MY READER REWARDS


We Love Our Subscribers!




Welcome to your weekly Reader Rewards newsletter! Spring is inching ever so closer to us, folks!  If you're impatient - there is ALWAYS the sunshine state of Florida, right?  Better yet: it will now be MUCH EASIER for us to make it down to Orlando and Fort Lauderdale to escape the cold up here.  If you missed the news this week - check out the story by The Pilot's Trevor Metcalfe right here on Spirit Airlines' new flights out of Norfolk International Airport.  Not bad fares to quickly get down to Orlando and Fort Lauderdale, right?  With all these additional flights out of Norfolk this past year, even the dogs want to take time watching the planes coming and going.  Yes - back in February a dog was spotted actually running around loose on one of the runways!  Maybe he/she couldn't wait for his/her owner to come home??  You can get the whole story right here - by The Pilot's Eliza Noe.  Don't worry - the story ends just fine. 

Yours truly - along with many others here in Hampton Roads - has receiving new property assessment in the mail recently.  So, I'm sure many are wondering what exactly is going on with the local real estate market, right?  We have you covered.  Inside Business Sandra Pennecke has the report on the local market right here. Hopefully we truly ARE recession-proof!

As an aside on the real estate market - some of you may have been to the VERY LARGE Dick's Sporting Goods over in Chesapeake.  Namely in the Greenbrier area.  A monster of a store for sure.  Well - there will be an even BIGGER Dick's coming to Chesapeake soon enough.  A Dick's "House of Sport" will open in the area.  Golf bays, batting cages and a climbing wall.  The Pilot's Natalie Anderson has the entire rundown for you right here.  Wow.

First it was spying balloons overhead.  Spying cranes though??  Those very large cargo cranes that are down at the Port of Virginia - have drawn the concern of the Pentagon. Yes, they were built in China.  The Pilot's Caitlyn Burchett has the story for you right here.  We shall see I suppose.

Yes - it's STILL restaurant week around Hampton Roads!  For that and other upcoming foodie events - The Pilot's Rekaya Gibson has you covered here - as always!  Another bonus review from Rekaya this week - especially if crepes are your game.  Check out Rekaya's review of Lily's right here. 

Enjoy the weekend!

Contests, contests, contests! We have Visa, Home Depot & Buffalo Wild Wings!

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





Last Week's Contest Winners

Amazon -                     Nancy McKeown

Kroger   -             
       Linda Hubbard

Lowe's -          
             Audrey O'Grady



CONTESTS
 Visa Gift Cards can be used online, over the phone and in your favorite stores and restaurants across the country—like Target, Walmart, Olive Garden and more. Register at MyReaderRewards.com for a chance to win a $50 gift card!


 Shop All Your Home Improvement Needs: Appliances, Bath, Kitchen, Tools, Hardware, Storage, Patio, Garden, Lighting, Fans, Electrical, Plumbing, Paint, Flooring, Decor, and More!  Sign up for a chance to win a $50 gift card at MyReaderRewards.com!

Enjoy all Buffalo Wild Wings to you has to offer when you order delivery or pick it up yourself or stop by a location near you. Sign up for a chance to win a $50 gift card at MyReaderRewards.com!
EToTod
Meet MItzi! Mitzi is this week's My Reader Rewards Pets of the Week!  MItzi's proud PAWrent is Gloria Query. 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!!!
EX
COMING SUNDAY:

Helen Pryor remembers the day in March 2020 she and everyone else at Chesterfield Academy was abruptly told to go home to wait out the coronavirus outbreak.

It would last for a few weeks, everyone thought. Teachers and students had to find places at home to set up their computers and figure out a host of new online programs and teaching resources. Worksheets were sent home. Teachers set up Zoom classes. Districts had to figure out how to get computers and Internet access to students who didn’t have them.

But it wasn’t an outbreak, it was a pandemic. Three years ago next week, COVID-19 was declared a national emergency, and governors across the country, including Virginia’s Gov. Ralph Northam, ordered schools closed. Today, schools, students and parents are still sorting through what happened and finding ways to help students catch up. The effects can be seen in virtually every part of public education — student achievement, morale, behavior, staffing.

