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VaNews
April 29, 2024
Top of the News

Google plans $1B data center investment in Northern Va.

By DAVE RESS, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

Google plans a $1 billion investment in Northern Virginia data centers, and in welcoming the move, Gov. Glenn Youngkin said it underscores the need for his “all of the above” energy plan, citing a controversial proposal for a gas-fired power plant in Chesterfield County as an example. Google’s investment will include expanding its two Loudoun County data centers and building a third facility in Prince William County, said Ruth Porat, president and chief investment officer of Google and its parent firm Alphabet.


Aird rips Petersburg’s casino pick, blasts council for choosing self-service over serving citizens

By BILL ATKINSON, Progress Index (Metered paywall - 10 articles a month)

The chief patron of the successful legislation that brought the long-pursued casino referendum has blasted Petersburg City Council over the choice of its former collaborator as the winning bidder for the business. In a scathing statement Friday night, Sen. Lashrecse Aird also pushed back at the city’s earlier claim that it wrote but never sent a letter of intent to one of the other four vendors “under duress” so that Aird would have a name to use as a bargaining chip in Richmond.


Virginia Tech orders pro-Gaza protesters to disperse; dozens reported arrested

By CARDINAL STAFF, Cardinal News

Virginia Tech ordered the students protesting the Israeli military action in Gaza to disperse Sunday night or risk arrest. Freelance journalist Justin Fleenor said he saw “more than two dozen” people arrested, including one professor. Virginia Tech did not have a number available for how many people were arrested. One video that Fleenor posted showed a woman in a Tech graduation robe being arrested; another showed police carrying a protestor from the site. Others were seen walking with police. Fleenor also posted a video showing a large group of students chanting “let them go!” Videos from others at the scene showed a crowd jeering police as they led handcuffed protestors to waiting vans.


State rolling back regulations for wetland delineators under Youngkin directive

By CHARLIE PAULLIN, Virginia Mercury

Those puddles of water along highways and property that seem like swamps are wetlands, a natural resource with numerous environmental benefits ranging from wildlife habitat and protection from flooding. How those wetlands are sited and how they are protected is determined by wetland delineators, who are professionally certified after rigorous training and years of experience. But Virginia legislators this year rolled back one requirement for the job and are attempting further changes through a less public regulatory process. Current professional wetland delineators say those efforts could undermine the integrity of the state’s certification and efforts to preserve a natural resource that is already under threat.


Virginia to spend up to $12 million on Pharrell biopic filmed in Richmond, Hampton Roads

By TREVOR METCALFE, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

A movie musical based on Virginia Beach native Pharrell Williams’ childhood could earn more than $12 million in state incentives to film in Richmond and Hampton Roads, according to state film office documents obtained by The Virginian-Pilot. In return, the film’s production could bring a total estimated statewide economic impact of about $84 million, Virginia Film Office Director Andy Edmunds said. The production will be based in Richmond with some photography in Virginia Beach, according to the project’s application for the incentives.

The Full Report
40 articles, 21 publications

EXECUTIVE BRANCH

Clean energy bank could help funnel $300M to Va. projects

By PATRICK LARSEN, VPM News

A bill that would set up a bank to better position the state to receive federal clean energy loans was sent back to Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s desk by legislators. Senate Majority Leader Scott Surovell (D-Fairfax) sponsored the proposal, which would establish the Virginia Clean Energy Innovation Bank and fund it with $10 million. He’s said during hearings on the bill that it could help funnel more than $300 million in federal loans authorized by the Inflation Reduction Act to the state.


Virginia Attorney General Speaks At UVa. On Free Speech And Criminal Justice Reform

By VYSHNAVI TATTA, Cavalier Daily

Politician and Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares spoke at an event titled “An Afternoon with Attorney General Jason Miyares” hosted by the Blue Ridge Center, an organization devoted to promoting free speech and debate on Grounds, and the Jefferson Council — a conservative alumni group dedicated to preserving the legacy of Thomas Jefferson — in collaboration with the Center for Politics on Grounds Wednesday.

