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Hampton Roads health care accelerator launches

Summary

  • Bloom’s 12-week accelerator supports 24 health-related businesses
  • Program covers compliance, funding access, revenue modeling and more
  • Funded by Health, LISC , Blocker Foundation

A new accelerator supporting 24 small and growing health care-related businesses in the Hampton Roads area wraps up its 12-week program in August. Developed by nonprofit coworking space Bloom as a program of the , the Bloom Accelerator is helping local entrepreneurs build relationships, scale their operations and navigate the unique challenges of the health care industry.

The program, funded by , and The Blocker Foundation, stemmed from a need for deeper support to the largely Bloom supports, according to Executive Director Michelle Wren. Of Bloom’s 200-plus entrepreneurs, about 97% are minority-owned.

“They’ve got barriers of entry that go along with minority ownership they’re trying to overcome — for example, to develop relationships with banks to access capital. We found our general programming just wasn’t fully meeting their needs,” says Wren.

With nearly a quarter of its coworking businesses being in the health care sector, Bloom decided to pilot an accelerator where members could learn from industry-specific experts and address pain points unique to health care businesses. Participants included nine home health companies, seven in behavioral health, five in women’s health or overall wellness, and three in health-care-related business services.

The accelerator program, hosted at Bloom’s Portsmouth space, included weekly deep dives on such topics as revenue models, regulatory compliance, market analysis and segmentation, and ethics, paired with mentoring and discussion sessions designed to help businesses incorporate the learning into their operations. In between sessions, participating entrepreneurs also took in presentations from Bloom partners such as the Hampton Roads Workforce Council, Old Dominion University’s Strome Entrepreneurial Center and local hospital systems.

For entrepreneurs like Tiffany Crayton, founder of Inspire. Empower. Change. Counseling & Consulting and a tenant, the program has been a game changer.

“I’ve been a clinician for over 20 years, but as a new business owner, having access to a program targeted to the unique needs of my industry has been a tremendous benefit,” says Crayton, a licensed professional counselor. “The program has shifted my mindset to see what’s possible. The presenters have blown me away, and the camaraderie in the group makes me feel like I’m not alone in my business challenges.”

Bloom hopes to build on the health care accelerator’s success with other industry-specific programs as well as follow-up programs targeting the area’s health care businesses.

StartVirginia: Heard Around Virginia August 2025

AgroSpheres, a biotech company developing nontoxic crop-protection products, announced in late June it was launching commercial sales of Fun-Thyme, a biofungicide derived from thyme oil. The company is partnering with Denver-based agricultural products marketer and distributor Wilbur-Ellis to introduce the product to U.S. farms. Fun-Thyme is billed as a highly effective alternative to traditional products for conventional and organic farming. It’s approved for use in Virginia, Arizona, Florida, Michigan, North Carolina, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Texas, Washington and Wisconsin, and its registration is pending in California. (Richmond Inno)

Backed by Nvidia and other heavy hitters, Emerald AI — a new AI startup with offices in Arlington County — emerged from stealth on July 1, stating that it aims to alleviate some of the concerns about data centers’ energy usage through software that will help data centers adjust energy consumption, making them more efficient in their energy usage during periods of peak power demand. The startup, which was incorporated last year in Washington, D.C., but has its primary offices in Clarendon, said it has secured $24.5 million in seed funding. (VirginiaBusiness.com)

Lockheed Martin Skunk Works, Lockheed’s R&D division for aerospace and defense technologies, and Manassas aviation startup Electra.aero signed a memorandum of understanding to “explore opportunities” for Electra’s EL9 ultra-short takeoff and landing aircraft, according to a mid-June news release. Lockheed Martin will collaborate with Electra to explore ways to accelerate development of the EL9, which can take off and land in 150 feet. The Skunk Works and Electra teams will also seek opportunities for potential programs of record with the U.S. Defense Department and global customers; about 85% of Skunk Works’ work is classified. Lockheed Martin Ventures signed a strategic cooperation agreement to invest in Electra’s Series A funding round in 2022. (News release)

