If you don’t live in the 1.5-square mile town of Dumfries, and you’re concerned about a new 305-room gambling resort, the message is clear: Buzz off and butt out.

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When a coronavirus state of emergency set by Governor Ralph Northam was lifted this summer, it allowed students to return to the classrooms.

Some Prince William County students started the new academic year in two new schools built during the pandemic.

Potomac Shores Middle School is located near Dumfries, in the Potomac Shores neighborhood.

With its mascot, the Cardinal, Gainesville High School sits just outside Gainesville Magisterial District, neighboring Brentsville Magisterial District, directly behind the Jiffy Lube Live concert venue.

Prince William County Potomac District School Board member Justin Wilk praised the success of the new middle school's openinand its staff andas mentioned some challenges the school is experiencing. 

"I'm very happy that things have gotten off to such a good start. The school is staffed with quality teachers, and Principle Joe Murgo has done a phenomenal job. There have been some challenges, we do need some crosswalks to ensure that the students can get to school safely. There's also the issue of so many parents driving their kids to school and getting everyone in on time."

Wilk's involvement in the naming of Potomac Shores involved taking meetings with residents whose children were drawn into the new school's boundaries. In a press release made by Prince William County Schools about the naming of Potomac Shores in Oct. 2020, Wilk stated that the name earned overwhelming support from residents who wanted the name to represent something based in the community.

Gainesville High School, the 13th high school to be opened in Prince William County, has also received praise from Brentsville District School Board member Adele Jackson, who sent a statement to Potomac Local News.

"I had the pleasure of visiting Gainesville High School a few times since school started and I am very impressed with the building, as well as the students and staff. I extend my gratitude to our supportive staff and Gainesville families. It's exciting to have the school year up and running at Gainesville High School."

Other names that were in the competition included naming the school after county police officer Ashley Guindon, who was shot and killed on her first day of duty in February 2016 while responding to a domestic dispute. Also in the running was Lillian Orlich, a 67-year career teacher, and counselor who spent the majority of her career at Osbourn Park High School.

Prince William County, the state's second-largest school division, welcomed back about 90,000 students at the start of the school year on August 23. It's the first time since the start of the pandemic in March 2020 that the majority of students have been back in a classroom for five days a week.

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Stafford County leaders want to give residents more time before a moratorium on utility disconnections ends.

While the moratorium was lifted in August, the county has discussed waiting until January 2022 before shutting off utilities for delinquent payments. Governor Ralph Northam had placed the moratorium in March 2020 to provide relief for Virginia residents who had experienced financial hardships due to the coronavirus pandemic, as many were furloughed for fired from their jobs.

The county's Utilities Department plans to notify residents of the moratorium's end later in September, giving those with delinquent accounts a four-month head start to get things in order.

During the disconnection moratorium, the number of delinquent accounts had risen by 11 percent to a total of 9,474 while the amount of money due to those delinquencies rose by 40 percent to $1.6 million. The county provided almost $500,000 in relief funds to customers through the COVID-19 Municipal Utilities Relief Program.

Northam had declared a state of emergency due to the pandemic in March 2020 which led to the moratorium. 

The Virginia General Assembly recently adopted House Bill 7001, in order to appropriate $120 million from the latest round of federal funds from President Biden's American Rescue Plan. Funds from this cut will be used to provide direct assistance to residents who are 60 days behind on their utility payments.

The Stafford County Utilities Department plans to apply for all the grant and assistance opportunities that they are eligible for. The funds will be awarded based on the total of accounts that are 60 days behind on their utility payments.





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[caption id="attachment_170753" align="alignright" width="150"] Jones[/caption]

This week, the Stafford County Board of Supervisors put its public schools in the spotlight, pressing its top administrator on Critical Race Theory.

In July, Hartwood District Supervisor Gary Snellings had planned to question officials from the county school division about CRT -- a decades-old academic framework examining how race and racism influence politics, culture, and law -- wanting to know if children are being taught the concepts in schools.

After receiving multiple emails from concerned constituents, Snellings took the floor and questioned Interim County Public Schools Superintendent Dr. Stanley B. Jones on Tuesday.

Jones said that the schools do not teach the theory in his opening statement, and they never have. Jones also stated that the Virginia Department of Education crafts the school's curriculum and that the theory is not part of that lesson plan.

Jones also expressed that the school board has better things to do than worry about Critical Race Theory. "Quite frankly, we're trying to recover from a pandemic. So most of our focus is on unfinished learning. We've had 18 months without kids in school. That's our focus," said Jones. 

Jones referenced a now-deleted video on the Virginia Department of Education's YouTube page. Teachers were encouraged to develop lesson plans on the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks that focused on racism, not terrorism or the masterminds who carried out the attacks.

