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Virginia
Full Virginia Duals team scores from Saturday, including a championship from Poquoson
TowneBank American High School Division
Semifinals:
Great Bridge 31, Grundy 30
West Deptford (N.J.) 34, Skyline 28
Championship: West Deptford 34, Great Bridge 30
Third place: Grundy 39, Skyline 30
Consolation:
St. Augustine Prep (N.J.) 54, Eastern View 23
Westfield 37, McLean 33
Tallwood 41, Franklin County 37
Heritage of Lynchburg 54, Orange County 30
West-Oak (S.C.) 38, Kellam 36
Liberty (Pa.) 54, Hempfield (Pa.) 27
Fifth place: Liberty (Pa.) 43, West-Oak 31
Seventh place: Hempfield 36, Kellam 36 (Hempfield won by criteria of eight bout wins to six)
Ninth place: St. Augustine Prep 44, Westfield 24
11th place: McLean 42, Eastern View 32
13th place: Tallwood 42, Heritage of Lynchburg 39
15th place: Orange County 57, Franklin County 22
Cliff Keen American High School Division
Semifinals:
Nazareth (Pa.) 40, Ridge (N.J.) 24
Staunton River 38, Grassfield 29
Championship:
Nazareth 41, Staunton River 30
Third place:
Ridge 41, Grassfield 28
Consolation:
Delaware Military Academy 37, Ocean Lakes 33
Cox 48, Canon-McMillan (Pa.) 32
Battlefield 53, Western Branch 22
New Kent 45, Landstown 27
Deep Run 48, Lafayette 34
Princess Anne 63, Menchville 18
Fifth place: Cox 36, Delaware Military Academy 28
Seventh place: Ocean Lakes 43, Canon-McMillan 30
Ninth place: New Kent 46, Battlefield 27
11th place: Landstown 48, Western Branch 29
13th place: Princess Anne 39, Deep Run 37
15th place: Lafayette 39, Menchville 34
Black & Blue High School Division
Semifinals:
Mills Godwin 39, King’s Fork 31
Poquoson 38, Turner Ashby 30
Championship: Poquoson 48, Mills Godwin 24
Third place: King’s Fork 41, Turner Ashby 33
Consolation:
Kempsville 66, York 12
Tabb 51, Western Albemarle 30
Mathews 38, Smithfield 31
Richlands 42, Bethel 39
Tabb 37, Kempsville 35
Richlands 40, Mathews 33
Western Albemarle 65, York 17
Smithfield 30, Bethel 30
Oscar Smith 44, Spotsylvania 36
Grafton 37, Granby 36
Fifth place: Oscar Smith 38, Grafton 33
Seventh place: Spotsylvania 42, Granby 36
Ninth place: Richlands 48, Tabb 36
11th place: Kempsville 53, Mathews 29
13th place: Smithfield 42, Western Albemarle 42
15th place: Bethel 46, York 23
National College Division
Round-robin:
Wisconsin 27, Virginia 13
American College Division
Semifinals:
Alvernia 25, Reinhardt 18
Elizabethtown 26, Averett 10
Championship: Alvernia 23, Elizabethtown 13
Third place: Averett 21, Reinhardt 17
Consolation:
Frostburg State 34, Marymount 6
Apprentice 30, Penn College 19
Johns Hopkins 35, St. Andrews 23
Liberty 29, Centenary 22
King 37, Belmont Abbey 10
Camden County CC 30, Rowan College of South Jersey 18
Fifth place: King 29, Liberty 18
Seventh place: Centenary 26, Belmont Abbey 22
Ninth place: Frostburg State 25, Apprentice 21
11th place: Penn College 39, Marymount 9
13th place: Johns Hopkins 47, Camden County CC 12
15th place: St. Andrews 54, Rowan College of South Jersey 0
Virginia
Drought emergency declared for parts of Virginia; governor warns of water restrictions
MARTINSVILLE, Va. (WSET) — Extreme drought conditions in parts of Virginia have prompted an emergency drought warning for a wide swath of the region, including Bedford, Campbell, Charlotte, Franklin, Halifax, Henry, Mecklenburg, Patrick, Pittsylvania and Roanoke counties, along with the cities of Danville, Roanoke, Salem and Martinsville.
The governor has warned that if conditions worsen, she will activate mandatory nonessential water-use restrictions.
In Martinsville, city leaders have issued a voluntary water conservation notice and are urging residents and businesses to cut back where they can. The request comes as local businesses that rely heavily on water say the drought is already affecting day-to-day operations.
SEE ALSO: Botetourt County residents adjust daily routines as voluntary water restriction continues
John Hughes, owner of John’s Car Wash, said the dry conditions have hit his business hard in recent weeks. “For the last 3 weeks, it’s been hitting pretty hard. We done three yesterday and haven’t done anything today with the drought and hot weather. Yeah, I’m really concerned about it,” Hughes said.
Restaurants are also feeling the strain. David Kitzmiller, an owner of Be Wiched, said water is essential for routine tasks such as washing dishes and preparing some menu items.
“We use a lot of water for washing dishes and some of our recipes if they limit us in anyway defiently can’t produce and its a scary aspect,” Kitzmiller said.
Kitzmiller added that cutting back is not always realistic for businesses that must meet sanitation needs. “Not really feasible for a business that depends solely relies on water to wash their dishes, so that can’t definitely be an impact there,” he said.
City leaders emphasized that the conservation request is voluntary for now, but they are encouraging everyone to do their part by taking shorter showers, turning off the faucet when it is not in use, washing only full loads of laundry, and limiting outdoor watering whenever possible.
Virginia
Five charged after Virginia Beach Police conduct human trafficking operation
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (WAVY) — Five people were charged after Virginia Beach Police conducted a two-day human trafficking and vice operation on July 3, according to the Virginia Beach Police Department.
