News from the South - Virginia News Feed
These popular snack foods could soon require warning labels in US
SUMMARY: A Texas bill proposes requiring warning labels on popular snack foods containing 44 specific ingredients like food dyes, bleached flour, and certain oils. Affected products include candies such as Skittles and M\&M’s, chips like Doritos and Ruffles, and drinks like Gatorade and Mountain Dew. The initiative aligns with Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Make America Healthy Again campaign, aiming for greater transparency. Though these ingredients are legal in the U.S., many are banned in other countries. Health experts say warning labels could reduce risks linked to ultraprocessed foods, which constitute over half of Americans’ calorie intake. Food industry groups oppose the bill, citing economic concerns and the bill’s broad scope. If passed, the law could prompt nationwide labeling due to Texas’s large market.
These popular snack foods could soon require warning labels in US
News from the South - Virginia News Feed
Company seeks to overturn Va. Supreme Court’s rejection of toll increase request
by Nathaniel Cline, Virginia Mercury
July 22, 2025
Toll Road Investors Partnership II (TRIP II), which operates the private 14-mile Dulles Greenway toll road, is seeking to overturn a Virginia Supreme Court’s decision last week to reject the company’s request to hike the roadway’s toll rate.
This comes after the Virginia Supreme Court on Thursday upheld the unanimous decision by the State Corporation Commission (SCC) to reject the proposal because it did not demonstrate that the proposed rates would be “reasonable to the user in relation to the benefit obtained.”
Atlas Arteria, which owns the roadway, is regulated by the SCC under the Virginia Highway Corporation Act, which allows the company to request a toll increase once per year but doesn’t permit it to negotiate those increases.
On July 11, 2023, TRIP II applied to raise tolls on vehicles, including two-axle vehicles, from $5.80 to $8.10 during peak hours and from $5.25 to $6.40 during off-peak hours, to cover its debt payments and operating expenses. Traveling the toll road cost commuters driving two-axle vehicles $1.75 and $3.50 for all other vehicles when the road opened in 1995.
Court records indicate TRIP II’s debt stood at $1.1 billion as of December 2022.
“TRIP II’s pending federal case, which was stayed in anticipation of the SCV appeal decision, will now proceed,” said Atlas Arteria in a statement. “The federal complaint alleges constitutional violations distinct from those decided by the (Supreme Court) and seeks compensatory, declarative, injunctive, and other relief, unavailable to TRIP II in the SCV appeal.”
The company said TRIP II would continue to engage with the SCC’s working group and plans to file a new proposal to raise toll rates later this year.
Following the Supreme Court’s decision, Attorney General Jason Miyares said in a statement on Thursday that the proposal failed to meet the basic legal standards of reasonableness and public benefit and that the high court upheld the commission’s finding that the proposed tolls were unjustified and unreasonably burdensome on the public.
Virginia law mandates that toll increases must be reasonable to drivers in relation to the benefit received.
In October 2023, the Virginia Attorney General’s Division of Consumer Counsel joined the case for TRIP II’s rate increase, along with Loudoun County.
“This is an enormous win for hardworking Virginians who are already stretched thin by rising costs,” Miyares said in a statement on July 17. “No private company has the right to exploit a government franchise to gouge commuters, especially when public alternatives exist. My office stood up to defend Virginia consumers from the largest toll increase in Dulles Greenway history, and today, common sense prevailed.”
Loudoun County leaders also celebrated the court’s decision. The toll road runs between Leesburg and Washington Dulles International Airport, situated in Loudoun County.
County leaders asked to participate in the case because they believe “decades of increased tolls on the Greenway prevent drivers from using it, which results in increased congestion on public roads in the county and forces Loudoun County to expand other roads at public expense.”
In anticipation of the Supreme Court’s decision, TRIP II filed its complaint in February in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District shortly after the SCC’s decision on Sept. 4, 2024. Since the Virginia Supreme Court’s ruling, no additional hearings have been scheduled.
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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 Company seeks to overturn Va. Supreme Court’s rejection of toll increase request 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 article presents a largely factual report on the Virginia Supreme Court’s rejection of a private toll road company’s attempt to raise tolls, emphasizing the protection of consumer interests and public benefit. The coverage highlights the Attorney General’s and Loudoun County officials’ criticisms of the toll increase as burdensome to commuters and frames the court decision as a victory for “hardworking Virginians” against corporate overreach. The tone and choice of quotes suggest a slight lean toward consumer protection and government oversight, which aligns with a Center-Left perspective, without strong partisan framing or ideological rhetoric.
News from the South - Virginia News Feed
Tropics Update: Area of interest in the Atlantic: 94-L
SUMMARY: As of July 21, the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season is about one-third complete, with only three named storms so far and overall quiet conditions in both the Atlantic and eastern Pacific basins. A new area of interest, Invest 94L, is located far east in the Atlantic but faces hostile conditions including dry Saharan dust and fast westward movement, limiting its development chances to about 10%. Historically, long gaps without named storms occur, with a notable 61-day lull in 1999. Tropical activity typically increases in August as conditions become more favorable. Tonight’s Hurricane Hub Live highlights ongoing monitoring and preparedness guidance.
