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November 21, 2009

Smith announces re-election bid

Waynesboro City Councilwoman Lorie Smith on Friday formally announced her bid for re-election as the city’s Ward D representative.

Smith won her seat in May of 2006.

“In large part, my work is not done,” Smith said.

Picture it, W’boro
Picture it, W’boro

Waynesboro’s three centuries of history that include vibrant industry, railroad travel and a river running through it are all captured in “Images of America: Waynesboro” – a 126-page pictorial history of the River City.

Bomb hoax suspect charged

An Afton man turned himself over to police today, after a pipe bomb hoax situation on Delphine Avenue led to a felony charge.

Authorities in early November rifled through two properties belonging to Mark S. Bales, 58, after the Waynesboro Police Department connected a suspicious package to him, according to a search warrant. Police closed the street Nov. 2 after finding the package.

Local soldier dies in S. Korea

A former two-sport athlete at Waynesboro High School, Kris Patrick Jones took quickly to military regimen.

“He just loved that kind of life,’’ Felicia Jones, of Verona, said of her brother, an Army corporal and father of six.

Fatal crash suit ends

Judge orders driver pay a monthly sum to survivors



November 20, 2009

Lorie Smith announce re-election bid

Waynesboro City Councilwoman Lorie Smith this morning formally announced her bid for re-election as the city’s Ward D representative.

Bomb hoax suspect charged

An Afton man turned himself over to police today, after a pipe bomb hoax situation on Delphine Avenue led to a felony charge.

$3.5B gap in budget to haunt localities

PORTSMOUTH — Local governments aren’t likely to escape the pain when the General Assembly attempts to eliminate an estimated $3.5 billion hole in the next two-year budget.

That estimate does not include the losses faced by local school districts to replace federal stimulus money that will dwindle next year and then disappear entirely in the second year of the budget.

Leaders to tackle plight of River City

A top Shenandoah Valley economic development official plans to meet with state leaders after Thanksgiving to address immediate and long-term job needs in Waynesboro.

Robin Sullenberger, CEO of the Shenandoah Valley Partnership, said Thursday that he had already discussed this week’s announcement of 110 layoffs at Invista’s Waynesboro plant and other recent job losses in the city with the Virginia Manufacturers Association.

Suited up
Suited up

Kate Collins students get ‘once in a lifetime’ history lesson

Police briefs_11/20

n Authorities charged Kimberly Anne Knight, 45, and John Timothy Swearengin, 45, with trespassing after Staunton police found them in an abandoned house in the 300 block of Green Street. Authorities also charged Swearengin with two counts of defrauding an innkeeper and one count of obstruction of justice. Almost a month before his arrest, Swearengin ate a meal at the Mill Street Grill without paying, authorities said.

W’boro woman gets 7 years

Judge hands down sentence for starvation, abuse

Revenue dip reflects shot to consumer pocketbooks

RICHMOND — Virginians are taking home less pay, spending less in stores and are still getting hit on their investments, new state tax collection statistics show.

Business profits are up sharply, according to the statistics, but with retail sales lagging, when that will translate into new hiring and investment is still unclear, economists say.



November 19, 2009

Police seeking credit card thief

Authorities in Staunton are looking for an unidentified white male suspected of stealing a credit card at Wal-Mart Nov. 14.

Sentencing today in neglect case

For seven months Billiejo Marie King trapped a teen girl in a room and deprived her of food.

Man pleads to mushroom charges

The man charged in Waynesboro’s largest mushroom bust pleaded guilty in circuit court Wednesday to possessing and distributing the psychedelic drug, which police found stored in more than 100 jars in his apartment.

Stormwater project might take West End fire substation funds

An ongoing discussion of how to proceed with referendum-approved projects boiled over during a Waynesboro City Council work session Wednesday night.

Council members recently received legal advice about their ability to move bond money between projects that residents voted on in a 2007 city referendum.

