with this report as of 5 p.m. Wednesday. On May 5, Tidewater Review staff again requested, under the Freedom of Information Act, for a copy of either the final or draft copy of the firm’s findings. Branch failed to provide the document until May 12, after the meeting where the report was discussed.
Tidewater Review
The Washington Times
The Daily Progress