13News Now chief meteorologist Tim Pandajis has the latest on the tropics. The National Hurricane Center is tracking an area of low pressure, known as Invest 94L, in the central Atlantic. Showers and thunderstorms have become less organized, and conditions are expected to become less favorable over the next day or so as the system moves west-northwest at 10–15 mph, according to hurricane forecasters.
Overall, things are quiet in the tropics, but we’re approaching a time when storm activity typically ramps up significantly.
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News from the South - Virginia News Feed
Richmond forms two work groups to tackle water system woes
by Markus Schmidt, Virginia Mercury
July 21, 2025
Facing renewed scrutiny after back-to-back water crises, Richmond Mayor Danny Avula has announced the creation of two new water-focused work groups aimed at building a more resilient regional system and restoring public trust.
“These two work groups mark a critical step forward in building a stronger, more resilient water system for the region,” Avula said in a statement. “Just today, we saw that spirit of collaboration in action as Richmond provided additional water to our neighboring locality during their planned maintenance. That’s what partnership looks like: clear communication, shared problem-solving, and mutual support.”
The announcement comes just weeks after a second major boil water advisory in less than six months rattled large portions of the city and surrounding counties. Though other central Virginia localities including Hopewell and Petersburg most recently experienced water-related emergencies, Richmond’s earlier water crises — and its recovery and resilience efforts — remain a top focus of public concern.
Petersburg officials: flooding spurred by intense rain, aging water system, lack of river dredging
In January, a cascade of failures at Richmond’s aging Water Treatment Plant left thousands without safe water for nearly a week. And in late May, another operational issue forced the city to issue an emergency alert affecting dozens of neighborhoods across Richmond’s Northside, Southside and central districts.
Of the newly founded groups, one will focus internally on scenario planning and long-term financial strategy. Led by Chief Administrative Officer Odie Donald and Public Utilities Director Scott Morris, the team will evaluate capital investment needs, debt management strategies and ratepayer impacts. They will consult with external financial experts, including Davenport Financial Advisors and Raftelis.
The second group will be a regional collaboration, including water utility leaders and technical experts from Chesterfield, Hanover, and Henrico counties, whose water systems connect to Richmond’s. That team will coordinate operations, capital improvement plans, rate models, and joint funding requests. It will also formalize a routine communication structure to keep all partners updated.
“These work groups and real-time collaborations are exactly what it takes to meet the challenges of modern infrastructure,” Morris said. “The ability to assist Henrico in this way underscores our capacity, but more importantly, it shows how jurisdictional coordination helps us all move forward with confidence.”
But the mayor’s announcement lands in the shadow of Richmond’s troubled recent track record.
On May 27, just as the system was recovering from early-morning repairs, filters at the water plant re-clogged after running at full capacity. Pressure dropped in the Ginter Park tank, and by mid-morning, officials had issued a boil water advisory that later expanded across the city, covering areas from Carytown to Manchester and VCU to Ancarrow’s Landing.
New boil water advisory issued in Richmond, months after January water crisis
Avula acknowledged that the city’s messaging to residents changed throughout the day, with the first public notice assuring the public that drinking water was unaffected, followed by a citywide boil alert a few hours later. He said the delay was due to the city’s efforts to first alert neighboring localities and reduce demand before informing the broader public.
The city had reached out to Chesterfield and Henrico counties to “try to figure out, ‘hey, what can we do to reduce demand on the system?’” Avula said at the time. “That allowed us to have more time to recover the facility and then make a plan of action to move forward.”
The flip-flop in messaging only added to public frustration following the January disaster, which state health officials have called “completely avoidable.”
In an April report, the Virginia Department of Health blamed the January failure on “a long chain of preventable failures,” including untested backup batteries, broken valves, and a failure to follow emergency protocols. The water plant flooded after a winter storm knocked out power and backup systems failed.
“The crisis could have been prevented with better operational decisions,” said State Health Commissioner Dr. Karen Shelton upon the report’s release. “Our goal now is to ensure corrective actions are taken swiftly and effectively, so Richmond-area families can trust their water supply.”
In response to the January incident, the city received a second formal violation notice and is now under state mandate to develop a corrective action plan. An independent engineering probe identified more than $63 million in urgent infrastructure upgrades on top of the $60 million already proposed in Richmond’s capital plan.
Those include automating emergency systems, modernizing electrical infrastructure, and redesigning critical flood-prone elements of the treatment plant.
While Avula praised the Department of Public Utilities’ recent work, the VDH report described a “culture of complacency” where makeshift fixes became standard and systemic risks went unaddressed.
Now, as summer heats up, the mayor hopes that formalizing collaboration and financial planning will signal a turning point. Both newly created work groups have already begun meeting to chart next steps, the city said in a statement.
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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 Richmond forms two work groups to tackle water system woes 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
This content primarily presents a factual and balanced report on Richmond’s recent water crises, focusing on government responses, infrastructure challenges, and public health implications. It includes official statements from the mayor and city officials, critiques from state health authorities, and details about corrective measures without overtly partisan language or editorializing. The article’s tone is neutral, emphasizing accountability and practical solutions rather than ideological perspectives, which positions it in the political center.
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