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After Hopewell water plant released raw sewage, state officials outline health, environmental impact

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virginiamercury.com – Charlotte Rene Woods, Shannon Heckt – 2025-07-15 04:25:00


Public officials warn residents to avoid the James River near Hopewell and Richmond after a power outage at Hopewell’s water treatment plant released about one million gallons of raw sewage into the river. The affected area extends from Gravely Run Creek downstream to Berkley Plantation. Officials expect the advisory to be lifted by July 18 after natural dilution and degradation. There are no fish consumption advisories currently, but safe handling is advised. The Department of Environmental Quality is investigating the incident. Recent heavy rains have increased water turbulence, helping to break down pollution, though Richmond’s combined sewage system poses ongoing risks.

by Charlotte Rene Woods and Shannon Heckt, Virginia Mercury
July 15, 2025

Public officials are advising locals to avoid the James River in Hopewell and Richmond, after a weekend water treatment plant malfunction released raw sewage into the waterway. They also said the region’s recent heavy rains play a part in pollution in the river but don’t expect long-term effects. 

On Friday night, Hopewell’s water treatment lost power and deposited about a million gallons of raw sewage into the James River. The most affected areas were Gravely Run Creek and sections of the James from the Old City Point Waterfront Park in Hopewell downstream to the Berkley Plantation — areas local and state officials have advised people and pets to steer clear of for the time being. 

“As long as there is no additional discharge, (Virginia Department of Health) expects to lift the advisory on Friday after the river system has time to flush out the sewage through dilution and degradation,” Brookie Crawford, risk communications manager with VDH, said Monday. 

Crawford also recommended that people practice safe food handling if consuming fish they’ve caught and pointed to VDH’s fish consumption advisory dashboard. As of Monday afternoon, there was no fish consumption advisory in place near Hopewell.

A Hopewell communications worker also confirmed that a permanent repair at the plant is expected to be done by the end of the week. 

WTVR first reported that faulty wiring at the water treatment plant had caused a power outage which led to the overflow. Residential sewage and drinking water were not affected, but untreated sewage flowed unabated into the James River during the incident. The plant was fully operational by Saturday, officials said.

The Department of Environmental Quality is investigating the incident. They visited the facility on Saturday and will be working with the plant to find solutions to ensure another leak won’t happen again.

A DEQ spokesperson said the sewage that entered Gravelly Run and the James River would have mixed in the water, making it impossible to clean up. Bacteria will die off over the next several days.

The swim advisory area is not expected to be expanded as the sewage moves downstream; DEQ believes it will be diluted and degraded. Recent heavy rains have led to more turbulent waters, which can also help with the breakdown of the sewage. If the plant remains operational, the swim advisory is anticipated to be lifted on July 18.

There are no long-term effects expected to impact the waterways. However, DEQ and VDH stress that people should not drink any untreated water, should shower after swimming, and should avoid swimming for three days after any significant rain.

Meanwhile, heavy rain poses additional health risks around Richmond since the city uses a combined sewage-overflow system. This means that heavy rains can allow a mix of stormwater runoff and sewage to become present in the river. Richmond has seen heavy rains most nights in recent weeks. 

“Heavy rain picks up anything it comes in contact with, including germs from overflowing sewage, polluted storm water, and runoff from land,” Crawford said. 

If a river or lake has a green film,  a chemical odor, appears cloudier than usual or has multiple dead fish, Crawford said it’s best not to get in. 

State lawmakers have tried unsuccessfully for years to earmark $50 million in the state budget to overhaul the system, though it survived negotiations earlier this year. 

Region’s previous water woes

Hopewell’s water treatment incident is the latest central Virginia municipal water issue this year. Richmond faced two water boil advisories in January and May as its water treatment plant also faced a power outage, and later, filter clogs.

