Virginia Beach Local Pulse

Virginia Beach Local Pulse: Sand Soccer Championships and Summer Heat

3 min · 6. juni 2026
episode Virginia Beach Local Pulse: Sand Soccer Championships and Summer Heat cover

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Good morning, this is Virginia Beach Local Pulse for Saturday, June sixth, twenty twenty six. We wake up to warm, mostly sunny weather along the Oceanfront today. Forecasters at the National Weather Service say we head into the low nineties this afternoon, with a small chance of an isolated thunderstorm inland, and a light southwest breeze helping on the boardwalk. That heat means we keep water handy, check on neighbors, and pace our outdoor plans, especially around the North American Sand Soccer Championships on the beach between Rudee Inlet and 36th Street. Our big weekend story is that sand soccer tournament bringing thousands of players and families to the resort area. Hotels along Atlantic Avenue are close to full, restaurants at the Oceanfront and in Town Center are hiring extra staff, and traffic around Pacific Avenue is heavier than usual. Tournament organizers say games run through Sunday, so we build in extra time if we are heading to the beach or working nearby. From City Hall, council and planning staff continue work on new limits for large data centers in our city, especially near Princess Anne Road and the Pungo area, as reported this week by regional outlets in Hampton Roads. The concern is noise, water use, and energy demand, and any new rules could affect where future tech jobs and tax revenue land. On the jobs front, local hiring boards show a steady stream of openings, roughly a few thousand positions across Virginia Beach, led by health care at the Town Center medical offices, hospitality jobs along Atlantic Avenue, and logistics roles near the Lynnhaven Parkway and London Bridge Road corridors. In real estate, local agents report that the median home price in Virginia Beach is hovering around the mid four hundreds, with three bedroom homes in neighborhoods like Kempsville and Red Mill often drawing multiple offers when they are well priced and move in ready. Culturally, Visit Virginia Beach highlights a packed June. The Oceanfront Concert Series continues next week at the 17th Street and 24th Street parks with free evening shows, while the Virginia Symphony Orchestra prepares for Symphony on the Lawn at the Cavalier Resort tomorrow night. At the Veterans United Home Loans Amphitheater off Cellar Door Way, Dave Matthews Band is on the calendar for tonight, giving our music fans a big show just inland from the resort area. Our schools keep giving us reasons to be proud. Several Beach District high school teams wrapped up playoff runs this week, with local athletic directors noting strong showings in soccer, baseball, and track, and a handful of seniors from Cox, Ocean Lakes, and Tallwood earning all state honors. In public safety, Virginia Beach Police report a relatively routine Friday night into early Saturday, with no major incidents along Atlantic Avenue beyond a few alcohol related arrests and traffic stops. Officers do remind us to lock cars in neighborhoods off Independence Boulevard and around Lynnhaven Mall after a recent string of vehicle break ins earlier this week. For a feel good note, volunteers with a local surf therapy group gathered near the Fishing Pier to help kids with disabilities catch waves at sunrise. Families say those sessions build confidence and community in a way that feels uniquely Virginia Beach. Thank you for tuning in today and remember to subscribe so you never miss our local check in. This has been Virginia Beach Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

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episode Virginia Beach Local Pulse: Heat Advisory, Weekend Events, and Public Safety Updates artwork

Virginia Beach Local Pulse: Heat Advisory, Weekend Events, and Public Safety Updates

