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Gary Cohn to resign as Trump’s economic adviser

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WASHINGTON (AP) – Top Trump economic adviser Gary Cohn is leaving the White House after breaking with President Donald Trump on trade policy.

Cohn, the director of the National Economic Council, has been the leading internal opponent to Trump’s planned tariffs on imports of steel and aluminum. He has tried to orchestrate an eleventh-hour effort to push Trump to reverse course. But Trump has been resistant to those efforts and reiterated Tuesday he will be imposing the tariffs in the coming days.

In a statement, Cohn says it was his honor to serve in the administration and “enact pro-growth economic policies to benefit the American people.”

Trump praised Cohn despite the disagreement, saying Cohn has “served his country with great distinction.”

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Dr. King’s speech ‘changed my life,’ retired Sen. Marsh says

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RICHMOND – Retired Sen. Henry Marsh, the first black mayor of Richmond, saw the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. speak in 1961.

“It brought tears to my eyes to see him in action,” Marsh recalled. “I said to myself, ‘Who is this man?’ I’ve been thinking one way, and he’s saying this crazy stuff about if somebody hits you, don’t hit them back, love them … That speech changed my life.”

Marsh reflected on the Nobel Peace Prize-winning civil rights leader during a discussion last week at Virginia Union University. The state’s Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Commission is hosting such discussions around the commonwealth to document and memorialize visits that King made to Virginia before he was assassinated in 1968.

Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney opened the conversation at Virginia Union. The theme was “MLK Moving Forward.”

“I love the mission of the ‘King in Virginia’ project – to have these conversations about ‘where do we go next?’” Stoney said. “This is an opportunity to recognize those who continue to perpetuate his work each and every day.”

One of the panelists was the Rev. Jamar Boyd II of Saint Smyrna Baptist Church in Georgia. He is a member of the Georgia NAACP and a Virginia Union graduate.

“In 2018, the honest question is not where we are. It’s still, ‘Where do we go?’ It’s still, ‘What do we have to do?’” Boyd said. “It’s 2018, and you still have Jim Crow” in parts of Virginia.

Del. Delores McQuinn, D-Richmond, said progress will depend on young adults like Boyd.

“It is up to young people to be equipped, to be the future drum majors of justice,” McQuinn said. “We need the youth to participate in the political process, through contact with their representatives and becoming officeholders themselves.”

Marsh echoed McQuinn’s statement about youth involvement but laid some blame on older generations as well.

“We need to energize young people, and we need to energize ourselves,” Marsh said. “We ought to be ashamed of ourselves” for failing to participate in the political process.

Part of the discussion focused on how to create a beloved community – King’s vision of a world of peace, equality and prosperity.

The Rev. James Somerville of Richmond’s First Baptist Church offered insight on how to get there.

“We have to believe that the beloved community is possible; I have to believe that the kingdom of heaven can come to Richmond, Virginia,” Somerville said. “Just look around for anything that doesn’t look like heaven, then roll up your sleeves and get to work.”

Chuck Richardson, a former member of the Richmond City Council, was in the audience at Virginia Union. He drew a parallel between a nation and a family.

“Right now, America is without a father. This country is like a family, and that father in that White House is not on the job,” Richardson said. “Nothing that we do today is going to matter until we replace the father in the White House who is no father to the family of America.”

More about the MLK Roundtables

The Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Commission is inviting the public to remember King’s life and legacy in a series of roundtables being held in each of the Virginia communities that he visited.

The next event will be 6-8 p.m. on March 13 at Old Cabell Hall at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. Panelists will include:

  • Lehman Bates, pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church
  • Andrea Douglas, executive director of the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center
  • Wesley Harris, who as a student in 1963 helped arrange King’s visit to Charlottesville
  • University of Virginia President Teresa Sullivan
  • Charlottesville Mayor Nikuyah Walker

Discussions also have been scheduled in Farmville on April 24 and Williamsburg on June 6. The commission is planning to hold roundtables in Danville, Hampton, Hopewell, Lynchburg, Newport News, Norfolk, Petersburg and Suffolk.

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Not all hand drying is created equal in illness prevention

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CHESTERFIELD COUNTY, Va. (WRIC) — Michelle Haviland brought her son Robbie to Huguenot Park for some time on the playground. After their fun, they took a break for a lesson in health at the park’s restroom.

“It’s important to wash your hands to get rid of the germs so that you don’t get sick,” she shared the message she works to instill.