Mayor Tim Williams proposed that $1.2 million borrowed to create a West End fire substation instead be used for a Wayne Hills stormwater project that is moving along faster than the proposed station.

Addict robber cries for mercy; judge unmoved

A Waynesboro man cried for mercy in circuit court Wednesday after pleading guilty to robbing a gas station.

“I know what I pled guilty to doing wrong,” Kenneth Marsella Reynolds told Judge Humes J. Franklin Jr. “I’m an addict – I’m not here to make anyone mad, I just pray to God. Have a little mercy on me today. Your honor, I will never be in your courtroom again.”

Streetscape advances
Streetscape advances

City to seek federal grant after session

Police brief_11/19

Staunton police arrested Jeremy Kirk Pope, 29, of Staunton on charges he stole a television and printer from a city residence. Pope, described by authorities as one of their “Frequent Flyers,” has been arrested more than a dozen times in the past three years for various charges including: public intoxication, urinating in public and larceny. In March Pope pleaded guilty to charges of assault and batter and for assaulting a law enforcement officer

Baby-shaking case results in 1-year sentence

Both attorneys listened to the defendant and agreed. Krista Shay Chandler told her story and they believed her remorse. But consequences could not be ignored.

Chandler, 21, appeared before a Waynesboro Circuit Court judge Wednesday, ready to be sentenced for abusing her boyfriend’s toddler in April 2008.

More than 10 supporters attended her hearing, and uttered words of encouragement after Judge Humes J. Franklin Jr. sentenced Chandler to one year in prison and three years of supervised probation.

Invista eliminates 110 jobs

Housing slump dogging city industries

Budget woes headline legislative breakfast in Staunton

STAUNTON – Two veteran Shenandoah Valley legislators are prepared to sharpen the budget axe for the 2010 General Assembly.

The legislators discussed the sobering news that Virginia is facing a projected shortfall of nearly $3 billion over the next two years during an area legislative breakfast Wednesday at Bentley Commons in Staunton.



November 18, 2009

BREAKING NEWS: Invista announces layoff of 110 in Waynesboro
BREAKING NEWS: Invista announces layoff of 110 in Waynesboro

Invista announces new round of lay offs

Man sentenced for Shell stickup

A Waynesboro man cried for mercy in circuit court today, after pleading guilty to robbing a local gas station.

Maersk Alabama repels 2nd pirate attack with guns

Somali pirates attacked the Maersk Alabama on Wednesday for the second time in seven months, though private guards on board the U.S.-flagged ship repelled the attack with gunfire and a high-decibel noise device.

Unemployment picture mixed

Unemployment fell in Waynesboro in September, but rose slightly in both Augusta County and Staunton, according to statistics released Tuesday by the Virginia Employment Commission.

Waynesboro’s rate dropped to 8.2 percent in September compared to 8.5 percent in August.

Filmed sex act leads to guilty plea

A Stuarts Draft man will serve three years’ probation for paying a teenage girl to perform oral sex on him as he videotaped the act.

Wayne Edward Gill, 39, pleaded guilty late Monday in a deal with Staunton prosecutors to avoid jail time. The court ordered Gill to register as a sex offender.

Gill paid a 17-year-old R.E. Lee High School student $300 to film her performing the act earlier this year in a Staunton auto body shop. The girl was seeking to pay drug debts, authorities have said.

Free tax prep to aid low-income earners

Alarmed by the number of low-income workers missing out on income tax credits and paying for tax preparation, the area’s Community Action Partnership this week begins lessons that will lead to a free preparation program.

Police brief_11/18

A three-vehicle crash along U.S. 11 and Captain Hizer Lane stopped traffic Tuesday morning after a Fort Defiance High School student braked for a loose dog, authorities said.

Daniel Whitson, 29, of Grottoes, smashed his vehicle into the back of the student’s car, jack-knifing the trailer he was hauling into an oncoming vehicle.

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