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Should the tiny town of Occoquan allow a five-story building to be constructed on the riverfront?

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Originals

The American Legion Bridge in Stafford County -- a two-lane bridge that carries traffic over Interstate 95, just north of the Stafford Regional Airport -- is about to close for nine months.

The Stafford County Infrastructure Committee received an update from the Virginia Department of Transportation about the upcoming closure of the bridge and the detours that will be used during that period.

The bridge will be replaced to accommodate the construction of two reversible I-95 E-Pass Express Lanes, as part of a project to extend the lanes south from Garrisonville Road to Route 17 near Fredericksburg. The Truslow Road Bridge, about 10 miles south of the American Legion Bridge, was also replaced to accommodate the new lanes. It reopened in April, five months behind schedule.

The update, presented by VDOT Mega Projects Engineer Robert Ridgell, outlined how traffic will be diverted during the nine months that the American Legion Bridge will be under reconstruction.

The planned detour will use the Centreport Parkway interchange at milepost 136 to get around the bridge and get onto Ramoth Church Road. VDOT will also coordinate with school transportation officials in order to inform them about the detours as the closure date gets near.

VDOT is planning to use lessons learned from the Truslow Bridge experience and apply them to the American Legion Bridge project in order to avoid the same mistakes and getting behind schedule.

The Truslow project ran into several issues that caused delays leading to the additional five months before its reopening. Four of those months were spent on redesigns of the foundations and piling which would have affected the quality of the bridge. Those delays combined with the coronavirus pandemic interrupting the work of the design and bridge crews brought down the work rates that would have brought the bridge to completion on time, said Ridgell. 

Ridgell vowed to the committee that VDOT had created risk mitigation plans that were designed due to the Truslow Bridge issues, one such mitigation would be the imposition of lane rental charges that would be made to the construction crew if they fail to make the completion date.

The American Legion Bridge is scheduled to be closed by January 2022 for this reconstruction.

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Business

A special use permit applied for by Haley's Honey Meadery has been approved by the Fredericksburg City Council.

Haley's, which is located in Hopewell over an hour south of Fredericksburg, will soon open a second location in the city. Haley's will be located at the old Pure Gas Station on Princess Anne Street and is currently under construction to be rebuilt as a tasting room and specialty restaurant.

The conditions of the special use permit will allow Haley's to operate a tasting room that will allow customers to sample ciders, mead, and wine which are made in Virginia. The permits also allow Haley's to sell those types of alcoholic beverages, none of those beverages will be made in the Fredericksburg restaurant but instead will be shipped up from their main location in Hopewell.

Haley's owner Tonya Haley told Potomac Local News that she was attracted to the area because of the upcoming breweries, wineries, and distillers that have come to the city over the last few years. The owners of those establishments and other members of the community brought the growing vibrancy and economic development to Haley's attention which encouraged her decision to open a new location in Fredericksburg.

Haley hopes to have the Fredericksburg location open before August.

Haley's will open in the Canal Quarter of the city which has been rezoned along with several nearby areas as a Creative Maker zone. The goal of the zone is to attract new and innovative businesses and allow them to create an identity that will make them unique and add to the charm and appeal of Fredericksburg.

"I'm looking forward to joining the Fredericksburg community," says Haley.

Haley's Honey Meadery will be located at 1600 Princess Anne Street in Downtown Fredericksburg and plans to operate from noon to 10 p.m. once it's open.

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News

The Stafford County Board of Supervisors has approved the use of funds obtained from the American Rescue Act, the latest round of federal stimulus money, to pay a consulting firm on how to better prepare for disasters such as the coronavirus pandemic in the future.

The county will pay $80,208 to IEM, an emergency management firm based in Morrisville, N.C. According to its website, IEM works with government entities and private sector organizations around the world to improve disaster preparedness. Their company's areas of focus are in response and recovery, homeland security and defense, public health, cybersecurity, and critical infrastructure.

The County's approval of the use of these funds to pay IEM was also an official acceptance of the funds which will be received in two separate portions for a grand total of $28.7 million. The first portion was received in May 2021 totaling $14.9 million from which the payment to IEM will come.

Stafford County Public Schools are also expecting to receive $14.9 million with the stipulation that 20% of that total be used to address the extended gaps in student's education due to the closing down of schools due to the pandemic.

The County has also set aside a total of $1,7 million which is to be used for one-time and pandemic supported projects.

The second portion of the ARPA funding which would be a sum of $13.8 million is expected to be received by Stafford County sometime later this year.

Stafford County has lost 82 residents to the coronavirus, while neighbors Prince Willaim and Spostylvanaia lost 501 and 124 people, respectively.

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Traffic

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Politics

It’s a homecoming, of sorts, for Republican Paul Milde. He won his primary bid to be the GOP nominee for the Aquia District seat on the Stafford County Board of Supervisors.

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News

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News

It was a night for incumbents in two Democratic House of Delegates Primary Election races in Prince William County and Stafford County.

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News

Democrats showed Lee Carter the door during today’s Primary Election, deciding not to send Virginia’s first self-described democratic socialist back to Richmond.

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Traffic

Some Stafford County leaders say the area near the Brooke commuter rail station is no place for new construction. 

The Brooke Virginia Railway Express station, at 1721 Brooke Road in the eastern section of the county, is in a largely rural area. Both Virginia Railway Express and Amtrak trains pass through the station, serving riders traveling between Richmond, Washington, New York City, and Boston.

In December 2019, before the coronavirus pandemic, about 60% of the nearly 800 parking spaces were being used at the station, making it the third busiest station on the Fredericksburg line at that time. Ridership numbers plummeted on VRE trains during the pandemic, and the commuter rail service has just returned to full service as of June 1. 

This month, the Stafford County Board of Supervisors received an update on the county's comprehensive five-year plan, which serves as a general guide on how the county's land will be developed. The plan details "targeted growth areas" or TGAs, noting where new development should occur. 

Now, leaders want to remove from the plan the area around the commenter rail station. And that left Aquia District Supervisor Cindy Shelton scratching her head.

"Other stations have ripped out [single-family] housing in order to create higher-density neighborhoods to live and ride the train into D.C. [The station] was put there to allow growth in the future," said Shelton. "Removal makes no sense to me since it's such an amazing opportunity."

The county's Planning Commission has been holding virtual meetings to discuss and decide on aspects of the plan, which is reviewed by the commission every five years in case anything needs to be amended. The last time this was done was in August 2016.

According to information county documents, the reason that the commission wants to eliminate the Brooke TGA is because of how difficult it would be to get public sewer utilities in the area necessary for new growth. Most, if not all of the county's growth areas are located both along major roadways, such as Routes 1, 17, and 610, and near public water and sewer lines.

Other potential options for sewer services such as constructing a treatment plant or a gravity sewer nearby are considered problematic because the amount of housing development needed to justify these options goes far beyond what is currently planned for that area.

However, Aquia Supervisor Cindy Shelton questions the data that the commission is using to come to this conclusion. Shelton contends that the Brooke Station has massive potential for growth since it's the only station in the Virginia Railway Express system that hasn't been built out.

Other TGAs such as Leeland Station, Courthouse Road, Centerport Parkway, and Warrenton Road (Route 17) are all under consideration for either elimination or modification under the comprehensive plan.

The review of the comprehensive plan is scheduled to be completed by August 17.

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