News

144 years of Bright Hope Baptist Church
Church celebrates inclusion on National Register of Historic Places
PC votes to not consider TOD removal
The Louisa County Planning Commission (PC) voted 5-2 to remove the public hearing for an amendment to remove roughly 2,600 assemblages of acreages in the Technology Overlay District (TOD) — the designation initially created in April of 2023 to attract high-tech industrial development in the county — at the April 9 meeting. Cuckoo District Commissioner George Goodwin and Louisa District Commissioner Matthew Kersey were the two dissenting votes.
#TeamLCPS MVPS and Educators of the Year
Through a division-wide vote and a nomination process that involved students, LCPS staff, parents, and community members, Louisa County Public Schools recognized six certified employees and seven classified employees as their school-level Educators and #TeamLCPS MVPs of the Year on Friday, April 3. The annual announcement highlights 13 employees each year for their excellence during the school year.
Representatives from localities impacted by proposed Valley Link Project convene in Louisa
On Friday, April 3rd, representatives from localities impacted by the proposed Valley Link Project convened in Louisa County to discuss local impacts and potential paths forward. Attendees included board representatives and staff from Louisa, Orange, Appomattox, Spotsylvania, Culpeper, Fluvanna, Buckingham, and Goochland.

Turning passion into purpose through pickleball
ABF prepares for second annual tournament

Civilian Conservation Corps Company 2359
President Franklin D. Roosevelt made a deal with three million young men in 1933. He would pay them $30 monthly, plus room and board, to improve public lands, forests, parks, and respond to other environmental and infrastructure projects in the United States and its territories. The president enacted the deal by executive order. It put forth a “New Deal” to preserve the future of the American landscape and engage the young, unemployed American male of the Great Depression. The families of men in Company 2359 received $25 monthly. The remaining $5 went to the men. Additional benefits included educational and vocational opportunities. Men without high school diplomas could study and get one. The work programs in the field and in the camps were rigorous and well organized to ensure improvements in the men and in the country. “New Deal” programs however, were discontinued in 1942 as World War II swept the globe and captured many Civil Conservation Corps workers in its wake.
Supervisors appropriate $33 million for water plant upgrades
The Louisa County Board of Supervisors (BoS) unanimously approved a resolution authorizing a budget supplement of $33,000,000 to design and construct water treatment plant process upgrades at the Ferncliff Water Treatment Plant and to upgrade the New Bridge Wastewater Treatment Plant at the April 6 meeting.

American history told through local lens
Civil War documented in Harlow letters

Louisa native breaks barriers with aerial warfare research
Whitlock is first woman to speak at Great War Aviation Society in England

Turf fields fees, access in question
Supervisors table motion pending agreement between LCPRT and local youth sports organizations

