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Staunton city

Blue Ridge Area Food Bank to provide summer meals for children

The Blue Ridge Area Food Bank will provide 25 feeding sites over the summer for children at risk of going hungry in Augusta and Rockingham counties, and the cities of Staunton, Waynesboro, and Harrisonburg. The organization expects to serve 2,312 children this summer, a 21% increase over last year.

The Summer Food Service Program is designed to reach children who may not get nutritious meals at home over the summer, particularly students who receive free or reduced-price meals during the school year.

Programs like this can help lessen the impact of the difficult economy on children and their families.

Read more in The Augusta Free Press....

Posted on Wednesday, June 9, 2010 - 4:36pm

Staunton braces for school and city budget cuts

Staunton, Va.

Budget issues are the minds of Staunton residents -- especially as they affect the schools, municpal pools, and libraries. Program cuts and higher fees are unpopular, but residents seem resigned to the new reality. 

Read more in the Waynesboro News Virginian and The Staunton News Leader....

Posted on Thursday, April 22, 2010 - 12:49pm

Budgets are balancing

In Staunton, residents will pay higher personal property taxes, more fees for water and sewer services, and see the Montgomery Hall Park swimming pool closed for the season. In Spotsylvania County, business owners may pay 42% more in property taxes next year. Henry County officials scrambled to find money to pay a deputy. In Charlottesville and Albermarle County, bad weather cost money by leading to reduced sales tax revenues.

Everywhere in Virginia, discussions are underway -- how will we balance our budgets?

Read more in the local news....

Posted on Friday, April 9, 2010 - 8:10am

Unemployment remains high across Virginia

 

Unemployment rates in Virginia are still high -- bad news for the housing market, which has been slow and appears likely to remain so until people who want work can find it. Virginia homeowners have collectively seen billions in equity wiped out in this recession, and experts agree the market won't fully recover until jobless rate subsides. Read more below....

Posted on Friday, March 19, 2010 - 10:34am

School districts across the commonwealth consider their options

School boards and the officials that report to them are rolling up their sleeves in preparation for battles and tough decisions. The state budget, passed on Sunday, included $253 million in cuts to public education. School districts now must decide where those cuts will be felt.

Read more about hoWesley Fryerw local districts are handling the pinch....

Education budget: some ease despite cuts  (The Virginian-Pilot)

School funding formula benefits Northern Virginia but not other areas (The Washington Post)

Local school districts will see $79 million less from the state in 2011 (The Daily Press)

Roanoke schools may cut 146 positions (The Roanoke Times)

Franklin Co. to discuss school budget (The Roanoke Times)

Budget cuts assessed (Martinsville Bulletin)

What impact will the new state budget have on local schools? (The Lynchburg News & Advance)

Plans pit Gladys school closure against employee pay cut (The Lynchburg News & Advance)

Some layoffs likely for Amherst schools (The Lynchburg News & Advance)

State education aid figures unclear (The Staunton News Leader)

Posted on Tuesday, March 16, 2010 - 11:32am

Development One Step Closer to Reality in Stauton

Staunton's largest commercial project is closer to happening after city leaders approved a land-transfer, according to NBC29.

The plan is for a new, modern Western State Hospital to be built, and the current property could be sold to developers.

This is great news for area residents because this development could significantly boost the local economy and bring in new jobs. For homeowners this could result in higher property values and lower property taxes - the perfect combination!

"The concept for Staunton’s largest commercial project is one step closer to reality. City leaders have signed off on a land-transfer deal that would open up nearly 300 acres of prime real estate.

For the commonwealth of Virginia it would mean a new, modern home for Western State Hospital. For Staunton it would mean a green light to take over the current hospital property along Route 250, and later sell it to developers.

It still exists only on paper but the re-development of the Western State Hospital property has cleared a major hurdle. The Staunton Industrial Development Authority has signed a property-transfer agreement with the state. The deal means a new mental hospital can be built on 70 acres now owned by the city.

Staunton City Manager Steve Owen said, 'This allows them to just sort of step away from the existing campus, and get a stand-alone facility. It puts the hospital where the hospital really should be. It doesn't tie up that very valuable land, which could have greater potential for retail development.'

Staunton is looking for a private developer who can maximize 260 acres of potential for stores, restaurants, hotels and offices. But the city's vision may compete with that of Augusta Marketplace just three miles and one interstate exit away. Both city and county are confident their neighboring projects will succeed."

Read the full story.

Posted on Wednesday, October 14, 2009 - 1:48pm

Staunton Residents Will Pay a Little More in Real Estate Tax Next Year

Stauton City Councile recently approved a $94.2 million budget for the next fiscal year, according to the News Virginian.