Mountain High Seltzer announced in June that its beverage is the first legal THC seltzer to be distributed statewide by major companies: Hoffman Beverage and Virginia Eagle Distributing, an Anheuser-Busch wholesaler. The milestone is a significant win for Mountain High Seltzer founder and CEO Joe Kuhn, who began his business under the name Albemarle Hemp Co. in 2019 in Crozet. The new beverage contains just 30 calories and zero alcohol, featuring a blend of 2 milligrams of THC and 4 milligrams of CBD. (VirginiaBusiness.com)

Reston cybersecurity and cloud services provider Neovera closed a deal on June 18 to buy Greenway Solutions, a Charlotte, North Carolina-based fraud detection and prevention firm. The deal marked Neovera’s fourth acquisition in 20 months and brought its workforce to nearly 200 people. Neovera CEO Scott Weinberg said Greenway’s customers include many of the country’s top 100 banks, which are using its tech to run fraud simulations across payment platforms and call centers to identify vulnerability points, find where controls fail and learn how systems can be implemented to prevent attacks. (DC Inno)

As of early July, Charlottesville wedding flowers company Poppy Flowers had raised $1.7 million in equity funding, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing. The company is seeking to raise $3 million total, and the round includes six unnamed investors. The first sale in the round was recorded on May 30. Cameron Hardesty launched Poppy in 2020. It provides flowers for weddings through a national network of floral designers and via boutique growers in Latin America and has raised about $8 million across several rounds since its founding. (Richmond Inno)

Top Five: August 2025

The most-read daily news stories on VirginiaBusiness.com from June 10 through July 10 included news of President Jim Ryan’s resignation amid federal pressure over university policies.

1   |  Buc-ee’s opens first Virginia location in Mount Crawford

Some fans camped out overnight and some drove from as far away as Alabama for the June 30 grand opening of the mega travel center’s new Rockingham County store. (June 30)

2   |  U.Va. president resigns under pressure from DOJ

University of Virginia President James E. “Jim” Ryan resigned his post at the state’s flagship university due to pressure from the federal government over U.Va.’s DEI policies. (June 27)

3   |  EU set to launch antitrust probe of $35.9 billion Mars-Kellanova deal

The European Union’s antitrust watchdog is expected to launch a full-scale investigation into McLean-based ‘  $35.9 billion acquisition of , probably delaying the merger. (June 24)

4   |  New Virginia Beach economic development chief resigns suddenly

Citing “pressing family matters,” Christian Green resigned in June after serving less than four months in the post. (June 12)

5   |  State Senate Dems claim in lawsuit

Youngkin is trying to nullify BOV rejection vote Nine Virginia Democratic senators sued the rectors of three universities, claiming that was nullifying a Senate committee’s refusal to confirm eight people appointed to the public universities’ boards. (June 24)

Out and About: August 2025

1. Smoov Moving founder Orlando “Took” Barbour; Regional Chamber of Commerce Community Engagement Director Ann Marie Hohenberger; and Quinton Harrell, a leader of the chamber’s Minority Business Alliance, were among those celebrating the July 1 opening of the moving company’s Albemarle County office. (Photo courtesy Charlottesville Regional Chamber of Commerce)

2. CYMNow Flowers owner Huan Vo speaks with Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate and Democratic attorney general candidate Jay Jones and lieutenant governor candidate state Sen. Ghazala Hashmi at the Falls Church shop June 27. (Photo courtesy Spanberger for Governor)

3. Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares, gubernatorial candidate Virginia  and Delta Star President and CEO Jason Greene attended the opening of Delta Star’s new Delta Iron Works in Lynchburg. (Photo courtesy Delta Star)

