Based on past plans filed by the power companies, Virginia is already 79% of the way to meeting its Clean Power Plan target for 2030. Conservation groups are calling on the power companies to address the three issues in the Integrated Resource Plans.
Attorney General Mark Herring announced today that he has reached a settlement with Trio Alarm, LLC (Trio Alarm), a Wisconsin-based seller of home security systems, for alleged violations of the Virginia Consumer Protection Act (VCPA) and the state’s “bait and switch” statute.
Congressman Robert Hurt (R-Virginia) recently introduced the Supporting Home Owners Rights Enforcement (SHORE) Act, H.R. 2929, along with Congressman G.K. Butterfield (D-North Carolina), Congressman Bob Goodlatte (R-Virginia), Congressman Morgan Griffith (R-Virginia), and Congressman Markwayne Mullin (R-Oklahoma).
On Tuesday night, foppish knights and dancing showgirls took the stage at the University of Virginia’s Culbreth Theatre for a rousing performance of Monty Python’s Spamalot, the headline musical in this year’s Heritage Theatre Festival.
UVA wrestling head coach Steve Garland announced Wednesday the signing of six student-athletes for the 2015-16 school year. The recruiting class has been tabbed No. 5 nationally by InterMat and the matches the top recruiting ranking in program history, set by the 2007 class.
Virginia senior soccer player Morgan Brian (St. Simons Island, Ga.) was named as the 2015 recipient of the Mary Garber Award, given annually to the top female athlete in the Atlantic Coast Conference.
You know him now as WWE superstar Dolph Ziggler. Not the best name for a top star, and he may go back to being Nick Nemeth soon, and that name isn’t any better. Whatever name he goes by, he’s at a crossroads.
Governor Terry McAuliffe announced today that AXON Ghost Sentinel, Inc. (AGS), a portfolio company of AXON Connected, LLC that provides swarm-based cybersecurity products, will invest $1.5 million to expand its operation in the City of Harrisonburg.
When it was first initiated, the Forest Products Tax in Virginia was paid by the lumber mills or other large forest products companies – entities that have a fixed place of business.
Most people probably don’t check the labels of chemical products they use, or go online to do research about how dangerous certain chemicals are. That’s understandable, but it’s also a shame, because there are a lot of scary chemicals out there.
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