The outgoing chair of the Chesterfield County School Board took the opportunity of his farewell address to criticize two citizens for filing "frivolous" FOIA requests that "hijacked" the process and bullied staff. He said the citizens "do nothing more than strive to get their names in the papers" and that there was a need to find a way to "recoup the hundreds of hours wasted by our staff for their meaningless requests." Neither citizen was present, but
the Chesterfield Observer noted that the records obtained by one citizen revealed problems with unlocked exterior school doors and with the custodial service outsourcing, as well as information that the school systems's retirement plan was underfunded.
Petitioners hit the signature mark to
force Norfolk’s City Council to hold public hearings and take another vote on the land sale deal for a casino resort that has been at the heart of much public controversy over the past two months.
A Roanoke City Council member resigned from more than half of the committees he served on, citing a concern over the way recent decisions were made. "We worked so hard for so many years to be
a council that works toward consensus and absolutely no effort went into that this time."
The Virginia Department of Health warned Virginians
not to use any third-party services to get vital records. Though there are charges for searches, the forms needed to request records are free and services that require fees for forms should be avoided, the State Health Commissioner cautioned.
Virginia State Police cleared the chairman-elect of the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors, of
allegations that he benefited from a quid pro quo relationship with two developers while buying his family home in 2017.
Between Oct. 1, when the Washington Nationals secured a wild-card berth in the Major League Baseball playoffs, and Nov. 14, when they won the World Series,
hundreds of applications for Nationals-themed license plates poured into the Division of Motor Vehicles, including requests to celebrate pitcher Max Scherzer ("MAXS31") and the unofficial anthem of the team, "BABSRK."
Five months after the shooting at a Virginia Beach municipal building, 450 city employees have filed for workers’ compensation benefits related to the shooting. The city
wouldn't say how much it has paid so far, nor would it say how many applicants sought compensation for physical versus psychological injuries.
Frederick County Board of Supervisors meetings will now
stream live on the county government website, and meeting videos will be archived on the site as well.
The City of Martinsville released the results of a study into the impact of reverting back to a town on the same day it voted to begin the reversion process. It was the
first time the public had access to the study, even though the council members have been discussing the possibility of reversion for years.
The City of Williamsburg began using a new software system that
updates the city's progress on various projects involving community character, economic vitality, transportation, citizen engagement and more.
A member of the Berryville Town Council accused the mayor of violating the town's code of conduct when the mayor said she was concerned about possible conflicts of interest violations by the town's recorder. Though
the mayor's remarks were made in an email, the council member said the mayor violated the code's provision that it would treat staff and others "with respect and will not make accusatory or disparaging remarks at a official council or committee meetings."
The Spotsylvania County Board of Supervisors approved a resolution to
ban county government employees from serving on the board. The resolution made an exception for one board member who has long worked for the county.
The City of Charlottesville
refused to provide a copy of the resignation letter submitted by the departing deputy city manager, though the city released similar letters in the past.
In mid-December, the Orange County Board of Supervisors voted to terminate the county administrator. There had been no prior public discussion of the matter,
which was added to the agenda at the start of the meeting.
At a meeting earlier in the month, the Orange County board voted to join the dozens of other 2nd Amendment Sanctuary localities,
even though the matter was not on the agenda and was not discussed until the public comment period. A social media campaign got the word out to the hundreds of citizens who were there to support the motion.