Virginia
About one-third of Central Virginia Training Center slated for demolition
AMHERST COUNTY, Va. (WSET) — Dozens of buildings at the former Central Virginia Training Center in Madison Heights are set to be demolished as part of a redevelopment plan years in the making.
31 buildings are slated to come down as the state moves forward with selling the property.
Jerry Davis, who lives next to the site, said, “To keep it in the condition it’s in, and it’s not being used for anything. It’s a waste of resources as it sits.”
Megan Lucas, CEO of the Lynchburg Regional Business Alliance, noted that about a third of the buildings on the 380-acre property are a state priority to remove. “We have shown it to lots of developers, lots of interested businesses, but when a willing purchaser looks at the site, they see that they would begin $16 million in debt before they even can start rebuilding the site,” Lucas said.
The state closed the facility years ago and later declared it surplus property. Officials say nearly 100 aging buildings, many that may have asbestos and hazardous materials, have made the site hard to sell.
Lucas believes the demolition will “absolutely help” the county and region by making the property more attractive to private investors, opening the door for jobs, development and tax revenue.
READ MORE: Central Va. Training Center site in Amherst Co. up for sale, vision to expand urban core
Residents like Kristina Lavender and Kristin Humphrey expressed interest in utilizing the site for mental health facilities, highlighting the community’s need for such resources.
“I think we could utilize it for mental health situations. We have facilities, it’s a lot of buildings, a lot of area to do a lot of different stuff with to benefit the community, versus plowing it down and building new stuff,” Lavender said.
“I agree we definitely could use some mental health facilities as the communities in desperate need of them, along with addiction,” Humphrey said.
Davis added, “I would love to see something done with it. I would love to see something, maybe a development or something to use the property in a way that would be beneficial for the community and the property owners in the area.”
Officials say the demolitions mark phase one of a redevelopment process nearly a decade in the making.
Virginia
Virginia Supreme Court voids voter-approved redistricting referendum
On May 8, the Virginia Supreme Court ruled that the General Assembly violated the state constitution when it tried to redraw congressional districts, nullifying the results of the April election in which Virginians narrowly approved redistricting.
Electoral maps are usually redrawn once every 10 years, but multiple states began redrawing them early after President Donald Trump urged Republicans to redraw district lines to ensure more favorable results for the party in the November 2026 elections.
This started a nationwide political battle for control of the U.S. House of Representatives. Texas was the first of several states to redraw districts favoring Republicans, and Virginia Democrats had proposed a constitutional amendment to allow redistricting in order to favor Democrats.
As of May 8, Republicans had initiated redistricting efforts in eight states; Democrats had led redistricting efforts in three states, including Virginia, the Washington Post reported.
In April, Virginia voters supported the redistricting amendment with 51.7% voting for it out of more than 3 million ballots cast. It could have given Democrats up to four extra seats in the U.S. House, according to the Washington Post (subscription required).
But the Virginia Supreme Court, in a 4-3 ruling, found that there were procedural errors in how the Democratic legislature handled the process, nullifying the election results.
The Virginia Constitution says that proposed constitutional amendments must pass in the General Assembly twice before the public can vote on them: once before an election of the House of Delegates, and again after an election. According to the Virginia Supreme Court majority opinion written by Justice D. Arthur Kelsey, early voting for the general election had already been open for six weeks when the General Assembly cast its first vote on the amendment in October 2025, with more than 1.3 million voters having already cast their ballots.
“This violation irreparably undermines the integrity of the resulting referendum vote and renders it null and void,” the court majority opinion stated.
The court’s ruling means the state reverts to the old district maps adopted in 2021. Based on those maps, Virginia voters elected six Democrats and five Republicans to the U.S. House.
Following the court’s ruling, some Virginia Democrats who planned to run for the U.S. House told the New York Times that they have to abandon their campaigns, while others, such as Tom Perriello who is running for the 5th District, face much more difficult campaigns.
Virginia Democrats on Friday asked the court to pause the nullification of the referendum results while they prepare their appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, according to VPM.
If you’ve been impacted by the Virginia State Supreme Court’s decision to nullify the results of the April 21 special election on redistricting, we want to hear from you.
Send us a tip or question using our contact form. You can also call (434) 218-3649 and give us as much information as you can in your voice message. You can also reach our newsroom on Signal at (434) 218-3649 or @cvilletomorrow.05. Signal is a chat and voice app for your smartphone that has end-to-end encryption and is run by a nonprofit organization.
Take action
Get in touch if you’ve been impacted by the overturned redistricting results
While we can’t cover every story that’s important to you, we do our best to be responsive to your needs. We use tips from readers to choose which stories to cover, to incorporate information into broader reports or to help us decide how to grow Charlottesville Tomorrow. Here’s where you can tell us what you think we should be covering.
More local news
Source link
Virginia
Virginia Heads To Knoxville Regional With Third Straight NCAA Bid
Virginia
Democrat Rep. Ted Lieu calls Virginia Supreme Court decision on redistricting
Watch CBS News
-
Politics2 minutes agoStacey Abrams hit with subpoena in alleged campaign finance violations saga: ‘No one is above the law’
-
Health8 minutes agoTwo Maryland residents monitored for hantavirus after sharing flight with infected cruise ship passenger
-
Sports14 minutes agoCraig Morton, quarterback who led the Broncos to their first Super Bowl appearance, dead at 83
-
Technology20 minutes agoRobotaxi drives off from airport with passenger’s suitcase
-
Business26 minutes agoL.A. port traffic rises in April despite trade disruption, higher fuel costs
-
Entertainment32 minutes agoEntertainment mogul Byron Allen to acquire Buzzfeed, HuffPost
-
Politics44 minutes agoOversight chair seeks information from OpenAI’s Sam Altman about potential financial conflicts
-
Science50 minutes agoHantavirus fears heighten with 4 Californians exposed to the disease. Is the alarm warranted?