Virginia
Humane Society Of Tulsa Caring For 200 Beagles Rescued From Virginia
Greater than 200 beagles arrived safely in Tulsa on July 27 after the U.S. Division of Agriculture eliminated them from a breeding facility in Virginia.
The Humane Society of Tulsa is one in all a number of companions working to get the 4,000 beagles from the Virginia facility adopted.
The Humane Society of Tulsa stated the 208 beagles vary from a couple of weeks outdated to eight years outdated.
They’ll spend their first evening on the adoption heart close to 61st and Sheridan. Then the following day, they are going to be vetted and vaccinated. Some might go to their endlessly houses as early as this weekend.
Humane Society of Tulsa transport coordinator, Lawrence DePriest, stated the journey from the breeding facility to Tulsa took 27 hours with all the mandatory stops.
“All people arrived blissful and wholesome appear to be doing good thus far,” stated DePriest.
DePriest additionally stated employees are grateful they’ve a giant transport rig to have the ability to rescue so many canines from being bought to labs for animal testing.
“They have been destined for not-so-great issues, so with the ability to get them out of that scenario and on the highway to a a lot, a lot happier and higher life is fairly rewarding,” stated DePriest.
Some in our neighborhood have requested how the Humane Society is in a position to soak up so many canines when different shelters are battling overcapacity.
Adoption Heart Supervisor, Rachel Ward, stated this historic rescue won’t burden the neighborhood.
“We’re working as a transportation hub, basically to get these animals throughout the nation, so our aim is to not funnel as many beagles into Oklahoma as attainable,” defined Ward. “It is to be a accomplice with the US Humane Society and the Division of Ag to have the ability to transfer these animals out of the power.”
Ward stated folks everywhere in the nation have already utilized to undertake, and the company will proceed to just accept functions.
“Individuals perceive the state that these beagles are in and perceive the place they’re coming from and perceive that they have been born to do nothing however breed and go into medical testing services,” stated Ward.
If you want to undertake one in all these canines or donate to the trigger, you possibly can click on right here for extra data on the Humane Society of Tulsa web site.
Virginia
Virginia government grinds to a halt as hospitals, residents hit by colossal water plant failure
A water treatment plant failure threw North America’s oldest continuous lawmaking body into crisis this week, as lawmakers were effectively shut out of the Virginia State Capitol for safety reasons.
Throughout the rest of Richmond, residents were dealing with a lack of water, and hospitals had to employ tanker trucks to provide the water needed not only to quench patients, but to provide heat and sanitization of medical implements, according to one state lawmaker.
The right-leaning group Virginia Project said the crisis may be the reason for the legislature to take an immediate interest in infrastructure funding, before offering a Confederate-era suggestion:
“Perhaps the waterless legislature should retreat to Appomattox,” a social media post from the group said, referring to the community about 100 miles southwest of the Capitol: where the Richmond-based Confederate States of America surrendered to the Union in April 1865.
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Others, like Virginia Republican Party chair Richard Anderson, placed blame on the recently-departed Democratic mayor who is now running for lieutenant governor.
“[The crisis is] a direct result of inept leadership by former Mayor Levar Stoney of Richmond–who presided over his city’s crumbling infrastructure,” Anderson said.
“Stoney as LG? Never.”
The crisis hit less than one week after the current Democratic mayor, Dr. Danny Avula, took office.
Avula, previously a pediatrician at Chippenham Hospital in neighboring Chesterfield County, said he has been hands-on since the water system first failed.
Avula said he spent much of Tuesday night at the city plant and announced Wednesday morning that some of the pumps are beginning to come back online.
“We’re starting to see that reservoir level fill up. It’s really encouraging. Right now the reservoir level is at 7ft for some context. [Our] reservoirs typically run at about 18ft.”
Avula’s work drew him bipartisan praise, including from one prominent Republican.
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State Sen. Mark Obenshain of Harrisonburg, the Senate GOP Caucus Chair, said he’s never seen a legislative session begin in such chaos in his 21 years in the Capitol.
“Kudos to the new mayor for his tireless efforts to resolve this inherited crisis,” he said on X, formerly Twitter.