The budget includes a 90-cent real estate tax, up 3 cents. This is obviously a concern to homeowners who will experience an increase in their real estate tax bill next year, however, hopefully the increased rates will help support services and programs that will improve the quality of living for Staunton residents.

"By a 5-2 vote, the Staunton City Council adopted on Thursday a $94.2 million fiscal year 2010 budget with a 90-cent real estate tax rate.

At the regular meeting in Staunton’s City Hall, Mayor Lacy King and Councilman Dickie Bell voted against the budget, both wishing to see a lower tax rate.

King said he realized the city could not equalize the tax rate because of an uncertain future with continued declines in state revenue – including a 21 percent drop in state tax revenue for April – that could force the city to cut its 2010 budget later this year. However, he believed the city could have cut the $177,629 necessary to reduce the tax rate from 90 cents per $100 of assessed value to 89 cents.

'I felt like we could have found one cent on the tax rate,' King said.

The tax rate represents a 3.4 percent tax increase over the revenue-neutral rate of 87-cents. The real estate tax bill on a $225,000 home will increase by $67.50 to $2,025 yearly.

Bell wanted an equalized tax rate of 87 cents to 'ease the burden' on residents. That rate would have necessitated further cuts of an additional $532,887. He said he could not support a 90-cent rate."

Read the full story.

Posted on Wednesday, October 7, 2009 - 9:34pm

Chesapeake Bay Reports Call For More Livestock, Runoff Regulations

Last week federal officials released parts of a strategy to restore the Chesapeake Bay, according to NewsDay.com.

The report focuses on expanding regulation of large-scale animal farms and municipal stormwater runoff. Although details of the expanded regulations have not been decided, the report did mention that federal leadership and "muscle" would be used when necessary to enforce the new regulations.

This report, along with others wll be used to develop a bay restoration strategy scheduled for release on Novemeber 9th.

Because many of the Virginia localities in the Chesapeake Watershed are heavily farmed areas, many Virginia property owners could be affected. Property owners will need to ensure that their rights are protected in the process of restoring the Chesapeake Bay.

"Federal officials on Thursday began revealing the building blocks of a strategy to restore the Chesapeake Bay, using federal leadership to encourage states to cut pollution and federal muscle, when necessary, to ensure it happens.

Among recommendations in draft reports from federal agencies: expanded regulation of large-scale animal farms and municipal stormwater runoff, and requirements that increases in pollution be offset by reductions from other sources.

The details, such as how many more animal feeding operations would be regulated, have not been decided, but 'the message here is that there will be, there is a commitment at EPA to increased enforcement and increased oversight of state programs,' EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson said Thursday.

The reports will be used to develop a bay restoration strategy, scheduled for release Nov. 9, that was mandated by an executive order issued earlier this year by President Obama.

The EPA said it was working with Chesapeake Bay states and the District of Columbia to establish limits for nitrogen, phosphorus and sediments. States would have to develop detailed plans on how to reduce levels of those pollutants from sources such as farms, highways and lawns. The EPA said it would step in if states don't take sufficient action.

While large operations such as industrial chicken farms would be regulated, the EPA said it would also expand regulation of municipal stormwater programs to include high-growth areas.

Jackson said the goal was to use federal leadership, and 'federal muscle when necessary.'

Agriculture is responsible for about half the pollution entering the bay, but Jackson noted there is more turf grass in the bay watershed than corn acreage and the region is much different from when bay restoration efforts began decades ago."

Read full story.

Posted on Monday, September 14, 2009 - 10:50am

Staunton Tourism Heats Up

Image from Jason Riedy

The NewsVirginian.com reports that Staunton is seeing a healthy dose of tourism this summer, bringing added life to downtown.

"While the summer tourism picture is mixed across Virginia, strategic marketing and favorable Northeast publicity have helped Staunton to a strong tourism summer.

Attractions such as the American Shakespeare Center and Frontier Culture Museum reported a strong June, and the city’s tourist visitors center recorded a 14 percent spike in the number of visitors in June over the same month a year ago."

Read full story.

Posted on Monday, July 27, 2009 - 9:26pm

New WSH to keep Staunton competitive

Downtown Staunton is bursting at the seams. Land occupied by the Western State Hospital is under-utilized, and for years, the town has sought better uses for the prime real estate.

A proposal four years in the making results in a deal that aims to keep Staunton competitive:

"The timing of plans to go forward with a new Western State Hospital and free up valuable Staunton real estate is coincidental to other developments on the table in Waynesboro and Augusta County, according to city officials."

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Posted on Saturday, June 27, 2009 - 1:59am