News

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.

This one’s for the people who really care about local news.

Locals Only members get deeper reporting, more context, and fewer shortcuts.

Think that’s you?
👉 Join Locals Only
Already a member? Sign in


News

In less than two weeks, citizens across the U.S. will mark the 20th anniversary of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.

This one’s for the people who really care about local news.

Locals Only members get deeper reporting, more context, and fewer shortcuts.

Think that’s you?
👉 Join Locals Only
Already a member? Sign in


News

Mark Broklawski says he takes pride in the fact that he is the product of the public school system.

The IT professional has lived in Stafford for 17 years. His wife, Amanda, is a public school teacher, and his children attend Stafford public schools. Broklawski also has other family members that work in public schools reaching back at least three generations.

Broklawski wants to put his experiences and knowledge to use by running for the Hartwood District seat of the Stafford County School Board. He wants to continue improving taxpayer value for their dollar and making the biggest impact possible while, as he puts it, "we reimagine education to ensure our schools, kids, and community meet the challenges of our technological era."

Broklawski already has some experience with the school board in helping to build broad coalitions of stakeholders to improve efficiency and ensure that resources can be deployed where they're needed most, as he has done with the Capital Improvement Planning and Multicultural committees created by the Stafford County School Board.

Potomac Local News talked to Mr. Broklawski about his campaign for the School Board as well as his perspective on events and how they've affected the way Stafford schools will run moving forward.

What inspired you to run for the school board?

After years of underfunding and mismanagement, the Stafford County public school system is in disarray. We are 35.3% below the state average in funding while being the 17th wealthiest county in the country. This is unacceptable. I'm running for Stafford County Schoolboard because our community deserves better.

Strong schools make strong economic sense for our community. Even if you don't have children in school now, strong schools protect your home value and increase our ability to attract businesses that pay well and grow our commercial base.

As we return to in-person instruction, we need to reimagine the way we do things. In this age of advanced technology our education system has been left in the dark. That needs to change. We need to invest in our teachers and our students. We need more classrooms not trailers. We need to empower all students to prepare for life after high school. We need more teachers per student and they need to be competitively compensated.

If I'm elected I will work tirelessly with our community members, parents and teachers. I will do everything I can because I believe that education is at the core of our community's health. It's time for our schools to be brought into a future we can be proud of, and if I'm elected I won't stop until we get there.

What do you think that Stafford Schools have done that's encouraging and what could be improved?

We need to prepare students for life after high school, whether that means attending a community college, pursuing a four-year degree, entering an apprenticeship program, or going right into the job market. It's time to move beyond the "bachelor's degree or bust" mentality. Not every child wants to go to college, in today's economy, they shouldn't have to in order to build a great life - if our schools help set them up for success from the start.

Stafford Schools has done a great job with their Career and Technical Education (CTE) programs, which is very encouraging; however, I see huge opportunities to further expand career path opportunities for students by building additional partnerships with businesses, community colleges, and building trades. This will allow students to concurrently earn credentials, learn apprentice-level content, and have long-term prospects for good-paying jobs with health and retirement benefits they can rely on.

CTE programs offer students marketable, real-world skills. But too many kids either don't know about or can't access these programs. This needs to change.

We must provide more staffing and space in buildings for high-demand programs, so that students can access these programs. CTE was ranked 5th on the 2020-2021 Top Ten Critical Shortage Teaching Endorsement Areas in Virginia.

Last year students missed a lot of school time due to the pandemic. Do you think it was necessary to shut down the schools?

My wife, a public school teacher, worked incredibly hard and put in countless hours whether teaching virtually or concurrently throughout the year, as did all of our teachers, admins and support staff. Let's also not forget about our special education teachers who continued to teach in-person throughout the school year.

So, to say that schools shut down last academic year is a false premise.

As a parent of two children in the public school system, the instructional models offered were far from perfect. The struggle was real for many families, including ours. Working families, especially women, have made deep career sacrifices to help oversee their children's education. Teaching children is not easy. My respect has only deepend for our incredible educators and all that they do.