Rosie Lozano, the Director of Infection Prevention at Chippenham and Johnston-Willis Hospitals, says hand washing is the key to overall well-being.

“Kind of a basic practice, but it is still the number one way to prevent any infectious disease,” she explains.

A new study found proper drying is a part of the process too.

It looked at how effective jet air dryers, warm air dryers and paper towels are at stopping the spread of viruses.

Researchers found jet air dryers dispersed 20 times more than warm air dryers and a whopping 190 times more than paper towels.

“Any germs that are still left on your hands after washing them can be spread around and blown around in the air,” Lozano explains.

It is the dirty truth about drying that people of all ages, like the Havilands, can keep in mind when they wash to keep illnesses at bay.

“It’s an easy step to take to help promote the healthiness of not only yourself but those around you,” Lozano stresses the importance of proper hand washing.

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Trump administration suing California over sanctuary laws

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration on Tuesday sued to block California laws that extend protections to people living in the U.S. illegally, the most aggressive move yet in its push to force so-called sanctuary cities and states to cooperate with immigration authorities. California officials remained characteristically defiant, vowing to defend their landmark legislation.

The Justice Department argued a trio of state laws that, among other things, bar police from asking people about their citizenship status or participating in federal immigration enforcement activities are unconstitutional and have kept federal agents from doing their jobs. The lawsuit named as defendants the state of California, Gov. Jerry Brown and Attorney General Xavier Becerra.

“I say, bring it on,” said California Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de Leon, a Los Angeles Democrat who wrote the sanctuary state bill.

It is the latest salvo in an escalating feud between the Trump administration and California, which has resisted the president on issues like taxes and marijuana policy and defiantly refuses to help federal agents detain and deport undocumented immigrants. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has said it will increase its presence in California, and Attorney General Jeff Sessions wants to cut off funding to jurisdictions that won’t cooperate.

The lawsuit was filed as the Justice Department is also reviewing Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf’s decision to warn of an immigration sweep in advance, which ICE said allowed hundreds of immigrants to elude detention. Schaaf said Tuesday the city would “continue to inform all residents about their constitutional rights.”

The state laws being challenged were a response to President Donald Trump’s hawkish immigration policies and widespread fear in immigrant communities following a campaign in which he promised to sharply ramp up the deportation of people living in the U.S. illegally. The decision to sue California shows Sessions and Trump remain aligned on this priority, even as their relationship has recently deteriorated, with Trump attacking his attorney general and Sessions pushing back.

Brown mimicked Trump on Twitter Tuesday night, writing: “At a time of unprecedented political turmoil, Jeff Sessions has come to California to further divide and polarize America. Jeff, these political stunts may be the norm in Washington, but they don’t work here. SAD!!!”

One of California’s laws prohibits employers from letting immigration agents enter worksites or view employee files without a subpoena or warrant, an effort to prevent workplace raids. Another stops local governments from contracting with for-profit companies and ICE to hold immigrants. Justice Department officials, speaking to reporters Tuesday, said that violates the Constitution’s supremacy clause, which renders invalid state laws that conflict with federal ones.

The Supreme Court reinforced the federal government’s primacy in enforcing immigration law when it blocked much of Arizona’s tough 2010 immigration law on similar grounds. The high court found several key provisions undermined federal immigration law, though it upheld a provision requiring officers, while enforcing other laws, to question the immigration status of people suspected of being in the country illegally.

Sessions planned to discuss the lawsuit Wednesday at an annual gathering of law enforcement officers in Sacramento.

“The Department of Justice and the Trump administration are going to fight these unjust, unfair and unconstitutional policies that have been imposed on you,” he said in prepared remarks. “I believe that we are going to win.”

Sessions has blamed sanctuary city policies for crime and gang violence and announced in July that cities and states could only receive certain grants if they cooperate with immigration agents. California is suing to force the administration to release one such grant. The state wants a judge to certify that its laws are in compliance with federal immigration law.

Defenders of sanctuary policies say they increase public safety by promoting trust between immigrant communities and law enforcement, while allowing police resources to be used to fight other crimes.

“We’re in the business of public safety, not deportation,” said Becerra, who insisted the state is on strong legal footing when it comes to dealing with immigration officials. “When people feel confident to come forward to report crimes in our communities or to participate in policing efforts without fear of deportation, they are more likely to cooperate with the criminal justice system altogether.”

