Author

Jacob covers federal policy as a senior reporter for States Newsroom. Based in Oregon, he focuses on Western issues. His coverage areas include climate, energy development, public lands and infrastructure.
Virginia Mercury is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.
Congressional panel splits on regulation of ‘orphaned’ oil and gas wells
By: Jacob Fischler - April 16, 2021
Members of a U.S. House Natural Resources panel agreed Thursday on the need to clean up and cap thousands of abandoned oil and gas wells, including some in Virginia, but disagreed along party lines about the extent of the federal government’s role in well regulation. The Energy and Mineral Resources Subcommittee hearing was held to […]
‘A once in a generation investment’: Biden unveils $2T infrastructure package; creating millions of jobs
By: John Micek and Jacob Fischler - March 31, 2021
Unveiling what he called the boldest domestic spending package since the construction of America’s interstate highway system and the dawning of the space race, President Joe Biden released broad details of a $2 trillion infrastructure package that would rebuild highways and bridges, along with providing funding programs for housing, broadband and schools and increasing U.S. […]
Biden reinstates bird protections gutted under Trump
By: Jacob Fischler - March 9, 2021
The Interior Department on Monday revoked a Trump administration policy that would have undercut a century-old law protecting migratory birds. The move strengthens federal regulators’ authority to enforce the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, a 1918 law that allows the government to prosecute polluters whose actions are responsible for the deaths of about 1,100 protected bird […]
‘I just don’t trust the system any more’: Voters on edge as election nears
By: Allison Stevens and Jacob Fischler - October 5, 2020
WASHINGTON— Widespread anxiety and confusion around voting, compounded by the pandemic that has spread to millions of Americans, including President Donald Trump. A vastly underfunded and decentralized electoral system that could take days and possibly weeks to certify results. Attempts to suppress voting, interfere with elections and cast doubt on the integrity of mail-in ballots […]
‘You just have to act’: Thousands outraged by police brutality rally at March on Washington
By: Jacob Fischler and Allison Stevens - August 29, 2020
WASHINGTON – On the 57th anniversary of the original March on Washington and in the throes of a pandemic, thousands of demonstrators on Friday joined Democratic lawmakers on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial to demand Congress act on police brutality and voter suppression. The event, organized by the Rev. Al Sharpton’s National Action Network, […]
Will Virginia sign on to Trump’s plan to boost unemployment benefits by $400?
By: Jacob Fischler - August 10, 2020
[UPDATE: Virginia applying to participate in Trump’s unemployment supplement] Governors, lawmakers and state unemployment agencies on Monday wrestled with confusion created by President Donald Trump’s executive action extending unemployment benefits, and it appeared some states could settle for $300 a week in benefits instead of the $400 that the president touted. State leaders from both […]
Trump moves to extend unemployment benefits, suspend payroll taxes after talks break down
By: Jacob Fischler and Allison Stevens - August 8, 2020
President Donald Trump on Saturday circumvented Congress and took action on his own after weeks of unsuccessful negotiations over another coronavirus relief package on Capitol Hill. He signed three presidential memoranda and an executive order, at his private golf club in Bedminster, N.J. Trump would provide $300 per week in federal unemployment assistance with another […]
Bipartisan bill with big money for Virginia, other national parks, heads to president’s desk
By: Allison Stevens and Jacob Fischler - July 23, 2020
WASHINGTON — Major environmental legislation sailed through Congress Wednesday while the nation’s political leaders were stuck in intense negotiations over the contours of a fifth coronavirus relief package. The bill would provide $9.5 billion over five years to pay down the National Park Service’s maintenance backlog and provide permanent funding at $900 million per year […]
Librarians, National Guard recruited for states’ new contact tracing armies
By: Jacob Fischler - May 27, 2020
As states seek to loosen wide-ranging restrictions imposed to constrain the novel coronavirus, they’re also looking to deploy a huge new fleet of workers to keep cases under control. Enter the contact tracers. With interpersonal contact certain to increase as states lift COVID-19 restrictions, tracing who infected people had contact with — and then isolating […]