STATE ELECTIONS

Stoney calls Spanberger ‘very formidable candidate’ after leaving governor’s race

By MICHAEL MARTZ, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney may have spared Virginia Democrats a costly primary fight, but his quick exit from the governor's race raises the temperature in the escalating competition for the lieutenant governor's nomination next year. Stoney's departure clears the field for Rep. Abigail Spanberger, D-7th, who had raised too much money and developed too high a political profile for the two-term mayor to overcome, even 14 months before a party primary that would have forced him to defeat the three-term congresswoman in a likely one-on-one matchup.

FEDERAL ELECTIONS

Spanberger endorses Leslie Mehta in 1st District congressional race

By MICHAEL MARTZ, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

Rep. Abigail Spanberger, D-7th, now with a clear path to the Democratic nomination for governor next year, jumped into the party’s primary in the 1st Congressional District on Friday by endorsing political newcomer Leslie Mehta for the nomination. Mehta, 47, a former civil rights attorney in Chesterfield County, is running against former New Kent County Treasurer Herb Jones for the Democratic nomination to challenge Rep. Rob Wittman, R-1st, who defeated Jones two years ago.


Rep. Good brings ‘Freedom Fighters’ tour to Amherst, addresses Ukraine funding bill

By JUSTIN FAULCONER, News & Advance (Metered Paywall - 18 articles a month)

At a campaign event in Amherst County on Wednesday, U.S. Rep. Bob Good, R-5th District, described his intra-Republican Party battle with a state legislator challenging his allegiance to former President Donald Trump as “the highest-profile primary race in the country.” Good, chair of the House Freedom Caucus who was among the group in Congress who engineered the historic ouster of former U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy last fall, is trying to secure a third term in the June 18 primary against newly elected state Sen. John McGuire, R-Goochland.

STATE GOVERNMENT

Va. ABC Authority seeks dismissal of whistleblower suit

By MICHAEL MARTZ, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

The Virginia Alcoholic Beverage Control Authority has asked a federal court to dismiss a $1 million whistleblower lawsuit filed by its director of retail operations, Jennifer Burke, whom it had placed on paid administrative leave last year after an investigation of thefts by employees of retail ABC stores that are under her supervision.


Virginia using multi-pronged approach to address teacher vacancies

By BRAD KUTNER, WVTF-FM

Virginia wasn’t an outlier in learning or teacher loss in the wake of the pandemic. But new teacher licensure programs, backed with state funds, are hoping to curb the shortage of educators parts of the Commonwealth are facing. Turner Penton is a tech ed teacher at Tucker High School in Henrico County. In the past he was a prison guard, worked in retail but had his longest stint working in a daycare center. But now, helping kids get socially and mentally adjusted to the real world, he’s thrilled to be working in a space where he feels like he’s making real impacts.

CONGRESS

Warner promises tough talk with postmaster general on Richmond mail service

By DAVE RESS, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., expects to have some tough things to say about Richmond’s mail service when he sits down soon with U.S. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, he told the Richmond Times Dispatch editorial board on Friday. Virginia has the worst on-time mail delivery record in the nation, and a recent audit of the Richmond Regional Processing and Distribution Center in Sandston found an egregious lack of attention to detail, ranging from losing mail that falls off conveyor belts, to poor coordination between processing machines and trucks moving mail.


Warner vows to continue support for mental health training for police, first responders

By KEITH EPPS, Free Lance-Star (Metered Paywall - 10 articles a month)

About a year and a half ago, Fredericksburg police responded to an accident at one of the city’s apartment complexes in which an 8-year-old boy ran in front of a car and was struck. City police chief Brian Layton said the first responding officer spoke Spanish and was able to communicate with the boy. But he couldn’t save the child, who died in the officer’s arms. “It was a horrific scene,” Layton said. “That’s the kind of thing that stays with you for a lifetime.”


Warner meets with first responders to discuss mental health issues

By JONATHAN HUNLEY, Fredericksburg Free Press

It was about a year and a half ago, right before Christmas, when a Fredericksburg police officer had a life-changing moment. He was responding to a call for service at an apartment complex, and he was first on the scene. An 8-year-old boy had been walking back from a playground with a family member when he saw that his parents had just gotten back home. The boy ran over to see his mother and father, but he was struck by a car coming through the parking lot.

