PATRIOT’S BEST SEASON EVER? Tim Baldwin and the Pioneers polished off Hylton 35-6. Page 9
November 20, 2019 | Vol. 18, No. 47 | 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.
Fauquier supervisors call to halt gas pipeline expansion Board wants more extensive state review By Daniel Berti
Times Staff Writer
The Fauquier County Board of Supervisors are calling for a moratorium on a 7.7-mile natural gas pipeline expansion in Fauquier and Prince
William counties set to begin construction in January, though it’s unclear whether local officials can stop the project from moving forward. The supervisors voted unanimously Thursday on a resolution calling for a more extensive state review of the project because of its impact on local surface waters as well as safety and environmental concerns. Prince William Board of
County Supervisors hasn’t taken a position on the pipeline expansion. The new pipeline is part of the Williams Partners Southeastern Trail expansion project. The project received approval from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in October. Construction on the pipeline expansion is slated to begin January 14, 2020, according to a company spokesperson, and will run adjacent to the
existing Transco mainline in Prince William and Fauquier counties. In addition to the new pipeline, the project will add horsepower to three existing compressor stations in Virginia – located in Manassas, Scottsville and Chatham – and modify 21 existing facilities in South Carolina, Georgia and Louisiana. See PIPELINE, page 2
Torian to lead Va. House budget committee By Jill Palermo
Times Staff Writer
happened next. “He gave me socks. It was amazing. I learned there were people who could love me when I couldn’t love myself,” he said. Mitchell also remembers when the Rev. James Gould of St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church came to talk to inmates. “He talked to me like I was a human being.”
Del. Luke Torian has been chosen to lead one of the Virginia House of Delegates’ most powerful committees: that which helps hammer out the annual state budget. Torian, D-52nd, will chair the House Appropriations Committee, Speaker-Elect Eileen Filler-Corn, D-41st, announced Thursday, Nov. 14. Torian, 61, will be the first African-American and likely the first Prince William County delegate to serve in the role in the state’s history. “It’s just a humbling experience and a good opportunity,” Torian said in a brief interview. “I’m humbled by the opportunity to serve in this capacity and humbled that the speaker-designee would recognize the work I have done.” Torian has served on the House Appropriations Committee since 2014. He has served as a budget conferee – a member of a smaller group of delegates charged with negotiating the final budget with state Senate leaders – since 2016.
See HOPE, page 2
See TORIAN, page 4
TIMES STAFF PHOTO/ROBIN EARL
The crosses in the White Marker Project memorialize the 3,500 Virginians lost to drug abuse in 2017. The crosses were pounded into the ground and placed on a fence erected for the display.
Former addict shares lesson of hope White Marker Project remembers those lost to drugs By Robin Earl
Times Staff Writer
When Nathan Mitchell was an inmate in the Fauquier County Adult Detention Center on a drug posses-
sion charge in 2017, he remembers buying coffee and sweets at the canteen. “For me, it was all about instant gratification. It was February and I didn’t have socks -- but I had candy and coffee.” Mitchell remembers when someone at the jail -- who was there working with a drug rehab program -- looked at his feet and said, “You look cold.” After more than two years, Mitchell is still surprised by what INSIDE Business.............................................12 Calendar.............................................13 Classifieds...........................................16 Lifestyle..............................................11
Obituaries...........................................15 Opinion.................................................7 Puzzle Page..........................................8 Real Estate..........................................14 Sports...................................................9
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Former addict shares lesson of hope HOPE, from page 1 “There were people who came in to talk to us that had been in my shoes and were living a clean life,” he added. “They told us that if they could do it, so could we.” That program, which he found in the jail, was the impetus for a turnaround. When a friend came to pick Mitchell up after his release from jail, he walked over to the McShin Recovery Resource Foundation building, now called “SpiritWorks,” across from the jail to wait. “We weren’t even out of the parking lot and he was offering me drugs. I said ‘no’ and walked back to McShin.” Mitchell then made his way to the McShin Foundation headquarters in Richmond, where he is now the foundation’s community outreach and advocacy coordinator. He and three other McShin supporters spent the afternoon on Friday, Nov. 15, creating a display of white crosses on Shirley Avenue in Warrenton. The aim was to remember the 3,500 Virginia residents who lost their lives to drug-related causes in 2017. It’s called the “White Marker Project.” Some of the crosses are marked with the names of those who died. Mitchell knew several of those memorialized on the crosses, including his best friend who died of a drug-related heart attack at age 35. He was found by his 13-year-old son, Mitchell said.
Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
Mitchell started using drugs at age 18. He is now 43. He said for a long time he was “pretty functional.” Mitchell said he started using heavier drugs when he was about 22, but it wasn’t until he was in his mid-30s that he went “full-on into self-destructive behavior. By the time I was 39 or 40, I didn’t want to live.” He said the first time he was in the Fauquier County Adult Detention Center, there was no program for those who were addicted. “We were all there on drug charges, and while I was there, all we talked about was drugs.” By the time he was back in jail for the second time, he said, “I was exhausted. I couldn’t get a clearance to do my job in D.C. I couldn’t vote.” But by then, the Fauquier County Sheriff’s Office had a drug program. In 2017, the McShin Foundation launched a behavioral-assisted program run first by the McShin Foundation and later by SpiritWorks. In 2019, the jail introduced a medicine-assisted treatment program with help from the local community services board, according to Fauquier County Sheriff Bob Mosier. As he pounded a white cross into the ground, Mitchell was thoughtful, noting it was the first time he’d returned to Warrenton since getting out of jail and moving to Richmond. “I’m so grateful,” he said. “This little jail in a rural community. They gave us hope.” Reach Robin Earl at rearl@fauquier.com
Fauquier calls to halt gas pipeline expansion
WARREN
PIPELINE, from page 1
How to reach us ADDRESS: 41 Culpeper Street Warrenton, Virginia 20186 PHONE: 540-347-4222 FAX: 540-349-8676 HOURS: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays, 24-hour answering service Publisher Catherine M. Nelson, 540-347-4222 cnelson@fauquier.com NEWSROOM Managing Editor, Fauquier Robin Earl, 540-347-4222 rearl@fauquier.com Managing Editor, Prince William Jill Palermo, 540-351-0431 jpalermo@fauquier.com
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The expansion will provide an additional 300 million cubic feet of natural gas per day to utility and local distribution companies MADISON in the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic regions, according to a company press release announcing the project’s approval. The Transco pipeline is the nation’s largest-volume interstate natural gas pipeline system. It runs from South Texas to New York City and transports approximately 15% of the nation’s natural gas. Fauquier County’s board opposes the project because of the potential degradation of surface waters and potential safety issues to the region and surrounding communities. Supervisor Rick Gerhardt, R-Cedar Run, said in an emailed statement the state gave the Southeastern Trail Expansion project permission to move forward in southern Fauquier without as extensive a water review process as other pipelines in the state. “This is particularly unacceptable considering that the pipeline’s planned route moves through 20 bodies of water,” Gerhardt said. The new section of pipeline, called the Manassas Loop, will indeed cross 20 waterbodies, including five perennial streams -- Cedar Run, Kettle Run, Owl Run, South Run, and Walnut Branch -- and one pond in Fauquier and Prince William counties, according to FERC’s environmental assessment. The pipeline will also temporarily impact two acres of wetlands during construction. The Fauquier board is calling on state agencies to perform a more comprehensive environmental review that involves at least one public hearing and comment period. Williams Partners could not be reached for comment about the Board’s request. The DEQ opened a public comment period from Nov. 1 to Monday, Dec. 2, to seek feedback on the state’s response to the environmental aspects of the project. Virginia DEQ Environmental Impact Review Manager Bettina Rayfield said the department has the option to object to the project, but that
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The map shows the local area affected by the natural gas pipeline expansion. The green boxes show existing transcontinental compressor stations; the blue lines show existing transcontinental pipelines, and the red line marked with a 1 shows a new section of pipeline called the “Manassas Loop.” an objection is unlikely. “Based on the comments we’ve received on the environmental assessment, none of the agencies that we coordinate with have identified anything that would lead me to believe there would be objection at this point,” Rayfield said. FERC held three public scoping sessions in June 2018 in Nokesville, Scottsville and Chatham to provide the public an opportunity to learn more about the pipeline project and comment on environmental issues. One FERC Commissioner, Richard Glick, issued a statement of dissent because of the climate change implications of the Southeastern Trail expansion. Glick said the commission, in its ruling, refused to consider whether the project’s contribution to climate change from greenhouse gas emissions would be significant, “even though it quantifies the direct emissions from the project’s construction and operation.” FERC’s environmental assessment of the Southeastern Trail expansion states the project will produce greenhouse gasses in the area of its construction and operation, including in Prince William and Fauquier counties. “Claiming that a project has no significant environmental impacts while at the same time refusing to assess the significance of the project’s impact on the most important environmental issue of our time is not reasoned decision-making,” Glick wrote. Reach Daniel Berti at dberti@ fauquier.com
Web/Copy Editor Amanda Heincer, 540-878-2418 aheincer@fauquier.com
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SUBSCRIPTIONS Call 540-347-4222 Help with your subscription? Call 540-878-2413 or email CirculationFT@fauquier.com Missed your paper? Call 540-347-4222, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursdays Subscription: $49.95 per year within the United States. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: Fauquier Times, 41 Culpeper St., Warrenton, VA 20186. Periodicals postage paid at Warrenton, Va. and at additional mailing offices.
