Norfolk - NPD: 2 dead following shooting at ODU’s campus
NORFOLK, Va. (WAVY) — Two people are dead after being shot in a parking lot on West 49th Street in the area of Broderick Dining Commons on the Old Dominion University campus Wednesday night, Norfolk and ODU police said.
ODU Police said that, at around 9:50 p.m., two people, later identified as 18-year-old Delanio M. Vick and 20-year-old Timothy G. Williams, suffered injuries from a shooting that took place in parking lot 3 in the 1400 block of W. 49th St. ODU and Norfolk police said neither person is a student nor affiliated with the university. The two who were injured were taken to Sentara Norfolk General Hospital, where they later succumbed to their injuries.
A campus lockdown has been lifted after both ODU and Norfolk police said there was no further threat to the campus community. An ODU Urgent Alert issued earlier in the evening stated there was a suspect at large, ODU Police said. There was no word early Thursday morning on whether a suspect is in custody.
Norfolk Police said the shooting occurred in a parking lot near the Broderick Dining Commons.
“We are deeply saddened by the unnecessary violence that occurred overnight on the campus of Old Dominion University,” Norfolk Police Chief Mark Talbot said. “Students attend a university to learn, and deserve to feel safe in their environment while doing so. We appreciate the strong partnership we have with the men and women of the Old Dominion University Police Department and all of their assistance both last night at the scene and today as we investigate this double homicide. Chief Sheldon and I will continue to work closely together to ensure that our teams have the resources they need to hold those who are responsible for this violence accountable for their actions.”
Joshua McCauley, director and campus minister for the Wesley Foundation at ODU and a ministry of the United Methodist Church, said he had been at the nearby Wesley Center for an event Wednesday evening and had just left to go home when he got the ODU Urgent Alert about an active shooter on campus and returned to the center.
“One of the rules of the chaplain is to make sure that we’re here to support our students,” McCauley said. “I’m happy to serve as a part of one of the university chaplains and the university chaplain association so I wanted to make sure students had a space to turn to when disasters like this take place.”
McCauley said “it’s disheartening [for it] to be here on our campus. I know there’ll be a lot of pain, and a lot of worry and anxiety amongst students. I’ve already been texting quite a few of them, checking in and making sure they’re OK and making sure they know that Wesley is open for them and a space for them to be.
“We’ve got some work to do here to heal.”
An emergency alert was sent by email, phone and text at 10:01 p.m. advising the campus community to stay indoors. At 11:43 p.m., ODU sent another emergency alert to lift the shelter-in-place.
ODU Police said walk-in counseling services will be available Thursday for students. The Office of Counseling Services can be reached at 757-683-4401, and appointments can be made online.
Va. budget could erase $56M in payments over failed VCU Health project
City of Richmond previously proposed mediation to resolve the issue
The General Assembly passed a state budget deal that would cancel $56 million in payments the Virginia Commonwealth University Health System agreed to give the city of Richmond for a failed development project.
In 2021, VCU Health sought to develop a $325 million project at the city-owned Public Safety Building, located at 500 N. 10th St. But the project — which would have housed office space, retail and parking — was stopped before construction started.
As a part of the deal, VCU Health agreed to pay the city about $2.5 million annually through 2045. By June 2024, about $2 million had been paid to the city.
State budget language approved in 2024 directed the health system to stop making the payments, leading former city leaders to seek mediation over the deal. In a letter to VCU Health, former Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney said the city would consider litigation.
“This issue has been outstanding for a while, and we're just trying to work towards an agreement — to work towards resolution,” former City Council President Kristen Nye told VPM News at the time.
On Saturday, the Virginia General Assembly passed amendments to the two-year budget that included language saying VCU Health “shall not be required to remit any payment to the City of Richmond” for the deal.
City Council President Cynthia Newbille didn't respond to a request for comment, and VCU Health declined to make anyone available.
"While this appears to be a disappointing development, the City is evaluating the budget language to better understand its potential implications," a city spokesperson told VPM News.
Early in the project, developer Capital City Partners told VCU Health that work could not continue under the plan's initial budget. It cited concerns over site conditions and increased construction costs due to COVID-19 supply chain issues.
VCU Health paid almost $80 million to halt the project, according to a Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission report. That included $73 million for the developer to cancel the deal and $5 million to the city to demolish the old Public Safety Building.
In October 2024, Marlon Levy, now VCU Health’s CEO, wrote that Richmond benefited from the deal, citing the demolition and receipt of $3.5 million from the developer.
Gov. Glenn Youngkin has until midnight March 24 to make a decision on the budget language and any legislation approved by the General Assembly. Lawmakers are then slated to meet April 2 to consider Youngkin’s amendments and vetoes.
Newport News - Nansemond Indian Nation prepares to open second clinic with more in the works
Fishing Point Healthcare provides tribal members and non-natives with primary care, physical therapy, dental and pharmacy services.
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Newport News-built SS United States passes by birthplace on final voyage to become the world's largest artificial reef
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Newport News-built SS United States passes by birthplace on final voyage to become the world's largest artificial reef
Built in Newport News, the historic, aging SS United States is heading to Florida's Gulf Coast where it will become the world's largest artificial reef. Author: Christopher Collette, Bruce Shipkowski (Associated Press) Published: 12:04 PM EST February 21, 2025 Updated: 11:39 PM EST February 21, 2025
PHILADELPHIA — The historic, aging ocean liner that a Florida county plans to turn into the world's largest artificial reef departed from south Philadelphia's Delaware River waterfront on Wednesday, marking the opening segment of its final voyage.