Richmond issues boil water advisory after storm disrupts water system

Richmond residents were without safe drinking water for nearly a week in early January following a power failure that signaled overdue maintenance repairs for the plant’s infrastructure. Residents in Richmond and Henrico County had to boil their water before consuming it, while those without pressure took advantage of a recent snowfall to melt and boil snow for use. Some residents also sought out natural springs in the area. The state penalized the city for the crisis.

By April, the installation of a new pump led to increased fluoride levels in local drinking water, but officials said it was still safe for consumption. Then in May, clogged filters prompted a water boil advisory for parts of the city and requests for conservation in others. 

In late June, officials from Richmond and Henrico County, which taps into part of Richmond’s water, held a water summit to dissect what went wrong and brainstorm plans for future collaboration on water infrastructure. 

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Virginia Mercury is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Virginia Mercury maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Samantha Willis for questions: info@virginiamercury.com.

The post After Hopewell water plant released raw sewage, state officials outline health, environmental impact appeared first on virginiamercury.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

The article presents a straightforward report on a local environmental and public health issue without injecting partisan commentary or ideological framing. It provides detailed factual information on the sewage spill, responses from government agencies, and historical context on related water system problems. The tone remains neutral, focusing on public safety, infrastructure challenges, and official statements, without advocating for particular political viewpoints or assigning blame beyond objective reporting. Overall, the content aligns with balanced, factual journalism that neither promotes nor criticizes a specific political agenda.

News from the South - Virginia News Feed

CDC director Susan Monarez is fired and other agency leaders resign

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www.youtube.com – WTVR CBS 6 – 2025-08-28 16:22:04

SUMMARY: CDC Director Susan Monarez has been fired, prompting several high-profile resignations within the agency. Appointed in July, Monarez was removed after refusing to endorse what her legal team described as “unscientific, reckless directives” under the Trump administration and Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Dimitri Dust, director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, also resigned, criticizing the CDC’s politicization and departure from scientific integrity. This turmoil coincides with new FDA COVID vaccine guidance and impending reports on autism causes. The controversy is part of broader tensions, including attempted firings and suspensions across federal agencies for dissenting voices.

The director of the nation’s top public health agency has been fired after less than one month in the job. The White House says Susan Monarez isn’t “aligned with” President Donald Trump’s agenda and refused to resign, so she was fired. Her lawyers said she was targeted for standing up for science. Also on Wednesday, some other top agency leaders said they are resigning. Monarez was sworn in on July 31 — less than a month ago, making her the shortest-serving CDC director in the history of the 79-year-old agency.

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Voting rights case to ensure rolls aren’t purged too close to Election Day to move forward

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virginiamercury.com – Charlotte Rene Woods – 2025-08-28 04:20:00


A federal judge allowed a voting rights lawsuit against Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s voter roll purge to proceed. The case, filed by Virginia immigrant and voting rights groups, alleges Youngkin violated the National Voter Registration Act by removing over 1,600 voters within 90 days of the 2024 election, during a federally protected “quiet period.” Youngkin’s August 7, 2024 executive order accelerated removals from monthly to daily, raising concerns about eligible voters being wrongly purged without proper notice. The lawsuit aims to prevent disenfranchisement ahead of the 2026 midterms. Youngkin vetoed a related bill to clarify the 90-day removal rule.

by Charlotte Rene Woods, Virginia Mercury
August 28, 2025

A federal district court judge rejected defendants’ attempts to dismiss a voting rights case that first surfaced last summer when Gov. Glenn Youngkin ordered a purge of voter rolls that the U.S. Department of Justice, Democratic Virginia lawmakers and civil rights advocates said was too close to Election Day.

Over 1,600 people removed from voter rolls under Youngkin order; groups seek court injunction

In what its plaintiffs are calling a “major win for voting rights,” U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia judge Patricia Tolliver Giles is allowing the case to proceed and move into the next phase of legal scrutiny. 

Filed by the Virginia Coalition for Immigrants’ Rights (VACIR), Virginia’s chapter of the League of Women Voters, and African Communities Together, the groups assert that Youngkin’s administration violated the federal National Voter Registration Act by removing people from voter rolls within 90 days of last November’s elections. 

