Find a tasteful greeting card during a pandemic. Go ahead. Try.
While the Northam administration was complaining of how difficult it was to acquire testing materials, commercial labs were saying they had significant excess capacity.
Not sure I can take any more of the venom and hostility directed at anyone who dares to question the state shutdowns or suggest they’ve gone on long enough.
Meet another lucky felon who’s about to be freed: Dwayne Markee Reid, 45. This Suffolk man was involved in two slayings, according to prosecutors and was sentenced to life.
News flash: We need oxygen. Masks obstruct it. That’s why exercising in a mask is a bad idea. And driving in one is dangerous.
The number of COVID-19 patients at the 663-bed Carilion Medical Center Sunday night: two.
A memo to staff at Sentara Norfolk General Hospital last Thursday showed nine Covid patients in regular rooms. Two in ICU. None on ventilators. This is terrific news. Why all the secrecy?
A letter signed by Del. Jason Miyares and supported by 100 doctors, dentists, builders, restaurateurs and assorted business people asks Gov. Ralph Northam to consider the damage being done to Virginia Beach by his indefinite shutdown order.
The person spreading fear and misinformation on Friday was one of Northam’s lieutenants. He ought to be sacked.
The Governor has no idea whether the number of COVID-19 cases is increasing or shrinking. The state’s capacity to administer tests is so inadequate.
What initially seemed like overly cautious decisions by a risk-adverse governor is starting to look like something else: Meglomania.
The freeing frenzy included some of the commonwealth’s most violent criminals, including several convicted of capital murder.
If the governor keeps the beaches closed beyond June 10, it will be catastrophic. He has to stop moving the goalposts.
In less than six weeks we’ve seen most of America’s governors racing to adopt Chinese-style tactics against law-abiding Americans in the name of managing a pandemic.
Much has been written about the paucity of COVID-19 testing in Virginia.
When it comes to allegations of sexual assault the press has a double standard.
Get out your pruners and head for your azaleas. Now, at the end of their bloom, it’s time to shape them.
Virginia’s two U.S. senators, Mark Warner and Tim Kaine, have joined 17 colleagues in signing a letter calling for emergency COVID-19 funding for regional and local news outlets.