Prince William Times 06/26/19

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FINAL STATEMENTS: Five Prince William County baseball players made the Class 6 all-state teams. Sports, Page 9.

June 26, 2019 | Vol. 202, No. 49 | www.princewilliamtimes.com | 50¢ Covering Prince William County and surrounding communities, including Gainesville, Haymarket, Dumfries, Occoquan, Quantico and the cities of Manassas and Manassas Park.

Supervisors want school funding tied to bond referendum By Jill Palermo

Times Staff Writer

Four Prince William supervisors said they would not vote to put a bond referendum for $600 million in parks and road projects on the ballot in November unless the board also pledges to help the school division fund a plan to rid the county of its portable classroom trailers. But on the eve of the Tuesday vote, Supervisor Frank Principi, D-Woodbridge, criticized a proposed resolution addressing funding for school construction, saying it lacks “teeth.” Principi further said he won’t support the resolution or the bond referendum unless the language pledging more money to the school division is strengthened. “That resolution doesn’t do it,” Principi said Monday. “There’s not much in that resolution other than for [Superintendent Steven] Walts to come up with a plan. I will have to see a change to that resolution.”

TIMES STAFF PHOTO/JILL PALERMO

Board of Supervisors Chairman Corey Stewart, left, Supervisor Marty Nohe, center, and Supervisor Frank Principi, right, discuss a proposed $600 million bond referendum June 18.

Vote set for June 25

The board was set to vote at their 7:30 p.m. meeting on Tuesday, June 25, on whether to place the bond referendum on the Nov. 5 ballot. The

vote will take place after press time. For updates, check PrinceWilliamTimes.com. If the bond referendum wins the support of at least five supervisors, it’s

is likely to be broken into three questions on the ballot: one addressing $400 million in new borrowing for 11 road projects and two addressing the proposed $200 million in parks projects. One question would ask voters if they approve of borrowing $52.4 million for outdoor parks projects. Those projects would include $6 million in upgrades for Howison Park; $6 million for a new Neabsco park, $10.8 million in improvements for Long Park, $6 million in improvements for Fuller Heights Park and $23.6 million for new trails and open space. The second question would ask for permission to borrow $147.6 million for five indoor recreation facilities. Those include a western county turf field dome, estimated to cost $4 million; an aquatics and fitness center in Woodbridge, estimated to cost $42 million; a western county indoor field house, estimated to cost $17.6 million; and the $84 million indoor track and field facility proposed for eastern Prince William. See BOND, page 4

School board sets boundaries for 13th H.S. More money promised for older schools By Jill Palermo

Times Staff Writer

After a months-long process that included accusations of segregation, the Prince William County School Board approved a boundary plan for the 13th high school on June 19 that includes a promise of more funding for low-income students and older schools across the county. Exactly how much more money will be directed to older schools and schools that teach low-income students has not yet been determined and was not discussed at the meeting. But school board adopted a resolution that

promises such investments along with the new boundary plan. School Board Chairman Dr. Babur Lateef said the move is an attempt to address the problem at the center of the boundary debate -- inequity in Prince William County’s schools. “We’re going to really push for more money for economically disadvantaged [students], and we’re going to commit to adding programs at Stonewall Jackson, and we’re going to commit to adding infrastructure spending” for older schools, Lateef said. “So this is going to tie the hands of the board and recommit our efforts to doing this.” Without talking specifics, Lateef mentioned the recommendations of the “infrastructure task force,” a committee of parents and school division staff that worked for two years to identify shortcomings in older school facilities. See BOARD, page 2

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PHOTO BY ROGER SNYDER

An aerial view of the site of the 13th high school in Bristow. The school has not yet been formally named.

Obituraries . .......................................16 Opinion.................................................7 Real Estate ........................................15 Sports . ................................................9

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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

School board sets boundaries for 13th H.S. From BOARD, page 1 In a report released earlier this year, the group recommended hundreds of millions in upgrades for older buildings. The school division is already spending about $1 million to make security upgrades to older schools. During the budget year that begins July 1, millions more will be spent to add auxiliary gymnasiums to Woodbridge and Gar-Field and renovate parts of Osbourn Park, three of the county’s oldest high schools. But much more spending is required to address all the task force’s recommendations. The resolution promising the extra spending was drafted by School Board member Gil Trenum (Brentsville) with the help of Stonewall Jackson High School math teacher Charles Ronco and other members of the Stonewall Jackson community. Stonewall Jackson High School played a significant part in the boundary-drawing process because more affluent areas of western Prince William County will be reassigned out of the Manassas-area school to attend the 13th high school. Also, each boundary proposal considered by the school board left Stonewall Jackson with higher percentages of minority, low-income and English-learning students than currently attend the school. Both factors sparked significant controversy and an outcry from

What: 13th high school When: Opens in the fall of 2021 Where: In Bristow behind Jiffy Lube Live on Progress Court. Who: Rising seventh, eighth and ninth graders will be the 13th high school’s first new students. (Rising freshman, who will be juniors in 2021, can choose to stay at their original high schools or switch to the new high school if they live in its attendance area.) some Stonewall Jackson students, who accused the school division of deliberately segregating poor and minority students at Stonewall. But as Lateef said, the school board and school division officials ultimately realized “there’s no way to map our way out of this mess.” That’s why the resolution promising more money for Stonewall Jackson and other schools serving low-income students – as well as for older schools -- was proposed, Ronco said. “If we have schools with higher needs get more resources, we’re going to be able to serve [students] better,” he said. A few parents also spoke in favor of the idea during citizen’s time, including Julie Couch, who served on the infrastructure task force. Couch said the school division exacerbates inequality by building the “best schools in the state” while leaving older buildings languishing with unmet needs.

Prince William County real estate taxes for the first half of 2019 are due on July 15, 2019. If you have not received a tax bill for your property and believe you should have, contact the Tax Administration Office at (703) 792-6710 or by email at TaxpayerServices@pwcgov.org. A late payment penalty of 10% will be assessed on the unpaid tax balance if taxes are not paid in full by the due date. If you receive a tax bill and escrow property taxes with your mortgage company, you should contact your mortgage company immediately. Your mortgage company will tell you the correct procedure for having the mortgage company pay the County directly on your behalf.

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“It’s not the kids who are the problem. It’s the lack of the investment that is the problem,” Couch said. When the board does this over and over again, “it’s not only a bad habit, it’s willful and deliberate harm.” The resolution also promises two new specialty programs for Stonewall Jackson High School, which currently houses an International Baccalaureate program. Plan affects Battlefield, Patriot, Stonewall Jackson, Osbourn Park high schools The school board ultimately voted 7 to 1 to approve a boundary plan devised by Trenum, dubbed “1b,” which will impact areas of western Prince William County currently zoned for Battlefield, Patriot, Stonewall Jackson and Osbourn Park high schools. Trenum’s plan was not one of the two plans recommended by school division planning staff, according to Matthew Cartlidge, supervisor of planning for Prince William County schools. The main difference in Trenum’s plan and those proposed by school division planning staff is that Trenum’s plan reassigns two areas not included in earlier plans. The “Lomond” area of Manassas – an area between Sudley Road and Bull Run Regional Park just north of the City of Manassas line – is reassigned to Osbourn Park High School from Stonewall Jackson under Trenum’s plan. The area will include about 275 high school students when the 13th high school opens in 2021, Cartlidge said. Trenum also reassigned the area encompassing the Manassas Airport to

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Brentsville District High School. However, there are currently no people living at the airport, which means Brentsville will not effectively be impacted by Trenum’s plan, Cartlidge said. The school division plan left the “Lomond” area zoned for Stonewall Jackson out of a concern that the shift would overcrowd Osbourn Park, Cartlidge said. But Trenum said the change is an effort to make room at Stonewall Jackson for its promised specialty programs. Also, Trenum said more students must be assigned to Osbourn Park to beef up its “base” attendance area. Trenum said he picked that particular area because it is also assigned to Parkside Middle School, where students generally attend Osbourn Park High School. “I think in the longer term it does provide a larger base of students for Osbourn Park,” Trenum said. “We know the transfer patterns are going to change after we redo the boundaries, and so O.P. will lose students from the Stonewall area. This actually helps backfill that a little bit. So from that perspective, I think this is a good plan.” Only School Board member Lillie Jessie (Occoquan) voted against the plan. She said she is concerned Osbourn Park High is being impacted “at the last minute” and without an opportunity to give input. Jessie also noted that overcrowding Osbourn Park risks access to its specialty programs by students from across the school division. See BOARD, page 5

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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

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Superintendent makes his contract request public, comes up short By Jill Palermo

Times Staff Writer

Prince William County Superintendent Steven Walts, known to his Twitter fans as @SuperPWCS, decided to go public last week with his request to extend his contract to 2023. It didn’t go as planned. The School Board split 4 to 4 on their vote, leaving Walts with his existing contract, which expires in 2021. Those voting against the extension included School Board members Willie Deutsch (Coles), Alyson Satterwhite (Gainesville) and Gill Trenum (Brentsville) – all Republicans – and Lillie Jessie (Occoquan), a Democrat. But as of Friday night, Walts’ Twitter post about the meeting had garnered 36 retweets, 60 comments and 366 likes. Walts also received a stuffed goat from one of his admirers during the meeting, a reference to the nickname students call him on Twitter: GOAT for the “greatest of all time.” Now in his 15th year at the helm of the school division, Walts only recently became a local social media sensation, a feat he achieved mostly by using Twitter to announce snow days and weather delays. He now has 18,500 followers, which is more than most local politicians with the exception of Del. Danica Roem, D-13th, who has 82,000, and Del. Lee Carter, D-50th, who has 40,000. Walts’ Twitter presence has nonetheless made him a celebrity of sorts among Prince William students, who call him “Steve,” “GOAT” and “the king” and swarm him during school visits for selfies. So it perhaps wasn’t surprising that Walts asked the school board to vote on his contract during the June 19 public meeting, which drew about 200 people, most of whom came to watch the board vote on boundaries for the 13th high school. Any change to Walts’ contract must be approved by the school board in a public vote. But during the past several years, the school board has taken such votes immediately after closed-session reviews of Walts’ performance, meaning only the school board members and a few staff were in attendance. Walts declined an interview for this article, but School Board Chairman Dr. Babur Lateef (at large) said the vote was taken in public at Walts’ request. The superintendent also encouraged school division administrators and principals to attend the meeting, according to other school board members. Walts’ wife, Kathleen Walts, was there along with their teenage daughter. Walts’ said they came to offer him moral support. But the unconventional public nature of the proceedings were not well received by the school board and may have contributed to the negative outcome of the vote. Satterwhite requested that the board retreat to closed session before taking the vote, saying she was uncomfortable discussing Walts’ contract in public. That suggestion, however, also died in a vote that split the board 4 to 4, with the same board members who

PHOTO: TWITTER.

Prince William County schools Superintendent Steven Walts poses with a stuffed goat someone gave him during the June 19 school board meeting, during which the board declined to extend his contract beyond 2021.

Superintendent’s pay

Base salary: $330,752 Car allowance: $13,500 Supplemental: $33,027 Retirement contribution: $81,000 Total: $458,279 voted against extending Walts’ contract voting to go into closed session while the others voted against it.

Jessie: Public vote ‘inappropriate’

After the meeting, Jessie posted a long explanation about her decision on Facebook. In a subsequent interview, she said Walts’ decision to take the matter public and encourage his staff to attend the meeting was “inappropriate” and showed “poor judgment.” “When I saw the principals and all the other people who were called into that room, I just felt pressured,” Jessie said, adding: “I think he forgot that the public doesn’t hire the superintendent. The school board does.” Jessie noted that neither principals nor teachers are allowed to involve their colleagues in their own reviews or even discuss them publicly. “I feel like [Walts] violated his own rule,” she said. But Jessie said she also declined to extend Walts’ contract over more substantive issues. Among other things, Jessie said she regrets she was not made aware of serious deficiencies at Woodbridge Senior High School until parents and some staff members there brought them to her attention. Then, when she sought funding to address the problems, which included fixing an athletic field in such poor condition that it caused athlete injuries, she faced an uphill battle with Walts and his staff. Jessie said she also had to fight to have school nurses shifted to the

professional pay scale and is still unsatisfied with the school division’s efforts to address lingering achievement gaps among minority students. Jessie said she continues to be frustrated by school division officials’ tendency to paint a too rosy a picture of student achievement. As an example, Jessie noted that Walts continually touts the school division’s graduation rate of 92.1 percent even though it’s only slightly better than the statewide graduation rate of 91.6 percent. “So it’s not a big deal, but we say it’s a big deal,” Jessie said of the graduation rate. “In a professional learning community, you deal with the current reality. … All we hear is the good stuff,” Jessie said. “Tell us the truth. Be transparent. You can’t get better when you only say we’re already great.”

