Originals

The Stafford County Board of Supervisors voted to restore a stream at St. Clair Brooks Park, located off of Butler Road in Falmouth.

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

Democrats rallied constituents from Prince William and Fauquier counties, declaring the right to vote is under attack by GOP-led state legislatures across the U.S.

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


Originals

A new Public Safety Facility currently being built in Manassas is currently on schedule by its completion date of September 2022.

A video posted on Twitter by Manassas City Police Chief Douglass Keen updated the new $49.1 million facilities located at 9608 Grant Avenue. In the short video, Keen is standing on what will become the facility's fourth floor while describing what will be the new home of the city's police department. 

The new 68,000 square foot facility will be the new home of the Manassas police and consolidate all of the city's public safety departments. This would include the 911 and Emergency Operations Center, the Fire and Rescue Administration offices, and its Information Technology Department.

The new, four-story facility will replace the current police station at 9518 Fairview Avenue.

In 2016, Manassas paid $3.2 million for the site on which the new facility would be constructed on which had been the site of a Safeway grocery store and later on as a flea market. 

The price tag of this project has expanded over the years. In 2017, estimates showed that it would cost the city $19 million. When ground was broken in 2020, the estimated project costs were said to be $40 million.

"This building will add to the south side of the city," said Mayor Hall Parrish II during the facility's groundbreaking ceremony in 2020. During the same ceremony, then-Mayor Parrish recalled the memory of the late former city councilman Steven Randolph. "The south side, as he called it, is something he championed."

The new facility will replace the current police station at Fairview Avenue and Signal Hill Road, built in 1990. During the City Council meetings, one suggestion was that the city's school system could use the old police station after the police department had vacated it.

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

Yesli Vega made history when she was the first Latina to be elected to the Prince William Board of County Supervisors 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


Originals

Manassas is moving ahead with an expansion of this city museum that will not include the addition of a new public library.

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

You can’t say Prince William County taxpayers don’t support the arts. 

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

A new exhibit was launched this month at the Manassas Museum called “Manassas Faces,” which uses faces of city residents to tell the story of life in Manassas.

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


Business

The Stafford County Board of Supervisors has deferred an agreement with the Center for Innovative Technology until August.

The agreement would allow the county to contribute funds to pilot projects to the Virginia Smart Community Testbed. While federal, state, and private contributions are currently being made to the testbed Stafford County has no such agreement that would allow them to contribute to pilot projects.

Pilot projects that Stafford County has shown interest in investment include the development of flood sensing monitors that could trigger information though connected signs regarding road closures. This would be of particular interest to the county because of the flooding issues on Brooke Road that have constantly caused traffic issues and cut off residents in that area from being able to leave their homes.

Other potential projects of interest to Stafford have been the use of artificial intelligence to analyze data that has been collected for use in what county documents are calling "smart tourism." The concept of "smart tourism" would be put to use in better targeting of visitor spending, such use of A.I. has also been considered in helping with making business expansions more efficient though the usage of multiple data sources.

The county is in the process of drafting an agreement that could create such a mechanism for it to invest in testbed projects of interest. The contract would require information such as the specific task order for each pilot project that outlines the scope of the work as well as financial contributions from the county, CIT, private partners, federal, and state agencies.

The Virginia Smart Community Testbed, which is also using newly-developed 5G cell phone technology, is located at the Stafford County Courthouse and was officially opened in late May. The testbed has made agreements with many private companies such as Verizon as other federal and state agencies to develop smart technology.

The testbed is the first of its kind in the Commonwealth giving Stafford County a chance to become a hotbed of emerging technologies.


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

Many musicians seek to bridge the gap between genres, and that intent is evident in the name of Sound Fusion.

Sound Fusion plays a jazz-funk hybrid sound consisting of some of the best young jazz musicians in Fredericksburg. Among them are saxophonist Ben Peters, drummer Kyle Smith, bassist Alex Rodriguez, and pianist Jack Earnhardt.

While the group has been together since October 2020, with the release of their first single "My Favorite Things" the group has been coming together for the last three years.

"So, about three years ago I was a sophomore at the University of Mary Washington and my mentor Professor Gately dispatched me to do a gig at a festival called the Kristallnacht,a winter market festival in Market Square in downtown Fredericksburg, and I recruited Jack, Alex, and Kyle to play with me. What I wasn't expecting when we jammed was that we clicked," says Peters about the group's formation.

From there the group continued to practice in Kyle Smith's basement and would record their first album State of the Art which shows off the influences that brought them to the world of Jazz such as Jacob Collier, Herbie Hancock, and John Coltrane. The Coltrane influence is strong as they cover Coltrane standards such as "Impressions" and "Alice in Wonderland" on the album.

Sound Fusion strives to blend its own sound from decades of schooling, experience, and interest in Jazz, Funk, Rock, and Disco music.

"Most of what we are playing is closer to the style of what was going on in Jazz in the '70s and '80s. That's where we are, that's where our languages are. That's just something that we can all communicate and understand each other." says bassist Alex Rodriguez.

Then the pandemic hit and it would affect the way bands perform and where they would perform. For Sound Fusion, however, it allowed them to gel even further as it would interrupt plans for some members of the group.

"I was worried that right as the group was really getting started, we're gonna have to go back to school at New England Conservatory in Boston. One of the good things that came out of Covid is that the time with the group was extended." says pianist Jack Earnhardt.

As the pandemic subsides, Sound Fusion is making plans for the future. In addition to upcoming shows they're also planning a new album which while they say will be on the slower side it will still have the same blend of genres that brought them together in the first place.

"So we've been discussing the second album, we're already talking about what do we want to do next? This is our first statement since State of the Art which is the first one. We agreed that let's start with one tune and see where it goes from. There may be something short that can come out of it, so I think it's gonna be a little slower this time. But we want to kind of build it." says Peters of the potential new album.


Sound Fusion will perform at Colonial Tavern on Lafayette Street in downtown Fredericksburg on Friday, July 16 from 7 pm to 9 pm.

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


Business

A newly-renovated hotel and conference center is expected to draw thousands to the Stafford County and Fredericksburg region.

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