The SS United States, a 1,000-foot vessel that shattered the transatlantic speed record on its maiden voyage in 1952, is being towed to Mobile, Alabama, for planned prep work before officials eventually sink it off Florida's Gulf Coast.
The move comes about four months after the conservancy that oversees the ship and its landlord resolved a years-old rent dispute. Officials initially planned to move the vessel last November, but that was delayed due to concerns from the U.S. Coast Guard that the ship wasn't stable enough to make the trip.
Officials in Okaloosa County on Florida's coastal Panhandle hope it will become a barnacle-encrusted standout among the county's more than 500 artificial reefs and a signature diving attraction that could generate millions of dollars annually in local tourism spending for scuba shops, charter fishing boats, and hotels.
Officials have said the deal to buy the ship could eventually cost more than $10 million. The lengthy process of cleaning, transporting, and sinking the vessel is expected to take at least one-and-a-half years.
The SS United States was once considered a beacon of American engineering, doubling as a military vessel that could carry thousands of troops.
Built in the early 1950s at Newport News Shipbuilding, its maiden voyage broke the transatlantic speed record in both directions when it reached an average speed of 36 knots, or just over 41 mph (66 kph), The Associated Press reported from aboard the ship. The ship crossed the Atlantic Ocean in three days, 10 hours and 40 minutes, besting the RMS Queen Mary's time by 10 hours. To this day, the SS United States holds the transatlantic speed record for an ocean liner.
"The ship will forever symbolize our nation's strength, innovation, and resilience," said Susan Gibbs, president of the SS United States Conservancy and granddaughter of the naval architect who designed the vessel. "We wish her 'fair winds and following seas' on her historic journey to her new home."
The SS United States became a reserve ship in 1969 and later bounced to various private owners who hoped to redevelop it. But they eventually found their plans too expensive or poorly timed, leaving the vessel looming for years on south Philadelphia's Delaware River waterfront.
A last-ditch fundraising effort last year to move the ship to a new port city, including possibly Newport News, was unsuccessful.
The near-completed Owl Creek Landing is set to include a lookout tower, treehouses and a massive steel slide.
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New outdoor attraction near Virginia Beach Oceanfront will let visitors walk the tree canopy WHRO | By Katherine Hafner Published February 18, 2025 at 3:42 PM EST
Construction crews work to complete the Nautilus Tower at Owl Creek Landing in Virginia Beach on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. Katherine Hafner / WHRO News Construction crews work to complete the Nautilus Tower at Owl Creek Landing in Virginia Beach on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. The near-completed Owl Creek Landing is set to include a lookout tower, treehouses and a massive steel slide.
A 38-acre stretch of forest across from the Adventure Park at Virginia Aquarium will soon be its own, more laid-back attraction focused on connecting with nature.
Outdoor Ventures plans to open Owl Creek Landing this spring off General Booth Boulevard. CEO Bahman Azarm said it’s been in the works for a decade.
“When we built the Adventure Park in 2014 we were always going to be building Owl Creek Landing but it required the bridge over (the creek) to be built, and it required the South Building of the aquarium to be finished first. So that's why it took 10 years before we could start this.”
The land is owned by the city of Virginia Beach and leased through the Virginia Aquarium, which will also receive a portion of revenue, Azarm said.
Construction crews are days away from finishing the centerpiece of the new attraction: the Nautilus Tower. It’s a 65-foot-tall, 80-foot-wide spiral walkway made of galvanized steel that stretches above the treeline.
“As you're going up, you can see that you really do feel the area and the floor of the forest in a very different way,” Azarm said. “You see the leaves, you see the plantings, but there's some other connection that you feel with the woods when you're up here.” A view from the Nautilus Tower at Owl Creek Landing in Virginia Beach on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. Katherine Hafner / WHRO News A view from the Nautilus Tower at Owl Creek Landing in Virginia Beach on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025.
The Adventure Park requires visitors to use harnesses and have certain physical abilities to participate, Azarm said.
Their goal is to make Owl Creek Landing more accessible, focusing on giving people a unique view of the natural setting “and some of the top of the trees that you wouldn't normally see unless somehow you were in a balloon or something,” he said.
The forest includes several species such as maple, oak and tulip poplar. The company plans to plant some new native trees like persimmons.
The site will include a series of ground-level paths as well as treehouses and suspended walkways between platforms situated in the trees. Treehouses at Owl Creek Landing in Virginia Beach on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. Katherine Hafner / WHRO News Treehouses at Owl Creek Landing in Virginia Beach on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025.
All connect back to the central tower, which Outdoor Ventures says will feature the United States’ longest steel slide.
All of the equipment needed to construct the massive tower had to come over a narrow pedestrian bridge across Owl Creek. That constraint, as well as the site’s environmental sensitivity, led officials to try a new kind of foundation. The tower's unique, Austrian-inspired foundation system at Owl Creek Landing in Virginia Beach on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. Katherine Hafner / WHRO News The tower's unique, Austrian-inspired foundation system at Owl Creek Landing in Virginia Beach on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025.
Outdoor Ventures flew its engineer to Austria to learn about the method. Instead of digging into the ground and pouring a traditional foundation, smaller slabs of concrete sit on top of the ground, reinforced with metal rods that spread out underground like tree roots.
Azarm said they hope to have a soft open in April and hold an official grand opening by Memorial Day weekend.
The grounds will be free to roam. Those who want to enter the tower or treehouse structures will have to buy tickets: $28 for adults and $18 for children.