Nick Gilmore
Radio IQ Senior Producer/MeteorologistNick Gilmore is part of Radio IQ’s award-winning newsroom, serving as the station’s senior producer and meteorologist. He regularly reports and anchors the station’s noon newscast, and created and produces the station's CommonWx weather and climate newsletter. Nick joined Radio IQ in 2016. A graduate of Virginia Tech with a degree in meteorology, Nick is from the New River Valley and still calls the area home.
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It’s unclear if the change is connected to last week’s crisis at a city water treatment facility that left residents under a boil water advisory for days.
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It’s hard to believe, but 2025 is right around the corner. Before we turn the calendar to a new year, I thought it’d be good to take a look back at 2024 for the last edition of this newsletter this year.
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With all your holiday cooking, it can be tempting to dump oil and grease down the drain. But officials in Central Virginia say that could be disastrous for your sewer system.
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A judge has ruled that Governor Glenn Youngkin’s effort to pull the state out of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, or RGGI, was unlawful.
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Appalachian says it is eyeing an SMR project on the Joshua Falls property it currently owns in Campbell County.
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Anecdotally, it seems as if this year has been very dry across much of Virginia – with the big exceptions being the two tropical systems that move through earlier this year.
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Roanoke College has released what may be the last statewide poll before next week’s election. And, it shows a significant lead for Vice President Kamala Harris.
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A federal judge has shut down a controversial voter purge program from Governor Glenn Youngkin.
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Folks who live in coastal areas are probably well aware of the risks from tropical systems.But inland communities maybe aren’t as prepared for hurricanes and tropical storms after they come ashore. As Hurricane Helene has shown us, maybe we should talk more about the risks from tropical systems to localities far removed from the coastline.
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City skylines are often marked by haze and smog – in addition to sometimes sweltering temperatures during the summer months.A professor at James Madison University has found an interesting connection between those conditions and thunderstorms.