Other board members split on Walts’ contract

Other board members who voted against the contract extension gave other reasons. Trenum acknowledged the “school division has had a very good year” but said the decision to extend Walts’ contract beyond 2021 should be made by the school board that takes office in 2020. Trenum is not seeking re-election. Deutsch noted there was “an incredible oddity” to the vote and said he would feel more comfortable reviewing Walts’ contract closer to its expiration date. Satterwhite did not publicly explain why she voted against the extension. School Board members who voted in favor of the contract extension included Lateef, Diane Raulston (Neabsco), Justin Wilk (Potomac) and Loree Williams (Woodbridge). Wilk noted Walts is national-

ly recognized by his peers and has made several positive changes in the past few years, including expanding pre-K and career and technical education programs, expediting security enhancements at older schools, ensuring teachers received back-toback step raises and “overhauling” the school division’s special education program as a result of a critical audit. Lateef said the school division would be hard pressed to find another leader as qualified as Walts. After the vote, Lateef said the result came down to board members having different positions on contract extensions. “I want to keep him here. I think he’s the best,” Lateef said of Walts. In the Nov. 5 election, Lateef will again face Satterwhite in the election for school board chair. Walts, for his part, said after the vote that while he is disappointed with the board’s decision, he “loves Prince William County schools.” “I just want to say that whatever happens in the future, I have two years on my contract and my intent is to provide the same quality leadership and service to the school division and to its students,” Walts said. Walts also mentioned his newfound entrance into “the Twitter world” and said doing so has “engaged me in a much more expansive way” with both students and parents. Walts said he believes he’s been able to address problems by hearing directly from the community through the social media platform. “Despite the decision tonight, there’s a lot of excitement,” he added. “I will continue with just as much enthusiasm as I have today.” Reach Jill Palermo at jpalermo@ fauquier.com


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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

Board’s split on pride month underscores political divide By Jill Palermo

Times Staff Writer

Although it’s nearly over, the Prince William County Board of Supervisors declared June LGBTQ+ Pride Month for the second year in a row. But the split vote underscored political divisions on the board ahead of the upcoming November elections. More than 20 speakers came to the podium during the supervisors’ June 18 meeting to express their support for a resolution declaring June “Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Questioning and More Pride Month” and to urge supervisors to do the same. No one spoke against the resolution and it ultimately passed in a 5-to-3 vote. Supervisor Frank Principi, D-Woodbridge, introduced the measure, which found support from nearly the same bipartisan mix of supervisors who voted in favor of it last year. They included Supervisors Maureen Caddigan, R-Potomac, Pete Candland, R-Gainesville, and Marty Nohe, R-Coles as well as Supervisor Victor Angry, D-Neabsco. Angry wasn’t on the board last year, but his predecessor, the late Supervisor John Jenkins, also voted in favor of the LGBTQ+ Pride Month resolution in 2018. Voting against the resolution were Board of Supervisors Chairman Corey Stewart, R-At Large, as well as Supervisors Ruth Anderson, R-Occoquan, and Jeanine Lawson, R-Brentsville. Stewart has declined to run for

re-election this fall. But both Anderson and Lawson have Democratic opponents in the Nov. 5 election, and both spoke in favor of the Pride Month resolution during citizens’ time. Kenny Boddye, the Democratic nominee challenging Anderson this fall, said there are moral, public safety and economic reasons to support the resolution. Boddye noted the high rates of self-harm and suicide among the LGBTQ community and cited the need for communities to “fully embrace them.” Boddye also said the resolution “shows … that we’re an inclusive community and we’re open to all.” Maggie Hansford, a Prince William County speech teacher and the Democratic nominee challenging in Lawson, said voting in favor of the resolution “is the right thing to do.” “Our children, our families our business community – everyone -- benefits from inclusion and the acceptance of everyone,” Hansford said. Neither Stewart nor Anderson commented on the resolution before voting against it. The same was true of all of the supervisors; there was no discussion either for or against the measure before the vote. When asked about the vote later, Stewart said he doesn’t believe it’s the government’s role “to celebrate, condone or otherwise judge someone’s sexual orientation.” That’s the same explanation he gave for voting against the measure in 2018. Anderson said she believes the

Supervisor Frank Principi, D-Woodbridge, right, shakes hands with Jim O’Connor, left, president of Equality Prince William, after the board of supervisors approved a resolution declaring June LGBTQ+ Pride Month. Evelyn BruMar, a local advocate of the LGBTQ community, center, looks on. PHOTO BY JILL PALERMO

measure was unnecessary given that the supervisors also approved a more general resolution calling Prince William County a “hate-free, bigot-free” zone. “I think there are so many things we could vote on that are very specific to various groups of people,” Anderson said. “I didn’t see any merit or any real usefulness” to the resolution. During the meeting, several speakers said declaring June LGBTQ+ Pride Month is meant to commemorate the 1969 Stonewall uprising in New York City, considered the start of the LGBTQ civil rights movement, and affirms that LGBTQ individuals are accepted and welcome. Some noted that federal civil rights laws offer no protections on the basis of sexual orientation or

gender identity, and that LGBTQ Pride Month resolutions are a way to draw attention to that fact. Jim O’Connor, president of Equality Prince William, said the LGBTQ community “wants no special treatment” other than to be treated like everyone else. “But that doesn’t always happen, so that’s why we need to make June LGBTQ Pride month,” O’Connor said. Still, both Anderson and Stewart said they don’t agree with that line of thinking. “I do understand it,” Anderson said of their arguments, “but I don’t think this resolution would fix that.” “I don’t go for that,” Stewart said. “Obviously, people have been persecuted for many different reasons.” Reach Jill Palermo at jpalermo@ fauquier.com

Supervisors want school funding tied to bond referendum From BOND, page 1 Finally, that question will also include an expanded or new boat house on the Occoquan Reservoir for county crew teams. In a memo released along with the supervisors’ agenda Monday, County Executive Chris Martino said he did not know how much it would cost to build or operate a new or expanded boat house. But Supervisor Ruth Anderson, R-Occoquan, asked the board June 18 to pledge at least $10 million toward such a project.

Schools constructionnot on the ballot

Along with Principi, Supervisors Victor Angry, D-Neabsco; Maureen Caddigan, R-Potomac; and Marty Nohe, R-Coles, all said June 18 that the board must either put the long-discussed $174 million plan to eliminate portable trailers on the ballot as a separate question or otherwise commit to funding the new school construction. But according to Principi, the board will keep the school construction question off the ballot, as they

were advised by county attorneys. Board Chairman Corey Stewart, R-At Large, has said asking voters’ permission to build new schools is risky given the school division has been in near-constant growth mode for decades, adding at least one new school almost every year. As such, the county cannot wait for voters’ approval to borrow for new schools. In Virginia, borrowing for new school construction does not have to go to the ballot. Principi stressed the safety issues inherent in teaching children outside brick-and-mortar school buildings as his primary reason for wanting the board to eliminate the portable trailers. There were 206 trailers in use across the county this past school year. “These trailers are very much outside the physical perimeter and physical safety of the boundaries of the school,” Principi said. “I really think schools should be our first priority, and I cannot in good faith vote in favor of two or three [referendum] questions until I get some resolution, some understanding about what this board is going to do on schools.”

Nohe agreed the board needs to make a “robust” statement about school funding. Caddigan, a former school board member, said she would be a “traitor” if she didn’t make the same argument.

Some supervisors say school promise ‘premature’

But not all supervisors agreed the board should commit to helping the school board with the new construction. Supervisors Ruth Anderson, R-Occoquan, Pete Candland, R-Gainesville, and Jeanine Lawson, R-Brentsville, called the commitment premature given that an audit of the school division’s student enrollment projections is still under way and not expected to be complete until later this summer. School division officials have said two new elementary schools in the U.S. 1 corridor and about 50 additional middle school classrooms are needed to eliminate the trailers that will remain after planned new schools are complete. The school division is in the process of building three schools: a 13th

high school in Bristow, a new middle school at Potomac Shores and the John D. Jenkins Elementary School on Prince William Parkway in Lake Ridge. By 2029, the school division is also planning to build four additional new elementary schools; 11-room additions to three middle schools (Bull Run, Marsteller and Gainesville) and a 14th high school, according to its most recent capital improvement plan. Stewart stressed the need for voters to give their guidance to the supervisors who will be elected in November. At least half of the current supervisors will not return in 2020. Two opted not to seek re-election; two were beaten by primary challengers. “This [referendum] would give the next board the tool it needs to improve” county infrastructure, Stewart said. “If we don’t grow our facilities, they are going to become more and more inadequate for the size of our population.” Reach Jill Palermo at jpalermo@ fauquier.com


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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

New laws on cigarettes, car seats, cell phones take effect July 1 By Amanda Heincer Times Staff Writer

A long list of laws passed by the Virginia General Assembly and signed by Gov. Ralph Northam will take effect July 1. They cover a range of topics from raising the age to purchase cigarettes and vaping products to child safety seats and using a cellphone while driving in a work zone. One new law regarding rear-facing child restraint devices, House Bill 708, was signed by Northam (D) in 2018 and goes into effect July 1. According to the new law, children should ride in cars in rear-facing safety seats until age 2 or until they reach the minimum weight for a forward-facing safety seat, according to the manufacturer. The current law allows children who are 1 year old, or who meet the weight limit, to ride forward-facing. Other laws going into effect on July 1 were passed by the General Assembly and signed by the governor this year. Senate Bill 1708 prohibits the use of cellphones in highway work zones. Specifically, the law prohibits a driver holding “a handheld personal communication device in his hand while driving a motor vehicle in a highway

work zone.” Violations are punishable by a mandatory fine of $250. Another new traffic law, HB 2805, prohibits parking any vehicle in the striped area adjacent to a parking space reserved for people with disabilities. A new Alcoholic Beverage Control-related law, HB 2073/SB 1726, allows restaurants to advertise their happy hour specials. The law allows restaurants to advertise the prices of their drink specials, something that was previously illegal. SB 1727 raises the minimum age for purchasing tobacco, nicotine vapor and other nicotine products from 18 to 21. Active-duty military members will still be able to purchase tobacco products at age 18 if they show a military I.D. Another new law, HB 2170, is an attempt to crack down on phone calls that display a false phone number on your caller ID. The new law makes it a Class 3 misdemeanor to call a number and display false caller identification information with the intent to “defraud, intimidate or harass” the recipient of the phone call. Another new criminal law, HB 2678/SB 1736, aims to crack down on revenge porn. The new law prohibits the unlawful dissemination

COURTESY PHOTO

According to a new law in effect July 1, children will now be required to ride in rear-facing safety seats until age 2, or until they reach the minimum weight for a forward-facing seat, according to the manufacturers. or sale of certain images of another person, including those that were realistically fabricated. SB 1395, another new criminal law, makes it a Class 1 misdemeanor to threaten to kill or injure any health care provider “who is engaged in the performance of his duties.” A new education-related law, HB 1652/SB 1005, allows school districts to start school no earlier than 14 days before Labor Day, unless the state Board of Education grants a waiver. The current law requires school districts to start school after Labor Day, unless the Board of Education grants a waiver. The new law also requires that if school starts

before Labor Day, school should be closed the Friday before Labor Day as well as on Labor Day Monday. Another new law grants a little more privacy to lottery winners. HB 1650/SB 1060 prohibits the Virginia Lottery from disclosing information about lottery winners whose prize is more than $10 million, unless the winner consents to the disclosure. The current law requires the lottery to disclose winners’ names, hometowns and the amounts won. More information about these laws and more legislation passed by the 2019 session of the General Assembly can be found at http://dls. virginia.gov/pubs/idc/idc19.pdf.

School board sets boundaries for 13th H.S. From BOARD, page 2 The school offers a biotechnology specialty program and a pre-governor’s school specialty program, both of which attract high-achieving students from across the county.

Demographic shifts

The boundary plan approved by the school board raises the percentages of minority, economically disadvantaged and “limited English proficiency” students at Stonewall Jackson and Osbourn Park high schools, while reducing those numbers at Battlefield and Patriot high schools. Under the approved plan, Stonewall Jackson High School would go from 80.8 percent minority to 88.6 percent minority. Regarding economically disadvantaged students, percentages would rise from the current 50.7 to 59.9 percent. For students learning English, percentages rise to 22.1 percent from 18.7 percent. Those numbers, however, reflect only the students who currently live in the attendance areas and are not future projections, which were not provided for Trenum’s plan. That’s because the plan was not formally recommended by the school division’s planning office, Cartlidge said. Osbourn Park High School would be 67 percent minority (up for 62.3 percent); 36.5 percent economically disadvantaged (up from 31.5 percent) with about 15.7 percent students deemed “limited English proficient” (up from 12.3 percent).

In contrast, Battlefield High School will likely be about 35 percent minority (down from 41 percent); 5.3 percent economically disadvantaged (down from 9.9 percent) with about 1 percent of its students deemed “limited English proficient” (down from 1.7 percent). Patriot High School, meanwhile, would be about 46.2 percent minority (down from 47.4 percent); 12.7 percent economically disadvantaged (up from 12.1 percent) with about 2.4 percent of its students deemed “limited English proficient.” The 13th high school is projected to be 53 percent minority, 16.8 percent economically disadvantaged with 3.1 percent of its students deemed “limited English proficient.” But none of those numbers – including the 88.6 percent of minority students at Stonewall Jackson High School – is likely to attract the attention of federal authorities unless they rise above the percent of minority students who live closest to the school’s boundaries, Cartlidge said. For Stonewall Jackson, for example, the minority student numbers would rise to 89.2 percent of the school’s student body if the boundaries were drawn based on proximity to the school alone. As long as the minority percentage does not surpass that level, there’s less “potential” for investigation under the federal Equal Education Opportunity Act, Cartlidge said. Reach Jill Palermo at jpalermo@ fauquier.com

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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

Woodbridge men’s deaths ruled homicides Police have identified two men whose bodies were found in a wooded area off Featherstone Road in Woodbridge Saturday as Jairo Mayorga, 39, and Milton Lopez, 40, both of Woodbridge. “The deceased were known to frequent the businesses in the area,” Prince William County police said in a news release Monday. A resident made the grisly discovery at about 10:35 a.m. Saturday, June 22. The bodies were found in the woods near the 1500 block of Featherstone Road, ac-

cording to a Prince William County police news release. Police are investigating the men’s deaths as homicides. Police say they do not believe there is reason for concern among area residents. “The incident is isolated to the woodline and there are no public safety concerns at this time,“ the release said. The investigation continues. Anyone with information about this incident is asked to contact Prince William County police.

Swastika found on Gainesville pool deck Prince William police are investigating the county’s third incident of vandalism involving the swastika symbol since March. This time, it was spray-painted on a pool deck in Gainesville. On Thursday, June 20, at 11:07 a.m., officers responded to the Piedmont Homeowners’ Association pool house at 14030 Clatterbuck Loop in Gainesville to investigate a report of vandalism. They arrived to find a swastika painted on the pool deck, according to Officer Renee Carr, spokeswoman for the Prince William County police. The pool manager told police the concrete surface near the pool was vandalized sometime between 9 p.m. on Wednesday, June 19, and 10 a.m. on Thursday, June 20, Carr said

in a news release. No suspicious persons or vehicles were reported in the area during the timeframe. The drawing did not appear to target anyone specific in the neighborhood. Earlier incidents included a swastika found etched into the side of a van parked in the 15700 block of Crocus Lane in Dumfries. That incident occurred sometime between 5 p.m. April 1 and 8:45 a.m. April 2, the report said. On March 12, police received a report of swastikas drawn with chalk onto a basketball court at Anne Moncure Park in Montclair. The drawings were removed without causing permanent damage. It’s not known if any of the incidents are related, the report said.

