Originals
It’s been 20 years in the making, but Catharpin Regional Park in Gainesville is being made into a community destination.
Recently, the county cut the ribbon on a new playground at the park, which includes playground equipment for those ages 2 to 12, four shaded searing areas, and a new picnic table. Some of the highlights of the new playset include built-in musical instruments and a spinning wave seat.
This article is FREE to read. Please Sign In or Create a FREE Account. Thank you.
The Historic Port of Falmouth Park is widely known around the region as a place to come cool off during the hot summer months.
Thousands visit the park, with its sandy beach on the banks of the Rappahannock River every year. But, the park is also known for being a dangerous place for swimmers.
The Manassas City School Board is set to vote to raise the salary of Superintendent Dr. Kevin Newman at its meeting on Tuesday.
The chief executive of the school system currently makes just over $200,000 a year. With the four-percent raise the School Board is considering for Newman, he’ll make about $209,000 per year, should the Board approve the raise.
Republican Maria Martin is running to unseat Democrat Luke Torian in the 52nd House of Delegates District in Prince William County.
This is her second bid for the seat in as many years. When you compare her fundraising numbers to Torian, an 11-year incumbent who has raked in more than a half-million dollars in donations from beer makers, Realtors, and Dominion Energy, Martin’s paltry $4,700 makes this campaign resemble a David and Goliath-style battle.
Hospitals in our area are adapting to life after the pandemic, and at least one has resumed its normal visitation policy.
Sentara Northern Virginia Medical Center in Woodbridge says it’s ready to welcome once again the visitors who wish to visit patients inside the hospital. Sentara will resume standard visitation policies for all Sentara hospitals and outpatient facilities.
The effort to extend the runway at Stafford Regional Airport got a major boost from the Federal Government.
Senator Tim Kaine announced the airport would get $5.5 million in federal funding. The airport is currently working to extend the airport’s runway by 1,000 feet to attract more planes to the region.
The Stafford Board of Supervisors has voted to use funds that were received through the American Rescue Plan Act.
A total of $15 million in funding was received from the Federal Government in May as part of the latest coronavirus bailout and will be used for a number of projects ranging from public utilities to providing broadband internet access.
The biggest project on the list will provide fiber broadband for all county facilities to improve network security and resilience for the county’s system. Stafford also plans to set aside some of the newly installed fiber for commercial broadband providers to serve unserved residents and businesses to encourage economic development in the area.
The county will spend over $6 million on broadband, using $3 million from the form of a prior ARPA payment, as well as $2 million from the second installment to help fund the project.
Plans are also in the works for improvements in utilities and road work for the local Patawomeck Tribe. Stafford will install 2,100 feet of new water and sewer lines in order to improve water quality conditions. The tribe, headquartered at the Duff McDuff Green Memorial Park, at 75 James Ashby Parkway, just of Route 3 in Falmouth, is currently using an alternative septic system at the Duff House which would limit any growth and development of the land.
Stafford also plans to provide a new access drive and parking area that will run from James Ashby Parkway to a cul-de-sac near the Duff House. The tribe leases the house and the surrounding land for their developing museum and tribal center. The combined total of the utilities and new path and parking lot will come to $1.5 million in funding provided by ARPA.
Stafford will also invest $1.7 million for new sewer improvements for the first phase of improvements near Cedar Lane and Courthouse Road, west of Interstate 95. The project is slated to develop over two million square feet for commercial and industrial use.
One project, the Merritt at Austin Run, is expected to break ground in that area taking up 400,000 square feet of commercial space. The project is expected to be done by 2022 and provide 400 jobs as well as generate $650,000 per year in real estate tax revenue.
A second phase is expected to be built upon the first phase that would help residents along Cedar Lane who has issues with failing drain fields and poor water quality. The County estimates that this could help 14 homes in that area. Stafford estimates that $1.5 million in funding would be needed for this second phase of utility development.
Finally, Stafford plans to give funding totaling $300,000 to the United Way in order to help Stafford residents with rent and mortgage assistance who have been hindered by the pandemic.
The county is expected to receive the second installment of funding totaling another $15 million later this year.
The ball is in motion to transform the heart of Stafford County into a livable, walkable downtown.
The Board of Supervisors approved its own request to rezone six acres of land next to the county’s iconic courthouse, clearing the way for 306 new apartments, as well as commercial space for retail stores and restaurants. In a rare move, the Board of Supervisors initiated the rezoning request, which, now that it is approved, allows developers to construct a more densely packed urban development than the original plan of building multiple one-level office buildings.