(Commetnary) Mondale was the first vice president to have an office in the West Wing, steps from the president’s own, rather than being sidelined in the Old Executive Office Building, and a weekly lunch scheduled with the president. Carter also made it clear that their two staffs were to be considered one; Mondale’s chief of staff Richard Moe was given the additional title “assistant to the president.” “We felt that Fritz’s long experience in Washington and the fact that for the first time he was being integrated into the Presidency itself was a compensating factor for the ignorance among the ...
Vaccines for COVID-19 and other coronaviruses could be produced quickly and inexpensively, and in many places around the world, if a new vaccine development method now being tested proves successful. “Our new platform offers a new route to rapidly produce vaccines at very low cost that can be manufactured in existing facilities around the world, which should be particularly helpful for pandemic response,” Dr. Steven Zeichner, one of the scientists involved in the project, said in a UVA Health news release.
An elite cultural exchange program is still feeling the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. The Fulbright U.S. Student Award is given to certain college students after their four years of studying new cultures and languages. According to a release, full immersion, overseas programs like the Fulbright awards, have suffered due to the pandemic, as have their recipients. For example, Callie Collins is a UVA fourth-year student who was given a Fulbright to be an English teaching assistant in Russia last year.
UVA Health is expanding its operations to increase the capacity of the hospital system. On Friday, UVA Health officially acquired the Monticello Community Surgery Center next to the UVA Primary Care Riverside on U.S. Route 29 in Albemarle County. This outpatient center has four operating rooms and one procedure room.
At a time when the demand for home care is exceeding the number of physicians providing home-based medical care, a team of health care workers at UVA Health is aiming to bridge the gap. The workers started a program called Virginia at Home last year. It’s a house call program that serves homebound patients in Charlottesville and the surrounding areas.
UVA Health will wipe out a decades-old backlog of court judgments and liens resulting from lawsuits it brought against patients for unpaid hospital bills, the Charlottesville-based health system said April 19.
UVA Health will release liens and judgments filed against most middle- and lower-income patients and limit patients’ financial liability for catastrophic medical care as part of new billing policies that focus on a patient’s ability to pay. Health System officials also will create an ombudsman position to assist patients with disputes and redesign intake and appointment scheduling to inform patients about insurance coverage limits and financial assistance prior to treatment.
UVA Health, which for years has sued thousands of patients annually for unpaid bills, said Monday that it will cancel a massive backlog of court judgments and liens resulting from lawsuits dating to the 1990s. Combined with reforms UVA announced in 2019, the move is likely to benefit tens of thousands of families and make UVA Health’s collections policies much more generous than those of many hospital systems, said experts who study health-care finance.
A group of UVA students is on the hunt for old furniture before it gets thrown into the trash. Refurnished is working to re-home old furniture to homes and organizations in need.
It remains unclear what the constitutional implications of Second Amendment sanctuaries may be. Under current jurisprudence, the federal government cannot compel state and local authorities to abide by federal law, a point UVA law professor Rich Schragger affirmed in an interview: “There is a constitutional doctrine that holds that local officials can’t be commandeered to enforce certain kinds of federal mandates.”
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While federal law protects employees from having their employers share their vaccine status with others, “your employer may be entitled to information about your vaccine status,” said Margaret Riley, a UVA law professor who teaches food and drug law, health law, bioethics and public health law. That’s true particularly if being unvaccinated poses a particular threat to others.
In 1963, Charlie became the UVA public address announcer for men’s football games at Scott Stadium and, as of 1965, for men’s basketball at University Hall. Charlie’s announcement “There will be no smoking in U-Hall except by the red-hot Cavaliers” was welcomed with loud applause. He would work over 700 Cavalier games during 34 years until his retirement as announcer in 1997.
You can trace Eleanor Love’s love of flowers back to her childhood when she would grow a hardy patch of sunflowers in her family’s front yard in Arlington. Later, after graduating from the University of Virginia, she spent a year as a volunteer with the National Health Corps, a branch of AmeriCorps, providing health care and education for underserved communities in Philadelphia. During that stint, she worked part time in a flower shop.
You can trace Eleanor Love’s love of flowers back to her childhood when she would grow a hardy patch of sunflowers in her family’s front yard in Arlington. Later, after graduating from the University of Virginia, she spent a year as a volunteer with the National Health Corps, a branch of AmeriCorps, providing health care and education for underserved communities in Philadelphia. During that stint, she worked part time in a flower shop.
In an interview, Grisham, who played baseball and basketball at Southaven High School in Mississippi, said the idea for the story began three years ago, when he read an article about the South Sudanese national team competing in Hawaii at the World Youth Basketball Tournament. He combined their story with that of Mamadi Diakite, who is from Guinea and played four seasons at the University of Virginia. 
Such a chaotic field, and the nature and timing of special elections more generally, will likely obscure any broad lessons, experts said. “If we get a Democrat versus a Republican in what seems like an inevitable runoff, I do think it’ll be an interesting test of party strength in the usually Republican but Trump-skeptical suburbs,” Kyle Kondik, managing editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball at the University of Virginia Center for Politics, said in an email. “I am not sure we’ll get such a runoff — there is a huge field of candidates, and we could see two members of the same party get through.”
Large donors also showed signs of favoring Republicans who voted to accept Biden’s victory, who on average took in about $150,000 from individuals giving more than $200. Republicans who voted to overturn Biden’s win on average raised about $100,000 from large donors. The gap could also suggest that House Republicans who voted to certify the 2020 election have a greater impetus to raise campaign donations because they are in more competitive districts or anticipate primary challenges. “A higher percentage of the people who voted to certify are in competitive districts,” said Kyle Kondik, an ana...
On March 1, the state of Virginia decriminalized jaywalking and reclassified it as a secondary offense — meaning people won’t be ticketed unless they’re violating another law. The change also reduces unnecessary interaction with the police. “As long as jaywalking was a primary offense, it was going to be a big source of harassment,” Peter Norton, associate professor of history in the University of Virginia’s Department of Engineering and Society, said.
The SolarWinds and Microsoft Exchange intrusions came as schools, local governments, and businesses have faced cyberattacks of their own. “All these things are really putting a lot of pressure on [nations] to better secure their systems,” says Kristen Eichensehr, who directs the National Security Law Center at the UVA School of Law. She says there is also pressure on the “international legal system to respond to this felt impulse that these things are wrong, and that they should be dealt with as illegal.”
Barbara Armacost, a law professor at the University of Virginia, said traffic laws are very extensive and can overcriminalize. “Once a person is stopped on the side of the road, police can seize any evidence that is in plain view inside of a car if police have probable cause to believe it is evidence of crime. They can also ask for consent to search the car, and they pretty much always get it,” Armacost said.