In this coming year we need to make sure our teachers and families have the support in place to make sure that we are bridging the learning gap for our children.

Another struggle was the lack of affordable access to high-speed Internet in Hartwood.

We cannot have two types of education: one on paper and one on the Internet. But the pandemic has highlighted the digital divide within our district. The lack of affordable high-speed internet has deepened inequities in access to education for our children, as well as inequities in parents' employment.

I will work with local, state, and federal partners to increase Internet access by bringing in more competition into our community and advocating for community broadband networks, which will have the net effect of greater accessibility, lower prices, and more options.

Do I believe if COVID-19-relief funds were prioritized to implement proven risk mitigation strategies that we could have returned to in-person instruction sooner? Absolutely.

Children and school staff are now required to wear masks throughout the school day. What are your thoughts? 

It's critical that children return safely to in-person instruction and can stay there.

State law requires that all schools offer in-person instruction and adhere to currently applicable mitigation strategies to reduce the transmission of COVID-19 that have been provided by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The CDC guidance continues to evolve, as the virus evolves, and as we learn more about the science surrounding the virus and subsequent variants. In fact, the CDC guidance changed again last week.

We must follow the science and the law when it comes to any required mitigation strategies, so children can safely return and remain in the classroom.

Broklawski is running against Alyssa Halstead for the Hartwood District seat on the Stafford County School Board on Tuesday, November 2. Early voting starts at the Stafford County Government Center on Friday, September 17.

This one’s for the people who really care about local news.

Locals Only members get deeper reporting, more context, and fewer shortcuts.

Think that’s you?
👉 Join Locals Only
Already a member? Sign in


News

Refugees from Afghanistan will descend on Quantico Marine Corps Base starting Sunday. 

This one’s for the people who really care about local news.

Locals Only members get deeper reporting, more context, and fewer shortcuts.

Think that’s you?
👉 Join Locals Only
Already a member? Sign in


News

There are two major developments in the Virginia governor’s race today. 

This one’s for the people who really care about local news.

Locals Only members get deeper reporting, more context, and fewer shortcuts.

Think that’s you?
👉 Join Locals Only
Already a member? Sign in


Features

Athletes will be allowed to return to the runway in the spring. 

This one’s for the people who really care about local news.

Locals Only members get deeper reporting, more context, and fewer shortcuts.

Think that’s you?
👉 Join Locals Only
Already a member? Sign in


News

Ridership on OmniRide Express buses was down nearly 63 percent in June compared to the same time in 2019.

This one’s for the people who really care about local news.

Locals Only members get deeper reporting, more context, and fewer shortcuts.

Think that’s you?
👉 Join Locals Only
Already a member? Sign in


News

The Fredericksburg City Council has approved an agreement between Virginia Attorney Mark Herring regarding allocating funds obtained through court settlements concerning the opioid crisis.

According to City Attorney Dooley, the city's piece of the litigation pie is expected to be between $300,000 and $400,000. While Fredericksburg has not set a plan for the disbursement of funds from the settlement, a percentage of what the city could get has been set by the Virginia Attorney General. 

The agreement allows 30 percent of the settlement funds to be distributed to participating localities such as Fredericksburg. Of that take, 15 percent would be used for approved opioid reduction costs, while the other 15 percent would be totally unrestricted and used by the city on other items.

Another 55 percent of funds received by the commonwealth would go into the Opioid Abatement Authority and Fund from which localities would be qualified to pull from for opioid reduction purposes.

Ward 3 Councilman Dr. Timothy Duffy called the agreement a warning shot to big business and a reminder of their responsibilities to the people.

"We have an industry that preyed on the public in a way that was appalling, a gross amount of these opioids flooded into town, throughout the country, in ways that far exceeded what could have been done for public benefit, and greed was certainly at the base of it," said Duffy. 

The opioid crisis has taken a toll on the community, he adds.

"We can't forget the appalling cost that has come to families in our city, our region, our country. There isn't anyone who doesn't know someone who's suffered from the scourge of opioid addiction."

