Friday, September 27, 2013
State and Local Stories
George Washington’s revealing copy of the first Acts of Congress is one of the jewels in the elegant, new George Washington library that opens Friday at his historic homestead, Mount Vernon. The Fred W. Smith National Library for the Study of George Washington at Mount Vernon is a $106 million project designed to be the international center for Washington scholarship, with a trove of his personal books and manuscripts at its core. The enterprise aims to elevate Mount Vernon from a popular tourist stop among the region’s pantheon of historic sites to a place of rigorous Washington research as well.
Washington Post
Email accounts of some Regional Ten Community Services Board employees were hackedin July, and Region Ten wants to let the public know about the security problem. In an email news release Thursday, Jane Lewis of Region Ten said a hacker got passwords to several email accounts at the end of July. One day later, she said, Region Ten asked all employees to change their passwords and began investigating the incident.
Daily Progress
Regional officials expressed shock and sadness at the unexpected death of Pittsylvania County Board of Supervisors Chairman Marshall Ecker, who died Thursday at his home. He was 68. Ecker died at around 3 p.m. at his home at Deer View Road in Gretna while working on an outdoor project on his farm, according to a news release from the Pittsylvania County Sheriff’s Office. Ecker opposed uranium mining and milling in Pittsylvania County and received criticism from supervisors, including Harville and Dan River Supervisor James Snead, when he said during his State of the County address that the county was “treading water” after dissolving its eco-nomic development department. He also fought — along with his fellow supervisors — in favor of the board’s past practice of sectarian public prayer before its meetings.
Register & Bee
The Henrico County School Board has appointed real estate attorney Robert G. “Rob” Boyle Jr. as an interim member to fill the Three Chopt District seat left vacant by the resignation of Diana D. Winston. The board appointed Boyle, who has been with the Hirschler Fleischer law firm since 2003, by a unanimous vote Thursday at the end of its monthly meeting. School Board Chairwoman Beverly L. Cocke said the fact that Boyle has said he has no intentions of running in that election played a big role in the decision to appoint him.
Times-Dispatch
A cross-check of voter registration rolls has indicated 2,176 voters registered in Loudoun County also are registered to cast ballots in other states. A new state law requires the State Board of Elections to cross check registration records as part of a multi-state effort to combat voter fraud. Virginia and 21 other states have signed on to the database.
Leesburg Today
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia says the courts will ultimately have to determine the legality of wiretapping by the National Security Agency. And he's not sure that's a good thing.
Times-Dispatch
Through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for records from Patrick County High School, The Enterprise has learned that the cougar statue placed at the front of the school cost $800, not $3,000 as alleged to the Virginia Board of Education. The money for the statue of the school mascot was transferred from the senior fund of the class of 2011 to a special gift fund at the recommendation of Dr. Roger Morris, division superintendent, and approved by then-Principal E.G. Bradshaw. The cougar statue became a source of controversy when PCHS math teacher Elizabeth Wallace, a senior class sponsor, told the Board of Education on July 25 that Morris had told the bookkeeper to transfer $3,000 out of the senior class fund and into a different account.
The Enterprise
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