Sessions’ audience Wednesday includes members of the California Peace Officers’ Association and groups representing police chiefs, sheriffs, district attorneys, narcotics investigators and the California Highway Patrol.

The groups’ members have often been split on sanctuary policies. None of the groups favored the state law restricting cooperation with immigration officials, but only the California State Sheriffs’ Association was actively opposed and some individual officials voiced support.

Protesters from labor unions, the Democratic Party and immigrant rights organizations planned to rally along with some state and local elected officials outside the hotel where Sessions will speak.

Becerra, a Democrat who is up for election in November, has been sharply critical of Republicans Trump and Sessions, particularly on immigration policies. He will speak to the same conference later Wednesday.

Associated Press writers Jonathan Cooper and Kathleen Ronayne in Sacramento contributed to this report. Thompson reported from Sacramento.

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Va. lawmakers still have budget, Medicaid expansion to finalize in final days of session

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — This year’s General Assembly session is scheduled to wrap up in a few days, but there is still some unfinished business lawmakers are sorting through before they leave Richmond.

The House and Senate are expected to adjourn March 10, following a 60-day session.

Since gaveling in Jan. 10, lawmakers have gone over thousands of bills.

More than 2,200 bills were filed in the House and more than 1,200 in the Senate.

While many bills have passed or been killed in the last two months, there are still dozens being considered in both chambers. That means lawmakers could run out of time to vote on everything before they adjourn.

But the biggest thing to check off the to-do list is finalizing Virginia’s two-year budget. As part of that process, lawmakers must decide whether Virginia will expand Medicaid.

The House included Medicaid expansion in its budget proposal. The Senate did not.

So far, there has not been an agreement.

If there is not a consensus by Saturday, lawmakers will have to continue working toward a compromise — passed their March 10 deadline.

Gov. Ralph Northam could also call a special session. The governor is able to do that when it is deemed necessary or advisable, and must do so when petitioned by two-thirds of the members of both chambers.

If lawmakers do end up passing a budget — but it does not include Medicaid expansion — Northam will likely step in.

He’s been a vocal supporter of extending health coverage to hundreds of thousands of low-income Virginians.

Northam could send down an amendment for lawmakers to consider when they return to Richmond next month.

The reconvened session is set for April 18. That is when lawmakers go over the governor’s amendments and vetoes.

To view the session calendar, click HERE.

Click HERE to see daily floor calendars for the House and the Senate.

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Possible $600 million combined jackpot has Richmonders pushing their luck

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — The Mega Millions is drawing Tuesday night with the Powerball following up on Wednesday, and although the two jackpots are pretty large on their own, together they combine for over $600 million.

Thoughts of travel, paying off debts and spoiling family bring people out every week to test their lottery luck. Right now, though, with the combination of those two jackpots, people are pushing it even further.

“Who doesn’t wanna win big, I wanna win big!” lottery player Victoria O’Connell told 8News.

It’s a mindset shared by everyone playing in the lottery: A chance to walk away with $265 million Tuesday night brought in Joe Espinosa and his wife, but after learning they could add another $348 million Wednesday he’s hoping lady luck is on his side.

“Now that we’re feeling to know that the Powerball is going to be that big might as well try both of them,” Espinosa said. “It can’t hurt.”

Everyone knows it’s a long shot to win a jackpot, but to combine them both is 1 in over 590 million. Although, it is a long shot one customer says you have to play it to win.

“People don’t think normal people hit, but they do,” said O’Connell.

She also decided to play both today, and she knows a thing or two about winning big. Back in 2007 she and her husband took home $300,000 playing the Cash 5. This time, it’d be a lot more money they could play with.

“My husband hates cold weather, so we’ll probably move to Florida,” O’Connell said.

The travelling is for themselves, but O’Connell and Espinosa agree helping their grand kids would be top priority.

“We can always spoil them now, but we can give them right back to their parents,” said Espinosa.

After that, attention turns to giving a large portion to those in need.

“Helping other people, especially in a lot of crisis,” Espinosa said. “I think it makes us feel good.”

You can watch the Mega Millions drawing live on 8News at 11 on Tuesday night. The Powerball will be drawn Wednesday night at the same time.

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Some areas of Central Virginia could see snow Sunday into Monday

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — There is a lot of speculation as to the upcoming weather for Sunday into Monday.

