Gov. Glenn Youngkin, welcoming the move, said it underscores the need for Virginia to push ahead with his “all of the above” energy plan.
The state library's genealogy workshop series is teaching people how to use its records to research their heritage and family lineage.
The Festival of the Moving Creature this Friday puts the art, craft and imagination of students on display.
Weeklong festival will hold individual showcases for red, white, rosé and sparkling wines, a golf tournament and more.
Too many families are unwilling to let their loved one pass at that appropriate time, and people suffer.
As we approach the potential end of funding for the ACP, I find myself gripped by a profound sense of anxiety and uncertainty.
As if road tolls weren’t unpopular enough, now the Virginia Department of Transportation is warning drivers to be aware of scammers impersonating toll collectors seeking unwarranted payment via text message.
Juan Rodriguez-Bedolla is wanted on five counts of attempted murder.
Some Virginia state employees will pay more for their health insurance, following the state’s latest review and projection of claims.
EPA announced a new rule regulating the two compounds as hazardous substances.
Gov. Glenn Youngkin is headed to Europe next week on his third international trade mission.
The reckoning has begun for the smelly invader.
"I'll do some songs I wrote about Charlottesville while I lived in Charlottesville," he promised The Daily Progress.
And other upcoming events for Charlottesville-area bibliophiles.
Samantha Koon Jones: Lawrence Wright's 'Mr. Texas' is 'Mr. Smith Goes to Washington' in cowboy boots
Political humor is not my genre of choice, but Mr. Texas is easily the best book I’ve read all year.
International Sculpture Day at McGuffey, jewelry at Crozet Artisan Depot and more.
A helicopter will be dropping an aerial pesticide along sections of Skyline Drive, Skyland and Big Meadows.
Eleanor Hunton Hoppe, the 46-year-old scion of the family that launched Richmond's largest law firm and ex-wife of a prominent federal judge, has agreed to serve 135 months behind bars as part of a plea deal.
James Robert Allen has pleaded guilty to abduction and malicious wounding charges in Charlottesville court.
Bob Good’s decision to vote against financial aid for Israel has cost him the endorsement of the Republican Jewish Coalition.
This is the first time anyone has ever been brought to trial under a Virginia law that bans burning objects in order to racially intimidate.
Before he hopped the fence into Republican politics, he was the Richmond correspondent for Charlottesville's NBC affiliate.
It is important that his rural roots be recognized.