ECONOMY/BUSINESS

Google Announces $1B Investment in Virginia Data Center Expansion, AI Training Programs

By STAFF REPORT, Loudoun Now

Gov. Glenn Youngkin and Alphabet Chief Financial Officer Ruth Porat on Friday announced a $1 billion investment to expand Google’s Virginia data center campuses this year including two Loudoun County sites. The $1 billion investment brings Google’s total investment in the state to more than $4.2 billion. Google calculates its Loudoun County investment at more than $1 billion.


Google announces $1B for data center expansion in Loudoun, Prince William counties

By BEN PETERS, Inside NOVA

Google on Friday announced a $1 billion investment to expand its Virginia data centers, including two Loudoun County sites and a newly opened Prince William County campus. Google President and CEO Ruth Porat was joined by Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin at the company’s Reston headquarters to announce the initiative, which brings Google’s total investment in the state to more than $4.2 billion. The company also announced two new AI workforce development initiatives — a $75 million AI opportunity fund and a new Google AI essentials Coursera course — to help workers lean about the new technology.


Google investing $1B in Va. data center campuses

By KATHERINE SCHULTE, Virginia Business

Google is investing $1 billion in expanding its Virginia data center campuses this year and is launching a $75 million Google.org AI Opportunity Fund, one of Google’s top executives and Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced Friday at Google’s Reston office. “Today is a great day. We’ve got a $1 billion investment in the commonwealth that we’re announcing. There’s an establishment of a new AI Opportunity Fund. And we’re creating new and opportunistic ways and pathways for people to upskill and find a new pathway to an amazing career,” Youngkin said. “That is worth celebrating.”


Virginia’s first shared solar facilities come online

By DAVE RESS, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

Virginia’s first “shared solar” facilities are now online, and the state is set for a major expansion. Shared solar is a way for people who cannot afford solar panels, or do not own land to put them on, to tap the sun and save on power bills. For utility customers who sign up for these, or the other shared solar facilities set to start in the months ahead, the electricity that shared solar systems feed into Dominion Energy’s grid translates to a 10% credit against their power bills.

TRANSPORTATION

Metro board approves new budget, but Virginia funding remains a question mark

By ANGELA WOOLSEY, FFXnow

The cost of riding Metro trains and buses will go up, starting July 1, when the transit agency’s new budget takes effect. The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority’s (WMATA) board of directors approved a $4.8 billion fiscal year 2025 budget yesterday (Thursday) that will increase fares by 12.5%, including by ending the flat $2 rate for weekend and late-night rides introduced in 2021 and expanded in 2022.


Metro avoids drastic cuts, but fares are going up in new $4.8B budget

By JACOB KERR, WTOP

Metro fares will soon be going up as part of the $4.8 billion budget approved Thursday by the WMATA Board of Directors. This budget, which goes into effect July 1, avoids drastic service cuts the transit agency proposed in December when it said it faced a $750 million deficit. But to help bring in more revenue, fares will increase by 12.5%. That means the base fare will go up from $2 to $2.25, while the maximum fare jumps up from $6 to $6.75. Metro Access fares will also rise to $4.50.

HIGHER EDUCATION

Arrests underway at pro-Palestinian Virginia Tech protest, school says

By MARTIN WEIL, Washington Post (Metered Paywall - 3 articles a month)

Arrests were underway early Monday at a pro-Palestinian protest at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, the school said. “They are being made,” a school spokesman said in an email early Monday. The numbers of those arrested and of those demonstrating could not be learned immediately. Posts on X indicated that hundreds were demonstrating and that several had been arrested.


Protest at Virginia Tech swells; police move to break it up

By LUKE WEIR, Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

Pro-Palestinian protesters linked arms to protect Muslim participants during late afternoon prayers at Virginia Tech, minutes after student organizers warned of a potential police crackdown during a third day of demonstrations on Sunday. Hundreds participated and more people watched as chants continued outside the Graduate Life Center on campus in Blacksburg. Around 10:30 p.m. Sunday, police were setting up a perimeter and warning anyone inside it to leave or be arrested, including media. Buses with police officers were arriving.


