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  • — by Tim Kaine
    On August 3rd, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) finalized the Clean Power Plan, to reduce the pollution responsible for climate change. For all its complexity, its goal is simple—power plants should generate 32% less carbon pollution by the year 2030 than they do today. In 1962, President Kennedy challenged our nation to go the moon by 1969. If America can get to the moon in 7 years, emitting one-third less air pollution in 15 years is surely within our grasp. From the overwhelmin...Continue Reading

  • — by Robert Sorrell
    The city of Bristol, Virginia, will receive $228,418 in federal funding from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. On Wednesday, U.S. Senators Mark Warner and Tim Kaine announced that seven Virginia localities and organizations will receive nearly $7 million in grants. The funding will help local governments fight housing discrimination, improve economic conditions and increase access to affordable housing. “These funds will strengthen Virginia communities and improve the ...Continue Reading

  • — by Will Dobbs-Allsopp
    Fourteen months into the American-led coalition’s airstrikes on the Islamic State in Syria, Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) still wants Congress to weigh in. Not even halfway through his first term, the junior senator from Virginia is making a name for himself in Washington as the leading advocate for Congressional authorization of military operations. The former Richmond mayor, Virginia governor and Democratic National Committee chairman was once on Barack Obama’s vice presidential shortlist...Continue Reading

  • — by Editorial Board
    Career and technical education got a welcome boost this week when U.S. Senator Tim Kaine, R-Va., announced his effort to make federal funds available for students loans for adults seeking post-high school certificates. Adult wanting to earn certificates at Valley Career and Technical Center in Fishersville and other schools often find the short-term classes cost-prohibitive, Kaine noted in press release about the well-named Career & Technical Education Opportunity Act. We applaud this use of...Continue Reading

  • — by Alicia Petska
    Speaker John Boehner wasn’t the only one fighting back tears Thursday morning when Pope Francis walked into the U.S. House chamber — the first pontiff ever to address a joint meeting of Congress. “It was a very emotional experience for me,” said Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., adding he couldn’t help but cry when the pope arrived. “Man, I’m a complete sap,” he added later, tearing up again as he described the event. For Kaine — a Catholic ...Continue Reading

  • — by Paul Duggan
    Federal transit officials said Thursday they have approved a plan by Metro to correct numerous safety­management problems in its subway and bus operations, including poor training of employees, outdated information technology and inadequate staffing and procedures at the rail system’s central control facility. Metro “must demonstrate a renewed commitment to set a higher standard of safety for its riders and employees,” Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said in a stateme...Continue Reading

  • — by Bill Bartel
    U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine, a practicing Catholic and former missionary, had a clear message Wednesday for Pope Francis: Allow women to become priests. Kaine said ending the church's centuries-old rule that only men can be ordained would be the most significant thing the pope could do. "If women are not accorded equal place in the leadership of the Catholic Church and the other great world religions, they will always be treated as inferiors in earthly matters as well," Kaine said in a statement. "There...Continue Reading

  • — by Mike DeBonis
    When Pope Francis stands before Congress on Thursday, he will not only be addressing the world's most powerful legislature, but he will also be addressing 165 members of his church flock. Nearly one-third of Congress is Catholic, and they are almost evenly divided between Republicans (82) and Democrats (83). But that shared faith has not meant much in the way of common political ground, with Catholic lawmakers split along much the same partisan and ideological lines as the public at la...Continue Reading

  • — by Tim Kaine
    Traffic on Interstate 95 — the subject of an Aug. 23 editorial — is all-too-familiar to me as a U.S. senator, a former governor, and as an I–95 commuter who lives in Richmond and works in D.C. Northern Virginia’s rapid growth is good because it means the corridor has jobs and economic development, but it also means populations are growing faster than infrastructure can handle them. Last month, a U.S. Department of Transportation report found that traffic costs ...Continue Reading

  • — by Tim Kaine
    Esta semana, Estados Unidos recibe al Papa Francisco en Washington, Nueva York y Filadelfia. Entre toda la emoción y la ansiedad por lo que dirá en su discurso, una cosa ya quedó clara. Él llega a una iglesia y un pueblo estadounidense que están siendo rejuvenecidas por nuestra población hispana. La primera visita a los Estados Unidos del primer papa latinoamericano coincide con otro evento importante: el 450º aniversario de la f...Continue Reading

