Updated: 11:39 AM Some Hurricane Katrina victims in Mississippi are thankful for a truckload of relief supplies they received from Charlottesville. Now organizers are hoping to send even more.
Updated: 12:09 PM Powered scooters sent 10,000 people to emergency rooms last year according to the federal consumer product safety commission. Now the general assembly wants to regulate scooters.
Updated: 5:03 PM A suspicious letter turned up at the Albemarle County court house Wednesday morning alarming officials and releasing a white substance into the air.
Updated: 10:37 AM Racial messages and hurtful comments are what caused the tension on Grounds. This has sparked students and faculty to spread the meaning of equality.
Updated: 4:55 PM Flu season is just around the corner and the government is urging high risk patients to get vaccinated now. Health officials don't want to see the problems caused by last year's shortage.
Updated: 3:47 PM In the classrooms where academic lessons are taught, students are learning to help others as kids of all ages in the area are helping the victims of Hurricane Katrina.
Updated: 11:14 AM Police say a woman walking along the Virginia Beach oceanfront found the body of Dana Naylor, who disappeared while swimming over the weekend.
Updated: 1:02 PM The response has been tremendous from people wanting to help the victims of Hurricane Katrina. Now there's a new phone number that will tell about all of the various relief efforts through the Charlottesville area.
Updated: 10:37 AM Candidates for Governor Tim Kaine and Jerry Kilgore took center stage on Tuesday. The pair squared off during an hour-long debate in Fairfax.
Updated: 12:22 PM Charlottesville's housing market is through the roof. Officials said businesses are feeling the brunt of it. But the City thinks they can do something about it.
Updated: 4:26 PM Embryonic stem-cell research is one of the most controversial issues of the Bush Administration--but at UVa--researchers may have discovered new alternatives.
Updated: 5:21 PM Last week we introduced you to a bus-load of volunteers heading down to Mississippi. They hoped to bring back families affected by hurricane Katrina. Now they're back.
Updated: 3:33 PM It affects two million Virginians each year. More and more hard working people are not able to afford health insurance. However, one county is ready to change that.