MY READER REWARDS


We Love Our Subscribers!




Welcome to your weekly Reader Rewards newsletter! Hopefully everyone enjoyed the holiday weekend as well as the shorter work week??  A little warm this week, yes?  We can all remember these toasty days when January and February are upon us!  Meanwhile, the beach or a pool sound about right.  Speaking of pools - Chesapeake has never had the benefit of a public pool.  Until now!  If you missed it, The Pilot's Natalie Anderson - has the full report on Chesapeake's first public pool right here.
Better late than never.

If you head down to the oceanfront along with all the seasonal tourists, perhaps a visit to the Isle of Capri restaurant?  We might not want to miss the special and unique server, seranading customers in one of multiple languages!  The Pilot's Stacy Parker has the report right here. Four different languages? Unbelievable.  

Staying on the topic of food here in Hampton Roads - check out what's happening around the area on the food scene this weekend: courtesy of The Pilot's Rekaya Gibson. From a seafood boil, to tacos and vegan cuisine....no shortage of options!  Looking for a new restaurant option?  Rekaya has us all covered with a review of Hampton's Drexler's Wood Fired Grill.  Check out her review right here.  We have always had the food scene covered here in Hampton Roads at Reader Rewards.  With that in mind, one last "food find" - yes again by The Pilot's Rekaya Gibson.  Check out her find righ here of Taqueria La Patrona.  

We're all aware of the history here throughout Hampton Roads.  Many historic buildings, places throughout the region.  Did you read about one of the oldest homes in Norfolk being brought back to life?  If you missed it, The Pilot's Jane Harper has the full report right here  - on The Taylor-Whittle house in Norfolk.  231 years old....unbelievable.

Lastly, many of us here throughout the area have proabably dropped a line in a body of water to fish at some point.  Some of us may very well have done this while kayaking.  How many of us though have hooked an 81 pound cobia??  The Leonardi brothers of Hampton can claim such.  The Pilot and Daily Press' Lauren Girgis - has the full report right here. A cobia looking like a "submarine"??  Yikes!


Contests, contests, contests! This week we have Wawa, Food Lion and Barnes & Noble!

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



Last Week's Contest Winners

Amazon -          Morris Neville
                                                                          

Target - 
            Edwenya Ferguson
                                                                         

Kroger -            Glenn Brensinger
                                                                              

CONTESTS

Fuel your day with Wawa, your all-day, everyday convenience store. Grab Built-To-Order® food and beverages, coffee, fuel services, and much more.   Register at MyReaderRewards.com for a chance to win a $50 gift card!

Food Lion Is In Your Neighborhood. Save Money Buying The Products You Love. Start Saving! You Can Count On Us for Every Day Low Prices & In-Store Hot Sales. Register at MyReaderRewards.com for a chance to win a $50 gift card!


Barnes & Noble's online bookstore for books, NOOK ebooks & magazines. Shop music, movies, toys & games, too. Register at MyReaderRewards.com for a chance to win a $50 gift card!
 Sign up for a chance to win a $50 gift card at MyReaderRewards.com!

EToTod
Meet Daisy & Buddy! Daisy & Buddy are this week's My Reader Rewards Pets of the Week!  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
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:

It’s old, hard for many area veterans to reach, and significant numbers of it beds are unused, so after 80 years at the tip of the Peninsula, the Hampton Veterans Administration Medical Center is facing an uncertain future.

Earlier this year, the VA’s study of its nationwide health care system recommending closing Hampton down and replacing it with new centers in Norfolk and Newport News, while sending more veterans for medical and surgical inpatient care to the Naval hospital in Portsmouth and moving its spinal cord injuries cases to Richmond’s VA center. On the other hand, a group of a dozen Senators, led by Veterans Affair Committee chairman Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., this week pledged to block the commission’s recommendations.

While the study proposed closing 17 facilities nationwide, Hampton is unusual in being replaced by two new centers. On the other hand, the study recommended a new New Jersey facility to fill any gaps from the proposed closing of two New York City VA hospitals, in Brooklyn and Manhattan.

Read more in the Sunday Main News section

A couple days after Portsmouth Police Chief Renado Prince was fired from his job, Pastor Bobby Randall voiced concern.

At a time of rising crime in the city, Randall said Thursday morning, the police department simply can’t afford more leadership turnover in its upper ranks.

“For the chief of police to be fired after just under a year of serving ... I think it was done prematurely,” Randall said. “We need to give our officers hope, by steady, consistent leadership, and without steady, consistent leadership, the bottom will crumble and fall.”

But the pastor sounded much different hours later, after Interim Police Chief Stephen D. Jenkins spoke at an anti-violence event at New First Baptist Church. Flanked by Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares and Portsmouth Sheriff Michael A. Moore, Jenkins drew multiple rounds of applause from the crowd of more than 125 people with his forceful delivery on a range of topics.