  • — by Paula C. Squires
    With an international bike race as a backdrop, Richmond celebrated another milestone Wednesday with the grand opening of Gateway Plaza, the city’s first new downtown Richmond office tower in two decades.A bevy of elected officials, led by U. S. Sen. Tim Kaine, offered congratulations to the city, the law firm of McGuireWoods LLP and the developer, Chicago-based Clayco, who worked together to build the 18-story, glass-walled skyscraper.  More than 200 people turned out for the ribbon-c...Continue Reading

  • — by Tim Kaine
    This week, America welcomes Pope Francis to Washington, New York and Philadelphia. Amid all the excitement and anxiety over what he will say, one thing is clear already. He arrives to a church and American population that are being rejuvenated by our Hispanic population. The first Latin American pope’s first visit to the United States coincides with another important event: the 450th anniversary of the founding of Saint Augustine, Fla. Forty-two years before Jamestown and 55 years before P...Continue Reading

  • — by Heather Mongillo
    Flowers, candles and cards were placed at the statue of Bob Simon at Lake Anne Plaza to honor the Reston founder who passed away yesterday. Simon died peacefully at his home in Reston. He was 101. An outpouring of support and condolences flooded RestonNow comments, Twitter and Facebook, with news of his passing picked up on Facebook’s national trends. Multiple people stopped by his statue on Tuesday morning to take pictures of the statue, say their goodbyes and share me...Continue Reading

  • September 22 2015

    HPD Receives $500K Grant

    — by Nolan Stout
    Help is on the way. For the Harrisonburg Police Department, that help will come in the form of a $500,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Justice, according to a press release announcing the grant Monday afternoon from the offices of Virginia’s two U.S. senators, Mark Warner and Tim Kaine. The grant comes from the Justice Department’s Community Oriented Policing Services grants, which are meant to fund law enforcement jobs and expand community policing and crime prevention initiati...Continue Reading

  • — by Lurah Spell
    WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Senators Mark Warner and Tim Kaine announced Monday that Virginia will receive $875,000 in U.S. Department of Justice Community Oriented Policing Services grants to fund law enforcement jobs and expand community policing and crime prevention initiatives. The City of Bristol will be awarded $375,000 to fund three officers and the Harrisonburg Police Department will be awarded $500,000 to fund four officers, according to a written statement. “We’re v...Continue Reading

  • — by Stuart Korfhage
    More of a historic powerhouse than an economic or political one, St. Augustine has a good bit of the world’s attention on all those fronts this week with a royal visit and as host of the U.S.-Spain Council. With St. Augustine celebrating its 450th year as a European-settled city, King Felipe VI of Spain made the city part of his first official visit as king to the United States. For the same reason — and to include the king — the honorary chairman of the U.S.-Spain Council, Sen...Continue Reading

  • — by Julian Pecquet
    A growing number of Democratic lawmakers are openly questioning whether toppling Syria's Bashar al-Assad should still be a priority amid steady gains by the Islamic State. The issue came to a head Sept. 16 as a key Senate panel held its first IS hearing since the first batch of 54 US-trained rebels was routed in late July by al-Qaeda-linked Jabhat al-Nusra as soon as it entered Syria. Reports that Russia is beefing up Assad's forces with tanks, troops and artillery has only a...Continue Reading

  • — by Ali Rockett
    U.S. Senators Mark Warner, D-Va., and Tim Kaine, D-Va., co-sponsored legislation Wednesday that would make Navy veterans who served off the Vietnam shore during the war there eligible for care for Agent Orange exposure. If passed, the Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Act would clarify an existing law so that these "Blue Water" veterans would be fully covered by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs if they served within 12 miles of shore, according to a joint statement released by the senators...Continue Reading

  • Three years after the Benghazi attack, the Obama administration and Republicans in Congress still haven't agreed on where to build a consolidated Diplomatic Security training center that both say is critical for protecting American embassies and consulates around the world. The question has prompted an increasingly nasty congressional turf battle, though a government audit circulated last week could help settle the case for a National Guard base in southern Virginia over a Federal Law Enforcemen...Continue Reading

  • — by Tamara Dietrich
    The president's task force on seafood fraud recommended some fixes earlier this year to prevent the sale of fake Chesapeake blue crab — but those fixes don't go far enough, Virginia lawmakers say. So on Tuesday, U.S. Sens. Tim Kaine and Mark Warner joined with U.S. Rep. Rob Wittman, R-Westmoreland, to urge President Barack Obama to take a more comprehensive "bait to plate" approach and track crab meat all the way from the source to the consumer. Doing so, the lawmakers said, would protect ...Continue Reading