4. L to R: Virginia Community College System Chancellor Dr. David Doré, Dr. Robert H. “Bobby” Sandel, who retired in June after 24 years as president of Virginia Western Community College, and Deborah Petrine, chair of the Virginia Western Educational Foundation board, attended a June 14 retirement gala for Sandel. (Photo courtesy Virginia Western Community College. Photo by Natalee Waters)

China, U.S. eye tariff pause extension after talks

 

SUMMARY: 

  • China and U.S. held two days of trade talks in Stockholm 
  • Officials discussed extending the Aug. 12 tariff deadline 
  • China says discussions were “candid and constructive” 
  • U.S. team to consult with President Trump on next steps 

 

STOCKHOLM (AP) — The United States and China have agreed to work on extending a deadline for new tariffs on each other after two days of trade talks in Stockholm concluded on Tuesday, according to Beijing’s top trade official.

The U.S. side says the extension was discussed, but not decided.

China’s international trade representative  said the two sides had “in-depth, candid and constructive” discussions and agreed to work on extending a pause in tariffs beyond an Aug. 12 deadline for a trade deal.

“Both sides are fully aware the importance of maintaining a stable, healthy China-U.S. economic and trade relations,” Li said, without elaborating how the extension would work.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent described the talks as a “very fulsome two days with the Chinese delegation.”

He said they touched on U.S. concerns over China’s purchase of Iranian oil, supplying Russia with dual-use tech that could be used on the battlefield, and manufacturing goods at a rate beyond what is sustained by global demand.

“We just need to de-risk with certain, strategic industries, whether it’s the rare earths, semiconductors, medicines, and we talked about what we could do together to get into balance within the relationship,” Bessent said.

He stressed that the U.S. seeks to restore domestic manufacturing, secure purchase agreements of U.S. agricultural and energy products, and reduce trade deficits.

Meeting in the Swedish capital

The latest round of talks opened Monday in Stockholm to try to break a logjam over tariffs that have skewed the pivotal commercial ties between the world’s two largest economies.

The two sides previously met in Geneva and London to address specific issues — triple-digit tariffs that amounted to a trade embargo and export controls on critical products — China’s chokehold on rare earth magnets, and U.S. restrictions on semiconductors.

Monday’s discussions lasted nearly five hours behind closed doors at the office of Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson. Before the talks resumed Tuesday, Kristersson met with Bessent and U.S. Trade Representative over breakfast.

A possible Trump-Xi meeting

The talks in Stockholm unfolded as President Donald Trump is mulling plans to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping, a summit that could be a crucial step toward locking in any major agreements between their two countries.

“I would say before the end of the year,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on Tuesday.

On his Truth Social media platform, Trump insisted late Monday that he was not “seeking” a summit with Xi, but may go to China at the Chinese leader’s invitation, “which has been extended. Otherwise, no interest!”

Bessent told reporters the summit was not discussed in Stockholm but that they did talk about “the desire of the two presidents for the trade team and the Treasury team to have trade negotiations with our Chinese counterparts.”

Greer said the American team would head back to Washington and “talk to the president about” the extension of the August deadline and see “whether that’s something that he wants to do.”

Striking tariff deals

The U.S. has struck deals over tariffs with some of its key trading partners — including Britain, Japan and the European Union — since Trump announced earlier in July elevated tariff rates against dozens of countries. China remains perhaps the biggest challenge.

“The Chinese have been very pragmatic,” Greer said in comments posted on social media by his office late Monday. “We have tensions now, but the fact that we are regularly meeting with them to address these issues gives us a good footing for these negotiations.”

Many analysts had expected that the Stockholm talks would result in an extension of current tariff levels, which are far lower than the triple-digit percentage rates proposed as the U.S.-China tariff tiff reached a crescendo in April, sending world markets into a temporary tailspin.

The two sides backed off the brink during bilateral talks in Geneva in May and agreed to a 90-day pause — which ends Aug. 12 — of those sky-high levels. They currently stand at of 30% on Chinese goods, and China’s 10% tariff on U.S. products.

