The Stafford County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday will discuss the issues of Critical Race Theory and the 1619 Project. Elected leaders on the top governing body want to know if either is being taught in the county's public schools.

The issue was originally placed on the agenda by Hartwood District Supervisor Gary Snellings on August 17, who asked outgoing schools Dr. Scott Kizner to attend the meeting to answer questions from Board members. Kizner had a previous engagement and couldn't attend, County Administrator Fred Pressley emailed Board members.

"This is totally unacceptable!" replied Snellings in an email on August 10, when he learned Kizner declined the request to appear. "The school division has known for almost two months that CRT was going to be on our agenda." 

Rock Hill District Supervisor Crystal Vanuch, the Board Chairman, also replied to Pressley's email, noting Kizner's decision to pass up the Board's invitation "doesn't look good for our schools." 

CRT is a decades-old academic framework examining how race and racism influence politics, culture, and law. Over the summer, parents not only in our area but across the country have packed local school board meetings protesting the practice they say paints all whites as "oppressors" and people of all other skin tones victims.'

Since he began talking about the issue in July, multiple Stafford County residents have emailed Snellings, who represents the Hartwood District. 

Please do not approve CRT into our schools. It'll do nothing but continue to divide and cause more hate. Our kids will be brainwashed to not love who they are as well as others. CRT is irrelevant to what our kids need to be taught to be successful in life. Please don't allow this hateful teaching in our schools.

-- Stephanie Mojica

"I do not want to but I feel if this is brought into the curriculum I will be pulling my daughter out of the public school system here in Stafford county and will either homeschool or send to a private school. My daughter as many other students have been taught to always read a book and not judge it by its cover. I feel that CRT teaches them to strictly look at the cover."

-- Denny Kelly Jr.

A representative from the School Division will attend the Board of Supervisors meeting on Tuesday, September 7, at 2 p.m. to answer the supervisors' questions. The meeting will be held at the county's government center, at 1300 Courthouse Road.

During a Board of Supervisors meeting last month, Snellings recounted how he had contacted members of the County School Board to ask about plans to teach the 1619 Project-- a long-form journalism project with topics like "America wasn't a democracy until black Americans made it one," and "American Capitalism is brutal. You can trace that to the plantation."

Historians have called the writing into question, questioning its accuracy. It was published in August 2019, on the 4ooth anniversary of the arrival of slaves in Virginia.

Snellings says he also asked School Board members if the division is teaching critical race theory, college-level material that works injects race into every facet of U.S. culture. 

"What really concerns me is that the School Board should already know what's being taught in their schools. They should already know what is being taught and what is not being taught. That's a real concern now," said Snellings, who'll be retiring from the Board of Supervisors on December 31. 

Also, during that meeting, Falmouth District Supervisor Meg Bohmke said that she had talked to teachers in the Stafford School system who say that, while the name is not being used, there have been lessons being taught that fit the description of Critical Race Theory.

A total of 21 states have banned the teaching of critical race theory in public schools, including neighboring states such as West Virginia and North Carolina. This past week in neighboring Prince William County, parents blasted the county School Board for an Equity Statement the Board approved in May, calling to hire teachers based on skin color to reflect the minority student population better.

Critical Race Theory believes that structural racism is embedded in many U.S. institutions, which runs contrary to long-held beliefs such as equal opportunity. Opponents of the theory believe that it creates division by asking adherents to judge people based on skin color rather than character content.

Another issue is that of the 1619 Project, a series of essays published by the New York Times that attempts to reframe the story of the country's founding by establishing from when the first African-American slave stepped foot in what would become the U.S. in the year 1619. The project, spearheaded by then Times journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones, has come under fire by historians across the political spectrum who dispute many of the project's assertions.

One such assertion that the American Revolution was fought to maintain the country's culture of slavery was disputed by Northwestern University historian Leslie Harris. Harris was a fact-checker with the 1619 Project who recounted in an article with Politico disputed that claim saying that the Revolution was actually a disruptor of slavery in America. According to Harris, Jones went with her version for the project despite Harris' claim to the contrary.

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As of Friday, Mary Washington and Stafford hospitals in Fredericksburg and Stafford, respectively, moved to what it’s calling visitation red status. That means no one may visit patients in either hospital.

“With the drastic rise in COVID-19 cases in our community and under our care in our hospitals and facilities, it is in the best interest for the safety of our staff, providers, and patients to restrict visitation at this time,” says Christopher Newman, MD, Chief Operating Officer and Chief Medical Officer for Mary Washington Healthcare.