NEWS
Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
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Nonprofit aims to further Times’ mission: saving local news By Jill Palermo
Times Staff Writer
When a group of about 45 local investors purchased the Fauquier Times and Prince William Times in 2016, the aim was to save the local newspapers. That remains the goal as ownership of the two weeklies now shifts to the nonprofit Piedmont Journalism Foundation. That was the message conveyed this week by both Landon Butler, who leads Piedmont Media LLC Board of Directors, and Boisfeuillet Jones Jr., president of the Piedmont Journalism Foundation, as they discussed the transition of the ownership of the news organization from its former investors to a 501(c)(3) nonprofit. The change was first announced publicly by Publisher Catherine Nelson in the Nov. 13 editions of the Fauquier Times and Prince William Times. “I really do hope the nonprofit format will have the possibility of enhancing life in Fauquier County and distinguishing Fauquier County for the quality of its journalism,” Butler said. “We have been an award-winning paper. … I’m proud of the work we’ve done.” Butler, of Rectortown, served as
Boisfeuillet “Bo” Jones
Landon Butler
deputy chief of staff to former President Jimmy Carter and founded a commercial real estate investment firm. The Tennessee native is also a former U.S. Marine Corps officer. “I do think we wanted to see Fauquier County, which is known for its agricultural heritage and protection of beautiful open lands, to also be known as a county that has a fine local newspaper,” Butler said. “It’s a plus for a community to have a good newspaper. It brings people together in a way that nothing else really can.” Jones, of Markham, helped found the Piedmont Journalism Foundation last year. Jones worked for 32 years at the Washington Post as the daily newspaper’s publisher and CEO. An attorney and native of Atlanta, Jones
Trevor Potter
went on to become the president and chief executive officer of MacNeil/ Lehrer Productions. The Piedmont Journalism Foundation has two other board members, Georgia Herbert, an attorney and former Fauquier County supervisor, and Jessica Matthews, former president of the Carnegie Foundation for International Peace. So far this year, the foundation has funded two special projects for the papers that were also made available to other local news organizations. The first, published late last summer, covered Fauquier County government’s efforts to expand cellular service and broadband internet. More recently, PJF’s freelance journalist Randy Rieland wrote “Opioid
Ripples,” a look at the effects of the opioid addiction crisis on Virginia’s Piedmont region. The latter was a partnership between PJF and the Foothills Forum, also a journalism nonprofit based in Rappahannock County. Jones said the goal of the nonprofit is to avail the weekly newspapers of the kind of funding that made the PJF projects possible: grants from other nonprofits and foundations. “This idea came to us as perhaps the best strategy for Piedmont Media to maintain the structure it has now while allowing it to raise funds that otherwise would not be available,” Jones said.
Transition to nonprofit owner
The switch to nonprofit ownership required the support of two-thirds of Piedmont Media’s investors. A memo composed for the Piedmont Media board and drafted by Trevor Potter, a graduate of the University of Virginia law school and member of Piedmont Media’s management board, noted the papers were initially purchased from former owner Peter Arundel for $1.2 million and supported by about $1 million more for startup and operating costs. See NONPROFIT, page 4
Central Community Library to close for renovations Jan. 15 Staff Reports Central Community Library is set to close for renovations Jan. 15, but when it reopens in June, things are going to be “much improved” with a new space for the Ruth E. Lloyd Information Center, passport services, a redesigned children’s area and more, Prince William County officials said in a news release. RELIC, the Prince William County’s repository for genealogy information and local history, will be relocated from Bull Run Library to a new space at Central Community Library, the release said. “The new, strategically designed layout will offer patrons more open space for programming and allow for a better flow, a community room for civic organizations, one quiet study room and two study-conference rooms, each holding up to four people,” the release said. “New, inviting seating will be available, both in the study rooms and open-space areas.” The library’s bathrooms will also be renovated and made compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act.