$20,000 reward offered in November 2018 double homicide A $20,000 reward was announced for information leading to an arrest in the double homicide in Fauquier County of Duong Nguyen, 61, and his son, America Nguyen, 22. The father and son were found dead of gunshot wounds at their Bealeton home on Nov. 9, 2018. America Nguyen is a graduate of Stonewall Jackson High School. His father, Duong, worked as a cabinet maker in Manassas. Deputies discovered their bod-

ies at the Nguyens’ home at 11027 Salisbury Lane in Bealeton on the morning of Nov. 9 after receiving a request for a welfare check. America Nguyen was last heard from on the night of Nov. 7, 2018, when he communicated with another family member on social media, authorities said at the time. More than seven months have passed since their bodies were found. The Fauquier County Sheriff’s office and the FBI continue to

City of Manassas, Virginia Public Notice Appointment of Interim City Council Member The Manassas City Council is seeking applicants to fill a Council seat that will be vacated due to the resignation of Vice-Mayor Ken Elston. The selected applicant would serve as a Council member upon appointment in August until the certification of a special election in November to fill the remainder of the term. To apply, you must be a qualified voter in the City of Manassas, fill out the online form at www.manassascity.org/council and upload a brief resume by 5 p.m. on July 12, 2019. City Council will hold a public meeting on July 25, 2019 to discuss interested candidates that have completed the required information and to allow candidates to present their qualifications. At the discretion of the City Council, the Council may elect to have a second public meeting on July 26, 2019 to review the remaining interested candidates, if necessary. A decision on the appointment is expected to be completed by August 12, 2019. Interested candidates should note that the position involves, at a minimum, the following: · Attendance at two (2) regular City Council meetings each month, held on the 2nd and 4th Monday at 5:30 p.m. · Attendance at up to three (3) City Council Work Sessions each month, held on the 2nd Wednesday, 3rd Monday, and 4thThursday at 5:30 p.m. · Special meetings, as needed. · A Council Member may also be appointed to serve on other Boards, Committees, or Commissions and/or Regional Boards. For questions or concerns call Lee Ann Henderson, City Clerk, 257-8280.

investigate the case and analyze evidence collected at the scene, Fauquier County Sheriff Bob Mosier said during a June 18 news conference. Duong Nguyen was described as a hardworking man who became a U.S. citizen after fleeing North Vietnam. America Nguyen had just started a job at Amazon and was working toward his college degree at the time of his death. Friends and family members were shocked by the men’s deaths, as was the community, Mosier said. “This has shaken a quiet county, a country community,” Mosier said. “… It’s something we don’t have here.” At the news conference, Mosier described the Nguyens as “normal people, going about their normal routine” at the time of the homicides. Duong Nguyen and his wife “so deeply loved America” that they named their children America and Virginia, Mosier said. “They were good Americans and have suffered this brutal circumstance in their lives,” Mosier said. “So we are going to do what we

Duong Nguyen

America Nguyen

can to bring this to its resolution.” Investigators renewed their plea for information from anyone who may have traveled the Va. 28 (Catlett Road) corridor in Fauquier County to Prince William County on the evening of Nov. 7, 2018, or in the early morning hours of Nov. 8, 2018. Anyone who remembers seeing anything or anyone suspicious is asked to call the FBI Washington Field Office at 202-278-2000 or to contact a local FBI field office or the nearest American Embassy or Consulate. Tips can be submitted online at tips.fbi.gov. All tips can remain anonymous.

Police investigate report of indecent exposure at Bristoe Station Battlefield Park A man exposed himself to a woman at a park in Bristow Sunday evening, Prince William County police said. At 9:22 p.m. on Sunday, June 23, police responded to investigate a report of an indecent exposure that occurred at Bristoe Station Battlefield Park, 10708 Bristow Road in Bristow, “earlier that evening,” Prince William County police spokeswoman Renee Carr said in a news release. The victim, a 50-year-old woman, told police that she was walking in the park, when an unknown man was walking out of the park. The two passed each other and both con-

tinued walking, police said. A short time later, the woman turned around and “observed the suspect looking at her with his pants pulled down, exposing himself and making obscene gestures,” police said in the news release. The woman left the area and reported the incident to police. Officers checked the area and did not locate the suspect, who is described as white, between 25 and 30 years old, and thin, with “a scraggly beard.” He was wearing light-colored clothing, police said. The investigation continues.


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OPINION WWW.PRINCEWILLIAMTIMES.COM

Prince William Times | June 26, 2019

More work needed to reform unrepresentative districts

Promises on school funding demand voter attention Both the Prince William County School Board and Board of Supervisors made big promises this past week about providing funding for older schools and ridding the school division of its portable classroom trailers. The question now is, will they deliver? The pledges came during important public meetings. Before approving a new boundary plan for the 13th high school, School Board Chairman Dr. Babur Lateef pledged the school board would boost its per-pupil funding allowance for schools that teach low-income students and would funnel more money to equipment, repairs and renovations to the county’s older middle and high schools. That’s good news considering that a task force of parents and school staff recently wrapped up two years of work to assess deficiencies between our new schools and those that were built 30 years ago or earlier. Security enhancements were at the top of the list, and the school division is already spending about $1 million to address them. But other fixes will require big money – between $18 and $37 million for each of the 14 older schools on the task force’s priority list. That’s an investment of $252 to $518 million. Then, less than a week later, the board of supervisors pledged to do more to help the school division tackle a $174 million plan to rid the county of its portable classroom trailers. For a county that has relied on trailers for decades, that’s a promise that’s long, long overdue. And these days, when we worry about our schools being attacked by armed intruders, forcing kids and teachers to spend their days in flimsy metal trailers is unacceptable. But again, $174 million is a lot of money on top of what the county is already spending to keep up with ongoing enrollment growth. By the time this newspaper is printed, we will know if the board of supervisors will ask voters to approve

another $600 million in borrowing for parks and road projects in a referendum planned for the Nov. 5 ballot. The money would fund 11 road projects and eight parks projects over the next 10 years. All of the projects would be nice to have, but none, in our opinion, is more important than ensuring that all Prince William County students are learning in safe and adequate school buildings. So here’s the bottom line. The board of supervisors and school board are making big promises – and only promises – in an election year in which at least half of the supervisors won’t return to office next year. All but one of the school board members are running for re-election and only two are unopposed, meaning that board could also see some turnover, albeit less so than the county board. Still, all of this makes the job of voters even more crucial. Before we head to the polls this fall, voters must have a clear understanding of the candidates’ priorities. We hope each and every candidate will make their positions and intentions clear on spending – and borrowing – to upgrade aging schools, rid the county of classroom trailers and to improve county roads and park facilities. The choices won’t be easy and they will be expensive, likely requiring at least some tax increases – or perhaps new taxes – to pay for whatever projects we undertake. As a newspaper, we will push the candidates to clearly state their priorities and explain how they believe the county should pay for them. Then, we’ll strive to hold the winners accountable after the election. We’re counting on an active citizenry to assist us in that process. At a time when our schools are busting at the seams – or falling apart due to old age – Prince William County residents need more than just empty promises from their elected officials. We will be watching to see how they deliver.

This week, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its long-awaited decision in Virginia House of Delegates v. Bethune-Hill, a gerrymandering case. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg essentially wrote that the Virginia House of Delegates was not allowed to bring the appeal. Here is some background. The General Assembly is required by the Constitution of Virginia and the U.S. Constitution’s Fifth Amendment to redraw congressional and state legislative districts after each census. In 2011, the General Assembly held a special session. Republicans held the majority in the House of Delegates. Democrats controlled the state Senate, and then-Gov. Bob McDonnell, a Republican, was in office. Each chamber drew its own maps, and incumbent members of Congress recommended the congressional maps. Governor McDonnell vetoed the first map drawn by the Democratic state Senate, which then proposed a compromise map. The governor then approved all three plans. Over the last 10 years, the case law on voting rights issues has changed as the composition of the Supreme Court has changed. In the case of Shelby County v. Holder in 2013, the U.S. Supreme Court held that “pre-review” of all voting-related actions required by the Voting Rights Act of 1965 was no longer required in jurisdictions with a history of racial discrimination -- such as Virginia -- ostensibly because racial discrimination was no longer an issue. This opened the door to voter identification laws, precinct changes, voter roll purges and other actions by state and local governments, largely in the South, over the last six years. However, the flipside of Shelby County was that because racial discrimination was “not as pervasive,” and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 had “solved” most of the problems it had sought to address, race could no longer be a predominant factor in drawing district lines. Following this new line of thinking, a three-judge panel threw out Virginia’s congressional district map in 2016, and Rep. Donald McEachin (D) was elected to represent Virginia’s newly drawn 4th Congressional District. More litigation ensued over in the House of Delegates, and a three-judge panel ultimately found 11 districts were improperly drawn to achieve an impermissible 55 percent black voting-age population threshold. This required more than 30 seats to be redrawn in Hampton Roads, ‘Southside” and around Richmond. The Virginia House of Delegates appealed the decision. On Monday, the U.S. Supreme

SEN. SCOTT SUROVELL

Court refused to consider the merits of the lower, three-judge panel’s ruling and held that the attorney general can represent the interests of Virginians in a redistricting case, but not one chamber of a bicameral legislative body. Ginsberg also wrote that a possible shift in partisan control of a legislative body is not the kind of “harm” that gives standing to bring a lawsuit but rather a basic outcome of democracy. That basically ended the litigation. However, the decision really ducked the important and most pressing issue: When does gerrymandering become so problematic it denies voters their right to representation? Virginia’s congressional, legislative and local government districts are rife with partisan gerrymandering. The power of computers made this one of the most fundamental problems in American democracy. There are numerous scholars who have developed mathematical models to objectively measure the distorting effect of district maps, but the U.S. Supreme Court remains divided on whether such formulas can find support in the U.S. Constitution’s due process cause or the First Amendment. So while this decision will make most Democrats happy, the fundamental problem remains unresolved. The 2020 General Assembly will take a second vote on an amendment to the Constitution of Virginia to create a form of nonpartisan redistricting. If approved, voter approval will still be necessary, and there are some statutory details that still require negotiation. I continue to have concerns about giving the Supreme Court of Virginia ultimate authority if stalemate occurs in the General Assembly given that that court has become dominated by Republican appointees in the last 20 years, could be dominated by another party in the future and more importantly, is not truly representative of Virginia ideologically and regionally. Northern Virginians are largely excluded today from Virginia’s appellate courts, a troubling development. The conversation continues. If you have any questions or feedback, please email me at scott@scottsurovell.org. The writer, a Democrat, represents the 36th state Senate district, which includes parts of Prince William, Fairfax and Stafford counties.


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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

CLUES

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SPORTS

SUMMER SWIMMING STARTS

The Piedmont Tsunamis’ Camille Spink broke her own Prince William Swim League record Saturday by swimming the 50-meter freestyle of the girls 13-14 age group in 26.87 seconds. She also helped Piedmont beat Dominion Valley 2,884.5-2,388.5 during their dual meet to give the Tsunamis a 2-0 record.

WWW.PRINCEWILLIAMTIMES.COM

Prince William Times | June 26, 2019

CLASS 6/5 BASEBALL HONORS

HATS OFF,

Zach Agnos

Carter Cunningham

HOTSHOTS

Photos by Randy Litzinger and Doug Stroud

CLASS 6 ALL-STATE*

6C ALL-REGION

FIRST TEAM

FIRST TEAM

PITCHER Nathan Williams, Forest Park, So.

OUTFIELD Ryley Johnson, Colgan, Jr.

SECOND TEAM

PITCHER FIRST BASE Carter Cunningham, Battlefield, Sr. SHORTSTOP Zach Agnos, Battlefield, Sr. OUTFIELD C.J. Miles, Battlefield, Sr. Shane Saunders, Osbourn Park, Jr. *Class 5 all-state team unreleased

Kyle VanDenburg

OUTFIELD Ryley Johnson, Colgan, Jr.

6D ALL-REGION

DESIGNATED HITTER Garrett Riley, Colgan, Jr.

PLAYER OF THE YEAR

Zach Agnos, Battlefield, Sr.

FIRST TEAM

PITCHER Riley Eikhoff, Patriot, Jr. CATCHER Jack Shephard, Osbourn Park, Fr. FIRST BASE Carter Cunningham, Battlefield, Sr. SHORTSTOP Zach Agnos, Battlefield, Sr. OUTFIELD C.J. Miles, Battlefield, Sr. Shane Saunders, Osbourn Park, Jr.

SECOND TEAM

PITCHER Cameron Mozingo-Morales, OP, Jr. SECOND BASE Liam Gannon, Osbourn Park, So.

Ryley Johnson

Riley Eikhoff

OUTFIELD Kyle Vandenburg, Patriot, Fr. Adam Kuzmicki, Battlefield, So.

SECOND TEAM PITCHER Magnus Ellerts, Woodbridge, Sr. FIRST BASE Marcus Garza, Colgan, Jr. THIRD BASE Brady Carter, Colgan, Sr. OUTFIELD Nick Davis, Forest Park, Sr. Ben Thomas

5D ALL-REGION FIRST TEAM

PITCHER Brody Mack, Potomac, Sr. CATCHER Braden Mack, Potomac, Jr. OUTFIELD Ben Thomas, Potomac, Jr. UTILITY Braden Mack, Potomac, Jr.

SECOND TEAM

SECOND BASE Josue Cumba, Potomac, Sr. OUTFIELD Brody Mack, Potomac, Sr.


10

SPORTS

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

GIRLS LACROSSE CLASS 4 ALL-STATE SECOND TEAM

MIDFIELD Emma Delery, Brentsville, Jr. Emily Lerch

4B ALL-REGION OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR Emma Delery, Brentsville, Jr. COACH OF THE YEAR Emily Johnson, Brentsville

FIRST TEAM PHOTO BY RANDY LITZINGER

MIDFIELD Emma Delery, Brentsville, Jr.

Emily Lerch, Brentsville, Jr. DEFENSE Shannon Hutchens, Brentsville, Sr.

SECOND TEAM

ATTACK Vicky Bruno, Brentsville, Fr. Sara Newlin, Brentsville, Sr. MIDFIELD Linley Tirrell, Brentsville, Jr. GOALIE Anna Harris, Brentsville, Sr.