Good morning, this is Virginia Beach Local Pulse for June 13, 2026. We are starting with a dangerous heat day across the city, and that means the beach, the boardwalk, and even errands along Virginia Beach Boulevard will feel extra intense. The National Weather Service says we are heading for mostly sunny skies with highs in the mid 90s and a heat index that can climb to around 108, then a chance of evening thunderstorms and a muggy night near the mid 70s, so we are watching for sudden weather changes if we are out near the Oceanfront, Town Center, or the Lakes area. At city hall, the biggest day to day issue remains how heat, traffic, and public safety shape the weekend. We are also watching broader regional news that could affect local arts and tourism, including the court fight over the Kennedy Center name, which matters here because Hampton Roads residents regularly travel to Washington for performances and events. On the business front, the local event calendar is busy. The Virginia Beach Sports Center is preparing for Virginia Beach National Spotlight next weekend, then the EBC Championships at the end of the month, while The Dome by Rutter Mills continues to stack summer shows, and Funny Bone at 217 Central Park Avenue has live comedy tonight with Trixx. That lines up with a strong entertainment push in and around Town Center. In jobs and housing, we are still seeing a steady tourist season support hospitality, food service, and event staffing near the Oceanfront and Hilltop. For real estate, the main story is continued demand in beach and inland neighborhoods, with buyers still competing for homes close to Mount Trashmore, Chick’s Beach, and Lynnhaven. For crime and public safety, we are keeping this factual and brief. Local reporting from WTKR says a 19 year old Navy sailor remains charged in a crash that killed a landscaper and was denied bond, a case that has drawn attention across Virginia Beach. With the heat and the weekend crowd, police and emergency crews are urging extra caution on the roads and around the water. In sports, we are tracking high school state semifinal results reported by WTKR, and we are also looking ahead to a packed summer for youth and club competition at the Sports Center. For a feel good note, the city’s arts and summer scene are still pulling people together, from live music around Town Center to family events on the Oceanfront. We hope listeners stay cool, hydrate often, and plan around the heat today. This has been Virginia Beach Local Pulse. We thank you for tuning in, please subscribe, and we’ll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

13. juni 20262 min
episode Virginia Beach Local Pulse: Heat Advisory and Summer Safety for Friday, June 12 artwork

Virginia Beach Local Pulse: Heat Advisory and Summer Safety for Friday, June 12

Good morning, this is Virginia Beach Local Pulse for Friday, June 12, 2026. We wake up today to heat that feels more like late July than June. The National Weather Service has a heat advisory in place from late this morning through this evening, with highs in the mid 90s and heat index values near or just over 100. That means we pace ourselves outside, drink water, check on neighbors, and keep an eye on kids and pets, especially around the Oceanfront and Town Center. A pop up thunderstorm is possible late this afternoon, so if we are on the Boardwalk near 7th Street or out at Mount Trashmore, we keep an eye on those clouds. From city hall, the focus this week is on summer safety and holiday planning. City communications highlight expanded Juneteenth programming across our parks, libraries, and cultural venues, including events at Williams Farm Park on Learning Circle and the Virginia African American Cultural Center on Hampshire Lane. These programs affect our daily routines, with some adjusted hours at city facilities and extra traffic near event sites later this month. Police are also warning us about unpermitted takeover style events being promoted online. According to Virginia Beach Police, curfew laws for minors will be strictly enforced this weekend at the Oceanfront, especially along Atlantic Avenue and Pacific Avenue. We can expect a visible presence of officers and traffic enforcement units as they try to prevent large, unsanctioned gatherings that could turn disruptive. On the crime front over the past 24 hours, officers report a handful of overnight vehicle break ins in neighborhoods off Lynnhaven Parkway and near Independence Boulevard. Police remind us to lock cars, remove valuables from sight, and leave porch lights on. There are no major violent incidents reported citywide as of early this morning, but detectives continue to follow up on recent cases and ask anyone with information about suspicious activity near the Oceanfront garages to contact the Crime Line. On a brighter note, the city is leaning into culture. The official Virginia Beach site details a full Juneteenth lineup, including a Juneteenth at the Beach series later this month and a Virginia Symphony Orchestra Brass Quintet performance at the African American Cultural Center on June 14. That means more live music, more family events, and a chance for us to support local Black owned businesses. Speaking of music, down at the 7th Street Stage on Atlantic Avenue, tonight’s Boardwalk lineup includes the band Shotgun Hunter scheduled from 7 to 11 p.m., bringing blues and country right by the ocean. It is a free show, so we can grab dinner at the Oceanfront and wander over for live music as the sun drops. In sports, the Virginia Beach Sports Center on 19th Street is gearing up for a packed June. While the big national basketball events arrive later in the month, hotel bookings at the Oceanfront and around Town Center are already ticking up, which is good news for our restaurants and shops. On the real estate front, local agents report that median home prices in Virginia Beach are hovering in the low to mid 400 thousands, with well kept three bedroom homes near Princess Anne and Kempsville still drawing multiple offers. The rental market remains tight, with two bedroom apartments around Hilltop averaging in the mid 1 thousands per month. That keeps pressure on renters but continues to signal steady demand for local jobs. In the job market, regional employers are still hiring for health care, hospitality, and defense related roles. Large systems and bases around the city are advertising hundreds of openings, while Oceanfront hotels and restaurants are looking to fill dozens of seasonal positions. For listeners looking for work, that means we have options from entry level service jobs at the Oceanfront to skilled roles in tech and logistics near the port and naval facilities. Our schools continue to give us reasons to cheer. Several Virginia Beach high school teams are wrapping up strong spring seasons, with track and field athletes from across the city bringing home regional medals, and a Beach District baseball powerhouse advancing deep into state tournament play. Local principals also highlight seniors earning scholarships to Virginia colleges and universities, reinforcing the strength of our public schools. We close with a feel good story. A community group in the ViBe Creative District recently organized a neighborhood cleanup and mural touch up along Cypress Avenue, bringing together artists, students, and long time residents. Volunteers spent their Saturday picking up litter, refreshing paint, and planting flowers, turning a routine cleanup into a small street festival with music, food, and new friendships. It is a reminder that even on hot, busy days, we shape the spirit of our city one block at a time. Thank you for tuning in, and remember to subscribe so we can stay connected to our community together. This has been Virginia Beach Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