Right now, you can look at weather forecast models that will show everything from a cold rain to snow and everything in between. We can certainly get snow at this time of year in Richmond and Central Virginia. It has happened before and it will again, but will it this time?

If you look online you will find computer models that are all over the place ranging from just about nothing happening (The Canadian) to a storm passing south and just glancing us (The Euro), to a nasty looking storm for the area (The GFS).

Which one is correct? Well five days out, any of them could be right since we are dealing with a system right now that would be in the data void of the Pacific Ocean — Thursday would be when the data starts to firm up a little bit.

I would toss the Canadian model out for right now. The operational version of the European model has a system passing to the south of us and just touching us with rainfall. In a way being south of us right now might be a good thing, as these forecast tend to slip north with time. When you look at the ensemble versions of the Euro (Think of the operational model as Diet Coke, then the ensembles are Diet Coke Lime, Diet Coke Lemon, Diet Coke Raspberry, etc)  they do support a storm that is a little more to the north.

The GFS model is the one that looks scary as of right now. This one brings a system on Sunday along and just south of the VA/NC border. It allows for cold air to get trapped in the Piedmont Region, say west of US-15, and could set them up for some snow.  As the storm moves to the east, it will pull cold air to the east eventually change us over to a wet snow on Sunday night into Monday.  That’s **IF** this model is right (which is probably isn’t.)

A couple things to remember: First, the ground surface will be warm. Second, we won’t have a lot of cold air banked up over us. Third, the models that you see on the internet “assume” 10 inches of snow for each inch of rainfall. This system would be closer to 5 or 6 to 1.

What do I think will happen as of right now? Well, the GFS model has been running with a “hot hand” recently, so let’s give it some credence. Snowstorms in our area do happen in the mid-portion of March (We are coming up on the 25th anniversary of the SuperStorm from 1993, which dropped 3” of snow here but 18” on Afton Mountain).

So I think we will get some rain on Sunday, maybe changing to snow in the evening and the overnight hours, but probably being just a slushy mix here in the Metro area. To the west, once you get WEST of US-15 there is a good chance of some accumulations happening. Out in the Valley, things could really be a mess, which means get the kids who are on Spring Break from Radford and VT back early.

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Richmond Police investigating crash involving school bus

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — Police in Richmond are responding to a school bus accident in the city’s Randolph neighborhood.

Sources tell 8News the crash occurred near the intersection of Idlewood and S. Granby Street, near Byrd Park.

No other details have been released at this time, although sources say that no students were injured.

8News has a crew headed to the scene. Stay with us for updates.

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Elementary school students reach out to Parkland with ‘Kindness Rocks’

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HANOVER COUNTY, Va. (WRIC) — Students at Mechanicsville Elementary School are reaching out to students in Florida after the deadly school shooting with a special project.

“Everything just stopped.”

February 14, should have been a day filled with love, but for Tamara Letter, it left like Sandy Hook all over again.

“Just grappling with the realities that we’re faced with another situation that’s beyond our control,” she added.

Letter is an institutional technologist at Mechanicsville Elementary. She found her passion for “Kindness Projects,” or acts of kindness, right around the time of the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Ct.

The students have been working on “Kindness Projects” all year, funded by a grant for Hanover County.

They happened to be working on one of them when tragedy struck Parkland, that’s when the 5th graders decided to dedicate their work to the students affected.

“It was an immediate paralysis of mindset of what to do,” she said, thinking about what happened in Parkland.

On Valentine’s Day, she was working with students on another project, painting rocks with words and phrases to spread joy around the campus. The project was funded by a grant and was inspired by “RVA Rocks.”

“I was wondering, what on earth can we possibly do to go across those state lines.,” Letter added.

Her idea: ask the 5th graders if they would share these “Kindness Rocks” with the students of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. Teachers didn’t go in depth about what happened, telling the students there was a tragedy.

“Put a bit of joy into their school,” elementary school student Samantha, 10, said.

“It makes them feel good inside, and happy, because of what happened,” said Mackenzie, another classmate.

Letter transformed seventeen of the rocks into memorials.

“So that way each of those lives that were lost – their names could be remembered,” Letter said.

Student to student, sharing a ray of hope.

“Let them be happy and always remember that there’s always a bright side,” student Bethany said.

Show no matter how small, kindness goes a long way.

“It’s very evident that we needed to do more with kindness,” Letter said. “We needed to do more with teaching out children the best ways to feel empowered, to do the right thing, to make a difference in the world and to be the good.”

