Tuesday, July 16, 2013
State and Local Stories
Senator Donald McEachin is submitting a Freedom of Information Act request to the Office of the Attorney General last weekasking for all information provided to the Cuccinelli for Governor campaign about the Attorney General’s involvement in matters related to Star Scientific CEO Jonnie Williams. The Office of the Attorney General shared information with the Cuccinelli campaign which, in turn, released some of that information to the Washington Post. Senator McEachin is requesting that all Virginians be offered the same level of access as Cuccinelli’s campaign, a non-governmental political organization.
Dallas Weekly
Hampton city employees received an email from City Manager Mary Bunting on Monday about a story the Daily Press published on Sunday. The story focused on the highest-paid public employees in local cities, counties and school divisions, looking at their salaries over fiscal years 2011, 2012 and 2013. Bunting called the story inaccurate and provocative in her email, a copy of which was forwarded to the Daily Press. The city manager said the story stated she received raises while other employees did not. The story did not single out Hampton or point to Bunting, but noted that some top earners saw their pay rise while other employees did not.
Daily Press
As the inquiries about Gov. Bob McDonnell’s private finances have grown, so has his response team. Rich Galen, who has handled media relations for Dan Quayle and Newt Gingrich, started late last week as a senior communications adviser to McDonnell’s private legal team. He is not being paid by taxpayers or by the governor’s political action committee.
Times-Dispatch
The 911 dispatcher who was suspended after making a controversial Facebook post about a deadly police shooting has made a public apology. Jessica Camarillo did an interview with WAVY-TV that aired Monday in which she apologized to the family of Joshua "Omar" Johnson, who was killed, and said she didn't mean what she wrote. "It's a really bad joke," she said. "I want to apologize for the hurt that I've caused."
Virginian-Pilot
A recent public notice encouraging Martinsville residents to boil their tap water was confusing, city and state officials have acknowledged. Michael Painter, a district engineer with the Virginia Department of Health’s Office of Drinking Water in Danville, said that in the future, the office will try to do a better job of specifying who is affected when water lines break.
Martinsville Bulletin
A budgeting snafu announced earlier this month and ongoing deliberations about a controversial new logo will be at the center of discussion during Tuesday’s meeting of the Prince William County Board of Supervisors. The meeting, set to begin at 2 p.m. in the McCoart Administration Building, will also include a presentation on a recently released report from the Bi-Partisan Election Task Force, appointed by supervisors late last year to investigate problems that led to long lines and late closings at several county polling places. Supervisor Pete Candland said he has received “hundreds of documents,” from county staff and is working on a spreadsheet to fully assess how much has been spent on the logo and how it was being implemented.
InsideNOVA.com
Loudoun County Supervisor Eugene Delgaudio (R-Sterling) today initiated legal action against the governing body on which he serves by filing a complaint in the Loudoun County Circuit Court. The complaint, which lists Delgaudio as the plaintiff and the Loudoun Board of Supervisors as the defendant, requests the local court issue a declaratory judgment and impose an injunction against the Board of Supervisors. An injunction from the circuit court would mean the Board of Supervisors delay or refrain from disciplinary action against Delgaudio.
Loudoun Times-Mirror
Virginians shouldn’t be shocked by the gift-filled relationship between Star Scientific CEO Jonnie Williams and Gov. Bob McDonnell’s family, one economic policy expert said. The scandal threatening McDonnell’s career is the likely outcome when people believe the governor’s job description entails promoting businesses, said Matthew Mitchell, a senior research fellow with the Mercatus Center at George Mason University in Fairfax.
Watchdog.org Virginia Bureau
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