Virginia

Virginia spans coastal wetlands, the Blue Ridge Mountains, and dense urban corridors — making it a place where environmental, civic, and community progress takes many forms. This archive collects positive developments from across the commonwealth, from conservation wins to public health advances and beyond.

Virginia State Capitol building in Richmond on an overcast day, for an article about Virginia's first female governor

Abigail Spanberger is inaugurated as Virginia’s first female governor

Virginia’s first female governor was inaugurated on January 17, 2026, as Abigail Spanberger was sworn in as the state’s 75th governor — closing a gap stretching more than four centuries. Spanberger, a former CIA officer and three-term congresswoman, won last fall by 15 points in a swing state, drawing national attention from Democrats seeking a winning message. Her inauguration also marked two additional firsts, with Virginia’s new lieutenant governor becoming the first Muslim and first person of Indian descent in that role. The milestone carries weight in a state that waited until 1952 to ratify women’s voting rights.

A nurse-midwife consulting with a pregnant patient in a rural clinic for an article about autonomous midwifery practice

Virginia gives nurse-midwives the right to practice without physician oversight

Certified nurse-midwives in Virginia can now practice independently after the state eliminated its physician supervision requirement. The change addresses a critical gap in maternity care, particularly in rural counties where obstetric services are scarce or entirely absent. Research consistently shows that midwife-led care for low-risk pregnancies produces strong outcomes for mothers and newborns while reducing unnecessary medical interventions. Virginia joins a growing number of states aligning licensing laws with full practice authority standards, reflecting national momentum to expand access to qualified maternal care providers.

A Aerial Photo Of Fredericksburg Va on a clear fall day, for article on Rappahannock Tribe rights of nature

Rappahannock Tribe first in U.S. to enshrine rights of nature into constitution

The Rappahannock Tribe of Virginia just became the first tribal nation in the U.S. to enshrine the rights of nature directly into its constitution, granting the Rappahannock River nine specific rights — including the right to flourish, regenerate, and flow with clean, unpolluted water. Both the tribe and its citizens can now go to court on the river’s behalf, treating it as a living entity rather than a resource. Chief Anne Richardson called the river “the Mother of our Nation,” and the protection arrives as suburban sprawl and fracking proposals press in on the watershed. It’s a quietly radical move that joins a growing global wave — from Ecuador to Aotearoa New Zealand — reimagining what nature is owed under the law.