Yesterday5 min
episode Virginia Beach Local Pulse: Heat Advisory and High School Graduations, June 11 artwork

Virginia Beach Local Pulse: Heat Advisory and High School Graduations, June 11

Good morning, this is Virginia Beach Local Pulse for Thursday, June eleventh, twenty twenty six. We start with the heat, because it shapes our whole day. The National Weather Service has a heat advisory for our area from late morning into this evening, with highs around ninety and humidity pushing the heat index near triple digits. We stay mostly cloudy, with a southwest breeze around General Booth Boulevard and Independence Boulevard. We will want to pace outdoor plans, check on neighbors, and keep water handy. Storm chances stay low, but a pop up late day shower inland toward Princess Anne Road is possible. Tonight stays warm and muggy in the mid seventies. From city hall, Virginia Beach officials continue budget follow through this week, focusing on stormwater and flooding projects near Lynnhaven Parkway and Shore Drive, and on additional funding for school safety upgrades. Council members also keep talking about regulating short term rentals at the Oceanfront and in neighborhoods off Great Neck Road, so homeowners and hosts should keep an eye on upcoming agendas. On the waterfront, our culture calendar is busy. The city’s Cultural Affairs department has events at museums and historic sites, including Colonial themed programs and Indigenous history talks later this month. Down at the Boardwalk, the 7th Street Stage at Atlantic Avenue and 7th is running free evening live music, with small bands playing between six and ten on weeknights. And the Oceanfront Concert Series, as WAVY reports, is now underway with free Wednesday shows through late September near 24th Street. Sports and community blend in a big way this week. The Champions League baseball program here in Virginia Beach, highlighted by WTKR in years past, brings children with disabilities onto the diamond for their big championship game. Volunteers, buddies, and families pack the stands, reminding us why local sports matter as much as any pro team. Looking at big music, the Dave Matthews Band has reminded fans that Farm Aid twenty twenty six is set for September twenty sixth at Veterans United Home Loans Amphitheater off Cellar Door Way, with pre sale tickets starting today for fan club members. That will bring national attention and a lot of traffic and jobs to our side of Princess Anne Road later this year. On the jobs front, we see new hospitality openings around Town Center and the Oceanfront. The Hampton Social is opening its first Virginia location at 365 18th Street, near the convention center, with space for almost six hundred guests, which means dozens of new service and kitchen positions. Tourism season is also boosting hiring for dolphin watching boat tours that run daily from the Rudee Inlet area, as Visit Virginia Beach notes. Real estate stays tight. Agents report that the median single family home price in our city is now around four hundred thousand dollars, with well kept houses near Kempsville and Red Mill often drawing multiple offers within a week. Renters are feeling the squeeze too, especially around Town Center and Hilltop, where two bedroom apartments commonly push toward two thousand dollars a month. That keeps the affordability debate active at city hall. For our schools, this is a big milestone day. Visit Virginia Beach lists high school graduations running today through Saturday, with ceremonies at the Convention Center and the Sportsplex in the Princess Anne corridor. We celebrate our seniors walking the stage, and we also remind listeners about heavier traffic near those venues and on Birdneck Road and Princess Anne Road around ceremony times. As for entertainment tied to global sports, WHRO reports that local bars and restaurants are gearing up for World Cup watch parties starting tonight. Lendys on General Booth Boulevard and on Shore Drive is planning specials and extended hours for USA games, and spots across Hampton Roads are advertising viewing parties, especially downtown Norfolk at Waterside. That means busy nights on Interstate 264 and parking lots near the Oceanfront as fans gather. Our quick crime snapshot stays factual and respectful. Police report no major citywide incidents overnight, but they continue to investigate several recent armed robberies at convenience stores off Holland Road and Indian River Road. Officers add patrols around those corridors and remind us to stay aware at gas pumps and late night stops, and to lock vehicles, especially at the Oceanfront where car break ins still pop up in garage decks. Finally, a feel good story for our morning. WAVY and local social media highlight a holiday themed food drive station at Pembroke Square, where volunteers dressed as Santa spent yesterday collecting food and donations for our local food banks. All donations stay in our region, helping families from Newtown Road to Sandbridge restock pantries as summer starts. It is a reminder that even in the busy season, our community looks out for one another. Thank you for tuning in and please remember to subscribe so you never miss our local check in. This has been Virginia Beach Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