The long view

While China has offered few specifics of its goals in the Stockholm talks, Bessent has suggested that the situation has stabilized to the point that Beijing and Washington can start looking toward longer-term balance between their economies.

Since China vaulted into the global trading system more than two decades ago, Washington has sought to press Beijing to encourage more consumption at home and offer greater market access to foreign, including American-made goods.

Wendy Cutler, a former U.S. trade negotiator and now vice president at the Asia Society Policy Institute, said Trump’s team would today face challenges from “a large and confident partner that is more than willing to retaliate against U.S. interests.”

Rollover of tariff rates “should be the easy part,” she said, warning that Beijing has learned lessons since the first and “will not buy into a one-sided deal this time around.”

Goodbye Stockholm

Bessent said the “overall tone of the meetings was very constructive” while Li said the two sides agreed in Stockholm to keep close contact and to “communicate with each other in a timely manner on trade and economic issues.”

On Monday, police cordoned off a security zone along Stockholm’s vast waterfront as rubbernecking tourists and locals sought a glimpse of the top-tier officials through a phalanx of TV news cameras lined up behind metal barriers.

Flagpoles at the prime minister’s office were festooned with the American and Chinese flags.

Congressional committee demands GMU president testify

Summary

  • GMU president called to testify before congressional committee
  • House Judiciary investigating “discrimination” at Mason
  • University is under four federal investigations opened in July

President , whose university already faces four federal investigations launched this month by the , has now been called to testify before the -controlled .

U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan, the committee’s chairman, and U.S. Rep. Chip Roy, chair of the Subcommittee on the Constitution and Limited Government, sent Washington a letter Tuesday stating, “[I]t appears there is a pervasive culture of intolerance at George Mason that violates the spirit, if not the letter, of the Civil Rights Act. During your tenure, George Mason seems to have engaged in racial discrimination in the hiring and promotion of faculty and staff contrary to both federal statutes and executive order.”

The Ohio and Texas congressmen, both Republicans, requested extensive information about George Mason’s diversity, equity and inclusion programs, which the letter says are in violation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The letter requested that Washington appear for a “transcribed interview” with the committee.

The letter also demands that Washington produce “all documents and communications” from his first day as George Mason’s president (July 1, 2020) to the present regarding DEI, “antiracism, and/or inclusive excellence,” as well as any document referring to a job applicant’s race or gender, the use of race or diversity in the hiring of faculty or staff, and the university’s antiracism and inclusive excellence task force and equity advisers programs. It asks for any document from Nov. 1, 2024, to the present that is related to compliance with a federal mandate or executive order related to DEI.

The documents are due by 10 a.m. Aug. 12, and Washington must schedule his testimony by that date, the letter says.

The congressmen’s letter, made public in a news release Tuesday, echoes the U.S. Department of Justice’s July 17 investigation and the U.S. Department of Education’s July 10 probe into alleged race- and sex-based discrimination in hiring and promotions at George Mason that disadvantage white and male candidates, allegations Washington denied in a statement earlier this month.

Meanwhile, George Mason faculty groups and others, including federal and state Democratic lawmakers and regional business organizations, have defended Washington, who is George Mason’s first Black president. Many have accused the Trump administration of using its powers to drive Washington out of office, drawing parallels to Jim Ryan’s resignation as the ‘s president in June, after a similar campaign by the DOJ’s civil rights division accused Ryan of failing to dismantle U.Va.’s DEI structures.

The congressmen’s letter accuses George Mason, the state’s largest public university by enrollment, of not fully complying with federal law following President Donald Trump’s executive order eliminating DEI offices at universities. “George Mason simply changed its name to the ‘Office of Access, Compliance and Community,'” the letter alleges, with the university making “mere cosmetic changes to its discriminatory DEI programs.”