Virginia Tech students join wave of campus protest encampments; senator weighs in

By ROLYNN WILSON, WRIC-TV

Virginia Senator Mark Warner is weighing in as students at Virginia Tech become the first at a major university in the Commonwealth to set up an encampment to protest Israel’s military action in Gaza. According to Virginia Tech, a group of pro-Palestinian protestors from the university community gathered on campus and placed tents on the lawn at the Graduate Life Center. School officials say the small gathering was not affiliated with the university or a registered university event.


12 arrested during Gaza protests at University of Mary Washington in Fredericksburg

By JOSHUA BARLOW, WTOP

Twelve people protesting the war in Gaza, including nine students, were arrested at the University of Mary Washington in Fredericksburg, Virginia, on Saturday after those individuals refused to vacate an area around Jefferson Square, according to the university president. In a message to the college community, UMW President Troy Paino said that after safety concerns arose during the afternoon on Friday, participants in the protest were told that encampments and tents would not be permitted as part of the demonstration.


UMW students arrested after re-erecting encampment

By JOEY LOMONACO, Fredericksburg Free Press

At least 12 people — including several University of Mary Washington students — were arrested Saturday evening as police from descended upon an encampment in Jefferson Square that was previously disbanded on Friday night. However, students from the university’s Students for Justice in Palestine organization re-staked their tents on Saturday afternoon, and at 5:39 p.m., SJP president Amirah Ahmed sent a Free Press reporter a two-word text message: “they’re arresting.” An Instagram live feed from UMW’s SJP showed at least three students being led away from the square in handcuffs by UMW Police officers, while a mix of students, faculty and community members looked on. Troopers from the Virginia State Police were also on the scene.


As Colleges Weigh Crackdowns on Protests, Questions About Outsiders Linger

By PATRICIA MAZZEI, New York Times (Metered Paywall - 1 to 2 articles a month)

Amid a dizzying array of standoffs involving pro-Palestinian demonstrations and encampments at colleges, schools that cracked down on protesters over the weekend have given varying justifications for their actions, while others sent mixed signals with their inaction. Behind it all was a central question confronting university leaders across the country: When does a demonstration cross the line? Colleges have cited property damage, outside provocateurs, antisemitic expressions or just failures to heed warnings as reasons to clear encampments and arrest students. Student groups have strongly denied or questioned many of those claims.


UVa students, faculty named in blacklist, accused of antisemitism without evidence

By JASON ARMESTO, Daily Progress (Metered Paywall - 25 articles a month)

An anonymous University of Virginia parent has accused two professors and one student of antisemitism for organizing an Israel-Palestine film series. Organizers, however, say the series was specifically designed to show balanced perspectives. It alternated between screening movies from Israeli and Palestinian filmmakers. The accusation is one of many listed in a document compiled by multiple UVa parents, which outlines a wide range of reported antisemitic incidents they say have occurred on UVa Grounds since Israel’s war against Palestinian terrorist group Hamas began in October of last year.


William & Mary to raise tuition for second year in a row

By SAM SCHAFFER, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

William & Mary will increase tuition for the second year in a row after years of the price remaining the same. Tuition will increase by 2.5% for in-state undergraduate students and by 3.3% for out-of-state undergraduate students for fiscal years 2025 and 2026, according to a resolution passed by the W&M Board of Visitors on Friday.

VIRGINIA OTHER

Declining volunteerism leads rural Va. counties to use paid EMS services

By GRACE MAMON, Cardinal News

As fire and rescue volunteerism declines across the state, many localities are changing the way they provide this service. Using paid crews is costly and sometimes controversial, but it’s already been an effective solution for several Southern Virginia counties, and likely will be for many more. Some localities, like Henry County, have coupled paid staff and volunteers for decades. Others, like Franklin and Pittsylvania counties, are in earlier stages of the transition to what is called a combination model of rescue services.