The rocks will be mailed to Parkland, Fl. soon.

Part of the project is about engaging on social media, kind of like “RVA Rocks.” Click here to get an up close look at the project.

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Once paralyzed, now walking: A push for coverage for activity-based therapy

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — With every step she takes, Kay Ledson is trying to bring hope to those with a spinal cord injury.

“I am walking 3085 miles, says,” explained Kay Ledson, who founded Warrior Momz.

The Australian mother is walking across America — an estimated 7 million steps — to spread the word about the benefits of activity-based therapy. Her trip recently brought her to Ashland, where she met with the United Spinal Association of Virginia and folks like Richmonder Evan Neal-Pishko, who eight years ago, suffered a spinal cord injury.

“I fell off a balcony on to a big dumpster,” Neal-Pishko said.

Neal-Pishko and Ledson know activity-based therapy makes a difference.

Ledson’s son, Josh, shattered his vertebrae in a snowboarding accident.

“Within nine hours, the doctors had basically said he was a complete quadriplegic, his spinal cord was crushed and he would never get out of bed again,” Ledson said.

With the use of activity-based therapy, stimulating and working out the body below the injury, Josh is now walking, married and fathered a child. He even burned his wheelchair.

“Josh actually walked out of hospital four and half months after he was admitted,” Ledson said.

“I have come a long way since my injury,” Neal-Pisko added.

He was told by doctors after his accident he would never walk again. Yet today he can lift himself out of his wheelchair, walk and work out on a specialized elliptical.

“I have been coming here to the gym for probably about seven years, now three times a week for three hours about each time,” he said.

Neal-Pisko added, “I have a just enough strength now to walk around funny but I am walking around, so that’s good.”

Amazing stories of recovery, but the therapy is limited.

“This kind of therapy costs money and it is not covered by medical insurance,” Ledson explained.

Every year in the United States, there’s an estimated 17,000 new spinal cord injuries. Yet, less than 10 percent seek recovery once discharged from the hospital.

And it’s expensive: Therapy can averaging between $85 to $125 dollars an hour. Most patients need two to three hours of it a day at least three days a week. At a minimum, that’s $510 a week.

The equipment can be pricey, too. A specialized exercise bike costs $22,000.

“It is very expensive to be injured in this world,” Neal-Pishko said.

Ledson, though, believes this kind therapy could actually save money in the long run.

“It is proven that the ones that have activity-based therapy can go on to lead meaningful lives, professions,” she said. “They are not on the social security, they are also not in the hospital.”

Next week, Ledson and members of the United Spinal Association of Virginia will lobby lawmakers in Washington pressing them to include activity-based therapy in all medical insurances.

“My body wants to work, my body wants to stand,” Neal-Pishko said.

“There are so many success stories using activity-based-therapy, insurance companies can’t really ignore it and neither can the lawmakers,” Ledson added.

In the meantime, Ledson is also raising money to help others with this therapy. If you wish to donate, click here.

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3 charged with stealing thousands of packages from Amazon facility in Ashland

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HANOVER COUNTY, Va. (WRIC) — Three men are accused of stealing thousands of dollars worth of merchandise from the Amazon facility in Ashland.

Earlier this year, over a six week period, at least 5,000 packages were stolen.

Detectives say Agbokou Gogo and Sylvester Easter were both contract employees for Amazon, and that Gogo would move pallets of packages into the loading area for Easter, who acted as a delivery driver.

Instead of taking packages to the post office, Easter offloaded the pallet of Amazon packages valued at more than $6,000 in a secret location.

Covert investigators with the Hanover County Sheriff’s Office followed Easter to a self-storage facility in Henrico.

Detectives also suspect the men stored stolen packages at a second storage facility by the airport.

Court documents show that Bruce Jordan paid to rent all of the storage units used by the suspects. Jordan allegedly told the manager of one of the storage facilities that he was using the storage space to house items that he would be selling on an online auction.

Investigators believe they caught the suspects before they could sell any stolen products. Cameras inside the Amazon building assisted detectives with identifying the suspects.

All three men face felony charges linked to embezzlement.

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Mayor Stoney releases proposed budget for 2019

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — Mayor Levar M. Stoney delivered his budget proposal for the 2019-2020 fiscal year on Tuesday.

The proposed $715.2 million budget is fully balanced and expenses are in line with current revenue projections, according to the mayor’s office.