The library will also have a redesigned, full-service, concierge desk with reference and circulation services, and will continue to offer a full-range of library materials such as books, children’s materials, audio-visual, and periodicals as well as access to the digital library and its resources through public access computers. The library will also be able to offer more programming in its “Makerspace,” including Cricut vinyl cutters, sewing machines and toys
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like Spheros, Ozobots, and Makey Makey, which teach children the preliminary basics of coding. The new space will have programs and will offer open times for individuals to use the equipment. The renovations also aim to add “better public access to computers, printers, copiers and scanners, mobile printing and reliable Wi-Fi,” the release said. The renovated library will also be offer to U.S. passport services, mak-
ing it the third county library to do so. Passport services are also offered at the Haymarket-Gainesville and Potomac community libraries. Prince William Public Library System Director Deborah L. Wright said the “new” Central Community Library will offer patrons a unique experience. “The library will have the intimate feel offered by our neighborhood libraries, as well as enhanced services and programs patrons experience in a community library setting,” Wright said in the news release. During the renovations, Central’s book drop will remain open, and books requested on hold can be picked up at Bull Run Regional Library. The Prince William Public Library System received proffer funds to renovate Central Community Library, county officials said. Roughly $750,000 will be used to update the space, furniture and other features. Public Works is addressing the renovation of outdated public restrooms as part of their budget. Library funds are not being used for this project. Central Community Library is at 8601 Mathis Ave., in Manassas.
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NEWS
Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
Nonprofit aims to further Times’ mission: saving local news NONPROFIT, from page 3
TIMES STAFF PHOTO/JAMES IVANCIC
Principal Lorrie Crockett was ready to cut the ribbon Nov. 13 to formally open St. Michael’s Academy at its new site in Vint Hill.
St. Michael’s Academy opens new school at Vint Hill By James Ivancic Times Staff Writer
Yaritza McCall likes the smaller class sizes and the religious instruction her two youngest children receive at St. Michael’s Academy. The school moved in October from a space at Community Christian Fellowship Church in Warrenton to a building on the former Vint Hill Farm Station military base that’s now home to a number of shops and offices. St. Michael’s staff and supporters celebrated the opening of the new space during a ribbon cutting and open house on Wednesday, Nov. 13. McCall’s son, Daniel, 4, attends preschool and daughter, Lindsey, 8, is in third grade. Lindsey has been attending St. Michael’s since kindergarten. “We were searching for a school that had Christian education and a smaller class size,” said McCall. “My husband saw a local newspaper announcement about an open house at St. Michael’s the next day … We brought Lindsey in for an evaluation and to get the feel of the school. We fell in love with the staff and what the school stands for. We’re beyond happy with it.” McCall said she wishes she had known about St. Michael’s when her 12-year-old daughter – who attends public school -- was younger. “Not that we’ve had any critical issues with that. I just love the size of the classes here. There’s more oneon-one time,” said McCall. Principal Lorrie Crockett said she’s heard that from other parents as well. Crockett said the new site has room to expand the building should that become necessary. The school currently is holding a fundraising drive to build an outdoor playground.
