Virginia
World record fallfish caught from Virginia’s Cowpasture River
RICHMOND, Va. (WFXR) — There’s a new world report fallfish and it was caught in Virginia.
It weighed three kilos nine-and-a-half ounces, which ties with the earlier Worldwide Recreation Fish Affiliation All-Sort out report.
The fish was caught within the Cowpasture River on Might 6 by Richmond angler Josh Dolin. Dolin caught the report fallfish on a spoon. As soon as he landed the trophy, he drove it again to Richmond the place it was weighed at Dance’s Sporting Items on an authorized scale and confirmed by the Virginia Division of Wildlife Sources.
Fallfish are native to Virginia and could be present in streams with good water high quality.
Virginia
New laws going into effect across DC, Maryland and Virginia on Jan. 1, 2025 – WTOP News
D.C., Maryland and Virginia can expect new laws to take effect starting Jan. 1, 2025. Here’s a few you should know about.
The new year is right around the corner, and so are some new laws for our region. Here’s what you can expect to take effect in D.C., Maryland and Virginia starting on Jan. 1, 2025.
DC laws
Banning right turns at red lights
D.C. drivers will no longer be allowed to turn right at a red light, unless the District Department of Transportation has installed a sign permitting it under certain circumstances.
This comes as a provision of the Safer Streets Amendment Act of 2022. DDOT will have to post on its website which intersections will allow right turns at red lights. Additionally, the rationale behind choosing said intersection and the date the sign will be posted.
Cash payments
D.C. retailers must accept cash payments. The law prohibits businesses from refusing cash payments, from putting signs up denying cash payments and from charging a customer more for using cash. Exceptions include if the customer is shopping online, if the business sells liquor, or if it’s open late at night.
Health care coverage for home visiting programs
Home visiting services will be required to be covered or reimbursed through health care coverage like Medicaid, the DC HealthCare Alliance and the Immigrant Children’s Program, as long as the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services approves it. The services must be through an eligible home visiting program.
Home visiting programs are services provided to young children and parents by the DC Department of Health, such as providing in-home parenting education and home visitation for pregnant or postpartum people.
Health care data transparency
A utilization review entity, which provides authorization reviews for health insurance, has to make information regarding approvals, adverse determinations and appeals readily and publicly available on its website.
For access to all of D.C.’s new laws in effect on Jan. 1, 2025, click here.
Maryland laws
Maryland work zone fines
Speed cameras will be placed and fines will increase in work zones through an expansion of the Maryland Road Worker Protection Act. Fines for speeding in work zones range from $60 to $500, depending on how fast the driver is going. Those fines will double if there are workers present.
The bill is due to recommendations from the Governor’s Work Zone Safety Work Group, a group created after a speeding incident in March 2023. On I-695 near Woodlawn, six construction workers were struck and killed in a work zone by a driver going over 100 mph.
Housing expansion and affordability
This requires jurisdictions to permit the placement of “a new manufactured home or modular dwelling” in areas that are meant for single-family homes, given said area meets multiple requirements. It also requires jurisdictions to increase uses in certain zoning areas for “qualified projects.”
The goal of this law, signed by Maryland Gov. Wes Moore earlier this year, is to make housing more affordable by making construction more accessible.
Opioid overdose and opioid-related hospital treatment
Every Maryland hospital must have the capability of treating a person who shows opioid-related symptoms or overdose in the emergency room, have the proper treatments for opioid-use disorder and must have appropriate intervention policies before releasing a person who was admitted for opioid-related illness.
Hearing aids for adults
Health insurers, nonprofit health service plans and health maintenance organizations must provide coverage for adult hearing aids. There may be a limit of $1,400 per hearing aid for every 36 months. The hearing impaired adult may choose a more expensive hearing aid and pay the difference.
For access to all of Maryland’s new laws in effect on Jan. 1, 2025, click here.
Virginia laws
Minimum wage increase
Virginia’s minimum wage will increase from $12.00 per hour to $12.41 per hour. The law requires all employers under the Virginia Minimum Wage Act to adjust their pay accordingly.
Ethnic origin discrimination
Ethnic origin is now a protected class as an addition of the Virginia Human Rights Act. This expansion prohibits any discrimination or harassment in the workplace or in public in the Commonwealth.
Data controllers transparency
Data controllers are required to restrict the collection of data to only what is necessary as it pertains to the context of the data collected. It requires that controllers do not use personal data outside of the scope of what is “reasonably necessary,” as it is disclosed to the consumer, unless direct consent is given otherwise.
It also requires that controllers do not process certain data of a known child for targeted ads, selling personal data or gathering information about a precise geolocation, unless it is considered “reasonably necessary” or parental consent is given.
Coverage for colorectal cancer screening
Health insurers are required to provide coverage for colorectal cancer examinations and testing. This law requires that following a noninvasive screening test, a follow up colonoscopy must be covered — meaning it’s exempt from deductibles and other costs of service.