“This is a fiscally responsible and lean budget, but this plan still manages to continue to invest, and even improve and expand upon our support for targeted priorities in core services, public safety, poverty mitigation and education,” said Mayor Stoney.

Some highlights of the proposed budget:

  • Reinvestment of $12.5 million of Richmond Public Schools balances to meet local funding requests for 2019
  • $3.3 million in funding to continue the salary decompression and step pay increases instituted last year for both police and firefighters
  • An additional $1 million toward the paving program to pave an additional 20 lane miles for the improvement of neighborhood streets
  • Creation of a new Department of Citizen Service and Response to oversee the 311 Call Center
  • Four weeks of paid maternity leave for birth mothers and 4 weeks of paid parental bonding leave for the birth of a child (City of Richmond employees)

Click here to read Mayor Stoney’s entire proposed budget.

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Man hit by car while trying to help another driver on I-95 south

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CHESTERFIELD COUNTY, Va. (WRIC) — A man was hit by a car while trying to help another driver who got into a car crash.

It happened around 10 p.m. Tuesday. A driver pulled to the right side of I-95 south near the Ruffin Road exit.

He had seen another car crash and pulled over to help, police said. When he got out of his car, a different car driving on I-95 hit him.

He was transported to the hospital with what police say are life-threatening injuries. The other two drivers both have minor injuries.

No word on any charges in this crash.

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Couple charged with stealing chainsaws from Lowe’s

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PRINCE GEORGE COUNTY, Va. (WRIC) — Two people have been arrested for stealing multiple chainsaws from a Lowe’s in Prince George County.

Terry Bell Jr., 39, of Dinwiddie County, and Brandi Flippo, 24, of Hopewell, have both been charged with four counts of grand larceny, four counts of conspiracy to commit larceny and four counts of selling stolen property for profit.

The duo allegedly stole four Husqvarna chainsaws valued at more than $200 a piece between February 1 and March 5.

An investigation revealed that Bell and Flippo entered the Lowe’s Home Improvement store and simply grabbed one chainsaw on four separate occasions and walked out. Due to the efforts of Lowe’s employees and store camera footage, police were able to identify the couple and retrieve the stolen items. An additional chainsaw and leaf blower were recovered that police believe were taken from another locality.

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Local Kroger stores now offering online beer and wine purchases

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — Richmond-area Kroger customers can now buy beer and wine through ClickList, the grocery’s online ordering service.

Nearly all beer and wine offered in a Kroger store are available on ClickList; approximately 1,000 items at each store.

“We carry a full variety of beer and wine,” said Candace Bingham, a division e-commerce field specialist with Kroger’s Mid-Atlantic Division.

Customers place their order at www.kroger.com/ClickList and search by entering beer or wine. Specific brands also can be entered.

Customers select a time to pick up their orders with four hours’ notice. Orders must be picked up at ClickList designated parking spaces.

“We’ve had requests from customers to offer alcoholic beverages since we introduced ClickList in 2016,” added Bingham.  “With this update in technology and a change in Virginia law, we’ve responded to customers.”

13 of the 18 Kroger stores in the Richmond area offer ClickList:

  • 10800 Iron Bridge Road, Chester, VA
  • 11895 West Broad Street, Henrico, VA 23233
  • 3001 Polo Pkwy, Midlothian, VA 23113
  • 9000 Staples Mill Rd, Henrico, VA 23228
  • 9351 Atlee Rd, Mechanicsville, VA 23116
  • 13201 Rittenhouse Dr, Midlothian, VA 23112
  • 7000 Tim Price Way, Richmond, VA 23225
  • 3507 W Cary St, Richmond, VA 23221
  • 14101 Midlothian Turnpike, Midlothian, VA 23114
  • 12726 Jefferson Davis Hwy, Chester, VA 23831
  • 1510 Eastridge Rd, Henrico, VA 23229
  • 1356 Gaskins Road, Richmond, VA 23238
  • 6335 Mechanicsville Turnpike, Mechanicsville, VA 23111

Kroger offers more than 40,000 items through ClickList, including fresh meat and produce.  Virginia law prohibits tobacco products and pharmacy prescriptions from being sold on ClickList.  Hot foods and gift cards also are excluded.

Kroger is waiving the $4.95 service charge for each customer’s first three orders.  No minimum purchase is required.