On Friday, the Justice Department’s civil rights division targeted the university’s faculty senate, which passed a resolution last week in support of Washington, and requested in a letter that the members of the senate and the president’s office preserve “all written communications” regarding the resolution, including earlier drafts, emails, texts and voice mails.

American Association of University Professors President Todd Wolfson, a Rutgers University professor, issued a statement Tuesday in support of the Mason Faculty Senate and called the DOJ letter “a gross misuse of federal power to chill speech, silence faculty members, and undermine shared governance. It is an attack on academic freedom, plain and simple.”

He also called on George Mason’s , which is set to meet Friday and to discuss Washington’s job performance, to “stand with their faculty and president by rejecting this attempt to weaponize federal authority against shared governance. They must not only refuse the DOJ’s request but also affirm that faculty speech will be protected, not punished.”

U.S. job openings dip to 7.4M as market cools

 

SUMMARY: 

  • June fell to 7.4M from 7.7M in May 
  • Quit rate declined, suggesting reduced worker confidence 
  • Layoffs remained largely unchanged last month 
  • Fed rate hikes and trade uncertainty slowing hiring 

 

WASHINGTON (AP) — Employers posted 7.4 million job vacancies last month, a sign that the American job market continues to cool.

The Labor Department reported Tuesday that job openings in June were down from 7.7 million in May and were about what forecasters had expected.

The Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) showed that layoffs were little changed in June. But the number of people quitting their jobs — a sign of confidence in their prospects elsewhere — dropped last month to the lowest level since December. Hiring also fell from May.

Posting on Bluesky, Glassdoor economist Daniel Zhao wrote that the report “shows softer figures with hires and quits rates still sluggish. Not dire, not amazing, more meh.”

The U.S. job market has lost momentum this year, partly because of the lingering effects of 11 interest rate hikes by the inflation fighters at the in 2022 and 2023 and partly because President Donald Trump’s have created uncertainty that is paralyzing managers making hiring decisions.

On Friday, the Labor Department will put out unemployment and hiring numbers for July. They are expected to show that the unemployment rate ticked up to a still-low 4.2% in July from 4.1% in June. Businesses, government agencies and nonprofits are expected to have added 115,000 jobs in July, down from 147,000 in June, according to a survey of economists by the data firm FactSet.

The seemingly decent June hiring numbers were weaker than they appeared. Private payrolls rose just 74,000 in June, fewest since last October when hurricanes disrupted job sites. And state and local governments added nearly 64,000 education jobs in June – a total that economists suspect was inflated by seasonal quirks around the end of the school year.

So far this year, the economy has been generating 130,000 jobs a month, down from 168,000 last year and an average 400,000 a month from 2021 through 2023 during the recovery from COVID-19 lockdowns.

Employers are less likely to hire, but they’re also not letting workers go either. Layoffs remain below pre-pandemic levels.

Inova Fairfax Hospital ranks No. 1 in Va. for fifth year

SUMMARY:

  • U.S. News & World Report ranked No. 1 in Virginia and the Washington, D.C. metro area for fifth consecutive year
  • ranked No. 2 in Virginia, top in Richmond
  • The rankings, based on performance metrics like mortality rates and patient outcomes, assessed over 4,400

For the fifth year in a row, Fairfax Hospital in Falls Church has taken the top spot for Virginia and the Washington, D.C. metropolitan region on U.S. News and World Report’s annual list of the nation’s best hospitals.

U.S. News and World Report’s 2025-2026 Best Hospitals rankings, released Tuesday, evaluated data from more than 4,400 hospitals across 15 adult specialties and 22 procedures and conditions. However, only 13% of hospitals being assessed earned a “best hospitals” designation.

“Earning this recognition for the fifth year in a row reflects the relentless commitment of our physicians, nurses, team members and partners to delivering world-class, patient-centered care every single day,” said Inova Fairfax Hospital President Dr. Steve Narang in a statement “It’s a proud moment for all of us at Inova Fairfax and a reflection of the trust our community places in us.”