State Senate Minority Leader Ryan McDougle, R-Hanover, told Fox News Digital the water outage doubly affected his work, as both the Capitol and his district office in nearby Mechanicsville both felt the effects.
McDougle said the outage’s reach has gone beyond Richmond’s limits and into Henrico and Hanover counties to the north and east. Constituents have been reaching out to his office for help.
McDougle praised Gov. Glenn Youngkin for being “extremely aggressive in trying to find solutions to the problem that was created in the city,” and offered the same for officials in suburban counties.
“[We are] trying to make sure that we’re getting water to infrastructure like hospitals, so that they can continue to treat patients and to get water available to citizens so that they can take care of their families.
“But this has been a real effort on behalf of the state government and local jurisdictions trying to assist Richmond.”
He said Avula does not deserve blame for the crisis, as he only took office days ago.
“It’s a shame this had to be on his first week,” McDougle said.
“But we need to really investigate and get to the bottom of how [the Stoney] administration could have let this become such an acute problem that would impact so many people.”
Schools in McDougle’s district were shut down Wednesday, and the legislature was gaveled out until Monday — after concerns from leaders and staff that the fire-suppression system in the iconic Capitol could malfunction without enough water flow.
McDougle remarked that while exercising caution is wise, Virginia’s spot as the oldest continuous legislature obviously predated utilities, and that the people’s work can and should be done in whatever way possible while the Capitol is out-of-order.
Another state lawmaker put the blame at the foot of Richmond’s longtime Democratic leadership.
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Del. Wren Williams, R-Stuart, said Richmond has been a city “plagued by systemic neglect and a lack of accountability.”
“Now, Stoney wants to be our commonwealth’s next lieutenant governor. Despite the city’s growing infrastructure needs, Democrats in Richmond allowed critical issues like water contamination and aging pipes to fester, leaving residents vulnerable to unsafe drinking water and deteriorating public health,” Williams said.
He previously proposed a bill that would have allowed state agencies to study utility upgrades and provide engineering support.
With Democrats marginally in control of the legislature and hoping to prevent Youngkin’s deputy Winsome Sears from succeeding him in November, Williams said the crisis is emblematic of Democrats’ “larger failure… in Virginia, where promises of progress and equity often ring hollow when the real work of maintaining essential services is neglected.”
Richmond businessowner Jimmy Keady echoed Williams, telling Fox News Digital the crisis isn’t just a failure of infrastructure but of past city leadership:
“For nearly 48 hours, businesses have forced to close. Residents were left without clean water, and hourly workers lost wages,” Keady said.
“The political implications are just as severe,” added Keady, who is also a political consultant.
He noted Virginia’s legislature is only in session for a few months, and referenced how lawmakers must explicitly pass resolutions to extend business beyond a term’s end date.
“By losing nearly 11% of this short session, Virginia lawmakers are losing valuable time to pass legislation that will address growing problems throughout our commonwealth, such as economic growth, rising medical costs, and — sure enough — aging infrastructure.”
Richmond’s water supply is primarily sourced by the James River.
Fox News Digital reached out to Stoney’s campaign and House Speaker Don Scott Jr., D-Portsmouth. Avula could not be reached.
In remarks late Wednesday, Youngkin praised public and private partners around the capital region that have helped residents deal with the lack of water, from Avula to companies like Amazon and Publix.
“The collaboration from the surrounding counties with the city of Richmond and the state resources has been truly inspiring. The counties of Hanover, Henrico and Chesterfield not only brought to bear all their expertise in emergency management, but their resources.”
“They all mobilized fire-pump trucks in order to make sure that if there was a fire emergency and there was no water available in the city, that in fact the city could react really quickly to those urgencies.”
Virginia
Drug dealers could be charged with murder under new Virginia fentanyl plan
Virginia Republicans announced their top legislative priorities for the new year, with curbing fentanyl deaths chief among them.
Under current case law, it is difficult to charge a drug dealer with the murder of a user who died from fentanyl they had purchased unless they are in the proximity of that dealer, according to GOP legislators.