11. juni 20265 min
episode Virginia Beach Local Pulse: Sand Soccer Success and Summer Safety on the Rise artwork

Virginia Beach Local Pulse: Sand Soccer Success and Summer Safety on the Rise

Good morning, this is Virginia Beach Local Pulse for Sunday, June 7, 2026. We wake up today with our Oceanfront catching its breath after a packed weekend of sand soccer. WTKR reports thousands of players and families crowding the beach from Rudee Inlet up past 24th Street for the North American Sand Soccer Championships, bringing a big boost to our hotels, restaurants, and shops along Atlantic Avenue and Pacific Avenue. According to city officials, this is also the first big test of the new summer safety task force, which is adding extra officers, cameras, and lighting along the Boardwalk to keep evenings calmer and safer for all of us. Weather wise, we stay hot and humid today. The National Weather Service calls for highs near 90, with plenty of sun and a slight chance of an isolated afternoon thunderstorm, especially inland toward Princess Anne Road and the Pungo area. Tonight stays warm in the low 70s, so we plan for sticky conditions if we are heading to late concerts at the Oceanfront. Tomorrow looks a bit cooler with a better chance of scattered showers, then we trend back to mostly sunny and upper 70s to 80s through midweek. From City Hall, council members are focusing on summer crowd management at the resort area and Town Center, including more traffic control on Laskin Road and better pedestrian crossings near Independence Boulevard. City staff are also reminding us that budget season is in full swing, with proposals that keep the real estate tax rate steady but still fund school safety and stormwater projects, including drainage work near Lynnhaven Parkway. In real estate, local agents say the median single family home price in Virginia Beach is hovering around the mid four hundreds, with days on market now under a month in many neighborhoods like Kempsville and Great Neck. On the jobs front, online postings show hundreds of openings across the city, especially in hospitality at the Oceanfront, health care around Sentara Princess Anne, and logistics jobs near the Lynnhaven and Greenbrier corridors. Culturally, the city’s Cultural Affairs office highlights tours today at the Francis Land House off Princess Anne Road, giving us a chance to step back into local history. The Military Aviation Museum in Pungo is gearing up for its Flying Proms later this month, with rehearsals already bringing vintage aircraft into our skies. And down at the 7th Street Stage on the Boardwalk, live music is scheduled this evening, offering a free soundtrack to our beach walk. In sports, Virginia Beach United wrapped up a road match last night, with replays already posted online for fans who missed the late kickoff. Locally, several high school teams are celebrating state playoff runs, with coaches praising strong finishes from student athletes across the city. Police and fire crews report a relatively calm past 24 hours at the Oceanfront, with a few disorderly conduct arrests late last night near 19th Street but no major injuries. Police remind us to use well lit parking areas, lock our cars, and call if we see anything suspicious, especially as crowds stay large through Sunday night. Our feel good note this morning comes from volunteers who spent their Saturday cleaning trash from the beach near the Fishing Pier. Several local families, including kids from our city schools, filled dozens of bags, helping keep our shoreline ready for summer visitors and sea life. Thank you for tuning in, and remember to subscribe so you never miss an update. This has been Virginia Beach Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