Procedure for preelection withdrawal resulting in an unopposed race
If a person running for an elected position chooses to drop out 44 days or less before the primary election, which results in one person in the race running unopposed, the unopposed candidate will immediately become the nominee for the political party, and the primary election will be canceled.
For access to all of Virginia’s new laws in effect on Jan. 1, 2025, click here.
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Virginia
Endangered pygmy hippopotamus born at a Virginia zoo and you can help name her
Move over, Moo Deng.
A Virginia zoo got a hippopotamus for Christmas because only a hippopotamus would do.
A female pygmy hippopotamus calf was born at the Metro Richmond Zoo in early December, marking the third calf of the endangered species to be born at the zoo in the last five years, officials said.
The mother hippo Iris gave birth to the yet-to-be-named calf on Dec. 9 and the zoo is currently holding a contest to name the new calf.
A whopping 14,000 people flocked to vote on a potential moniker, and the options have been narrowed down to Poppy, Juniper, Hammie Mae, and Omi.
The baby girl is the river horse’s third calf shared with her current mate, Corwin.
Iris keeps to a schedule. The new hippo is the second she has given birth to in December, according to the zoo. All three of her offspring have been female as well.
“Most people don’t get a hippopotamus for Christmas at all, so we feel lucky to have received two over the years,” zoo officials said in a news release Tuesday — in a nod to the famous holiday tune.
The new baby had a neonatal exam and weighed in at 15 pounds, a mere fraction of the 600 pounds officials say fully grown pygmy hippos can boast.
Hippos are usually a naturally polygamous species, but it’s been slim pickings for the pygmies over the last few decades.
When the hippo was declared endangered in 2015, there were only about 2,500 mature ones left, and even then officials were pulling that from a 1993 population estimate, according to the Zoological Society of London.
“This birth – like all of Iris’ births – plays an important role in helping protect this rare and elusive species. Unlike common hippos, pygmy hippos do not live in groups and are usually solitary or in pairs. For this reason, once Iris’ two previous calves grew up, they were moved to other zoological facilities to live with future mates and continue contributing to the conservation of their species,” the zoo wrote in the news release.
Earlier this year, another baby pygmy hippo took the internet by storm. Moo Deng, a newborn at a zoo in Thailand with a penchant for trying to bite people, captured the hearts of people far and wide and became one of the most prolific memes of the year.
Virginia
Report: Tennessee's Cameron Seldon Commits To Virginia Tech
Cameron Seldon
Athlete
Tennessee
6-2, 222
2 years remaining (Jr.)
Another former top prospect from the Commonwealth of Virginia announced his return on Sunday as Tennessee’s Cameron Seldon committed to Virginia Tech. Pete Nakos of On3 first reported the news and Tech Sideline confirmed it with the program.
Seldon is from Browns Store, Va., an unincorporated community in Northumberland County on the Northern Neck along the Potomac River and Chesapeake Bay. He starred at Northumberland High School and was a top-five in-state recruit in the 2023 class, according to the 247Sports Composite.
He was a running back for the last two seasons with the Volunteers but has the versatility to play wide receiver, which Tech Sideline understands is the position he’ll play for the Hokies. In his time at Tennessee, he compiled 224 rushing yards and a touchdown — which came against UTEP in 2024 — on 48 carries (4.7 average) over 19 games. Seldon also returned six kickoffs for 113 yards with a long of 35. He only caught one pass, which went for a loss of two yards.
Seldon was terrific in high school for the Indians. As a senior, he racked up 551 yards and 11 touchdowns on the ground to go with 18 catches for 365 yards and five scores. He also had four touchdowns in the return game, three of which came on kickoffs.
A three-sport athlete who also played basketball and ran track, Seldon graduated as a state champion in the 100-meter dash, the 200-meter dash (twice) and the 4×100-meter relay.
A number of Power Four schools pursued him out of high school, including Maryland, Michigan, North Carolina, NC State, Penn State, Syracuse, Virginia, Virginia Tech and West Virginia. His transfer portal recruitment was very quiet, however.
Seldon continues the trend of former in-state talents returning to the Commonwealth through the transfer portal — many of whom were highly-rated — and playing for the Hokies. Portsmouth’s Antwaun Powell-Ryland (Florida) started the trend and Highland Springs’ Kelvin Gilliam (Oklahoma) hopped on the train last year. Even Chesapeake’s Sherrod Covil Jr. (Clemson), who announced he’s transferring to Tech on Dec. 18, was a former top-10 recruit. Virginia Beach’s Kemari Copeland (Iowa Western C.C.) and Gloucester’s Kaleb Spencer (Miami) are other examples, too.
Seldon is the 10th transfer portal commitment of the offseason for the Hokies and the third offensive weapon, joining running backs Terion Stewart (Bowling Green) and Marcellous Hawkins (D-II Central Missouri). His addition puts the Hokies at approximately 80 scholarships for the 2025 season.
For more information on Virginia Tech’s comings and goings in the portal, along with a scholarship count, click here for Tech Sideline’s roster management page.
Cameron Seldon links:
247Sports
Tennessee bio
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