Relying on the local expertise of demographers, the count review operation has helped the Census Bureau identify more than 240,000 housing units and 6,500 group living quarters, such as nursing homes and prisons, that were missing from the bureau’s records, the agency confirmed. Qian Cai, a demographer who directs the Demographics Research Group at UVA’s Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service, had been preparing to do another review of the bureau’s data files in September to help make sure college student housing in her state was correctly counted.
The statue of Revolutionary War Gen. George Rogers Clark has stood on University of Virginia land for 99 years, but a push for racial equity and efforts by student leaders may force the statue to be removed. The statue, for which University leaders actively lobbied a wealthy Charlottesville philanthropist back in 1921, would be replaced by a Native American-centered cultural center under a recommendation by UVA’s Racial Equity Task Force.
(Commentary by alumna Karen Owen) As we celebrate the centennial of the ratification of the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, giving women the right to vote throughout the land, perhaps lost in the shuffle is another red-letter day for women in Virginia: The 50th anniversary of full co-education at the state’s flagship university.
The coronavirus pandemic has disproportionately impacted minorities. But statistics and the lack of research studies show health care is different for Black and brown people. Dr. Taison Bell from the University of Virginia believes biases are the cause.
In a traditional presidency, a natural disaster can provide a political advantage because it can give the incumbent a chance to put his or her leadership on display, said Barbara Perry, director of presidential studies at UVA’s Miller Center.
UVA Health has designed a nasopharyngeal swab and will distribute 60,000 of them across the state per week to support COVID-19 testing, the Charlottesville-based health system said this week.
Arlington has tallied more than 3,400 cases of COVID-19. More than 450 have been hospitalized and at least 138 have died. UVA researchers estimate that Northern Virginia will see a surge in new cases this fall.
As more of Virginia’s universities open for the fall semester, they’re collecting and releasing COVID-19 data and grappling with contingency plans for those who contract the disease. The University of Virginia released its first set of COVID-19 testing data Wednesday.
The five people are accomplished scholars and government practitioners who can comment on a broad array of political and governmental issues.
Tony Poljan, who is now a graduate transfer tight end at UVA, has rarely shied away from a hurdle. His stuttering is an issue he faces head-on.
The only university in the U.S. designated a UNESCO World Heritage site, the University of Virginia is one of the oldest in the country, founded in 1819 by Thomas Jefferson.
Brennan Armstrong has been named the starting quarterback for the University of Virginia. The announcement was made with a press release Thursday morning.
Expectations are rising that a COVID-19 vaccine will be ready for the public by the beginning of next year. That could mean an approved vaccine by January. “I believe that it is realistic that we will know sometime in late 2020 whether some COVID-19 vaccines are safe, exactly how effective they are, and which ones should be used to vaccinate the U.S. population in 2021,” writes William Petri, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Virginia.
We don’t hear much about the Second Lady, and that’s on purpose. But that doesn’t mean that Karen Pence has nothing to say. While Pence’s view may have tilted harder to the right than those of most Americans, his presence on the ticket comforted Conservatives who were uneasy with Trump’s more liberal history. "On social issues, I don't think you get more conservative than these two," says Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia Center for Politics.
Michael Barber, professor of BYU’s political science, and his collaborator, John B. Holbein of the University of Virginia, examined records from the past three decades in counties using mandatory vote-by-mail in Colorado, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Nebraska and California, focusing on elections immediately before and after the system was implemented.
A set of car dealerships across Virginia will be raising money to help families and children fighting cancer get to and from hospital appointments. Donations will be made to UVA Children’s, the ASK Childhood Cancer Foundation in Richmond, and the Children’s Hospital of the King’s Daughter in Williamsburg.
Depression study suggests it may be possible to predict who would benefit. The lead author is C.J. Brush, who earned a doctorate at Rutgers and is now at Florida State University. Rutgers co-authors include Anthony J. Bocchine and Andrew A. Ude, both doctoral students, and Kristina M. Muniz, a former undergraduate research assistant who is now at the University of Virginia Health System.
“The patients in this study were children with hematology/oncology conditions,” Beth Quatrara, a nursing professor at University of Virginia, said. “They are accustomed to treatments and IVs. Providing them with time to ‘be free’ and ‘be kids’ was seen as a gift.”
The UVA COVID Tracker is a tool that is designed to track public health information and metrics about the virus and it will be updated daily.
When it comes to the best college value for your money, it’s tough to beat the University of Virginia. Money magazine just ranked UVA the second best value education among american public universities, behind only the University of Michigan.