Read more in the Sunday Main News section

Starla Baker was ready for her baby brother to come home.

After 14 years in prison, William ‘Mann’ Barco — an inmate at Greensville Correctional Center — was slated to be released July 5.

Baker lined up a job for him in construction and prepared a bedroom at their mother’s house in Norfolk. She bought items he would need, like clothing and a cell phone. Their family even had a “Welcome Home” party planned: They bought balloons and banners and another sibling booked a flight from Tennessee.

Then about two weeks ago Barco, 30, called with an update: He wasn’t getting out.

“I was pulling in my driveway and he called and told me and I literally thought he was pranking me,” Baker said.

But it wasn’t a joke.

Barco and hundreds of other Virginia state prisoners are no longer eligible for early release, due to a budget amendment from Gov. Glenn Youngkin, passed by The General Assembly last month, that restricted which inmates are eligible for early release through a program that lets people earn time off for good conduct. Now the prisoners who were slated to go home this summer will remain in custody, leaving many angry and confused. Lawmakers in favor of the new policy argue it will keep communities safe, but some human rights advocates fear it could have the opposite effect.

Read more in the Sunday Main news section

Betsy Hardy woke up early June 29, the weight of five generations on her mind.

Three hours later, she stood in the parking lot of the TowneBank Pavilion Center II building. She watched as the outdoor pedestal clock that had been a fixture in the family’s jewelry business since 1884 was loaded onto a trailer bound for Tennessee.

“I’m going to keep my glasses on,” said Hardy, holding back tears as the crane operator prepared to lift the 650-pound piece.

For years, the black metal clock greeted drivers as they entered the resort area. Before that, it lived in front of her father’s store at Wayside Village Shoppes on Virginia Beach Boulevard. But its heyday was in the early 1900s as a fixture on downtown Norfolk’s Granby Street in front of four iterations of the jewelry store.

Hardy has managed the business since 1993. She moved the clock to her gallery, Hardy’s The Art of Jewelry, in 2010.

Read more in the Sunday Break section

When Clayton Echard was in the seventh grade, he became hyperfocused on his body, pinching his stomach every time he passed by a mirror because he didn’t like the way it looked.

It was years before the “Bachelor” star could put a name to what he was experiencing — body dysmorphia, a mental health disorder that involves obsessively focusing on a perceived physical flaw. Now he’s trying to help others who are struggling with the same. After the show finished airing in March, Echard opened up about his struggles, posting resources and tips online.

“Going on the show was a catalyst for me feeling as though I can do this,” Echard, 29, said. “It’s something that I’m passionate about, and I want to be able to impact others.”

Echard is known as the dimpled, buff, 6-foot-5 star of the 26th season of “The Bachelor,” but now he’s rebranding himself as a mental health advocate. This, he believes, was the only path forward after the filming ended and he sank into depression.

Read more in the Sunday Break section

Hampton Roads airports are working to accommodate industry challenges, but the region isn’t experiencing the long lines, staffing shortages and delayed and canceled flights that other cities are experiencing, airport leaders said.

Norfolk International Airport has been busier but well-staffed, and both vendors and the Transportation Security Administration were prepared for Fourth of July demand, said Charlie Braden, director of market development at Norfolk Airport Authority.

“With regards to cancellations and delays, we’re really sort of at the whim of the airlines,” Braden said.

So far this summer, Braden said the Norfolk airport is experiencing a 10% reduction in departures compared with the summer of 2019 along with an 11% increase in seats. And 2019 was the airport’s highest passenger growth year on record, Braden noted.

Read more in the Sunday Work & Money section

In an instant late last week, the ACC went from a period of relative stability — yet one not without significant questions about its long-term future — to prognostications of doom and visions of worst-case scenarios. Pick a related metaphor and they all fit the perception that suddenly surrounds the ACC: A sinking ship; the Hindenburg engulfed in a fireball; the grim reaper knocking on the door, toting a scythe.

The ACC isn’t quite there, not yet anyway, but the vibes are not good. The revelation that USC and UCLA intend to depart the Pac-12 for the Big Ten has reinforced a truth that is not new, necessarily, but one that is becoming more difficult to ignore. And that truth is this: In major college athletics, there is no longer any such thing as the Power Five.

Read more in the Sunday Sports section

See America - Summer 2022

Parade Picks - Passport to Paris

What America Eats - Summer's Best Steak Salad

  
The Virginian-Pilot

You are receiving this email because you opted in to receive marketing communications from The Virginian-Pilot and/or its advertising partners.
Sign up for newsletters | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Copyright © 2020
Click here to unsubscribe.
The Virginian-Pilot, P.O. Box 2820, Norfolk, VA 23501, United States