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Welcome to your weekly Reader Rewards newsletter!  WOW - July 1st.  Time flies, right?  Already this far into 2021.  For oh so long, we have ralled around the following refrain here at Reader Rewards: Wear a mask, wash your hands frequently and keep six feet of distance. In one way it seems as if it was years ago that Governor Northam declared a State of Emergency here in Virginia due to COVID.  In another way it seems as if it were just yesterday. Regardless - effective today, July 1st: Virginia's COVID state of emergency has expired.  If you missed The Pilot's Sierra Jenkins' coverage on what it means - check it out here.

July 1st also brings about a number of changes in laws here in Virginia.  Who would have thought even one year ago that the general topic of marijuana legalization would come about effective July 1st, 2021? Well, change can take place quickly sometimes - this is a prime example.  Be careful though - it's not nearly as simple as it sounds on the surface.  The Daily Press' Peter Dujardin covers the ins and outs right here, if you missed it.

While we don't enjoy being a "wet blanket" here at Reader Rewards - while we're on the topic of new laws that go into effect today.  You may have heard about the new law concerning the release of balloons?  The Pilot's Stacy Parker has it ALL right here in case you missed it or hadn't even heard.

We often make sure to highlight the local food, beverage and restaurant scene here in Hampton Roads - thanks to The Pilot's Matthew Korfhage.  You may have heard that Matthew is moving on to another challenge.  If you missed out on his farewell article AND even better yet - what he'll miss most here in Hampton Roads - you can read it ALL right here!

Enough of yours truly rambling on - Fourth of July weekend is upon us!  For coverage on how to handle/plan for the holiday weekend - check out Stacy Parker's coverage here. Enjoy the coming weekend with friends and family! Find a spot on the beach or near a pool and relax!

Contests this week! Once again we've got more of your favorites: Kroger, Home Depot and Olive Garden!

Enter to win a $50 gift card to one  Go to MyReaderRewards.com to win!


Last Week's Contest Winners

Amazon -  Lynn Tiedge

Walmart -
Kevin Reilly

Wawa - 
Judy Beckner


CONTESTS

Deals that are lower than low. Save time & money today! Kroger® is working around the clock, so you can get what you need in store & online. Pick Up Curbside. Bakery & Deli. Fuel Points. Weekly Savings. Earn Fuel Discounts. Seasonal Low Prices. In-Store Pharmacy. Register at MyReaderRewards.com for a chance to win a $50 gift card!

Shop online for all your home improvement needs: appliances, bathroom decorating ideas, kitchen remodeling, patio furniture, power tools, bbq grills, carpeting and more. Register at MyReaderRewards.com for a chance to win a $50 gift card!


Welcome to Olive Garden Italian Restaurants. Stop by today and enjoy family style dining and fresh Italian food at our local restaurants. Sign up for a chance to win a $50 gift card at MyReaderRewards.com!




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Meet Boat(cat) and Toby(doge)!  Boat and Toby are this week's My Reader Rewards Pets of the Week!  I think we've all heard of the saying "Cat's got your tongue" - has anyone heard of "Cat's got your tail"? Boat and Toby's proud PAWrents are Mr. & Mrs. Carroll!  Check out our other furry friends in our new Pet Gallery. Want your pet featured? Email a picture of your pet to
Mark.quan@pilotonline.com. Please include your name along with your pet's name. Let's round up those pet pictures folks to further boost our gallery and to showcase!!!
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Restaurants are opening back up so don't forget Reader Perks! Take advantage of over 500,000 local and national discounts that can pay for your subscription over & over again! To access Reader Perks, click here. You must be a print subscriber to take advantage of this program. Log in using the email address associated with your newspaper account. No email on file? Email your name and address to Mark.quan@pilotonline.com to add it and gain access! Not a print subscriber? Click here to subscribe!
COMING SUNDAY:

Per pupil expenditures at Newport News middle schools is shockingly low, according to state numbers. A look into why and what those numbers mean.

 Read more in this Sunday's Main News section

During the time when she was undergoing radiation treatment for cancer, Leah Marshall was calling the Virginia Employment Commission.

She had filed for unemployment benefits two days after becoming unemployed in August 2020. Six months later, she still had not heard a decision.

Marshall ran out of savings and began the process of filing for bankruptcy.