11

LIFESTYLE WWW.PRINCEWILLIAMTIMES.COM

Prince William Times | June 26, 2019

Celebrating July 4 all week long

th

By Aileen Streng

Contributing Writer

Looking for fireworks, parades and other ways to celebrate America’s independence? Here is our list of events in and around Prince William County. The fireworks and fun begin Saturday, June 29 and continue through the weekend after the Fourth of July holiday. Not the Fourth (yet): Tim’s Rivershore Restaurant and Crabhouse in Dumfries will host its annual “Not the Fourth” fireworks on Saturday, June 29. The fireworks are launched from a barge in the Potomac River. Come by boat or plan to come early to secure a table at the Tiki Bar, outdoor seating area or on the beach. There will be live music, food specials and activities for kids. Head to nearby Saint John Paul the Great Catholic High School, 17700 Dominican Drive, Dumfries, for parking. Multiple buses will shuttle visitors to Tim’s Rivershore. Lorton Workhouse: The Lorton Workhouse Independence Day celebration runs from 5-10 p.m. on Saturday, June 29.

Tim’s Rivershore.

UPCOMING EVENTS JUNE 26 – JULY 2, 2019 Wednesday, June 26

Dead and Company: 7 p.m.Jiffy Lube Live, 7800 Cellar Door Drive, Bristow. Tickets available. Potomac Nationals vs. Wilmington Blue Rocks: 7:05 p.m. Pfitzner Stadium, 7 County Complex Court, Woodbridge.

Thursday, June 27

2019 Summer Concert Series: 7 p.m. Featuring the U.S. Navy Concert Band. National Museum of the Marine Corps, 18900 Jefferson Davis Highway, Triangle. Free admission and parking. Thursday Farmers Market: 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Harris Pavilion, 9201 Center St., Manassas. Lunch and Learn Series: Noon-1 p.m. Bring your lunch and learn about local history. CenterFuse, 9071 Center St., Manassas. Free.

Friday, June 28

Night Owl Hike: 7:30 p.m. For ages 6 and up. Dissect owl pellets, learn about birds of prey and take a hike. RSVP by June 27 to 703-583-6904. Leesylvania

A nearly 30-minute fireworks show follows its Rizer Pavilion musical performance by the U.S. Navy Band Sea Chanters. The Lorton Workhouse is located at 9518 Workhouse Road, Lorton.

Fourth of July

Dale City parade and family fun day: Dale City Independence Day Parade and Family Fun Day begins at 10 a.m. Thursday, July 4. It’s one of Virginia’s largest and oldest Fourth of July parades. The parade will feature scouting troops, churches, politicians and performing arts groups. The parade runs along Dale Boulevard, starting at Kirkdale Drive and ending at Gemini Way or the Dale City Commuter Lot. After the parade, the family fun day festivities with vendors, games and entertainment runs until 2 p.m. at Center Plaza, Dale Boulevard, Dale City. P-Nats fireworks: Enjoy the last Fourth of July fireworks show at the Potomac Nationals game before the team moves to Fredericksburg next year. The game begins at 6:35 p.m., and the fireworks start after the game ends. The G. Richard Pfitzner Stadium is located at 7 County Complex Court, Woodbridge. For ticket information, visit potomacnationals.com. Old Town Manassas: Celebrate this Independence Day in Old Town Manassas with one of the largest fireworks displays in Northern Virginia. The celebration surrounds the Manassas Visitors’ Center in the Historic Train Depot, the Harris PaState Park, 2001 Daniel K. Ludwig Drive, Woodbridge. Fee $2 per owl pellet. “Aladdin The Musical”: 10:30 a.m. Disney’s “Aladdin” kids’ musical adventure. Hylton Performing Arts Center, 10960 George Mason Circle, Manassas. Tickets $6-$10.

Saturday, June 29

Autorama Fest: 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Community festival and car show. Manassas Museum Lawn, 9101 Prince William St., Manassas. Free to the public. Proceeds benefit the Northern Virginia Veteran’s Association of Manassas. Saturday Farmers Market: 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Commuter Car Park, 9024 Prince William St., Manassas. Happy Birthday Leesylvania: 5-6 p.m. Join the 30th anniversary ceremony and cake cutting followed by the Cabin Creek Band and fireworks. Leesylvania State Park, 2001 Daniel K. Ludwig Drive, Woodbridge. Yoga on the Lawn: 9 a.m. Enjoy yoga on the lawn. Bring a yoga mat, towel and water. Rippon Lodge, 15520 Blackburn Road, Woodbridge. $5 per class, $20 for 5 classes. Self Defense for Runners Class: 4-5 p.m. Learn the basics of how to defend yourself. Sign up at www. aimhumanperformance.com/ events/2019/6/29/self-defense-for-

COURTESY PHOTOS

Dale City Fourth of July parade. vilion and the Manassas Museum. The Harris Pavilion will feature community contests from 3-5 p.m. There will be a bicycle decorating contest for kids starting at 3 p.m. At 4 p.m., contestants of all ages will compete to blow the biggest bubblegum bubble in the Bubblegum Blowing Contest. Then at 5 p.m., contestants of all ages will compete in the Watermelon Eating Contest. Be sure to bring your lawn chairs and blankets and come early to get the best seats on the Manassas Museum Lawn for the fireworks display at 9:15 p.m. Manassas Park: Independence Day festivities in Manassas Park will be held from 7-10 p.m. at Signal Hill Park, 9300 Signal View Drive, Manassas Park. There will be free shuttles from the VRE Station and city hall starting at 6:30 p.m. Parking is $5 beginning at 5 p.m. There’s on-site parking for handicapped individuals only. Fireworks begin at dusk. Montclair: The Montclair Home-

owners Association’s Independence Day Celebration begins at 10 a.m. with a bike parade ending at the association office with popsicles where children can take pictures with Uncle Sam. Then head over to Dolphin Beach at 6 p.m. for entertainment by The Hacken Boys along with several food trucks. Community events are for residents only, and all residents must present a 2019 recreation photo ID to enter Dolphin Beach. Fireworks begin at 9 p.m.

runners. AIM Human Performance, 2218 Tackett’s Mill Drive, Woodbridge. Free.

Jason Masi. Harris Pavilion, 9201 Center St., Manassas. Tackett’s Mill Farmers Market: 2:306:30 p.m. Vendors from across Northern Virginia. Tackett’s Mill Farmers Market, 2231 Tackett’s Mill Drive, Lake Ridge.

Sunday, June 30

Prince William Community Band and Ice Cream Social: 3-4:30 p.m. Come for the concert and afterward have free ice cream. Harris Pavilion, 9201 Center St., Manassas. Free. Stars and Stripes Concert, Car Show and Children’s Parade: 2-6 p.m. Haymarket Town Hall, 14600 Washington St., Haymarket. Gainesville Farmers Market: 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Local produce, baked goods, live music, cooking demonstrations, and more. Gainesville Farmers Market, 13710 Milestone Court, Gainesville.

Monday, July 1

Tai Chi: 5 p.m. For adults. To participate you must fill out a Release of Liability form at the information desk. Chinn Park Regional Library, 13065 Chinn Park Drive, Woodbridge. Free. English Conversation: 6 p.m. For adults. Speakers of all languages are welcome. Bull Run Regional Library, 8051 Ashton Ave., Manassas. Free.

Tuesday, July 2

Acoustic Tuesday: 7-8:30 p.m. Featuring

Still celebrating…

Dumfries: Dumfries will hold an Independence Day celebration from 7:30-10:30 p.m. on Saturday, July 6, at Cecil W. Garrison Park, 11749 Main St., Dumfries. There will be free hotdogs, freeze pops, drinks and entertainment. The fireworks display will begin around 9-9:30 p.m. The event is sponsored by Potomac Landfill and Premier Automotive. Reach Aileen Streng at aileenstreng@gmail.com

Ongoing Events

Bridging Cultures: The Latino Community in Manassas. On display until Sept. 15. The exhibit will feature music, food, holiday traditions and other subjects important to the local community. Manassas Museum, 9027 Center St., Manassas. Free. War Dogs: Never Above You, Never Below You, Always Beside You Exhibit: On display until September 2019. Exploring the loyalty, bravery, and sacrifices made by the warfighters’ best friend. National Museum of the Marine Corps, 18900 Jefferson Davis Highway, Triangle. Free. Superpower Dogs: Family-friendly film will show daily at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. until Sept. 30. Experience the life-saving superpowers and extraordinary bravery of some of the world’s most amazing dogs. True story narrated by Chris Evans. National Museum of the Marine Corps, Medal of Honor Theater, 18900 Jefferson Davis Highway, Triangle. $6 per person.


12

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

The Readers’ Choice Awards contest is underway. It’s time to vote for your favorite local businesses and people to vie for their chance to be awarded The Prince William Times Readers’ Choice Award. Your recommendations matter in The Readers’ Choice Awards. Nominate your favorite places, personalities, businesses and organizations in more than 100 categories and help them rise to the top of the ballot. Now through June 19: Vote for your favorites. You can mail the ballots to us, drop them by our office (Fauquier Times 41 Culpeper Street, Warrenton, VA 20186) or vote online at www. PrinceWilliamTimes.com. At the end of the nomination period, the businesses and people with the most nominations will win in each of their categories. Only one business in each category will be named Readers’ Choice. The Prince William Times Readers’ Choice Awards are decided solely on your votes. We give the power to the fans. Now it’s your turn to tell us who is your choice in Prince William County. We will announce the winners in each category in our paper and online on July 24. barreloak.com

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Best restaurant____________________________

Best bartender____________________________

Best sports bar____________________________

Best BBQ_________________________________

Best steakhouse___________________________

Best breakfast_____________________________

Best sushi restaurant_______________________

Best brunch_______________________________

Best vegetarian menu______________________

Best burger_______________________________

Best wait staff______________________________

Best chef_________________________________

Best winery_______________________________

Best coffee venue__________________________

Best wine store____________________________

Best date restaurant________________________ www.1gateau.com 12 Culpeper St, Warrenton VA

540.347.9188

Best dessert______________________________ Best diner_________________________________

Services

Best accountant___________________________

Best farmers market________________________

Best auto repair___________________________

Best french fries___________________________

Best bank_________________________________

Best food truck____________________________

Best barber_______________________________

Best happy hour___________________________

Best birthday party venue___________________

Best ice cream shop________________________ Best body piercing/tattoo shop______________

Warrenton Dental Care Ryan M. Shearer, D.D.D. William C. Walther, D.D.S.

540.347.2233 381 Stuyvesant St. Ste 3 Warrenton, VA 20186

Best Italian restaurant______________________

Best car wash______________________________

Best kid-friendly restaurant_________________

Best carpets/flooring_______________________

Best local brewery_________________________

Best caterer_______________________________

Best lunch deal____________________________

Best cellphone provider___________________

Best Mexican restaurant____________________

Best ceramic tiler__________________________

T&J Ceramic Tile, Inc.

LICENSED & INSURED • FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED

Free Estimates • Installation & Repair T&J Ceramic Tile, Inc. • ResidentialL& Commercial ICENSED & INSURED • FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED • New Homes or Remodel Work Free Estimates • Installation & Repair LICENSED & INSURED • F AMILY OWNED & OPERATED • Residential & Commercial New Homes or Remodel Work Free •Estimates (540)439-0407 • Fax Tim (540)439-8991 • Installation & Repair Mullins tandjceramictile@comcast.net (540)439-0407 • Fax (540)439-8991 • Residential & Commercial tandjceramictile@comcast.net www.tandjceramictile.com www.tandjceramictile.com • New Homes or Remodel Work

T&J Ceramic Tile, Inc. Tim Mullins Tim Mullins

(540)439-0407 • Fax (540)439-8991

(540)341-1828 285 W SHIRLEY AVE WARRENTON, VA DEVINELINETATTOO@YAHOO.COM DEVINELINETATTOO.COM


13

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

Services cont.

Best tree service___________________________ Best vet __________________________________

Best child care___________________________

Best wedding venue_______________________

Best chiropractor_________________________ Best community college___________________ Best contractor__________________________

Arts and Entertainment

Best local band____________________________

Best dentist_____________________________

Best local photographer____________________

Best dry cleaners_________________________

Best local museum_________________________

Best electrician__________________________

Best music lessons_________________________

Best eye doctor__________________________

Best park/outdoor adventure_______________

Best family practice_______________________

Best performing arts center_________________

Best financial advisor_____________________

Best summer camp________________________

Best gardening/nursery __________________

Best live music venue ______________________

Best gym/fitness club_____________________ Best gymnastics center___________________

Retail

Best hair salon___________________________

Best antiques______________________________

Best handyman__________________________

SPECIALIZING IN HARDSCAPE INSTALLATIONS

540.937.3827 703.980.7722 INFO@GROUNDEFFX.COM www.GroundEffx.com

For A Dancer, Inc Celebrating 20 years in Fauquier County

Best car dealership (new)___________________

Best home improvement store_____________ Best HVAC_______________________________ Best insurance agent______________________ Best landscaper__________________________

Best car dealership (used)___________________ Best consignment/vintage clothing__________ Best florist________________________________ Best furniture store_________________________

Best lawyer______________________________

Best international foods market____________

Best lodging/B&B________________________ Best medical center_______________________ Best nail salon____________________________ Best painter______________________________ Best pet groomer________________________ Best pet motel/kennel_____________________ Best pet store____________________________

Best pharmacy____________________________ Best plumber_____________________________ Best real estate agent_____________________ Best roofer_______________________________ Best senior care facility_____________________ Best towing_______________________________

Teaching dance for over 20 years.

Best kids’ clothing store___________________ Best men’s clothing store___________________ Best shoe store____________________________ Best sporting goods store___________________

Public Space

Best local blogger_________________________ Best local Facebook page__________________

Best riding lessons facility_________________

11084 Marsh Road Unit E Bealeton, VA 22701 foradancerinc@comcast.net www.foradancerinc.com

Best grocery store_________________________

Best unique gifts store______________________

Best pediatrician_________________________

540-808-3730

Best jewelry store__________________________

Best women’s clothing store________________

Best dog walker__________________________

Best local Instagram presence_______________ Best local website__________________________ Best local nonprofit________________________

WHO CAN SOLVE YOUR CLEANUP NEEDS? ROOFING CONTRACTORS INC.