Inova Fairfax Hospital also ranked 32nd in the nation for obstetrics and gynecology care, up from 36th place last year.

To determine the Best Hospitals, U.S. News analyzed each hospital’s performance based on objective measures, including risk-adjusted mortality rates, preventable complications and the level of nursing care. The publication states that the Best Hospitals Specialty rankings methodology and measure patient outcomes using data from over 800 million patient care records.

“For more than three decades, U.S. News has been an invaluable guide for patients,” said U.S. News Managing Editor and Chief of Health Analysis Ben Harder in a statement. “With a ‘Best Hospital’ recognition, Americans, in consultation with their medical providers, can confidently choose a hospital known for providing superior care for their specific illness or condition.”

U.S. News and World Report evaluated 120 hospitals in Virginia. The in Virginia are as follows:

1. Inova Fairfax Hospital, Falls Church
2. VCU Medical Center, Richmond
3. Sentara Norfolk General Hospital, Norfolk
4. (Virginia Hospital Center), Arlington County
5. (tie) Chippenham and Johnston-Willis Hospitals, Richmond
5. (tie) Medical Center,
5. (tie) Winchester Medical Center, Winchester
8. Carilion Roanoke Memorial Hospital, Roanoke
9. Mary Washington Hospital, Fredericksburg
10. (tie) Bon Secours St. Mary’s Hospital, Richmond
10. (tie) Sentara Virginia Beach General Hospital, Virginia Beach

Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center ranked second in Virginia for the third consecutive year and first in Richmond for the 15th year in a row. The hospital was also ranked 41st for orthopedics. Sheltering Arms Institute, a joint venture between and Sheltering Arms, was ranked 27th for rehabilitation.

VCU Medical Center also ranked second in Virginia and 14th in the mid-Atlantic for children’s care, ranking nationally in two children’s specialties. U.S. News and World Report’s evaluation of the VCU hospital included data from Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU.

“To be recognized time and time again by U.S. News is a great honor and truly a testament to our team members’ undeniable commitment to this community,” Jim Willis, interim president of VCU Medical Center, said in a statement. “From implementing the latest innovations in robotic surgery to improving access to life-saving care, we are dedicated to making sure each person who walks through our halls receives high-quality care.”

Sentara Norfolk General Hospital placed third in the state and No. 1 for the Virginia Beach-Norfolk-Newport News area.

“We are proud to be recognized for excellence in improving the health of the community,” said Sentara Health Senior Vice President Dana Weston Graves, who also serves as acute care president for Sentara’s Southeast Market – Norfolk.

7 Virginia businesses land on Fortune Global 500

Summary

Once again, seven Virginia companies made the Global 500 list of the world’s largest corporations by revenue, which was released Tuesday.

Freddie Mac, the McLean government-sponsored home mortgage company, is still the state’s top-ranked company at No. 80 this year, up eight spaces from 2024’s list. According to Fortune, Freddie Mac reported $122 billion in revenue in fiscal 2024, up 13% from the previous year.

The , however, has shaken up the leadership of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, another government-sponsored housing finance system. Several board members have been removed from Freddie Mac, and CEO Diana Reid was fired in March, only six months after she was named the corporation’s new permanent head. CEO Michael J. DeVito retired in March 2024. Michael Hutchins, who served as interim CEO following DeVito’s departure, is back as interim chief as of March.

Meanwhile, RTX, the Arlington County aerospace and defense contractor formerly known as Raytheon Technologies, is at No. 153, up 35 spots and passing by Arlington-based aerospace and government contractor Boeing, which fell 47 spots to No. 206 this year.

RTX reported $80.7 billion in revenue for last year, up 17.2% year-over-year, and Boeing was down 14.5% in revenue, reporting $66.5 billion in fiscal 2024. That’s an $11.8 billion decrease from fiscal 2023, a reflection of the some of the fallout the company’s experienced since the January 2024 midair blowout of a Boeing jet’s door plug. In the following months, Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun resigned, and Robert K. “Kelly” Ortberg succeeded him as the company’s chief executive.