LOCAL

Loudoun County Fire and Rescue Department union ratifies contract

By GABBY ALLEN, WDVM-TV

IAFF Local 3756, the union that represents about 650 officials throughout the Loudoun County Fire and Rescue Department, ratified their first-ever Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) on Sunday night. The Loudoun Career Fire Fighters Association (LCFFA) said the members of Local 3756 are the first public sector employees to ratify a CBA in the history of Loudoun County. The association described it as a “blowout and historic victory.”


Warrenton mayor defends controversial data center project

By PETER CARY, Piedmont Journalism Foundation

The special Warrenton Town Council meeting was called to hear from Dominion Energy about how it will run power lines to the proposed Amazon data center on Blackwell Road. But when Dominion failed to supply any new information, it spun into something else. Three council members tried to gain approval for one last check on noise the data center might emit, but the move clearly frustrated Mayor Carter Nevill, who launched into a nearly eight-minute speech, during which he defended the controversial Amazon project, the town council and staff — as well as the rigor of the town’s approval process.


RPD asked protesters to scale back marches amid spike in violence, staffing issues

By SAMUEL B. PARKER, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

Richmond Police Chief Rick Edwards on Thursday said the department had reached out to pro-Palestine protest organizers to ask them to decrease the frequency of their demonstrations amid a surge in violent crime in the city and persistent police staffing issues. In a text message sent by Richmond police officer Mohammed Maher Hameed to organizer Zaid Mahdawi, Hameed requested that the protesters give Richmond police “a little break.”


Richmond baseball stadium project’s unlikely supporters: Labor unions

By ERIC KOLENICH, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

The city of Richmond’s plan to build a new minor-league baseball stadium has gained a groundswell of support from more than just baseball fans. The plan has found favor with union workers. The Diamond District project calls for the developers to hire a minimum number of union workers, small businesses and minority-owned businesses to build the $110 million stadium, the infrastructure and the development around it.


Henrico considering ‘transformational’ fix to housing affordability crisis

By SEAN JONES, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

Henrico County leaders are considering a plan to make roughly 100 to 150 new homes more affordable each year. There’s a national home affordability crisis that’s showing its effects locally with average homebuyers being priced out of the market. Staple jobs — police officers, teachers, dental assistants and paralegals — often make less than half the yearly salary needed to afford the median home price in the county.


Many Hampton Roads families are struggling to get students back in class.

By NOUR HABIB, Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

One day, Judith Burkett of Portsmouth received a call from her grandson’s school: Did she know where Jakob was? He hadn’t attended in months. Months before, the boy — his mother, her partner and three younger brothers — had been living with Burkett. But Burkett’s daughter and her partner had a drug problem and the family suddenly left in fall 2022, a couple of months into Jakob’s third grade year. Burkett started asking friends and family to help look. She found out where they were living and alerted the school. The school attendance liaison became “a godsend.” “She was like a pit bull until she got him back in school.”


Spotsylvania School Board reps demand answers on superintendent’s firing

By TAFT COGHILL JR., Fredericksburg Free Press

As a newly elected Spotsylvania County School Board member, Belen Rodas was not involved in the contentiousness that made national news on a regular basis over the previous two years. Rodas received a firsthand view of the argumentative nature of the group during a work session Tuesday night, as a discussion on whether to release the cause of the firing of former Superintendent Mark Taylor became heated. Microphones were shut off as board members screamed at each other. Allegations of dishonesty were lobbed at Chair Lorita Daniels by board members Lisa Phelps and April Gillespie. Daniels attempted multiple times to enter recess but was rebuffed because a motion was on the floor.


2 Bedford County School Board members say board wasn’t aware of lawsuit against parent

By LISA ROWAN, Cardinal News

Three of seven Bedford County School Board members have spoken up in a Facebook group about a lawsuit filed last month against a parent, with two saying the school board didn’t sign off on the suit bearing its name as plaintiff. The suit seeks $600,000 in damages from Moneta resident David Rife, alleging he used crude language and threatened police and legal action during repeated calls to the school district about his son.

 

EDITORIALS

Governor, lawmakers pledge cooperation on a new budget deal

Virginian-Pilot Editorial (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Gov. Glenn Youngkin and Democratic leaders in the General Assembly are finally talking to each other — instead of about each other — as they work to build a new state budget. That’s good news. While there is plenty of mistrust for the two sides to overcome given the months of partisan grandstanding which preceded it, a thaw in this frigid relationship bodes well for Virginia. It gives rise to optimism, however cautious, that they can deliver an agreement that serves the many needs of the commonwealth.