One month later, she got an award letter and began receiving weekly payments. Marshall, a 47-year-old resident of Virginia Beach, said she used the money to get through that period and pay for health insurance.

About two months later, the benefits were cut off without notice.

She’s not the only one struggling through a system so dysfunctional it now faces legal action.

The Virginia Employment Commission faces a court order mandating it to process all 92,000 backlogged unemployment insurance claims by Labor Day and an executive order by Gov. Ralph Northam to fix staffing and technology issues by Oct. 1.

Until then, thousands of Virginians are still waiting for desperately needed aid.

Read more in this Sunday's Main News section

Shot in the face, stabbed in the head and nearly drowned with bleach, Brianna Arrington had been dying for about nine hours by the time someone found her.

It had been a gang hit, and the 20-year-old mother was supposed to die early in the morning on April 24, 2020, prosecutors said. Presumably, her would-be killers thought they’d finished the job after shooting her in the right eye, sending a bullet into her skull and out her right ear.

Arrington’s attackers then drove her 2-year-old son more than five miles and abandoned him on the street, according to police. A garbage collector found the toddler wandering alone about an hour before dawn in West Ghent.

Somehow, Arrington lived. She spent weeks in the hospital in a coma, lost her eye, and is deaf in her right ear. When she testified at a December court hearing, eight months after the attack, she still had a slew of scheduled surgeries and was taking dozens of pills every day.

Read more in this Sunday's Main News section

  • At the mouth of Rudee Inlet, a majestic Old Glory waves in the wind, greeting mariners who enter the safe haven from the ocean.

    The 15-by-25-foot American flag is flown from an 80-foot tall pole at Southside Marina. It can be seen from land, too, with some of the best views from the southern-most point of the Boardwalk.

    Virginia Beach businesswoman Cheryl McLeskey, who owns the marina, installed the flag pole in 2019 in the center of a grassy plot of land to honor her late husband, Wayne, and her father who fought in WWII.

    Read more in this Sunday's Main News section

    Blood donors reclined in chairs basked in natural light at a recent American Red Cross blood drive. Mobile phlebotomists moved between trees strung with fairy lights, preparing blood bags in the lobby of the Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art.

    Off to the side, a table presented free snacks for donors to replenish blood sugar. Next to them were gift bundles of stadium cups, koozies, ballpoint pens and informational material — all splashed with the TowneBank logo.

    As a sponsor, Suffolk-based TowneBank partnered with the local Red Cross to organize the drive and provide promotional items. The company also encouraged about 25 employees to sign up.

    These partnerships have supported the Red Cross coming out of the pandemic, a time when the baseline of need for blood donations is higher than normal.

    The lack of elective surgeries and scarcity of travel-related car crashes during the height of the pandemic meant that fewer people needed the lifesaving units of blood that donors provide. Now that the United States is creeping back to “normal,” the need for blood has skyrocketed.

     Read more in this Sunday's Main News section

  • So you have friends and family who are vaccinated and rolling in like a hurricane-whipped tide to visit.

    What to do with them beyond the typical dip at the beach?

    Plenty.

    We have a list of unique travel stops, fun to-dos and experiences that can be had only in our neck of the Eastern Seaboard. Our list isn’t inclusive, and the items are not in any particular order.

    Why 51? Because it’s more than 50.

    Read more in the Sunday Break section
         
          A full-time human resources administrator for a Norfolk ship repair company                was eager to become an entrepreneur, although she didn’t think olive oil would            be in her wheelhouse.

          But when Chasity Pritchett, who works at Auxiliary Systems Inc., tasted                        jalapeño-infused olive oil that a co-worker drizzled on his fresh homegrown                  produce, her taste buds and interest were piqued.

          “It sounds crazy, but I said, ‘I think I could get into the olive oil business,’”                       Pritchett said.

           The Chesapeake resident researched the product, the industry and the health             benefits of olive oil and delved in.

           Read more in this Sunday's Work & Money section

Note to Readers: Parade Magazine WILL NOT publish this coming Sunday, July 4th.  Below is a special preview of the July 11th edition!





Let The Games Begin: 2021 Tokyo Olympics

Parade Picks - Space Jam: A New Legacy

Books We Love - Cover to Cover

  
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