In May, Boeing and the U.S. Department of Justice reached a deal that will allow the company to avoid criminal prosecution for allegedly misleading U.S. regulators about the 737 Max jetliner before two of the planes crashed and killed 346 people in 2018 and 2019. Under the agreement, Boeing would pay and invest more than $1.1 billion, including an additional $445 million for the crash victims’ families, the Justice Department said.

The Justice Department and Boeing came to an earlier agreement in 2024 for $2.5 billion, following the Alaska Airlines blowout, but a federal judge rejected the plea deal in December 2024.

The rest of Virginia’s companies on the list of the world’s largest corporations, based on total revenues for fiscal years ending on or before March 31, are , , General Dynamics and .

Once again, Walmart and Amazon.com landed the top two spots, with Walmart reporting $680.9 billion in revenue for 2024, and Amazon bringing in $637.9 billion; both are increases from last year.

Goochland County’s Performance Food Group reported $54.6 billion, up 2.5% from 2023, and Capital One reported $53.9 billion in revenue, up 9% from last year, and a move up 33 spaces. General Dynamics saw its revenue rise 12.9% last year to $47.7 billion, which gave it a boost of 44 spaces in the 2025 list. Northrop Grumman, meanwhile, rose two spaces and reported $41 billion in fiscal 2024 revenue, up 4.4%.

These are the Virginia-based companies that made the 2025 Fortune Global 500 list, in order of ranking:

80) Freddie Mac, McLean

153) RTX, Arlington County

206) Boeing, Arlington County

267) Performance Food Group, Goochland County

271) Capital One Financial, McLean

318) General Dynamics, Reston

380) Northrop Grumman, Falls Church

Judge blocks Youngkin university board appointees

Summary

  • In win for Democratic state senators, Fairfax County Circuit judge stops U.Va., GMU, VMI boards from seating rejected Youngkin appointees
  • Says in ruling for preliminary injunction that state senators proved “irreparable harm”
  • GMU’s board set to meet Friday to discuss university president’s performance
  • Attorney general plans to appeal to state supreme court

In a win for Virginia Senate Democrats, a judge ruled in favor of their motion to stop three Virginia universities from recognizing eight gubernatorial board appointees who were rejected by a state Senate committee in June.

The appointees for the universities’ boards of visitors include former Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, former state Secretary of Commerce and Trade Caren Merrick and others with significant conservative political and business connections, and the ruling comes as George Mason’s president is under heavy federal scrutiny by the , which opened four federal probes into GMU in the past month.

On Friday, Judge Jonathan Frieden heard arguments from the plaintiffs’ attorney, Mark Stancil of Willkie Farr & Gallagher, who said the state Senate’s Privileges & Elections Committee has the right to reject gubernatorial appointees on its own during special sessions, and from Christopher Michel, an attorney with Quinn Emanuel representing the state attorney general’s office for three university rectors, who argued that the entire General Assembly has to be called to vote on the matter.

Frieden’s order letter issued a preliminary injunction to prevent the three rectors of , and ‘s boards from seating the rejected appointees. In court, Frieden said he expected the losing side — in this case, the defendants — to send an argument to stay the judgment by Wednesday morning, and that the plaintiffs would be able to send a response by Wednesday evening, allowing the judge to rule on the two arguments by Friday morning, when George Mason’s board is set to meet.

The state attorney general’s office said Tuesday that it plans to appeal the ruling to the Supreme Court of Virginia.

The nine senators, which include eight members of the Senate Privileges & Elections Committee and Senate President Pro Tempore L. Louise Lucas, sued because and Virginia said that the rejected appointees were still valid members of boards, and appeared to be granting the boards’ rectors the go-ahead to seat the new appointees as legitimate board members.