Kroger began online ordering nearly two years ago in the Mid-Atlantic Division, which includes stores in Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee.  A total of 46 stores now offer ClickList in the Mid-Atlantic Division.

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‘Kind of awful’: Another snowstorm clobbers the Northeast

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NEW YORK (AP) — For the second time in less than a week, a storm rolled into the Northeast with wet, heavy snow Wednesday, grounding flights, closing schools and bringing another round of power outages to a corner of the country still recovering from the previous blast of winter.

The nor’easter knocked out electricity to hundreds of thousands of customers and produced “thundersnow” as it made its way up the coast, with flashes of lightning and booming thunder from the Philadelphia area to New York City. A New Jersey middle school teacher was struck by lightning but survived.

Officials urged people to stay off the roads.

“It’s kind of awful,” said New York University student Alessa Raiford, who put two layers of clothing on a pug named Jengo before taking him for a walk in slushy, sloppy Manhattan, where rain gave way to wet snow in the afternoon. “I’d rather that it be full-on snowing than rain and slush. It just makes it difficult.”

The National Weather Service issued a winter storm warning into Thursday morning from the Philadelphia area through most of New England.

The storm unloaded snow at a rate of 2 or 3 inches an hour, with some places in New Jersey, New York and Connecticut getting well over a foot by Wednesday night. Butler, New Jersey, got 22 inches, Sloatsburg, New York, 23 inches and Newtown, Connecticut, 14 inches.

Major cities along the Interstate 95 corridor saw much less. Philadelphia International Airport recorded about 6 inches and New York City received a little over 2.

More than 2,600 flights across the region — about 1,900 in the New York metro area alone — were canceled.

It wasn’t much better on the ground, with Pennsylvania and New York banning big rigs from some major highways and transit agencies reducing or canceling service on trains and buses.

The storm wasn’t predicted to be as severe as the nor’easter that toppled trees, inundated coastal communities and caused more than 2 million power outages from Virginia to Maine last Friday.

But it still proved to be a headache for the tens of thousands of customers still in the dark from the earlier storm — and for the crews trying to restore power to them.

In New Jersey, the state’s major utilities reported more than 300,000 customers without power by Wednesday night, with some left over from last week. PECO, Pennsylvania’s largest electric utility, reported more than 100,000 homes and businesses without power.

Wind gusts up to 60 mph were forecast on Cape Cod, 45 mph at the Jersey shore and 30 mph around suburban Philadelphia.

The wind knocked gobs of slush and snow off buildings and trees in Philadelphia and New York, forcing pedestrians to watch out. Across the region, power lines and tree branches sagged precariously under the weight of the wet show. Suburban streets were littered with downed trees and branches.

“I don’t think I’m ready for this to happen again,” Caprice Dantzler said as she walked through Philadelphia’s Rittenhouse Square. She said many trees that crashed into cars and homes and blocked streets during the last storm had yet to be removed.

A few hardy tourists waded through puddles and slush to visit the World Trade Center memorial, where Juan Escobar, visiting from Cali, Colombia, with his wife, Daniela, snapped a selfie in front of one of the reflecting pools. Escobar said it was the second time in his life he had seen snow.

“It’s awesome!” he said. “We are cold as hell, but we are happy.”

Ten people were taken to hospitals with symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning after running a generator inside a home in North White Plains, New York, police said. All were expected to survive.

A teacher was struck by lightning while holding an umbrella on bus duty outside a school in Manchester Township, New Jersey, police said. The woman felt a tingling sensation but didn’t lose consciousness. She was taken to a hospital with minor injuries.

Members of the Northeastern University women’s basketball team pushed their bus back on course after it was stuck in the snow outside a practice facility in Philadelphia. The Huskies were in the city to compete in the 2018 CAA Women’s Basketball Tournament. The team posted a video of the feat on its Twitter account.

Amtrak suspended service between New York City and Boston until at least 10 a.m. Thursday. New York City’s Metro-North commuter railroad suspended service on lines connecting the city to its northern suburbs and Connecticut because of downed trees, and the Long Island Rail Road also was experiencing delays. School districts and government offices from Delaware northward closed, and the governors of New Jersey and Pennsylvania declared states of emergency.

Officials warned homeowners of the danger of heart attacks from shoveling heavy snow.

In New Jersey, a volunteer firefighter used the snow to save a house from major fire damage.