The department’s Special Investigations Bureau conducted the operation, which was aimed at identifiying human trafficking victims, reducing the demand for commercial sex and targeting individuals seeking to exploit or recruit children for prostitution.
Detectives used many investigative techniques to proactively identify individuals involved in criminal activity related to prostitution, human trafficking and offenses against children. The operation was conducted in Virginia Beach, involving personnel from all of the bureau’s squads.
As a result of the operation, five people were identified and charged with offenses ranging from solicitation of prostitution to sex trafficking and crimes involving minors. Two vehicles and U.S. currency were seized during the operation. Other people were connected to victim services through Samaritan House.


The operation led to the following people being charged:
- Shane Carter, 28, of Norfolk, was charged with solicitation of prostitution.
- Robert Harris, 64, of Virginia Beach, was charged with solicitation of prostitution and assault and battery.
- Larry Pittman, 53, of Portsmouth, was charged with sex trafficking and use of electronic devices to facilitaate certain offenses involving minors.
- Kenric Frazier, 46, of Portsmouth, was charged with sex trafficking, use of electronic devices to facilitate certain offenses involving minors and solicitation of child pornography.
- Cameron Lewis, 24, of Norfolk, was charged with solicitation of prostitution.
Investigators also developed leads about people who are suspected of trafficking and exploiting others for commercial sex. Those are now active and ongoing investigations. There may be more charges and arrests pending further investigation and consultation with the Virginia Beach Commonwealth’s Attorney’s Office.
If you’re a human trafficking victim or know someone who is, you can report it to the National Human Trafficking Hotline at 1-888-373-7888.
Virginia
Dragas responds to accusations of having unfair advantage in quest to buy VB National
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (WAVY) — Helen Dragas, CEO of Dragas Companies, said she does not feel her company had an “unfair advantage” in pursing a deal to buy Virginia Beach National Golf Club.
Rather, Dragas said her team took the initiative to put forward the “the “best competitive proposal we could.”
Next month, Virginia Beach City Council could vote to sell the 270-acre 18-hole course to Dragas, who along with Texas-based Century Golf, would redesign and refurbish the course. Dragas would then build nearly 660 housing units on the southern end of the property, and build a new childcare center.
Dragas’ proposal, titled “Princess Anne Landing,” was one of nine total groups who responded to the city’s request for proposals regarding of the future of the course.
Still, many on both social media and in public comments have accused the longtime housing developer of having the upper hand, given that she had the city sign a non-disclosure agreement in 2024, more than a year before the city’s intentions of possibly selling the course became public.
As part of an interview Tuesday with 10 On Your Side, Dragas was asked about those accusations and other questions. Responses are edited for style and brevity purposes.
REPORTER: You’ve heard some of the criticisms … sitting through the public hearings. … How do you take it when people say that you got an unfair advantage?
DRAGAS: I say that we invested thousands of hours of hard work and due diligence watching public hearings, media council meetings, digging into those engineering studies that I referenced before that showed the deficiencies, … understanding the comprehensive plan, the Historic Overlay District, the ITA situation, all that. There’s a lot of complexity there and we invested a lot of time and energy to develop the best competitive proposal we could. We never knew we would see it, and we still don’t know if we’ll see a single cent of that investment back. And that’s competition and that’s initiative, and we live in a country that’s always rewarded initiative. And we took it. And while others might have been spending their time on other projects or other endeavors, this is what we were doing. So we didn’t receive any nonpublic information. We just did our homework and I think we tried to solve a lot of problems in one proposal: housing, homeownership, childcare, golf course, you know, redesign and refresh and reinvestment and a future tax stream for the course. So we think we come up with something that provides benefit, not just at offers, but to a lot of other constituents in the city as well. We’re really proud of it.
REPORTER: You were telling me that … long before even the auditors report, you had your eye on that that parcel and thought it would be good for houses. Correct?
DRAGAS: Well, we always knew that there was that section that … could handle some housing, yes. And others did as well. There were other rentals. There was another unsolicited proposal or two. And then I think about half of the respondents to the proposal included housing.
Under the terms that have been negotiated between City Council and economic development staff for months in closed session, Dragas would purchase the roughly 270 acre course for $17.9 million from the city. The city will, in turn, give the $17.9 million back to Dragas, along with $1.8 million from the Virginia Beach Development Authority, to go towards an estimated $38 million golf course redevelopment.
On top of the nearly $20 million the city would give the development team for the golf course work, the city could contribute up to nearly $8 million in public infrastructure along Tournament Drive and Princess Anne Road, to include turn lanes, streetscape improvements, utility relocations, and a sewer extension.
REPORTER: Why does it need to be a public-private partnership?
DRAGAS: So right now the city has millions of dollars in deferred renovation — $7.7 million in identified stormwater deficiencies and remaining clubhouse and facilities repair. That doesn’t cover anything about renovating a 30-year-old course. And … everything needs a renovation, refurbishment at some point in its life, physical life. And so, this course needs that. There’s also public infrastructure that serves the entire area right there. So there’s some Virginia Beach Development Authority parcels that sit there and the first tee … as you probably know, is that land is going to be dedicated to the First Tee. There’s sanitary sanitary sewer infrastructure that serves all those parcels that was originally connected to be temporary, and that was almost 30 years ago. So the city has, I think, some deferred public infrastructure costs as well. What our proposal does is take the city off the hook for future maintenance liabilities. They’re actually going to come out of pocket less than they would if they just did the stormwater and the clubhouse repairs that were made, and in exchange, the city will have a $3.4 million a year tax revenue stream, a completely refreshed and refreshed renovated golf course, a badly needed child care facility and then, of course, the homes, homeownership opportunities for over 600 families.
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