Read more in the Sunday Main News section

Kernet Holloway story?

Holloway died Feb. 3 at the Amherst Adult Detention Center (part of Blue Ridge Jail Authority) in the Lynchburg area.

Holloway was one of more than 170 inmates the Hampton Sheriff’s Office is holding outside of the city after issues with the building — including an outdated locking system — forced the Hampton City Jail’s closure in May of 2022.

More than half of those inmates are being held at Hampton Roads Regional Jail in Portsmouth, under a longstanding partnership with Hampton and four other area cities.

But the Hampton Sheriff’s Office has also contracted out to three other agencies -- the Western Tidewater Regional Jail in Suffolk; Riverside Regional Jail in Hopewell; and the Blue Ridge Regional Jail Authority in Lynchburg, which runs five jails in the western part of the state.

Read more in the Sunday Main News section

Savana Griffith wakes up everyday worried about her hemp business.

She loves helping her customers and running her shop, The Hemp Spectrum, in Virginia Beach. But she’s scared recent legislation will spell its doom.

“We put our whole life savings into this,” Griffith said. “We’ve been doing things the right way and now they’re going to put us out of business and into debt.”

The General Assembly recently passed a bill that would tighten regulations on the industrial hemp industry. Supporters say it would protect children from accidental ingestion and keep consumers informed. Others argue it would have the opposite effect by shuttering shops and pushing customers to seek questionable products from the black market.

Read more in the Sunday Main News section

Sure signs of a provocative art exhibition: A museum displays a trigger warning or provides a sanctuary space where visitors can decompress.

The Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art has done both with the recent opening of “Kara Walker: Cut to the Quick, from the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer and His Family Foundation.”

Walker is known for creating powerful — and sometimes controversial — images to illuminate the nation’s painful legacies of slavery, misogyny, violence and colonialism.

“For a nation dealing with tough issues,” said Heather Hakimzadeh, Virginia MOCA’s senior curator, “this exhibition is a starting point of a dialogue.”

Read more in the Sunday Break section

A Chesapeake man and margarita fan has landed in paradise. His ready-to-drink margarita won a national contest, with a head-spinning cash prize, and it’s now on store shelves nationwide.

Deron Cassell’s Tropical Paradise — a blend of mango, peach, strawberry, pineapple and orange juice — won him $100,000, tequila maker Jose Cuervo said in a news release. The blend hit stores in February.

Read more in the Sunday Break section

After a long wait, Mary’s Kitchen, a popular local breakfast spot, reopens Monday.

Mary’s closed temporarily in October because of the “economic climate,” according to a sign taped to its entrance and a post on its Facebook page. Regulars were disappointed but found a glimmer of hope in that the hiatus was only until the spring.

Since 1951, Mary’s has been serving Southern favorites for breakfast and lunch — such as buttermilk biscuits and chicken and dumplings — to locals and tourists.

Read more in the Sunday Break section

2022 was Norfolk International Airport’s best year in its 85-year history, the director said.

“We recovered from the pandemic faster than just about any other airport in the nation,” said Mark A. Perryman, Norfolk Airport Authority president and CEO. “That’s a testament to what this region has to offer.”

As of last year, the Norfolk airport overtook the Richmond airport in terms of passengers, he said during a presentation on Wednesday. Norfolk tallied about 4.12 million passengers while Richmond had about 4.07 million. He explained there is friendly boasting as the numbers go up and down between the two.

The Downtown Norfolk Council held a member briefing at the Norfolk Waterside Marriott to share details of the airport’s latest progress and master plan.

Read more in the Sunday Work & Money section


Note To Readers:  A reminder that Parade magazine is now only found along with your e-edition of either The Virginian-Pilot or Daily Press each Sunday morning.  Print copies of Parade magazine ceased after the November 13th issue.


Oscars’ Greatest Hits