(571) 292-1403 www.HandymanCans.com

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Best local artist_____________________________

Best doctor______________________________

Dumpster Rentals & Junk Removal

Tree Removal, Excavation, Clearing, Demo, Horse Arenas, Fencing, Driveways and Landscaping No job too big or too small

Best golf course/club_______________________

Best dance studio________________________

JBS Excavating & Clearing LLC FREE ESTIMATES

540-349-ROOF (7663) www.PeakRoofingContractors.com 2018 Winner of Best Roofer Fauquier Times Readers’ Choice

385 W. Shirley Ave. Waterloo Station Warrenton, Virginia

540-347-0022 540-347-0023

Brian’s Tree Service

Licensed Fully Insured Free Estimate

540.222.5606 540.937.4742


14

THE LIBRARY PAGE WWW.FAUQUIER.COM

Fauquier Times | June 26, 2019

‘That’s one small step for man...’ Going to the moon with your library card by Jean L. Ross

Contributing Writer

Travel is big in July. We Americans are on the move in the summer. Whether we’re traveling for vacations or relocating, lots of miles are traversed. However, 50 years ago this month, several men had to travel a lot farther than any of us to get to their destination: the moon. Apollo 11 landed two men on the moon on July 20, 1969. Some of us were watching it on TV, and some of us were not born yet, but we all know it was a historic mile-

WHAT’S HOT Summer sizzles in NoVA, and there are several hot titles in demand and very appropriate to the season. Many of those will make wonderful beach reads, and most are by familiar authors: “Labyrinth” by Catherine Coulter: the 23rd entry in her FBI thriller series“One Good Deed” by David Baldacci: the ever-popular Virginian’s latest, coming soon

stone in our country’s history. If you didn’t get to see it “live,” take a look at our digital library and find Access Video on Demand. Original NASA footage, PBS special programs, and lots of other fun things to watch can be found there for free, non-commercial viewing with just your library card. If print is a preference, check out the brand-new book “One Giant Leap: The Impossible Mission That Flew Us to the Moon,” by Charles Fishman. Also new, and a title that looks at where we are now, is “Moon Rush: The New Space

THE LATEST NEWS FROM AND ABOUT THE FAUQUIER COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY

Race,” by Leonard David. There are many other books and videos in our collections about this historic moment. You can find both general histories of space exploration and individual biographies of the astronauts. If you prefer fiction about going to space, NoveList Plus (www.pwcgov.org/ library, “Digital Library”), will help you find titles of interest. As you stargaze on a clear summer night this month, keep in mind you can learn much more about the new frontier of space with just your library card.

“Mrs. Everything” by Jennifer Weiner: another story of young women and family dynamics from this popular writer “Contraband” by Stuart Woods: perennial favorite Woods is back with another suspenseful novel “Summer Guests” by by Mary Alice Monroe: this popular novelist is fond of depicting nature and the environment in her novels “City of Girls” by Elizabeth Gilbert: best known for “Eat, Pray, Love,” Gilbert has written several novels, and this story of 1940s New York City is certain to appeal to her readers

While not as well known, the novels and nonfiction listed below will enliven your summer and provide that wonderful readability that a summer book requires. Check out any of these interesting reads: “Surfside Sisters” by Nancy Thayer “The Summer of Sunshine and Margot” by Susan Mallery “Love Thy Neighbor: A Muslim Doctor’s Struggle for Home in Rural America” by Ayaz Virji “The Escape Room” by Megan Goldin “Ask Again, Yes” by Mary Beth Keane “The Guest Book” by Sarah Blake “Summer of ’69” by Elin Hilderbrand “Songs of America: Patriotism, Protest and the Music That Made a Nation” by Jon Meacham “Never Have I Ever” by Joshilyn Jackson

2019 JULY EXPLORE HIGHLIGHTS Butterfly Rick A funny, frenetic performance demonstrating the beauty of butterflies, the mystery of their camouflage, and the trickery of their disguises. Plus… live butterflies! Designed for first-graders and up. Monday, July 8 through Thursday, July 11. On Monday: 10:30 a.m. at Independent Hill, 2 p.m. at HaymarketGainesville. On Tuesday: 10:30 a.m. at Dale City, 2 p.m. at Nokesville, 6:30 p.m. at Potomac. On Wednesday: 11 a.m. at Dumfries, 2:30 p.m. at Central. On Thursday, 10:30 a.m. at Lake Ridge, 2 p.m. at Chinn Park. Hampstead Stage Company: Stories in the Stars Soar through the stars in this collection of Greek myths! Travel the night sky and delight in learning stories of the wind, seasons, sun, and moon. Look up every once in a while! Ages 3 and up with caregiver. Monday, July 29 and Tuesday, July 30. On Monday: 10:30 a.m. at Haymarket-Gainesville, 3 p.m. at Central and 6:30 p.m. at Potomac. On Tuesday: 10:30 a.m. at Bull Run and 2 p.m. at Montclair. Reptiles Alive Meet reptiles in a wildly exciting and interactive show that introduces awesome (and slithering!) reptiles. You might have a close encounter with lizards, tortoises, or a giant python as you learn about these amazing creatures and what it’s like living in their world. All ages with caregiver. Tuesday, July 16 and Thursday, July 25. On July 16: 10:30 a.m., 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. at Chinn Park. On July 25: 10:30 a.m. at Bull Run. Ident-a-Child Get a free photo ID of your child from the Prince William County Sheriff’s Office. All ages with parent. Monday, July 1: 10:30 a.m. at Dale City. Tuesday, July 9: 10:30 a.m. at Lake Ridge. Tuesday, July 16: 10:30 a.m. at Dumfries. Tuesday, July 23: 10:30 a.m. at Chinn Park. Critters and Conservation Have you ever seen a green aracari toucan? Or do you know how a sugar glider flies? See these and other awesome animals, up close and personal, and meet one after the show! Ages 3 and up with caregiver. Wednesday, July 24: 2 p.m., Montclair. Young Fresh Chefs Come cook (and eat!) with us: We’ll learn how to make delicious foods, like Coney Island hot dogs and snow cones, fruity desserts, brunch favorites, and quesadillas and queso! Multiple dates and locations. Grades six through 12. On Wednesdays in July. Wednesday, July 10: 2 p.m. at Chinn Park and 6:30 p.m. at Potomac. Wednesday, July 17: 2 p.m. at Bull Run. Wednesday, July 31: 2 p.m. at Chinn Park. Old Bridge Chamber Orchestra Enjoy a lively introduction to the orchestra in this engaging combination of storytelling with small orchestra performances. Ages 3 and up with caregiver. PWC Police Read-Along Meet your friendly neighborhood police in a “readalong” especially for you. Enjoy stories read by your friends in blue, along with songs and activities from your librarian storytellers. Multiple dates and locations. Ages 2 to 6 with caregiver. Permission to Be Bold: Author Talk Join leadership coach and author Barbara Gustavson for this workshop based on strategies from her new book, “Permission to Be Bold: A Guide to Loving Yourself, Living Fully, and Leaving Your Mark on the World.” Women want to thrive and take action on personal goals but often feel they don’t have the time and energy while caring for everyone else. Connect with others, learn personal growth tips, and create a self-care plan and take-home project. Adults. Buffalo Soldiers By the end of the Civil War, nearly 200,000 black soldiers were serving in the Federal Army. After the war, many decided not to return to a life of sharecropping and racial oppression, instead volunteering to battle outlaws and Indian raiders along the western frontier. This program uses dazzling reenactments and the expertise of military historians to tell the multifaceted story of the Buffalo Soldiers, a name given to black troops by their Native American adversaries.


15

Prince William Times | June 26, 2019

REAL ESTATE WWW.PRINCEWILLIAMTIMES.COM

Unique home in the heart of Warrenton This lovely Victorian home is on Culpeper Street, in the heart of Warrenton. Now a single-family home, this property was once apartments. It could still be turned into apartments or used as a single-family home. The home features five fireplaces, three kitchens and six bedrooms. There are hardwood floors throughout, custom woodwork and front porch with main door to hallway or two double doors to living room. There is also a large dining room with custom-built china cabinets from Clore furniture, which can be bought separately. This home, at 86 Culpeper St., in Warrenton, is listed by Brenda Rich with Century 21 New Millennium in Gainesville. Brenda Rich Century 21 New Millennium 540-270-1659

Ask the Arborist

Todd Hagadone Jr. I.S.A. Certified Arborist Buried Root Collars

We are pledged to the letter and spirit of Virginia’s policy for the achievement of equal housing opportunity throughout the Commonwealth. We encourage and support advertising and marketing programs in which there are no barriers to obtaining housing because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, age, familial status, or national origin. All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Virginia and federal fair housing laws, which make it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, national origin, or elderliness, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. For more information or to file a housing complaint, call the Virginia Fair Housing office at 804-367-8530 or toll-free at 888-551-3247. For the hearing impaired, call 804-367-9753. EMAIL: fairhousing@dpor.virginia.gov WEBSITE: dpor.virginia.gov/fairhousing

CONGRATULATIONS. DECIDED December is aYOU’VE great time TO SELL YOUR HOME; NOW WHAT? to sell!

#1- National Association of Realtors stats show staged homes sell for more money and in much less than non staged homes. #2- Do you do it alone or hire a pro? Mistakes can cost you in the end. #3- The Natalie and Curt Team professionally stage every listing we sell.

CALL US FOR A FREE CONSULTATION IMPROVING Less Competition Serious ON Buyers YOUR CHANCES TO SELLatYOUR HOME! Homes Show Beautifully the Holidays Call us today Creating Clients to get started for Life. NatalieandCurt.com NatalieandCurt.com info@NatalieandCurt.com 703-200-4703 Main Office 571-261-1400 info@NatalieandCurt.com 7526 Limestone Drive, Gainesville 703-200-4703 Main Office 571-261-1400

All trees, even young ones, should exhibit a distinct, visible flare where the stem (trunk) joins the root system. If this flare is covered by soil or mulch, then disease, girdling roots and insect infestations are more likely to occur. How often have you seen a “volcano” of mulch around a tree stem, totally obscuring the root flare? If the root flare is buried, disorders will develop. The interruption of nutrient and water flow from the roots to the branches will lead to stunted growth and eventually the crown’s decline. Once the crown is affected, remedial treatments may be unsuccessful in keeping the tree alive. So, inspecting this critical region for disorders is important. Excavation of the buried root collar is a priority. This is one of the most common problems seen in landscapes every day. If you have any questions from this article or related issues pleases contact us or visit our website to find out about all of the services we offer. You can also call us to schedule an appointment for a complimentary consultation at (540) 364-2401.

7526 Limestone Drive, Gainesville

www.bartlett.com


16

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

OBITUARIES Stanislawa Dawidow Stanislawa Dawidow, 83, of Gainesville, passed away peacefully, surrounded by her loving family, on Wednesday, June 19, 2019 in Fairfax. She had retired as a dentist and had built God’s Church in Christ alongside her husband Boleslaw Dawidow in her native Poland. In her last years she had attended Church on the Rock where her ministry was intercessory prayer. Among her survivors are her daughters Elizabeth Ait and her husband Robert and Yolanta Marr and her husband Royal; grandchildren Desiree Clark and her husband Jeremy, Emily Marr, Austin Marr and his wife Rachel and Anna Snipes and her husband Matthew; great grandchildren Jacob, Amelia, Jubilee, Olivia, Marisa and Elijah and her siblings, Edward Rapanowicz and his wife Ala, Ludmila Rapanowicz-Sosulska and her husband Kazimierz and Elzbieta Rapanowicz. She was predeceased by her husband Boleslaw Dawidow. The family will receive friends from 10:00 to 11:00 a.m. on Friday, June 28, 2019, at Pierce Funeral Home where a service will be held at 11:00. Interment will follow at Stonewall Memory Gardens.

Alvin Ray Fishback

Mattie Rankin Heddings

Alvin Ray Fishback, 72, of Delaplane, died June 18, 2019, in Fauquier Hospital. The family will receive friends from 1 to 2 p.m. Sunday June 23, when the service will begin at Royston Funeral Home in Marshall. Interment will follow at Leeds Cemetery.

Mattie Rankin Heddings, 93, of Catlett, passed away on June 18, 2019. The funeral will take place at 11 a.m. Saturday, June 22, at the Midland Church of the Brethren, with interment in the church cemetery.

Nancy Jean Dean

Robert Lee Walker, 85, of Warrenton, Virginia, passed June 24, Nancy Jean Dean, 72, of Catlett, 2019. passed away peacefully on Sunday, June 16, 2019. Funeral services are incomplete at A graveside service was held at 11 this time. a.m. Monday, June 24, at the Midland Cemetery. Online condolences can be given at www.joynesfuneralhome.com

Tonya Nicole Bland

David Scott Vice David Scott Vice, 59, of Ashburn, VA passed away unexpectedly on Saturday, June 22, 2019 in Fairfax. Since 2016 Dave had been serving as the Executive Director of the Northern Virginia Criminal Justice Training Academy in Ashburn, VA. He dedicated his career to law enforcement and law enforcement training. Dave retired in 2008 as a Captain with the Fairfax County Police Department where he served with distinction for 25 years. He held leadership positions with the Fairfax County Criminal Justice Academy as well as the Rappahannock Criminal Justice Academy before being named the Director at NVCJTA. Dave enjoyed golf, woodworking and the beach. He cherished the time spent with family and friends and is remembered for his integrity, devotion and fun loving spirit. Among his survivors are his wife of 37 years, Marsha Vice, children Monica Parsons and her husband Linwood and Joshua Vice and his wife Lauren; his grandchildren Noah, Samuel and Amy Parsons; his mother, Sally Vice of Hendersonville, NC and two brothers John C. Vice of Centreville, VA and Stephen C. Vice of Annapolis, MD. The family will receive friends from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. on Thursday June 27 at Pierce Funeral Home. A Mass of Christian Burial will be held on Friday, June 28 at 10:00 am at All Saints Catholic Church in Manassas, VA. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to C.O.P.S. (Concerns of Police Survivors) at concernsforpolicesurvivors.org.