“The nullification of plaintiffs’ votes constitutes irreparable harm whether the disputed appointees’ continued service on the GMU, U.Va. and VMI boards would result in decisions with which the plaintiffs agreed or disagreed,” Frieden wrote in Tuesday’s decision. He concluded that the state Senate has delegated to the committee the responsibility of confirming or rejecting all gubernatorial appointees to boards, so the committee’s action in June to not confirm the eight university board members was on behalf of the 40-seat Senate.

“Accordingly, the Constitution of Virginia required the rejected appointees to immediately cease their participation on their respective boards. They have not done so,” Frieden wrote. “Instead, following the legal advice of the attorney general, the defendant rectors of the George Mason University and University of Virginia boards of visitors and president of the Virginia Military Institute have continued to recognize the rejected appointees as members of their respective governing boards. Moreover, they intend to continue to do so.”

George Mason Rector Charles “Cully” Stimson was ordered to not recognize the votes of the university’s four disputed appointees or include them in closed sessions, special meetings or appoint them to board committees. According to Mason’s board website, one rejected appointee, former Federal Trade Commission chair Maureen Ohlhausen, was named to the powerful executive committee as a member-at-large, and she was made part of the academic programs, diversity and university community committee.

In addition to Ohlhausen and Merrick, Florida attorney Charles J. Cooper and former U.S. deputy secretary of education William D. Hansen are among the rejected appointees to Mason’s board. VMI appointees John Hartsock, deputy chief of staff for U.S. Rep. Ben Cline; Stephen Reardon, an attorney with Spotts Fain; and Jose Suarez, a Florida businessman, are also blocked from participating in its board, as is Cuccinelli’s participation on U.Va.’s board.

“Although we are disappointed in the ruling, we were prepared for this possibility,” Miyares spokesman Shaun Kenney said in a statement. “This case is straightforward. The constitution is clear that it is the General Assembly, not a fraction of a Senate committee, that is authorized to act. We will quickly file an appeal with the Supreme Court of Virginia and are confident in our position.”

U.Va. issued a statement: “The university will comply with today’s ruling and move forward with important university business. As we prepare for the new academic year, the board of visitors and U.Va. leaders remain focused on serving our community and our commonwealth through our education, research and patient care missions.”

Cuccinelli’s photo and bio page were no longer on U.Va.’s BOV webpage as of Tuesday afternoon, and VMI had removed its disputed board members’ online presence as well. George Mason’s board webpage still included the rejected appointees several hours after the ruling.

The hearing was fast-tracked because George Mason’s board is set to meet this week. The agenda calls for a closed session at 11 a.m. Friday to discuss President ‘s job performance. Washington’s diversity, equity and inclusion efforts have been specifically targeted in the U.S. Department of Education and Department of Justice investigations, according to letters issued by both departments.

The federal investigations into Mason are centered on alleged race- and sex-based discrimination in hiring and promotion in favor of women and people of color, as well as alleged failure to protect Jewish students and staff from antisemitic attacks.

But critics, including state and federal legislators and faculty members, say that the investigations are politically motivated and targeted to try to drive out Washington, and many have said that the George Mason board, made up entirely of Youngkin appointees, has failed to support the university president.

Democratic state Sen. Aaron Rouse, chair of the Senate Privileges and Elections Committee, said in a statement that the ruling “is a victory for the rule of law, for the Senate’s constitutional role, and for the people of Virginia. It also sends a clear message that attempts to impose political control over our public universities, whether from Richmond or Washington, will not go unchecked.” 

In her own statement, Lucas said, “The Trump-Youngkin administration launched another blatant partisan power grab, this time targeting some of the top universities in the country, right here in Virginia. Once again, they tried to break the law in their attempt to force our progressive university leaders to bow to their will, but today they failed.”

VMI and George Mason did not immediately respond to requests for comment Tuesday.