State Senate Minority Leader Ryan McDougle, R-New Kent, told Fox News Digital on Tuesday that Virginia hopes to address that legislative insufficiency.
“This [law] would say if you sell the drugs, it doesn’t matter if you’re in physical proximity,” he said.
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McDougle and Senate Republican Caucus Leader Mark Obenshain are spearheading the effort.
Fox News Digital reached out to Obenshain, of Harrisonburg, for additional comment.
However, at a related press conference, Obenshain said that as long as people are “dying in every corner of Virginia, of every socioeconomic background, that means there’s people out there peddling this poison.”
A pair of Senate special elections on Tuesday were set to determine whether Republicans will take a slightly belated majority in the chamber this term, as Democrats currently control it by one seat.
Voters went to the polls in both Loudoun County and a swath of more red counties, including Buckingham, Fluvanna and Goochland.
On Wednesday, multiple outlets projected Democrats will hold their slim single-seat majority – requiring one liberal to side with McDougle and Obenshain on their counter-fentanyl proposal.
In 2022, the Old Dominion ranked 14th among states for total fentanyl-related deaths, with 1,973 fatalities, and was positioned near the national average in terms of death rate per capita, according to CDC data.
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For comparison, neighboring West Virginia leads the nation in fentanyl deaths per capita, but total deaths were 1,084, less than Virginia.
Seven out of 10 pills seized by the DEA contain a lethal dose of fentanyl, according to OnePillCanKill Virginia.
A representative for Gov. Glenn Youngkin said he believes prosecuting fentanyl dealers should receive bipartisan support:
“As Governor Youngkin has said time and time again, any person who knowingly and intentionally distributes fentanyl should be charged and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” spokesman Christian Martinez told Fox News Digital.
“We cannot continue to let makers and dealers get away with murder – and it is time Democrat lawmakers side with victims’ families over fentanyl makers and dealers.”
In April, Youngkin signed Obenshain’s prior fentanyl-related bill, SB 469, which made unlawful possession, purchase or sale of encapsulating machines for the purpose of producing illicit drugs a Class 6 felony.
It also imposed felony penalties for subjects who allow a minor or mentally incapacitated person to be present during the manufacture of any substance containing fentanyl.
Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares previously said an average of five people die each day from fentanyl overdoses throughout the state.
“By enhancing penalties and criminalizing the possession and use of machines to produce counterfeit drugs, we are supplying law enforcement personnel with the tools they need to hold drug dealers accountable for poisoning our communities,” Miyares said.
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After her husband signed the 2023 legislation, Virginia first lady Suzanne Youngkin said there is “nothing more important” than protecting families and communities in Virginia. “I applaud all persons working hard to fight the spread of this illicit drug taking the lives of far too many Virginians,” she said.
Virginia Republicans also indicated this week that they will work to put Youngkin’s December plan curtailing taxation of gratuities into law. The plan somewhat mirrors President-elect Donald Trump’s “No Tax on Tips” campaign pledge.
“Hard-working Virginians deserve to keep the tips they earn for their service,” McDougle said. “Governor Youngkin’s inclusion of this policy in the budget is an important step in our support of hard-working Virginians, and we’re proud to introduce the bill to put it in the Code of Virginia.”
McDougle said Tuesday the chamber will also pursue a ban on transgender women competing in women’s and girls’ sports.
Virginia
AP Declares Republican Victory in Virginia’s 10th District Special Election
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (WVIR) – The Associated Press has called Virginia’s 10th District special election for Republican Luther Cifers.
With all precincts reporting, Cifers captured nearly 59 percent of the vote, leading Democrat Jack Trammell by more than 3,000 votes.
While election officials say mail-in ballots will be accepted until noon Friday, the margin appears insurmountable.
Cifers, a Prince Edward County businessman, will take over the seat previously held by John McGuire. The district has traditionally been a Republican stronghold and was expected to swing red again this year.
Despite the victory, Democrats have maintained the current balance of power in Virginia’s statehouse. They will hold a 21-19 edge in the Senate and a 51-49 lead in the House of Delegates during Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s final year in office.
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