Barbara Jean Mosimann August 20, 1932- June 16, 2019 Wife, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, sister, aunt, lover of Christ and His Catholic Church -- this was Barbara Jean Mosimann. Jean was born in Johnstown, PA where she was raised with her five siblings, attending the local Slovak parish. Her maternal grandmother played an instrumental role in Jean’s faith development -- one of her earliest memories is of her ’Bubba’ praying the rosary constantly in her native Slovak tongue. Jean was a devoted wife, married to her wonderful husband Jim for almost 66 years. Jean was the mother of 8 children, grandmother of 23 and great-grandmother of 15, who was committed to creating a happy childhood for her children and happy memories for all her family. From her youth, Jean was steadfast in her faith -- her faith in Jesus Christ, through the Catholic Church. She never shied away from sharing this faith -- with her family, friends, anyone and everyone she met. Jean had a rich prayer life, guided by the Holy Spirit, and through this Holy Spirit she was able to live her faith actively. She believed and taught her family that God is real and present in every aspect of their lives -- and to expect miracles, healing, prophesy, and God’s word and direction. Jean carried the concerns, joys, and sufferings of her family and others deeply in her heart. She brought these to her Lord in constant prayer, up until the moment of her death. She loved unconditionally, reveled in joys, shared in sorrows, and always prayed. Jean showed a selfless love in her devotion to the needs of her husband and children, following the model of our heavenly mother, Mary. She was blessed with the ability to make God real and present to those around her and knew that she was deeply loved by Him. She is survived by her husband Jim, her brother Joseph Kokoruda, her children -- Theresa, Mary, Michelle, Thomas, Kateri, Joseph, John, and Madeleine -- 23 grandchildren, and 15 great-grandchildren. Jean was pre-deceased by her sisters, Mary-Lou, Patricia, Dorothy, and by her brother Robert. All of us, gazing with un-veiled face on the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory, as from the Lord who is the Spirit. 2 Corinthians 3:18

Robert Lee Walker

Ruth Thompson Barros

Ruth Thompson Barros, 89, of CulTonya Nicole Bland, 40, of Mar- peper, Virginia, passed June 18, 2019. shall, Virginia, passed June 18, 2019. Funeral services will be held on Funeral services will be held on Fri- Wednesday, June 26, 2019, 11:00 am, day, June 28, 2019, 11:00 am, at First at Providence Baptist Church, 7498 Baptist Church, 4195 Loudoun Ave., Sumerduck Road, Remington, Virginia, 22734. The Plains, Virginia, 20198. Online condolences can be given at Online condolences can be given at www.joynesfuneralhome.com www.joynesfuneralhome.com

Heidi Nicole DiMarzio Heidi Nicole DiMarzio, 40, passed away peacefully on Thursday, June 20, at her Gainesville home. She enjoyed cooking, baking and traveling with her husband. She cherished time spent with family. She is survived by her husband, Kevin Urciolo, her parents, Vincent and Candice DiMarzio, her grandfather Jack Michaux and his wife Carolyn, her mother-in-law Deborah Urciolo, her sister Dana Franklin and her husband Nathan and she was a wonderful aunt to Jayden and Alexander. She was predeceased by her grandparents, Helen Cole Michaux and Domenico and Frances DiMarzio. The family will receive friends from 5:00 pm to 9:00 pm Sunday, June 23, 2019 at Pierce Funeral Home. A Service will be held at 11:00 am on Monday at the funeral home with interment to follow at Stonewall Memory Gardens. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to Advocacy for Neuroacanthocytosis Patients, check payable to The Anglo-American Charity Foundation. If you would like to mail your donation, please do so to: Candi DiMarzio, 9004 Robson Drive, Manassas, VA 20110.

G. Donald Gartrell, Jr. G. Donald Gartrell, Jr. passed away peacefully on June 17, 2019 at the age of 97. Born in Leesburg, VA of G. Donald “Pappy” Gartrell and Dixie Gray Gartrell of Middleburg, VA. Don had lived in Middleburg, VA for virtually his entire life. He is survived by his bride of 77 years, Eugenia “Genie” Lowe, who he met at his 16th birthday party, and who was with him when he passed. He is also survived by his two sons; G. Donald Gartrell, III and his bride, Ginny Lynn and David Lowe Gartrell; two grandsons, David Lowe Gartrell, Jr, and Jon Michael Gartrell, and his bride, Kristen; and two great-grandchildren, Jackson and Grayson. Both Don & Genie loved playing tennis and traveling to Myrtle Beach, SC where they had spent their honeymoon. They were inseparable until June 17 of this year and will be again. Don was an active member of his community. He was 60+ year Master Mason of Cochran Lodge, No. 271 in the Plains, VA and served in various roles in his lodge including Past Master, and Deputy District Grand Master. A grave-side service will be held at Ivy Hill Cemetery in Upperville, VA at 11:00 am on Saturday, June 29, 2019. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Down Syndrome Association of Northern Virginia, 10467 White Granite Drive, Suite 320, Oakton, VA 33124.


17

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

PRINCE WILLIAM

CL A SSIFIEDS ADVERTISING DEADLINES: Business Directory: Thursday at noon, All other Classified ads: Monday at 3 p.m. To place your ad, Call: 540-351-1664, Toll Free: 888-351-1660, Fax: 540-349-8676, Email: classifieds@fauquier.com 022

Rentals — Houses

Goldvein, spacious 2BR, 2BA house, carport, lakeview home, lg private estate. For details. 540-273-6835 Rentals —

080 Office

New Baltimore Business Center. 1500 SF suite, 2nd flr, all utils incl, 1 yr lease req´d, 1/mo sec dep. 703-408-2525 Farm

220 Equipment John Deere 4400 HST tractor w/420 loader, 4WD, 35-HP diesel engine. (PTO approx: 28.5 hp). Approx 726 hours on unit. AG tires. $15,500 OBO https:// bit.ly/2CyEso7

Furniture/

228 Appliances Cabinet - pine with slide out cutting board. Shelves inside below. $30 or make offer. Call 540-533-9040. Contemporary Sofa 250.00 540 937-4513 Dining Room table with leaf , 6 Chairs and Hutch that lights up 350.00 540 937-4513 Glass Top Kitchen table with 4 chairs 200.00 540 937-4513 Metal Lawn Chairs 6 @ 10.00 each 540 937-4513 Oak Curio Cabinet, excel cond, glass shelves. $200. Email to sadexter@me.com No deliveries. White Wicker Rocking Chair 150.00 540 937-4513 White Wicker Rocking Chair 125.00 540 937-4513

Rentals — Houses New Baltimore near Vint Hill Rd, 3BR, 2.5BA, new kit & master BA, finished bsmt, lg. LR, wooded lot. With separate in-law suite w/2 full BA. Call for more info!! 540-229-9328

248

Lawn/Garden Equipment

2017 John Deere D105 42-inch Lawn Mower. 19 hrs $1,300. Located in The Plains. 570-270-0599

256

Miscellaneous For Sale

45 RPM record collection, orginial 50´s/ 60´s. Approx 3000. Va r i o u s p r i c e s . 571-344-4300 45 RPM records (lots of 50) 0.50-$1.00 ea, comics $2+ ea, beanies $2+ ea, pez $1+ ea, 571-344-4300 Beatles memorbiliapicture, black & white (60´s), albums, 45´s & magazines.571-3444300 Elvis memorabilia, Yankee memorabilia, Celtics Merch, Hot Wheels/Matchbox cars 571-344-4300 Frank Sinatra, JFK, MIchael Jackson, Redskins, & sports books & mags. Michael Jordon mini chanpionship basketballs + magazines. 571-344-4300

Auctions

TREE WORK 540-395-4814; 540-364-2682 Furniture/

228 Appliances Broyhill Early Am DR Set,tbl, 6 Chairs, China Cab. All in very good condition. $500 for all. Email to sadexter@ me.com No deliveries.

FREE Aquarium 10 gal w/hood & Accessories. 540-272-0221 Handspun specialty, sparkle, Angora, & Alpaca yarn. Beautiful, incredibly soft & warm! www.etsy.com/shop/ taiscefiberandyarn Olympic merch $2+ ea, Sports cards $3+, playing cards $3+ ea, Disney Merch $3+ ea, 571-344-4300 Record albums $5+ ea, Sports Illustrated mags incld swimsuit $5+ ea, Old books $7+ ea, Snoppy merch $1+ ea, 571-344-4300 Miscellaneous

261 Wanted

WANTED FREON R12 We pay CA$H.

R12 R500 R11. Convenient. Certified professionals. refrigerantfinders. com 312-291-9169

Business

350 Services

GO WITH THE BEST!!! Brian´s Tree Service. LICENSED, INSURED, FREE ESTIMATES. Tree removal, trimming, deadwooding, stump removal, lot clearing. Senior discounts 540-937-4742 or 540-222-5606 G R AV E L : A L L PROJECTS. Topsoil; fill dirt; mulch. No job too small.540-8254150; 540-219-7200 GUTTERS, FREE ESTIMATES.Jack´s Seamless Gutters. 703-339-6676 or 540-373-6644. We keep our minds in the gutter. JBS Excavation & Clearing, Free estimates, tree removal, horse arena, d r i v e w a y s & landscaping. No job too big or too small. 703-582-0439 JENKINS EXCAVATING & LOGGING. Free Estimates, Class A Contractor, Commercial, Residential. Demolition, land clearing, site prep, roads, drives. 540-661-0116

Musical

Ads Work Call a Rep Today Call 888-351-1660

224 Firewood

YARD CLEAN UP

Miscellaneous

256 For Sale

Ellis Warehouse & Mini Storage 11524 Balls Fard Road Manassas, VA 20109 Date of Auction: June 28, 2019 10:00 AM Unit # Name F-41 Jose Bautista A-25; A-32; F-48 Terry Dudley B-32 John Arvanitis F-6 Tanya Nicholson F-21 John Richards C-50; F-13 Lito Fabricio

262 Instruments P-35 Roland Digital Piano. New, barely used digital piano with bench and sheet mus i c . $ 7 0 0 , 571-455-3272

273 Pets

ABLE PET GROOMING 540-341-7888 FREE Pit Bull blue brindle spay female to good home only. Excellent w/kids & family. 412-953-5503

Prince William SPCA

ADOPT VOLUNTEER DONATE ADVOCATE www.pwspca. org Pay for your home over 30 YEARS. Find it in about 30 MINUTES Times Classified 347-4222

N U T T E R S PA I N T I N G & SERVICES Call Erik, 540-522-3289 S e a l C o a t i n g Driveways. Call for our seasonal special. CBS Sealcoating. Why pave it?? Just S a v e I t ! ! 540-775-9228

375

Home Healthcare

CAREGIVER

Private duty for Elderly w/ disabilities Their home & all daily needs. ● Run errands ● Personal care ● Light Housekeeping ● Cooking Excellent refs. Live in or Out. Call Naana 630-200-9592

376

Home Improvement

Affordable Roofing with Terry´s Handyman Services, LLC. Licensed & Insured. Commercial & residential. Senior discounts. 540-937-7476

Announcements Did you know... Prince William Public Library challenges you to...

READ 100 BOOKS BEFORE COLLEGE

Take the Challenge! Read 100 books before you graduate from high school. For students in grades 9–12. To learn about prizes & to sign up go to: pwcgov.org/library

Home

376 Improvement

630 Campers/RVs

Design/build services. New, renovations, additions for residential. Commercial renovations & tenant uplifting. Licensed & i n s u r e d . 540-428-3050 www. s o u t h s t a r construction.com Power Washing, Go from Green to Clean!!540-642-2349, 703-987-5096. Licensed & Insured! Remodels; New Homes; Windows; Painting; Garages; B a t h r o o m s ; Kitchens; Decks;. Class A. Lic & insured. GMC Enterprises of VA, LLC. 540-222-3385

2009 Nash 27’ Northwood camper. Excel cond, expandable flr, queen, awning, full kit, All the amenities. $9500 OBO Text for pictures. 540-905-1159

Trucks/

675 Pickups

´01 Toyota Tacoma Pre Runner, 4 Cyl, 140K mls, great cond, white loaded, runs great. $6950. 703-424-6322 Haymarket.

680 Vans/Buses

670

Trailers

1998 Cotner 2 horse bumper pull w/ ramp. VA inspection. 5 new tires, refurbished ramp. $4,800 540-825-8815 leave message. 2017 Chevy Volt, excel cond. 26K mls. Smooth, quiet ride. $19,500, low end of the Kelly Blue Book. Amissville. 540-522-9216

2003 Dodge Custom 1500 Van. 45,731 miles. Gently used. Very good cond. Aski n g $ 6 , 7 5 0 . 540-439-4005

Classified Ads Work Call 347-4222

385 Lawn/Garden GORMANS TREE AND LANDSCAPING SERVICES. Seasonal Clean up. Snow removal, grinding, mowing, take downs. Free estimates. 540-222-4107; 540-825-1000

Landscape des i g n a n d construction specializing in retaining walls, custom patios, walkways, stairs, driveways and more. Ground Effects Landscape Construction, Inc. 540-937-3827; 703-980-7722 Antiques &

600 Classics

1994 XJS Jaguar Convertible, 6 cyl, 94,064 mls, runs good, good cond, One owner, always garaged, $6,900 540-463-5777 This Could be Your Ad! Call 540-347-4222

I n d o o r Ya r d Sale! Sell, Browse, Shop, Get a Bite to Eat! Spaces Available, Too! 39 Alexandria Pike Warrenton Saturday, July 13th. From 8:30 to 12:30 For more information, please call 540-347-5467. Spaces are only $10! Vint Hill area, Rt 605 to 7753 Rogues Rd (RT 602). 6/29 & 30. 8a-2p Inside. Everything goes.

