Richmond, Virginia and earthquake
President Joe Biden officially pardoned Virginia House Speaker Don Scott (D - Suffolk) on the 1994 federal drug charges for which Scott previously served eight years in prison.
Nine preservation projects in Central Virginia have been awarded grant funding through the Virginia 250 Preservation Fund.
Virginia State Yo-Yo Contest was held this weekend, giving people of all ages the chance to show off their skills.
Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced Monday that the state has already launched an investigation into last week’s water crisis in Richmond through the Virginia Department of Health’s Office of Drinking Water,
The 31-page order from Judge John Gibney of the U.S. District Court in Richmond details a range of steps the state needs to take over the next seven years
Doug Wilder, the man who made history in 1990 as the first African American to serve as governor of a U.S. state since Reconstruction, is celebrating a milestone birthday on Friday.
Virginia has been under a Justice Department consent decree since 2012 to improve services for people with developmental disabilities. A federal judge ruled the state has made enough progress the
Virginia’s attorney general has dropped a case against a former school district superintendent who was accused of firing a teacher because she spoke out about a student inappropriately touching her.
Biden announced that he used his clemency power to pardon Richmond native and criminal justice advocate Kemba Smith Pradia, who was previously convicted of a n
Del. Don Scott (D-Portsmouth), the first Black person to serve as speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates, was convicted in 1994 of a non-violent federal drug-related offense.
A small temblor startled residents near Richmond this week. Over a decade ago, a 5.8 earthquake in Virginia became the most felt quake in the U.S.