Crockett taught at St. Michael’s before becoming principal three years ago. The Vint Hill site at 6848 Johnson Drive holds classes for kindergarten through fifth grade. St. Michael’s also has a preschool in Haymarket on Fayette Street. There are 125 students enrolled in preschool and 80 in the K-5 building. There is before and after school care at both campuses. Preschool classes run during the morning; K-5 classes are 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. There are 14 lead teachers, seven assistant teachers, a reading specialist, four co-curricular teachers and seven administrative staff members. Foreign languages, computer and STEM classes are among the specialty classes, as well as classes in art, music and typing. Students are taken on monthly trips to the Haymarket public library. St. Michael’s is a non-denominational Christian school. Students have daily Bible lessons and weekly chapel visits. Students support the food pantries in Haymarket and Fauquier County, the Carried to Full Term service and Toys for Tots. “The school very much has a family feel and the amount of attention students get is huge. There’s a sense of community and our big goal is to develop [in the students] a relationship to God. Our families want a Christian environment,” Crockett said. “Our teachers truly care about our kids. It’s not just a job, it’s a mission,” Crockett added. Tuition rates and other information about St. Michael’s Academy can be found on its website at st-michaelsacademy.org. Reach James Ivancic at jivancic@fauquier.com
Under Nelson, who joined as publisher in early 2018, Piedmont Media drastically cut “legacy” costs, such as supporting contracts, and is nearly breaking even. Nelson reduced what had been a six-month operating loss of more than $200,000 to about $20,000, the investor memo said. Still, additional financial support is needed to keep the papers viable amid what Potter, a Chicago native and former chairman of the Federal Election Commission, called the “hurricane force winds” of the newspaper business. The memo notes the U.S. has lost about 2,000 newspapers in the last 15 years as annual revenue generated by print advertising shrank from about $50 billion 2000 to a current $14 billion annually. “It is important to recast the paper from a business to a public good that deserves support from the wider community – i.e. as an endeavor to protect the future of Fauquier County and our rural way of life to be supported alongside other local charitable organizations that work for good land-use policies, good public officeholders, schools, conservation, etc.,” the memo said. Further, local news has an important “watchdog” function necessary to discourage corruption and unchecked government spending, he added. For the investors, the transfer of their shares to the nonprofit status will allow them to recognize a business loss on their tax returns, the memo notes. Both Nelson and Jones stressed that the papers would continue operations as usual, with no planned changes to staff . “For me, this is about saving community journal-
ism, which is something I’ve dedicated much of my career in recent years,” Nelson said. Potter, in response to a question, likened the arrangement to a nonprofit hospital that owns a pharmacy. It furthers the nonprofit’s mission but may be operated separately. PJF fits the Internal Revenue Service’s definition of a nonprofit dedicated to educating the public by promoting local journalism in Fauquier County, Potter said. While some nonprofit newspapers, such as the Salt Lake City Tribune, have themselves become charities to which people can make tax-deductible contributions, the PJF did not choose that route, Potter said. “Instead, our investors sold their interests in the business to a nonprofit educational charity, PJF, that now holds the paper,” he explained. “If the newspaper ever made a profit (after all expenses and debt), then the charity would pay taxes on that profit.” Butler said he hoped the community would view the change as an invitation to further “engage” with the Fauquier Times and Prince William Times by reading the papers, writing letters to the editor and sharing their thoughts about local issues and the papers’ coverage. Jones said he hoped the papers would serve as “a model” for other local news outlets. Although Virginia has at least two nonprofit online news websites, Charlottesville Tomorrow and the Virginia Mercury, it is thought the Fauquier Times and Prince William Times will be state’s first nonprofit weekly newspapers. “We hope it leads to greater community involvement,” Jones said. Reach Jill Palermo at jpalermo@ fauquier.com
Torian to lead Va. House budget committee TORIAN, from page 1 Torian won a sixth term in the state House last week and has served as pastor of the First Mount Zion Baptist Church in Dumfries for 24 years. Torian is a native of Roxboro, North Carolina, who earned his Master of Divinity from Virginia Union University and his Doctor of Divinity from Howard University. Prince William County hasn’t had such political clout in the state General Assembly since 2015, when the late Sen. Chuck Colgan retired at the age of 89. Colgan, D-29th, served as chairman of the state Senate Finance Committee, the equivalent of Torian’s new job in the House of Delegates. “It’s a huge deal,” said state Sen. Jeremy McPike, D-29th, of Torian’s appointment. “The chairman of appropriations is one of the most influential people in the state on the budget.” “It’s great news for Prince William County,” he added. Gov. Ralph Northam (D) and
Virginia’s General Assembly will begin work on Northam’s new twoyear budget when they return to Richmond in January. It’s a bit too early to make predictions about new spending, but both McPike and Torian said education and transportation will once again be state budget priorities. Torian said he will consult all of the county’s stakeholders – including the board of supervisors, school board and chamber of commerce – over the next several weeks as he prepares for his new role. “We will certainly be looking at appropriating resources that will address the size of our school system and resources that will address our transportation needs,” Torian said. Prince William County is represented in the state legislature by five state senators and eight delegates. The delegation elected last week includes 12 Democrats and one Republican. Reach Jill Palermo at jpalermo@ fauquier.com
PUBLIC SAFETY
Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
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POLICE BRIEFS 2 charged in October fatal shooting in Woodbridge Police have arrested two suspects in connection with the fatal shooting of a Norfolk man in Woodbridge in October. Nathaniel Isaiah Hickson, 21, of Norfolk, died after police found him suffering a gunshot wound on the 1900 block of Briar Rose Lane in Woodbridge just after 11 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 21, according to Sgt. Jonathan Perok, spokesman for Prince William County police. The police investigation determined the shooting occurred during
a marijuana deal between the victim and the two suspects, Perok said. The suspects attempted to rob the victim, shots were fired, and Hickson was fatally shot. With the assistance of the U.S. Marshals Fugitive Task Force both suspects were located and arrested on Wednesday, Nov. 13. Najoun Devon Courtney, 21, of no fixed address, is charged with murder and is in police custody in Spotsylvania County, police said. Tre Rose, 19, of no fixed address, is charged with murder and is in police custody in Richmond.