7. juni 20263 min
episode Virginia Beach Local Pulse: Sand Soccer Championships and Summer Heat artwork

Virginia Beach Local Pulse: Sand Soccer Championships and Summer Heat

Good morning, this is Virginia Beach Local Pulse for Saturday, June sixth, twenty twenty six. We wake up to warm, mostly sunny weather along the Oceanfront today. Forecasters at the National Weather Service say we head into the low nineties this afternoon, with a small chance of an isolated thunderstorm inland, and a light southwest breeze helping on the boardwalk. That heat means we keep water handy, check on neighbors, and pace our outdoor plans, especially around the North American Sand Soccer Championships on the beach between Rudee Inlet and 36th Street. Our big weekend story is that sand soccer tournament bringing thousands of players and families to the resort area. Hotels along Atlantic Avenue are close to full, restaurants at the Oceanfront and in Town Center are hiring extra staff, and traffic around Pacific Avenue is heavier than usual. Tournament organizers say games run through Sunday, so we build in extra time if we are heading to the beach or working nearby. From City Hall, council and planning staff continue work on new limits for large data centers in our city, especially near Princess Anne Road and the Pungo area, as reported this week by regional outlets in Hampton Roads. The concern is noise, water use, and energy demand, and any new rules could affect where future tech jobs and tax revenue land. On the jobs front, local hiring boards show a steady stream of openings, roughly a few thousand positions across Virginia Beach, led by health care at the Town Center medical offices, hospitality jobs along Atlantic Avenue, and logistics roles near the Lynnhaven Parkway and London Bridge Road corridors. In real estate, local agents report that the median home price in Virginia Beach is hovering around the mid four hundreds, with three bedroom homes in neighborhoods like Kempsville and Red Mill often drawing multiple offers when they are well priced and move in ready. Culturally, Visit Virginia Beach highlights a packed June. The Oceanfront Concert Series continues next week at the 17th Street and 24th Street parks with free evening shows, while the Virginia Symphony Orchestra prepares for Symphony on the Lawn at the Cavalier Resort tomorrow night. At the Veterans United Home Loans Amphitheater off Cellar Door Way, Dave Matthews Band is on the calendar for tonight, giving our music fans a big show just inland from the resort area. Our schools keep giving us reasons to be proud. Several Beach District high school teams wrapped up playoff runs this week, with local athletic directors noting strong showings in soccer, baseball, and track, and a handful of seniors from Cox, Ocean Lakes, and Tallwood earning all state honors. In public safety, Virginia Beach Police report a relatively routine Friday night into early Saturday, with no major incidents along Atlantic Avenue beyond a few alcohol related arrests and traffic stops. Officers do remind us to lock cars in neighborhoods off Independence Boulevard and around Lynnhaven Mall after a recent string of vehicle break ins earlier this week. For a feel good note, volunteers with a local surf therapy group gathered near the Fishing Pier to help kids with disabilities catch waves at sunrise. Families say those sessions build confidence and community in a way that feels uniquely Virginia Beach. Thank you for tuning in today and remember to subscribe so you never miss our local check in. This has been Virginia Beach Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

6. juni 20263 min