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Community-Supported News. Free to all.
VOL. 10, NO. 5
22
DECEMBER 12, 2024
LEA Secures School Employees Unionization Vote BY AMBER LUCAS
alucas@loudounnow.org
The Loudoun Education Association on Monday secured enough votes to win the designation as the sole representative for collective bargaining for Loudoun County Public Schools employees. With 4,795 votes cast, the LEA won 96% of the vote among certified personnel, who are employees that require licensure from the Virginia Department of Education or the health department and 91% of the vote among classified personnel, including bus drivers and support staff. The school division has more than 13,000 staff members. It joins nine other associations in becoming exclusive collective bargaining representatives for Virginia school divisions, including Arlington County, Fairfax County and Prince William County in Northern Virginia. The election was triggered Sept. 9 when LEA President Kris Countryman submitted the required forms to Director of Human Resources Lisa Boland. The forms included a request for certification of election and copies of certification cards from 30% of certified and classified employees. That filing allowed Countryman UNIONIZATION VOTE continues on page 31
Renss Greene/Loudoun Now
Data centers near Loudoun Station in Ashburn.
JLARC Takes Deep Dive into Data Center Impacts Unconstrained Power Demand Could Double in a Decade
BY HANNA PAMPALONI hpampaloni@loudounnow.org
State leaders are gearing up to tackle a challenge Loudoun County has been grappling with for the past few years – how to manage the impact of unprecedented data center growth. The Joint Legislative and Audit Review Commission on Monday morning heard the results of a much-anticipated study the data center industry and a new series
of policy recommendations. “The data center industry is growing rapidly in Virginia,” JLARC Staff Director Hal Greer told the commission. “This growth is creating unprecedented challenges for the state’s energy infrastructure. Today’s briefing will highlight the tradeoff the state faces between the economic benefits of data centers and the energy challenges that they pose.” The report resulted in 12 findings, eight recommendations, and 10 potential
policy changes in focus areas ranging from water usage and environmental impact to energy demand and grid reliability. Project Leader Mark Gribbin said data centers bring economic benefits during their initial construction and from local tax revenue. “In recent years, the industry supported 74,000 jobs on average, including direct
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POWER DEMAND continues on page 28
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