Virginia has begun paying unemployment benefits to some of the tens of thousands of people whose claims had previously been on hold – in some cases for many months – because they were awaiting a staff review.
Virginia has begun paying unemployment benefits to some of the tens of thousands of people whose claims had previously been on hold – in some cases for many months – because they were awaiting a staff review.
Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, D., “overstepped his role” when he told citizens how to worship amid the latest coronavirus restrictions, Fox News contributor Mollie Hemingway told “America’s Newsroom” on Friday.
Beyond/Hello, operated by husband-and-wife team Gregory and Farzana Kennedy, opened in late November at 8100 Albertstone Circle in the Manassas area of Prince William County. The outlet can not only fill cannabis prescriptions but also grows the marijuana itself on site.
A controversial plan to pave the way for a future mixed-used development in an agriculturally zoned area along Va. 234 in the area known as Independent Hill was voted down by Prince William County’s Planning Commission Wednesday evening.
After nearly a year-long hiatus, Prince William officials are once again debating possible changes to the county’s 117,000-acre “rural crescent,” which was the topic of a recent planning commission work session.
As a series of road widening projects intended to ease congestion along Route 1 progress, Prince William County’s Department of Transportation is beginning to explore another means of moving people up and down the eastern part of the county.
Approximately 3,000 first-graders in Prince William County are set to return to classrooms on a part-time basis starting tomorrow.
All Prince William County students who choose the school division’s proposed “hybrid plan” could return to schools for in-person learning by the start of the third quarter, which begins Feb. 2, under a plan the school board approved early Thursday despite criticisms from some members who said it lacks a sense of urgency about getting students back in school.
A woman who treated more than 100 patients while pretending to be a psychologist in Stafford County was ordered Friday to serve 11 years in prison.