The opioid epidemic was declared a public health emergency by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services due to the wide misuse of both prescription and non-prescription opioid medications. According to numbers provided by HHS, it was estimated that 10.1 million people had misused such drugs in 2019 alone and that 70,630 people had died as a result of drug overdoses.

Along with many other localities and states, Fredericksburg had filed a civil litigation lawsuit against various companies involved in the production, sale, and distribution of medical-grade opiates. The suit seeks to recover costs associated with opioid addiction.

Other localities such Arlington, Prince William, and Fairfax Counties have already approved similar understandings with the Attorney General.

This agreement is the latest result in Fredericksburg's lawsuit against companies involved in the Pharmaceutical Supply Chain since its inception in May 2019 when the City Council declared the opioid crisis a public nuisance.

According to Fredericksburg City Attorney Kathleen Dooley, some of the defendants in the lawsuit are seeking to end these lawsuits through settlements. Some of those defendants include McKesson, AmerisourceBergan, and Cardinal Health, collectively considered the big three companies in opioid distribution. Jansen/Johnson & Johnson is also expected to make a settlement as well.

This one’s for the people who really care about local news.

Locals Only members get deeper reporting, more context, and fewer shortcuts.

Think that’s you?
👉 Join Locals Only
Already a member? Sign in


Schools

A middle school in Fredericksburg will send its students home for virtual-only learning just two weeks after the start of the new school year.

The city schools system announced that students at Walker-Grant Middle School would return to virtual learning after seeing a growing number of new coronavirus cases.

After consulting with the Virginia Department of Health, Fredericksburg City Public Schools announced it, which had determined the situation as a high-level concern due to Walker-Grant's reporting of several new cases over the last two weeks, which has resulted in the quarantining of staff and students.

According to FCPS, there have been multiple presumptive and positive new coronavirus cases just in the last week. FCPS also disclosed that just in the last two days, those cases had been linked together, resulting in multiple outbreaks and other ongoing cases resulting in high levels of student absenteeism and school staff being at critical levels.

VDH considers a coronavirus outbreak to be at least two cases reported at the same address. 

Updated stats on the FCPS school website reveals that between August 8 and August 23, a total of 95 students within the entire school division have been quarantined due to exposure to the virus. Out of that total, 25 students had been tested positive for the virus.

The total number of students in the FCPS is 3,551 for the 2020-21 school year. 

The school division's coronavirus dashboard also records that five staff members have also tested positive and been quarantined for exposure. The dashboard doesn't record from what schools these cases are being reported from, so it's hard to say whether all or just most of the recorded cases come from Walker-Grant.

However, FCPS does state in their announcement that they didn't see any closely joined outbreaks, high absenteeism, or critical staff capacity issues with any other schools in the district.

As a result, FCPS and VDH have decided that Walker-Grant will revert to virtual learning immediately until Tuesday, Sept. 7. FCPS has also ordered the staff to report to work to provide virtual instruction.

Parents and caregivers have been instructed to contact Walker-Grant if the student doesn't have their computer or internet access.

Over the past seven days, there's been an average of 11 new coronavirus cases reported in Fredericksburg, with an average of zero hospitalizations and zero deaths. Further north, the state health department reported the first coronavirus-related death of a child in the region.

The child was between the ages of zero and nine years old, as the state does not reveal victims' information.

In neighboring Stafford County, Interim Superintendent Dr. Stanley B. Jones says the division is working on a pivot plan to revert to online learning in their schools. The decision to return to virtual learning would only be made after consulting with local health officials, said Jones.

 

This one’s for the people who really care about local news.

Locals Only members get deeper reporting, more context, and fewer shortcuts.

Think that’s you?
👉 Join Locals Only
Already a member? Sign in


News

One person is in custody following an incident in ts Manassas Park.

This one’s for the people who really care about local news.

Locals Only members get deeper reporting, more context, and fewer shortcuts.

Think that’s you?
👉 Join Locals Only
Already a member? Sign in


View More Stories