The federal law entails a 90-day “quiet period” that both former President Joe Biden’s administration and the Virginia groups’ suits alleged Youngkin violated.

Voter purge lawsuits add to disenfranchisement allegations against Youngkin administration

Youngkin had issued an executive order on Aug. 7, 2024 — exactly 90 days before the 2024 elections — before touting it  on Fox News that same day. 

A 2006 law does allow removals from rolls if people fail to indicate U.S. citizenship on Department of Motor Vehicle paperwork. The information is then sent to the State Board of Elections monthly. Youngkin’s order ramped the process up to daily, which raised concern about eligible voters being inadvertently removed, along with its occurrence within the 90-day “quiet period.”

Purged Virginia voters say experience has been ‘worrying’

In the Aug. 7, 2024  interview with Sean Hannity, Youngkin said the “daily scrubbing” of voter rolls was necessary to “make sure that in fact if an illegal immigrant either mistakenly or maliciously registers to vote, that person will be cleaned off the ballot immediately and turned over to our prosecuting attorneys to make sure that they are prosecuted to the full extent.”

Election officials said at the time that there was already a process in place to prevent undocumented immigrants from voting. The coalition’s suit argued that many removals were done without proper notification or investigation, leaving eligible voters unaware they could no longer cast their ballots. Plaintiffs in the lawsuit stressed that purges affect both longtime citizens who’d made paperwork errors and those who’d become naturalized citizens since their last Department of Motor Vehicles visits. Roughly 1,600 Virginians were affected, some of whom were able to get back on the rolls, but it was a challenge for them. 

“An attack on naturalized citizens is an attack on citizens,” VACIR director Monica Sarmiento said on a press call Wednesday celebrating the advancement of the case. 

Though the case sought an injunction last year,  the U.S. Supreme Court allowed the purge to take place. In the new U.S. District court ruling, the case can move forward again.

“Now we will have the opportunity to depose officials who were involved, seek additional information, find out who is responsible, and make sure this doesn’t happen again,” said Anna Dorman, legal counsel with Protect Democracy, which was also involved in the case. 

Beyond the lawsuit, state lawmakers tried to adjust the 2006 state law to further clarify federal law’s 90-day threshold. It cleared the legislature but was ultimately vetoed by Youngkin. 

If the lawsuit prevails, plaintiffs said their goal is to prevent voters from being negatively affected when they seek to vote in next year’s congressional midterm elections.

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Virginia Mercury is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Virginia Mercury maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Samantha Willis for questions: info@virginiamercury.com.

The post Voting rights case to ensure rolls aren’t purged too close to Election Day to move forward appeared first on virginiamercury.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Left

This content reflects a Center-Left political bias as it highlights concerns and legal challenges against a Republican governor, Glenn Youngkin, regarding voter roll purges. The article emphasizes the perspectives of civil rights groups, Democratic lawmakers, and voting rights advocates, portraying the voter roll purge as potentially harmful to eligible voters and aligned with efforts to protect voting rights. While presenting factual information and quotes from both sides, the framing and choice of sources indicate a leaning toward progressive viewpoints on election integrity and voter protections.

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McLaurin joins Commanders for practice after signing extension | NBC4 Washington

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www.youtube.com – NBC4 Washington – 2025-08-27 22:51:17

SUMMARY: Terry McLaurin is back with the Washington Commanders after signing a three-year, $96 million extension. He practiced for the first time in months, energizing the team and fans. McLaurin expressed gratitude and peace about the deal, emphasizing the importance of communication and compromise in negotiations. He highlighted his faith and wife as key supports during the process. Coach Dan Quinn believes McLaurin will be ready for Week 1 against the Giants. McLaurin feels confident about his readiness and is eager to lead the team, calling the Commanders “home” and expressing excitement to continue playing football.

With contract extension negotiations behind him, wide receiver Terry McLaurin returned to the Washington Commanders’ practice …

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