COLUMNISTS

Schapiro: Learning from others’ mistakes

By JEFF E. SCHAPIRO, Richmond Times-Dispatch (Metered Paywall - 7 articles a month)

It’s no secret that Gov. Glenn Youngkin — a creature of the corpocracy who came to Richmond with nary a nanosecond in politics and government — has attempted to run Virginia as he did the publicly traded investment behemoth in which he spent nearly all of his private career, amassing a $400 million-plus fortune. It’s no secret that top-down approach — to the annoyance of Democratic and Republicans legislators accustomed to collaboration — hasn’t always worked.


Yancey: Here’s what readers recommended visitors see on the way to Southwest Virginia

By DWAYNE YANCEY, Cardinal News

Y’all sure know how to make someone feel welcome. Not me. I’m already here. I’m talking about the Arlington reader who contacted me recently, said he’d never been west of Roanoke and hoped soon to rectify that. He was writing in response to my column in defense of Southwest Virginia which, in turn, was a response to a story in Axios Richmond that made dismissive reference to “whatever the hell is west of Roanoke.” I told our prospective visitor that I’d give him some recommendations on what to see and do and then promptly turned to the best source for that — you.


Casey: Why are congressmen from Western Virginia mostly soft on Ukraine?

By DAN CASEY, Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

There’s a popular saying about the war in Ukraine that goes something like this: “If the Russians stop fighting, the war ends. If the Ukrainians stop fighting, Ukraine ends.” More than anything else, that simple aphorism highlights the nature of the most damaging conflict in Europe since World War II: Unprovoked military aggression by the authoritarian Russian Federation against a European democracy.

OP-ED

Archer: Carefully consider any changes to Virginia’s ABC

By ROBERT ARCHER, published in Roanoke Times (Metered Paywall - 5 articles a month)

The efforts in the recent legislative session to make the Virginia Alcoholic Beverage Control Authority more independent of the executive branch give me pause and concern. I have been involved in the alcohol business at Blue Ridge Beverage Company Inc. for more than 50 years. Our family business has always taken seriously the responsible marketing and consumption of alcoholic beverages and the issues surrounding them. Also, in my travels over the years as a member of our national trade association leadership, I learned that Virginia’s ABC has always served as a model for the control and regulation of a product that can cause harm if abused.

Archer is chairman and CEO of Blue Ridge Beverage Inc. based in Salem.


Corneliussen: Restore Fort Monroe’s 1619 name: Point Comfort

By STEVEN T. CORNELIUSSEN, published in Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

Virginia is considering a great idea: restoring the original name of the place where the arc of the moral universe bent toward emancipation. In 1619 as “Point Comfort,” that historic landscape saw the dawn of British North America’s slavery. In 1861 as “Fort Monroe,” it saw the dawn of U.S. slavery’s demise. True, dropping the military name could offend people such as me — a former Navyman, son of a Navyman, married in Fort Monroe’s chapel to a soldier’s daughter. But way more importantly, that Chesapeake Bay landscape uniquely commemorates the struggles of the planet’s first nation to found itself on freedom.

Corneliussen of Poquoson publishes the free-subscription Substack newsletter The Self-Emancipator, named in the spirit of the antebellum abolitionist publication The Emancipator.


Abuhamad: EVMS research aims to save the lives of women and babies

By ALFRED ABUHAMAD, published in Virginian-Pilot (Metered Paywall - 2 articles a month)

For the past 32 years, I have had the privilege of being associated with one of the finest medical and research institutions in the country. For 29 of those years, I have also been on the front lines, delivering babies and caring for mothers. Witnessing the repercussions of serious pregnancy complications on mothers and babies has been among the most challenging and emotionally wrenching aspects of my career, and I have dedicated my clinical and research practice at Eastern Virginia Medical School (EVMS) to finding a way to prevent these tragedies.

Abuhamad is president, provost and dean of the EVMS School of Medicine.