Manassas Park residents may soon find they can’t park as many commercial vehicles on the street and their properties as they used to.

The City Council, also known as the city’s Governing Body on Tuesday, September 7, will take up proposed changes to the zoning code that would place limits on commercial vehicles.


Two teenagers were shot outside a Prince William County High School following a fight they had nothing to do with.

Two teens were shot on Friday, August September 27 outside Freedom High School while a football game was taking place inside the school’s stadium. The boy shot in his lower body, and the girl shot in her foot is expected to recover.


Crossroads Tabletop Tavern, a Manassas-based game pub, has put out a call to local historians for information about the building that it's inhabited since 2018.

According to Crossroad's post to its Facebook page, the building that houses the tavern located at 9412 Main Street will celebrate its 111th birthday. The tavern wants to mark the occasion by finding out more about the building's history, but they've only been able to go back as far as 1984.

The building had been a bar up to that point, but Crossroads owner and founder John Hornberger says that there's proof that people used to live in the building.

"The building may have been apartments since it has the wiring and remnants of bathroom facilities that would have gone along with those kinds of things," says Hornberger.

Hornberger also talked about an artifact from back when the bar was known as Jake's. In a drop ceiling above the kitchen not visible to the public's view, signatures of the people who took part in a drinking contest are seen. If participants drank all six of the bar's original beers in one night, their names would be added to the ceiling.

Another piece of the puzzle in the history of the building comes from the world of pop music, along with other landmarks in old town Manassas the building was featured in the Steve Winwood music video for the song "Back in the High Life Again."

Hornberger also plans to officially name the building if he can't find out its official name. His choice would be the Baggins Building, a nod to the character of Frodo Baggins in the Lord of the Rings books by J.R.R. Tolkien.

Crossroads plans to have a month-long celebration for the building, including a weeklong birthday celebration, an overnight gaming session for select invitees, and a month-long sale on games.

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Amazon has expanded into Stafford County with a new 200,000 square foot facility at 25 Strategy Drive, near the county’s regional airport.

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The Virginia Department of Veteran Affairs will open a new care center for veterans in Fauquier County next year.

The new clinic, which is currently near the end of its construction phase, is being built on the former Vint Hill Farm Property. In 2017, state officials told us construction was set to begin.

The clinic, which will be known as the Puller Veterans Care Center, is one of two new locations being built by the Virginia Department of Veterans Services. The second will be located in Virginia Beach and will be known as the Jones and Cabocoy Veterans Care Center.

Both locations were chosen because of large veterans populations living nearby. The Fauquier clinic sits 13 miles from Manassas, which also has a large concentration of veterans.

The new centers are being built on property that was donated to the commonwealth for the purpose of creating these clinics. They will operate as long-term care facilities which will offer in-patient nursing care, Alzheimer's and memory care, as well as short-term rehabilitation care for veterans.

The centers will include amenities such as private rooms with bathrooms, a beauty and barbershop, a pharmacy, activity rooms and lounges, a library, and a game room.

"With the addition of the two new veterans care centers, VDVS will have centers nearby most veterans throughout the state," says Jeb Hockman, VDVH spokesman. "Nothing is more important than paying back our veterans for their unselfish service to protecting our freedoms."

The Puller Center is named for the Puller Family whose members have served with distinction in the U.S. Armed Services. Gen. Lewis B. "Chesty" Puller saw action as a Marine in Central America, World War II, and in the Korean War before retiring in 1955. Gen. Puller is only one of two men to receive the Navy Cross a record five times which among other accolades makes him one of the most decorated soldiers in Marine history.

His son, Lt. Lewis B. Pulley Jr., also served with distinction in Vietnam in 1968 where he was awarded the Purple Heart for saving his platoon after he set off a trap which caused him to lose both legs, his left hand, and several fingers on his right hand.

Toddy Puller, who served in the Virginia General Assembly from 1992 to 2016 and was married to Lewis Puller, pushed for the new veterans care facility in Northern Virginia. When she retired, she represented portions of Fairfax, Prince William, and Stafford counties in the Virginia Senate. 

The VDVA is responsible for the welfare of the more than 720,000 military veterans who live in the state of Virginia. VDVS also operates two existing veterans care centers, the Virginia Veterans Care Center in Roanoke and the Sitter & Barfoot Veterans Care Center in Richmond.

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