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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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Prince William County taxpayers helped pave the way to the update grand opening of a new warehouse and corporate headquarters for mailing and printing business that does $20 million a year in sales.

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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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The Prince William Chamber of Commerce is out with its first political endorsements of the season.

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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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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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Police Chief Peter Newsham was placed under the microscope on Tuesday following his decision to send a police officer to the home of a resident who criticized top elected county officials. 

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Delegate Mark Cole's decision not to run for reelection in Virginia's 88th District has created a crowded field of candidates looking to replace the veteran lawmaker who served for more than 20 years. 

Tim Lewis, a Libertarian who is mounting a third-party run in the district that includes Stafford, Spotsylvania, and Fauquier counties, and Fredericksburg, wants to bring a different philosophy to the state capitol. 

Originally from Montgomery, Ala., Lewis has lived in Virginia on and off since 1984 with his wife Jackie and his three children. In addition to having served 20 years in the Marine Corps, Lewis serves on the board of the child-focused non-profit Beacon Hill as well helping to fundraise for the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.

Lewis is a Libertarian, the country's third-largest political party. He'll run against Democratic candidate Kecia Evans and Republican Phillip Scott.

Lewis takes both Democrats and Republicans to task for continuously growing the state government and wants to offer a different choice to residents of the 88th district.

"Under both Republican and Democrat rule, we've seen the power of the government grow and take more control over our lives. There are jobs here in Virginia you can only have if you ask permission and pay Richmond for the right," says Lewis.

Lewis acknowledges that he doesn't want to run the lives of Virginians, and wants to empower Virginians to follow their own path without government intrusion. He believes that as long as someone is not hurting others or taking something that doesn't belong to them, they should be able to live their own best life and make their own decisions on what is best for them and their family which is a typical libertarian ideal.

Lewis is also focused on particular issues such as repealing a 2.5% grocery store food tax, which has also been proposed by Glenn Youngkin, the Republican candidate for governor. He also wants to open Virginia to school choice which he says is already available in Washington D.C. and in the states surrounding the commonwealth, where school funding is allocated by student, not school building. Lewis and his wife Jackie homeschool their three children.

Lewis is also focused on the repeal of Certificate of Public Need laws which govern how hospitals and medical centers operate. According to Lewis, these laws have been blamed for creating medical monopolies which denies such services to communities and increases the costs of healthcare.

"COPN requires hospitals to jump through a number of hoops and petition Richmond for permission to do something as simple as add an MRI or to build a NICU. If Richmond believes it will create "unfair" competition, they can deny the request," says Lewis.

Lewis also holds up private health offerings such as plastic surgery, Lasik, chiropractic, and hospice care as examples of providers' ability to lower costs and provide more healthcare in an open marketplace.

Historically, third party candidates such as those from the Libertarian Party have had a hard time getting on ballots. But Lewis has taken the time to go door-to-door and talk with potential voters to explain his positions, this approach got him enough signatures to get on the ballot and run in the 88th District.

"Regardless of political beliefs, I will fight tirelessly to give every voter the right of self-determination, the power to decide how to live their own lives. I'm not out here running for some powerful lobby or old political party, I'm running understanding that in the eyes of the government, each and every person in our Commonwealth should be protected on equal ground. I offer no special treatment to one group over another, I offer full liberty to all. I will push at every turn to get the government out of your way and out of your life."

Election Day is November 2. No-excuse early voting begins Friday, September 17.

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