McDonnell’s transportation bill moves forward
RICHMOND Gov. Bob McDonnell's transportation funding bill has cleared its first hurdles in the General Assembly, but it still has a long way to go. The Senate Transportation Committee on Wednesday advanced the five-year, $3.1 billion funding package to the Finance Committee.
Virginia Senate rejects Sunday coyote hunting
RICHMOND The Virginia Senate has rejected legislation that would have allowed people to hunt coyotes on Sundays.
Va. House delays showdown on Senate redistricting
RICHMOND The House showdown over a surprise redistricting bill that Senate Republicans strong-armed to passage will have to wait for another day.
Film, tourism industries thank Virginia legislators
RICHMOND Donald “Spec” Campen Jr. pinned a bright yellow “Lights Camera JOBS!” button to his Navy blazer and spent Tuesday morning serving donuts and funneling popcorn into small cardboard boxes on the first floor of the General Assembly Building.
Va. eugenics program victims closer to payment
RICHMOND Lewis Reynolds didn’t know what had been done to him until years later. After getting married, the Lynchburg man found he couldn’t father children. The reason: He had been sterilized at age 13 under a Virginia law with the stated purpose of preventing “defective persons” from becoming “by the propagation of their kind a menace to society.”
Lawmakers move to change Va. electoral vote system
RICHMOND Virginia's Republican-ruled legislature has taken the first steps toward ending the state's winner-takes-all system of apportioning its 13 presidential electoral votes. A Senate subcommittee recommended Sen. Bill Carrico's bill on Wednesday on a 3-3 party line vote.
House panel votes down citizen review of SOLs
RICHMOND After grappling this morning over how much input parents and other citizens should have into the state’s Standards of Learning exams, a House panel decided against creating a special review board for those groups.
New poll shows tight race for Virginia governor
RICHMOND The two leading candidates for Virginia governor this year are locked in a tight race whose outcome may depend on turnout levels in November, according to a new poll sampling voter attitudes about the contest.
Bills go after loophole in police certification
Police officers should lose their certifications in Virginia if they commit a felony or fail a drug test. But that happens only if a chief notifies the state's Department of Criminal Justice Services. A state study last year revealed that Virginia's chiefs rarely do. And that has resulted in proposed changes making their way through the General Assembly.
Va. bills go after loophole in police certification
Police officers should lose their certifications in Virginia if they commit a felony or fail a drug test. But that happens only if a chief notifies the state's Department of Criminal Justice Services. A state study last year revealed that Virginia's chiefs rarely do. And that has resulted in proposed changes making their way through the General Assembly.
Va. motorcycle helmet law withstands repeal effort
RICHMOND An attempt to repeal Virginia’s mandatory motorcycle helmet law was defeated by a close vote in a House of Delegates subcommittee today. The bill (HB2010) from Del. Ben Cline, R-Rockbridge County, would have made helmets optional for riders 21 and older. The measure was rejected 3-2 and will advance no further in this legislative session.
Gun show bill voted down in Va. Senate committee
RICHMOND Legislation aimed at requiring criminal records checks for all firearms transactions at gun shows, including those by private sellers, won't advance this year, but members of a state Senate committee pledged Wednesday to work toward a compromise that could expand criminal background checks on firearms purchases.