COMMUNITY YARD SALE EVERY SATURDAY

WEATHER PROVIDING GLASCOCK’S GROCERY / NICKS DELI (gravel parking lot)

8294 EAST MAIN ST, MARSHALL SET UP 7 AM UNTIL ?? FREE SET UP !!!! No selling of any fire arms

ALL WE ASK IS THAT YOU LEAVE YOUR SPOT THE WAY YOU FIND IT ALSO STOP IN THE STORE AND GRAB A COLD DRINK OR SOMETHING TO EAT

Estate Sale, Our big red barn! Antiques, gas pumps, ta-

bles, beds, old cars, barn finds!! 5350 Savannah Branch Rd, Bealeton 22712. 6/28, 8a-5p. 504-272-4575

Announcements

Dumfries Announces Community Partner Grant Program May 29, 2019 – The Town of Dumfries is now accepting applications for its inaugural Community Partner Grant Program. Non-profit organizations that provide services to Dumfries residents are encouraged to apply. Grant awards will be made up to $10,000. Applicants will be scored on how services align with the strategic goals of the Town, which are, Public Safety; Economic Vitality; Sustainability & Infrastructure; and, WellManaged Government. The Application form can be found at: http://www.dumfriesva.gov/wpcontent/uploads/Town-of-DumfriesNon-profit-Grant-letter-Form.pdf

Classified ADS WORK! Call Your Rep TODAY! 540-347-4222 or FAX 540-349-8676


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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

Legal Notices Legal Notices

Legal Notices

ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ146125-01-00, 0200;JJ146126-01-00, 02-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re AMAN, JANNA JJ146125-01-00, 02-00; & AMAN, JAMAL JJ146126-01-00, 02-00 The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY/ VISITATION OF AMAN, JANNA JJ146125-01-00, 02-00; & AMAN, JAMAL JJ146126-01-00, 0200; It is ORDERED that the defendant abdallah ranadhan aman appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 07/09/2019; 10:30 AM Abby Cook, Deputy Clerk

BOARD CHAMBER, 1 COUNTY COMPLEX CT PRINCE WILLIAM, VA 22192 PLANNING COMMISSION PUBLIC HEARING JULY 10, 2019 7:00 PM 1.

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ146390-01-00; JJ146391-0100; JJ146392-01-00; JJ146393-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re BROADUS, CHRISTOPHER J; BROADUS, SAHTORRIE JADA MARIE; BROADUS, STEVEN LEE, III; BROADUS, JACALIYONNA K The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF BROADUS, CHRISTOPHER J; BROADUS, SAHTORRIE JADA MARIE; BROADUS, STEVEN LEE, III; BROADUS, JACALIYONNA K; It is ORDERED that the defendant EVANS, JASMINE appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 06/14/2019; 10:30 AM Karina Sandoval, Deputy Clerk

2.

Special Use Permit #SUP2019-00027, Milestone / T-Mobile @ Stonewall Middle School: To allow the installation of a telecommunications facility consisting of a 117-foot-tall tower structure with fenced equipment compound. The site is located at the south-central portion of Stonewall Middle School, adjacent to an existing paved driveway, and approximately 400 feet northeast of the intersection of Lomond Dr. and Urbanna Rd. The site is addressed as 10100 Lomond Dr.; is identified on County maps as GPIN 7697-70-8563 (pt.); is zoned R-4, Suburban Residential; and is designated PL, Public Land, in the Comprehensive Plan. Gainesville Magisterial District

3.

Comprehensive Plan Amendment #CPA2016-00007, Kline Property: To amend both the long range land use map designation and the text language for ±49 acres from CEC, Community Employment Center, to CEC, Community Employment Center, with a Center of Community Overlay. The property is located at the southeast corner of the intersection of Prince William Pkwy. and Liberia Ave., east of the City of Manassas and is identified as County GPINs 7895-23-2666; 7895-23-4912; 7895-33-1607, 7895-32-0193; and 7895-32-7841(pt.); is zoned A-1, Agricultural; is in the Domestic Fowl Overlay District; and is partially located within the Prince William Parkway Highway Corridor Overlay District. (Concurrently being processed with #REZ2016-00021 and #SUP2017-00037) Coles Magisterial District

4.

Rezoning #REZ2016-00021, Kline Property: To rezone ±92.19 acres from A-1, Agricultural, to PBD, Planned Business District, and PMR, Planned Mixed Residential, with associated development waivers/modifications and signage modifications, to develop mixed residential, retail, commercial, office, and recreational/institutional uses. A mixture of multi-family (two-overtwo), single-family attached (townhouse), and single-family detached residential dwellings are being proposed, not to exceed a combined total of 310 units. The subject property is located east of the City of Manassas, southeast of the intersection of Prince William Pkwy. and Liberia Ave., east of Prince William Pkwy., and north of Buckhall Rd. The site is identified on County maps as the following GPINs: 7895-23-2666; 7895-23-4912; 7895-32-0193; 7895-32-7841; and 7895-33-1607. The site is zoned A-1, Agricultural; is currently designated CEC, Community Employment Center, and SRR, Semi-Rural Residential; and is partially located within the Prince William Parkway Highway Corridor Overlay District and the Domestic Fowl Overlay District. (Concurrently being processed with #CPA2016-00007 and #SUP2017-00037.) Coles Magisterial District

5.

Special Use Permit #SUP2017-00037, Kline Property – CVS Pharmacy (Drive-Through): To allow a drive-through facility and signage modifications associated with a pharmacy/retail store. The subject ±2.4-acre site is located southeast of the intersection of Prince William Pkwy. and Liberia Ave.; and is identified on County maps as GPINs 7895-23-2666 (pt.) and 7895-23-4912 (pt.). The property is zoned A-1, Agricultural; is currently designated CEC, Community Employment Center, in the Comprehensive Plan; and is located within the Prince William Parkway Highway Corridor Overlay District and the Domestic Fowl Overlay District. (Concurrently being processed with #CPA2016-00007 and #REZ2016-00021.) Coles Magisterial District

Legal Notices

PUBLIC NOTICE

ABANDONED VESSELS

Notice is hereby given that the following vessels have been abandoned for more than twelve (12) months on the property of EZ Cruz Marina, 16245 Neabsco Road, Woodbridge, VA 22191. 703-670-8111 ● 1987 Wellcraft Santrope 32’ Hull ID# WELC2763A787 ● 1986 SeaRay 26’ Hull ID# SERM5607A686 Reg # VA 4958 BZ ● 1995 Bayliner Avanti 32’ Hull ID # BVKA44EPB595 Reg # VA 5383 BV ● 1985 Boston Whaler Revenge 22’ Hull ID # BWC5C3834485 Reg # NY 3243 FP Application for Watercraft Registration/Title will be made in accordance with Section 29.1733.25 of the Code of Virginia if this watercraft is not claimed and removed within 30 days of first publication of this notice. Please contact the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries with questions.

Public Facility Review #PFR2019-00015, Columbia Gas - First African Episcopal Church: To construct a natural gas regulator station as part of an ongoing Columbia Gas project to install a new gas pipeline. The ± 8,301 sq. ft. facility will be located within an easement on the property of First African Episcopal Church. The site is located ±720 feet north of the intersection of Grant Ave. and Old Dominion Dr.; is addressed as 10405 Grant Ave.; and is identified as GPIN 7795-90-6455 on County Mapper. The site is zoned A-1, Agricultural, and designated SRL, Suburban Residential Low, in the Comprehensive Plan. Coles Magisterial District

Copies of the above files can be viewed in the Planning Ofc. @ 5 County Complex Ct., Ste. 210, PW, VA. Copies of staff reports may be requested after 7/3/19, or you can view reports @ www.pwcgov.org/planning or contact us @ (703) 792-7615 or email us @ planning@pwcgov.org. ACCESSIBILITY TO PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES: The hearings are being held at a public facility believed to be accessible to persons with disabilities. Any person with questions on the accessibility of the facility should contact the Planning Ofc. @ the above address & No., or TDD (703) 792-6295. Persons needing interpreter services for the deaf must notify the Clerk no later than 7/3/19.

ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ146261-01-00; JJ146262-0100; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re SOLACHE, KEVIN LOPEZ; SOLACHE, EDWIN LOPEZ The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF SOLACHE, KEVIN LOPEZ; SOLACHE, EDWIN LOPEZ; It is ORDERED that the defendant RUBIN HERNANDEZ appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/06/2019; 10:30 AM Theresa Robinson, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ146247-01-00;JJ146248-0100; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re VARGAS, A L A M A Z A , J O A N A F ; VA R G A S ALAMANZA, HANNA GUADALU The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF VARGAS, A L A M A Z A , J O A N A F ; VA R G A S ALAMANZA, HANNA GUADALU; It is ORDERED that the defendant LUIS EDUARDO appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/02/2019; 10:30 AM Susan Seitz, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ146249-01-00; JJ146224-0100; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re MACHUCA, BARAHONA, ANDERSON G; BARAHONA, BRANDON BAGNER The object of this suit is to: DERTERMINE CUSTODY OF MACHUCA, BARAHONA, ANDERSON G; BARAHONA, BRANDON BAGNER; It is ORDERED that the defendant HENRY G MACHUCA GUERRERO appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 07/30/2019; 10:30 AM Keshara Luster, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ146270-01-00; JJ146274-0100; JJ146275-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re ESCOBAR AQUICE, KIARA, JJ14627001-00, ESCOBAR AQUICE, JJ14627401-00, FRANCHESKA; EXCOBAR AQUICE, AARON, JJ146275-01-00; The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ESCOBAR AQUICE, KIARA, JJ146270-01-00, ESCOBAR AQUICE, JJ146274-01-00, FRANCHESKA; EXCOBAR AQUICE, AARON, JJ146275-01-00;; It is ORDERED that the defendant JULIZA AQUICE RAMOS appear at the abovenamed Court and protect his or her interests on or before 07/22/2019; 10:30 AM Abby Cook, Deputy Clerk


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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

Legal Notices NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BY THE TOWN COUNCIL OF THE TOWN OF DUMFRIES, VIRGINIA ON July 2, 2019 at 7:00 PM or as soon thereafter as may be heard Located at 17739 Main Street, Suite 200, Dumfries, VA 22026 The Town Council of the Town of Dumfries hereby gives notice of a public hearing regarding the lease of Town owned office space at 17739 Main Street, Dumfries, Virginia 22026. All supporting material is available for public inspection at the Office of the Town Clerk at 17739 Main Street, Suite 200, Dumfries, Virginia 22026 between the hours of 8:30 AM and 5:00 PM; M-F. The public hearing is being held in a public facility believed to be accessible to persons with disabilities. Any person with questions on the accessibility of the facility or needing to discuss accommodation of a disability should contact the Town Clerk at 703-221-3400 or dhobgood@dumfriesva.gov, during normal working hours.

Legal Notices

ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ146319-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re GUZMAN ALVAREZ, JEFRY OSMIN The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF GUZMAN ALVAREZ, JEFRY OSMIN; It is ORDERED that the defendant GUZMAN RAMIREZ, MARLON ANIBAL appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/08/2019; 10:30 AM Karina Sandoval, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices

Run date: June 26, 2019 ORDER OF PUBLICATION

NOTICE ARCHITECTURAL REVIEW BOARD PUBLIC HEARING

CITY OF MANASSAS - CITY HALL SECOND FLOOR CONFERENCE ROOM 9027 CENTER STREET

Tuesday, July 9, 2019 - 7:00 P.M. Notice is hereby given that the Architectural Review Board will conduct a public hearing on the following item(s). All interested parties are encouraged to present their views at this hearing. ARB #2019-19, DEMOLITION OF 9511 LIBERTY STREET To consider a Certificate of Appropriateness to allow the demolition of a contributing structure in the Manassas Historic Overlay District. The property is a single family detached dwelling located on south side of Liberty Street. The property is zoned R-2S, Small Lots, Single-Family Residential and is categorized as a contributing structure. This meeting is being held at 9027 Center Street, in a public facility believed to be accessible to persons with disabilities. Any person with questions on the accessibility of the facility should contact the City Clerk at the above address or by telephone at 703/257-8280. Persons needing interpreter services for the deaf must notify the City Clerk no later than 10:00 a.m. on Friday, July 5, 2019. A copy of the staff report will be available in the Community Development Office and online at www.manassascity.org after 3:00 p.m. on Friday, July 5, 2019. For additional information, contact the Community Development Office at 703/257-8223 or TTY 7-1-1.

Run dates: 6/26/19 & 7/3/19

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ146174-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re MARENCO MANTILLA, JANAN JOSE The object of this suit is to: O B TA I N J O I N T C U S T O D Y O F MARENCO MANTILLA, JANAN JOSE; It is ORDERED that the defendant MARENCO GUEVARA, OSCAR JOSE appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/12/2019; 10:30 AM Karina Sandoval, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ121700-04-01; JJ121701-0401; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re ERMI, ANTHONY CONNOR; ERMI, JOSEPH THOMAS The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ERMI, ANTHONY CONNOR; ERMI, JOSEPH THOMAS; It is ORDERED that the defendant JEFFREY ERMI appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/16/2019; 10:30 AM Keshara Luster, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ146314-01-00; JJ146315-0100; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re STEINBACK, LELAND NATHANIEL; STEINBACK, ELIJAH RAYMOND The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF STEINBACK, LELAND NATHANIEL; STEINBACK, ELIJAH RAYMOND; It is ORDERED that the defendant MARVIN HATHANIEL HAIRSTON appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/02/2019; 10:30 AM Theresa Robinson, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ145926-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re BALLARD, NEVAEH LONDON The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF BALLARD, NEVAEH LONDON; It is ORDERED that the defendant BRITTANY BALLARD appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/19/2019; 10:30 AM Theresa Robinson, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ146164-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re SANTAMARINA CHAPONAN, KEVIN B The object of this suit is to: DETERMINE CUSTODY OF SANTAMARINA CHAPONAN, KEVIN B; It is ORDERED that the defendant JOSE SANTAMARINA DE LA CRUZ appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 07/11/2019; 10:30 AM Susan Seitz, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ146272-01-00; JJ146273-0100; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re HERNANDEZ TOBAR, MANUEL & HERNANDEZ TOBAR, JOSUE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF HERNANDEZ TOBAR, MANUEL & HERNANDEZ TOBAR, JOSUE; It is ORDERED that the defendant MANUEL HERNANDEZ RUBIO appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 07/22/2019; 10:30 AM Abby Cook, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ146163-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re LARA BONILLA, ITZEL GISSELL The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY/FACTUAL FINDINGS UNDER SIJS RE LARA BONILLA, ITZEL GISSELL; It is ORDERED that the defendant FRANCISCO LARA SANTOS appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 07/11/2019; 10:30 AM Susan Seitz, Deputy Clerk


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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION

ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ146129-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re CAMPOS, IRAHETA, ELFIDO The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF CAMPOS, IRAHETA, ELFIDO; It is ORDERED that the defendant ELFIDO CAMPOS GRENADOS appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 07/22/2019; 10:30 AM Abby Cook, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ145746-01-01; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re ACHEAMPONG, AGNEW GERALDINE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ACHEAMPONG, AGNEW GERALDINE; It is ORDERED that the defendant GOINS, HAFZA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/19/2019; 10:30 AM Karina Sandoval, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION

ORDER OF PUBLICATION

ORDER OF PUBLICATION

ORDER OF PUBLICATION

ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ136306-01-01; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re ESQUIVEL RECINOS, ELVIS The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ESQUIVEL RECINOS, ELVIS; It is ORDERED that the defendant ESQUIVEL, MYNOR AUGUSTO appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 07/31/2019; 10:30 AM Karina Sandoval, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ146196-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re THOMAS, RATCLIFF, III The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF THOMAS, RATCLIFF, III; It is ORDERED that the defendant BREONIA MORRIS appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/19/2019; 10:30 AM Keshara Luster, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ138112-03-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re TOOKER, HAYLEE REAGAN The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN JOINT CUSTODY OF TOOKER, HAYLEE REAGAN; It is ORDERED that the defendant TOOKER, JOSEPH MARK appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/12/2019; 10:30 AM Karina Sandoval, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ128222-02-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re HARRIS, ADEN EAMON The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN JOINT CUSTODY OF HARRIS, ADEN EAMON; It is ORDERED that the defendant HARRIS, NESA MICHELLE appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/13/2019; 10:30 AM Karina Sandoval, Deputy Clerk

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ146318-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re DIAZ FLORES, GEMA DARLYN D The object of this suit is to: PETITION FOR CUSTODY OF DIAZ FLORES, GEMA DARLYN D; It is ORDERED that the defendant DIAZ CRUZ, RUDI DONALDO appear at the abovenamed Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/02/2019; 10:30 AM Tina Cha, Deputy Clerk

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ126177-01-02; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re HARRIS, MARIAH The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF HARRIS, MARIAH; It is ORDERED that the defendant FATHER-UNKNOWN appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 07/30/2019; 10:30 AM Karina Sandoval, Deputy Clerk

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ145585-02-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re JONES, JAYCEION ROSHON DWIGHT The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF JONES, JAYCEION ROSHON DWIGHT; It is ORDERED that the defendant UNKNOWN FATHER appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 07/25/2019; 10:30 AM Tina Cha, Deputy Clerk

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ142383-07-00/08-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re ZAENKER, LILLY GRACE SHANNAN The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY ZAENKER, LILLY GRACE SHANNAN; It is ORDERED that the defendant UNKNOWN FATHER appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 07/26/2019; 10:30 AM Tina Cha, Deputy Clerk

Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ146235-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re GUZMAN, ALISON MIKAELA The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF GUZMAN, ALISON MIKAELA; It is ORDERED that the defendant CUEVA-IGLESIAS, ADRIAN ESTEBAN appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 07/22/2019; 10:30 AM Tina Cha, Deputy Clerk


21

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

Employment CUSTOMER SERVICE REP

HIRING

● ● ● ● ● ●

FOREMEN TRUCK DRIVERS PIPE FOREMEN PIPE CREW LABORERS MECHANIC GUARANTEED TIME!!

EXCELLENT PAY AND BENEFITS. Call 540-364-4800

for our fast-paced Warrenton Office. Must be an organized team player, selfmotivated, detailoriented, multitasked individual. PT & FT avail. Email resume to: natalie@ lespinc.com or fax to: 540-347-7280

SHOP FOREMAN STRUCTURAL LAY-OUT FITTER RAIL/ STAIR MECHANIC exp´d, for Steel Fabrication co. Salary based on exp. 401K, health ins, paid vacation, & sick leave. 703-368-1503

CNA´s/PCA´s

Immediate positions for ALL shifts with local agency. HIGHLY COMPETITIVE WAGES! 540-466-1632 for phone interview Monday- Friday

Millimeter-Wave Engineer

Small Charlottesville company is currently accepting resumes for a Millimeter-Wave Engineer. BScEE Preferred. Job involves RF Engineering activities related to the production and testing of 100-1000GHz Transmitters and Receivers. Recent grads are encouraged to apply. Retirement and health benefits provided. EOE. Send resume as pdf to: rfengineer2@gmail.com Classified Ads Work Call 347-4222

Flaggers Full time, to provide traffic control & safety around construction sites. A valid driver license & clean driving record a must. Starting $13/hr & scheduled raises. Company-paid medical & dental premiums.

Please fill out an application at careers.trafficplan.com or come to our office Tuesdays or Thursdays (8am-10am).7855 Progress Ct., Suite 103; Gainesville, VA

CDL DRIVERS

Tread Mill getting dusty? Sell it in the Classifieds and jog all the way to the bank.

FT, local septic co., must have good driving record, able to lift minimum 50 lbs & perform manual labor. Reliable transportation & report to work on time is req´d. Submit resume to amseptic@hotmail.com or contact Sharon at 703-350-1121

We’ll help you place your ad

Small Charlottesville company is currently accepting resumes for a Micro Assembly Technician. Two years Electronics technician degree or equivalent/similar is preferred. Experience working under a microscope with microelectronics if preferred. Retirement and health benefits provided. EOE. Send resume as pdf to: electech2@gmail.com

888-351-1660

Micro Assembly Technician

BUS DRIVERS First Transit in Woodbridge, VA is seeking drivers who hold a CDL with Airbrake and Passenger endorsements OR a valid Virginia CDL Permit. Two years of driving experience preferred.

Competitive Wage

$5,000 Sign-On Bonus* Paid Training Benefits Package includes 401(k), Medical, Dental, Vision Apply Online Today!

apply.firstgroupcareers.com or Call: 703-580-6167 *Conditions Apply Equal Opportunity Employer

YOUR

REAL ESTATE COULD BE HERE! Call 540-351-1664 or email classifieds@fauquier.com to place your ad.

ATTENTION: Great opportunity for Moms, Retirees or anyone needing a little cash!!

Newspaper Carriers

Orlean/Marshall; The Plains/Marshall; other routes available soon The Fauquier Times is currently looking for home delivery carriers in Fauquier County. Great earning potential for one day work. No collections. Requirements are a valid driver´s license, must be available all day on Wednesday, have reliable transportation, and speak good English. Carriers with previous newspaper delivery experience, and good geographical knowledge of the county preferred.

Interested applicants please call our Circulation Department at 540-347-4222 or e-mail us at nkeyser@fauquier.com or apply in person to 41 Culpeper Street, Warrenton, Virginia 20186

GENERAL ASSIGNMENT REPORTER Virginia’s top community newspaper (2018) is looking for an experienced general assignment reporter. Breaking news, public safety, agriculture, environmental issues, local politics and education are all topics that need to be covered in this largely rural -but never boring -- central Virginia county. Looking for a strong fulltime writer with a persistent news focus, to file stories for a weekly print paper and robust website. Best candidate will live or relocate to Fauquier County or nearby. Fulltime salary and benefits. Send resume and cover letter, plus at least ten news clips to: Robin Earl, managing editor, Fauquier Times – rearl@fauquier.com. Call 540-272-1852 with questions.


22

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

BUSINESS SERVICE DIRECTORY Heating and Air Conditioning For all your

Heating and Cooling needs, call on

RC’S A/C SERVICE & REPAIR (540) 349-7832 or (540) 428-9151

Drywall

Excavation

Lawn

SEAL COATING DRIVEWAYS 

540-775-9228 | 804-867-8016

Lawn Maintenace • Planting • Mulching Bed Design • Spring/Fall Cleaning • Seeding Aeration • Dethatching • Top Soil • Sod Fertilization Programs • Trimming/Pruning Gutter Cleaning • Debris Removal

CBS Sealcoating  

Family Owned & Operated • Licensed and Insured

540-347-3159 •703-707-0773

DRYWALL & PLASTER REPAIR

Builder

Business Opportunities

Gutters

Landscaping

SEAMLESS GUTTERS Free Estimates

JACK’S SHEET CO, METALINC. 703-339-6676 5, 6, 7, 8 AND ½ GUTTER SIZES. COLORS AVAIL., HIDDEN HANGERS, GUTTER GUARDS, ALUMINUM & COPPER

“We keep our minds in the gutter!” Since 1966

Home Improvment Cleaning

Excavation

Mowing, Lawn Maintenance, Trimming, Topping, Spraying, Removal, Stump Grinding, Mulching, Pruning, Cabling, Planting, Grading, Seeding, Power Washing, Retaining Walls, Patios, Walkways

540-987-8531 540-241-8407

Tidy Maids House Cleaning

Licensed & insured Free Estimates

•Residential •Commerical •Move in / Move out •Licensed & Insured •Supervised by owner •Excellent References •Weekly, Bi-weekly, Monthly •Serving Woodbridge, Manassas and surrounding areas.

All major credit cards accepted

georgedodson1031@gmail.com www.dodsontreecareandlandscaping.com

 

571-228-7572 dorisamandah@yahoo.com

     

 

Construction



Driveways

G RAVEL ALL PROJECTS

•Excavation •Clearing/Grubbing •Ponds •Grading •Culvert Installation •Drainage Solutions •Hardscapes •Hauling

540-219-1613 Justin Johnson- President

Michael R. Jenkins

540-825-4150 • 540-219-7200

keep it classy Advertise in the classifieds.

Classified ADs Work! Times Newspapers Classified Call 540-347-4222

Nutters Painting & Services – SPECIALIZING IN – • Painting (Int&Ext) • Roofing/Repairs • Siding • Gutters • Drywall • Carpentry

• Fencing • Vinyl Trim & • Gutter Cleaning Fascia Wrap • Bathroom • Brickwork • Pressure Washing Remodeling • Deck Water Sealing • Crown Molding • Yard Maintenance • Tree Removal

Free Estimates 20 years exp. Licensed/Ref’s Available • Discount Pricing

mbccontractingservices@yahoo.com

Your Ad Could Be HERE.

Home Improvment

Call Erik 540-522-3289

  We deliver days, evenings and even weekends!

CALL ANYTIME

 

540-351-1664 540-349-8676 (fax) classifieds@fauquier.com

nutterspainting@aol.com

Nail an Downexpert in the Business & Services Directory

Masonry


23

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

BUSINESS SERVICE DIRECTORY Moving/Storage

Plumbing

Tree Service/Firewood CHARLES JENKINS TREE SERVICES Family Owned Since 1970

LOT CLEARING • TOPPING • TRIMMING • MULCHING EDGING • FERTILIZING • TREE REMOVAL • SPRAYING ALSO SEASONED FIREWOOD & MULCH DELIVERY FREE ESTIMATES • REASONABLE RATES

Cell: 540.422.9721  “A Country Boy’s Dream”

INSURED - BONDED - LICENSED

Pet Services

Power Washing

Love animals? Volunteer with us!    To sign up, see website below for application

Roofing

Tree Service/Firewood Painting/Wallpaper

Tree Service/Firewood If you want a Classy Job call ...

NORTH'S TREE SERVICE & LANDSCAPING

Painting & Decorating, LLC

Family Owned & Operated for Over 30 yrs. Quality Work Guaranteed CALL ABOUT - COMPLETE TREE SERVICE OUR

• Home painting & carpentry repairs • 30 years of hands on experience • Small company with personal service

- ALL PHASES OF LANDSCAPING 25% OFF

Free Consultations & Estimates.

- All phases of Masonry - Gravel & Grading Driveways - Fencing

Creative • Professional • First Class Painting Services

Call today! 540-349-1614 or 703-444-7255 Fully licensed & Insured

Honest and Dependable

SPECIALS

540-533-8092

Free Estimates • Lic/Ins • BBB Member • Angie’s List Member

Pond

Tile T&J Ceramic Tile, Inc.

LICENSED & INSURED • FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED

Free Estimates • Installation & Repair • Residential & Commercial • New Homes or Remodel Work

Tim Mullins

 Aquatic Weed Control Fountain & Aerators Pond Dredging & Repairs Fisheries Management Phone: 540-349-1522 www.vawaters.com

(540)439-0407 • Fax (540)439-8991 tandjceramictile@comcast.net www.tandjceramictile.com

Professional Services

Breezy Knoll RESIDENTIAL CARE LLC

Living in a smaller place can reduce anxiety and stress. Loved ones will not get lost in 

Ofc: 540.812.4294 14274 EGGSBORNSVILLE ROAD •CULPEPER, VA 22701

Professional Services GET YOUR BONNET ON!!

Ladys’, Mens’, Children

33 Beckham St, Warrenton | 540-216-7494 The corner of Culpeper & Beckham St. | Old Town Warrenton


24

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | June 26 2019

SHOP NOW!

Designer Queen Bed NOW ONLY $598

Designer Sofa final price

INCREDIBLE STYLE $ Your Choice: 398 AMAZING VALUE! Upholstered or Panel Bed

compare at:$1199

5 Piece Set Available in 3 Colors NOW OCharcoal NLY $1498 Gray, or Scarlett

compare at: $1139

compare at:$2999

STOREWIDE SAVINGS BEAT plus SAVE THE % to CROWDS! months

50

UP TO

30 % *

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every item in every department! special financing ‡‡

PLUS 5 YEARS SPECIAL FINANCING New Arrivals, Best Sellers & 2017 Closeouts

Reclining Sofa NOW ONLY $798

compare at: $1299

3 Piece Firepit Set final price

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compare at: $2279

Largest Selection of Furniture IN-STOCK! Ready For immediate delivery!

Queen Storage Bed final price

398 $300 Ashley Cash $

compare at: $1139

5 Piece Set final price includes queen headboard, footboard, rails, dresser & mirror. final price $898 compare at: $2599

when you purchase Select Tempur-Pedic Mattress Sets

14270 Smoketown Rd 45633 Dulles Eastern Plz 7378 Stream Walk Ln Manassas, VA 20109 Sterling, VA 20166 Woodbridge, VA 22192 (571) 379-4130 (571) 323- 9024 (703) 492- 5861

some exclusions may apply. 1/29/18 7/4/19

Mon- Sat: 10am-9pm Sun: 11am-7pm


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