Stillwater firefighter Joe McAllister didn’t have any firefighting equipment when he got to the house, so he improvised, grabbing a shovel and tossing snow onto the fire, according to nj.com. McAllister knocked down most of the flames by the time other firefighters arrived.

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Porter reported from Newark, New Jersey. Associated Press writers Michael Catalini in Morrisville, Pennsylvania; Michael Sisak and Rod Hicks in Philadelphia; Wayne Parry in Atlantic City, New Jersey; and Bruce Shipkowski, in Toms River, New Jersey, contributed.

Alabama police: 2 hurt in accidental school shooting

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BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) — Authorities say two students have been hurt in an accidental shooting during afternoon dismissal at a high school in Alabama’s largest city.

Birmingham Police Sgt. Bryan Shelton told local media organizations that one of the students suffered life-threatening injuries in the shooting Wednesday afternoon. Shelton called it an “accidental shooting” but details weren’t immediately available.

The Birmingham City school system said in a statement that the shooting at Huffman High School prompted a brief lockdown and police were called. It says students were subsequently let go and police are investigating the circumstances surrounding the shooting.

Stolen guns from cars could end up in other crimes

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — Police in the Richmond area said guns stolen from cars continue to be a big problem. So, they’re urging gun owners to keep those weapons locked up and inside your homes.

Police say people may not realize how often gun owners leave their guns in their car and how often those guns are stolen, and sometimes those weapons pop up in other crimes.

Several years ago, Chesterfield County Police got a disturbing call after residents living off of Winterpock Road discovered someone had shot and killed their horse. Eventually, Steven Dunn was arrested and charged with the crime.

Investigators say he used a gun that had been stolen from an unlocked car. It’s a problem police say they have to deal with hundreds of times a year. Criminals taking weapons left in an owners vehicle.

“We have numerous incidents a year where weapons are stolen out of unlocked cars and that just creates a risk out in the community,” said Chesterfield County Police Corporal Matt Rogers.

In Chesterfield, there were 180 weapons stolen from unlocked cars all of last year worth nearly $90,000. They’ve already had 10 guns stolen from unlocked cars so far this year. In Henrico County, 20 guns had been stolen as of February 25th from unlocked cars. While Richmond doesn’t distinguish between locked and unlocked, they say 73 firearms have been taken in 67 thefts from cars so far this year.

Police say knowing what happens to those weapons after they end up in the hands of a criminal is unsettling, “Those weapons can be used in a variety of different crimes,” Cpl. Rogers said. “So you know we want to help prevent that.”

Chesterfield has been pushing for people to lock their cars at night to prevent thefts. They urge gun owners to take their guns into their homes at the end of the day and lock them up; saying it doesn’t make sense to leave such a dangerous and expensive item in your car.

“Guns can be several hundred dollars a piece and you know up to a $1000 so it’s not a cheap item that’s being stolen,” said Cpl. Rogers.

They say it’s not only protecting your gun from being stolen, but it’s protecting the public from that gun being used in a future crime.

As of March 7th, Chesterfield County Police have recovered 16 of the guns that were stolen last year. Some of those guns were just found this year.

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Another Nor’Easter impacting local flights

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — Nor’Easter has hit the northeast hard with harsh weather. The storm has also impacted traveling conditions for many as thousands of flights have been canceled throughout the country.

Flights in and out of Richmond International Airport have experienced multiple cancellations.

More than 30 flights involving Philadelphia and New York were grounded on Wednesday

Many flights were canceled during the early morning hours, allowing most travelers to avoid a trip to the airport.

Airlines hope to get commuters back on their way as soon as possible after so many people were stuck from last week’s high winds.

People planning on traveling through Richmond in the days to come, need to check their flight status before making the trip to the airport.

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White nationalist rally planner sues city over permit denial

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CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) – An organizer of last summer’s white nationalist rally in Charlottesville is suing the Virginia city over its denial of his request to hold an anniversary event.

The Daily Progress reports Jason Kessler filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday. He argues that his First Amendment rights were violated when the city denied his permit application. Charlottesville rejected the application in December, saying the proposed event would present a danger to public safety.

Kessler is a Charlottesville resident who was the primary organizer of the Aug. 12 “Unite the Right” event, which descended into violence. The day ended with three people dead.

In his application, Kessler described the anniversary event as a “rally against government civil rights abuse and failure to follow security plans for political dissidents.”

A spokesman for the city says it has no comment on the lawsuit.

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