Jones distanced the county school divisions from the state's August 18 webinar aimed at teachers across the state, testifying the teacher orientation video didn't contain any mentions of race or the concepts of white privilege.

Potomac Local News reported on the content of the video, where the keynote speaker Dr. Amaarah DeCuir, from the American University School of Education, focused on matters of social justice.

When the word "terrorist" is used, it's most often used to describe people from the Middle East, said DeCuir in the video.

On August 13, the Department of Homeland Security issued a heightened terrorism watch. Anyone who disagrees with the Federal Government's coronavirus mitigation efforts, those who question the results of the 2020 Presidential Election, and those who celebrate religious holidays are now considered a terror threat, NBC News reported.

Rock Hill District Supervisor Crystal Vanuch asked about the schools' equity policy, stating, "the school division will work collaboratively with educators and other key stakeholders to build awareness, solutions, and leadership for social justice."

The division cited the National Equity Project, a California-based education reform organization that works with "oppressive" and "dehumanizing" systems and aims to radically transform them into more liberated institutions, as a resource it used to formulate the statement. 

The link showed on the page August but has since been removed from the school division website. The link is one of many resources that could be found on the page, Jones told Vanuch.

Snellings cited a report from a parent of a Brooke Point High School student who claimed that a teacher asked their child to state their preferred pronouns. Over the summer, a teacher in Loudoun County was suspended after declining to adhere to a new policy that requires public schools teachers to refer to children using their preferred pronouns and the bathroom of their choice.

Pointing out the prevalence of identifying pronouns, Snellings reminded Jones that his personal email signature contains a list of personal pronouns he and him. Jones said he did not know Stafford County teachers asking students to identify their pronouns.

Jones warned that any further questions teachers about CRT being taught in the classroom would distract from the division's focus of making up for lost time after test scores fell statewide last year during virtual learning.

School systems in our area and across the country have been dealing with the potential of Critical Race Theory being taught in schools.

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This fall, about 600 children and teenagers will take part in America’s oldest pastime, playing for the Greater Manassas Baseball League.

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A video urging teachers to talk about racism when developing lesson plans to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the September 11 terrorist attacks has been removed from YouTube.

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Leaders in several jurisdictions will pay remembrance to the victims that lost their lives on this, the 20th anniversary of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

The Stafford County Board of Supervisors declared September 11 as Patriot Day. The name made its first appearance in 2002 when the U.S. Congress passed legislation naming the day "Patriot Day." The day was further expanded in 2009 when President Barack Obama added a National Day of Service and Remembrance to the date.

In observance, Stafford is giving the majority of County offices and departments a half-day on Friday, Sept. 10, which will allow employees to leave at 12:30 p.m. The County Circuit Court will be open that day until 4 p.m.

The Regional Landfill in Stafford and the Belman Road Recycling Center in Fredericksburg will close at 4:30 p.m. On 10 a.m. Saturday, September 11, the county will hold a bell-ringing ceremony to remember those who lost their lives on that day.

Stafford has performed this ceremony each year following terrorist attacks. The county also asks residents to join them in this remembrance by flying their American flags at half-mast.

"The philosopher and novelist George Santayana is credited with saying, 'those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it," said Board of Supervisors Chairman Crystal Vanuch. "We are gathering to make sure we never forget those who were lost when our country was attacked and to remember, 20 years on, that we must always be united in protecting our country."

In Prince William County, service will be held at the September 11 Memorial Fountain, located on the county's government complex in 1 County Complex Court in Woodbridge. That event will be held on September 10 at 9:30 a.m. and led by the Board of County Supervisors.

A total of 22 county residents died in the Pentagon and New York City attacks, the locality with the highest number of residents lost in the Washington D.C. metropolitan region. Their names are engraved on a wall at the memorial fountain. 

In 2013, the county hoisted steel beams from the World Trade Center into a sculpture across the street from the memorial fountain. The sculpture, which serves as a reminder of that raw day was met with mixed reactions.

In Occoquan, the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 7916 will host a 20th-anniversary commemoration ceremony at Mamie Davis Park. According to Mayor Earnie Porta, the ceremony will include a keynote address by U.S. Air Force Veteran Bill "Skip" Powers.

Powers is a lifetime member of the Post 7916 and was the fire captain at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland on September 11. The ceremony will begin at 9:45 a.m. Saturday, at 202 Washington St. in historic Occoquan, and is free to the public.

After the ceremony, those in attendance are invited to a brunch held at cost at the VFW Post canteen.

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Governor Ralph Northam will stop for lunch on Thursday in Dale City. 

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Youth baseball teams could be looking for a new home following Monday’s Manassas City Council meeting.

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For months, Pamela Yeung has pushed for a policy to require anyone who enters a public school building in Stafford County to wear a mask.

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