Police: D.C. man fatally shot outside Woodbridge studio A fight at a Woodbridge sound studio led to the shooting death of a 32-year-old man early Monday morning, according to police. Officers responded at 1:05 a.m. Monday, Nov. 18, to the 1400 block of Old Bridge Road. They arrived to find the victim unresponsive outside in the parking area. He was pronounced dead at the scene, according to Sgt. Jonathan Perok, spokesman for the Prince William County Police Department. The victim was identified later
Monday as Trevor Vernon Sellers, 32, of Washington, D.C. A preliminary investigation revealed Sellers was shot during an altercation at sound studio DMV Studios, Perok said. Police have not yet made an arrest, but the homicide unit is actively investigating.
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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
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Manassas Ballet theatre with the Manassas Ballet Theatre Orchestra in
REAL ESTATE TAXES DUE December 5, 2019 Prince William County real estate taxes for the second half of 2019 are due on December 5, 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.
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manassasballet.org • info@manassasballet.org • (703) 257-1811 MBT is funded in part by the National Endowment for the Arts, the Virginia Commission of the Arts, Prince William County, and the City of Manassas
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OPINION WWW.PRINCEWILLIAMTIMES.COM
Prince William Times | November 20, 2019
Guest Opinion
Reforms will top lawmakers’ agenda in 2020 Election Day, Nov. 5, 2019, brought a political earthquake to Virginia. The governor’s office, House of Delegates and Senate of Virginia will be controlled by Democrats for the first time since 1991. Virginians voted for change, and we are likely to see significant changes in Virginia policy after nearly 30 years of delayed and avoided actions. The 2020 session is a welcomed opportunity to bring Virginia up to speed with the rest of the country. Your state legislators are now preparing for the 2020 General Assembly session, which will begin Jan. 8 and end in March. People should expect to see funding for education at all levels prioritized. Virginia’s teacher salaries have dropped from the top third in the country to the bottom third over the last three decades. This hurts teacher recruitment and retention and ultimately the quality of education. We will work for progress toward universal preschool. Virginia’s state-supported colleges now have some of the highest tuition rates in the United States. I expect the legislature to work toward lowering tuition. Voting reforms will be high on the agenda, including expanding early voting. I will work to move state and local elections to even years, but that may take time and requires a state constitutional change. Virginia’s criminal justice system is unnecessarily punitive, has significant racial disparities and falls short on rehabilitation. We will likely revisit Virginia’s still low misdemeanor-felony threshold of $500 along with measures to increase diversion, promote expungement and second chances and reconsider mandatory minimum sentences. We will move the long-overdue Equal Rights Act ratification early in the session. The legislature will also put Roe v. Wade into law to protect against the U.S. Supreme Court going backwards. We are also likely to revisit Virginia’s mandatory ultrasound requirement for women exercising their constitutional reproductive rights. Several groups have ranked Virginia as the worst state in which to be an employee. The General Assembly will consider raising the $15 minimum wage phased in over time. We will also address measures to strengthen workers’ rights, including eliminating the ban on project labor agreements in public contracts, requiring a prevailing wage in public contracts and measures to provide real remedies to employees who experience wage theft. Virginia has a recent history of hostility to people in our lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgender (LGBT community). We will be considering measures to prohib-
SEN. SCOTT SUROVELL
it discrimination in housing and employment against LGBT Virginians and prohibiting the misguided practice of conversion therapy. Virginia’s newest residents have also been unfairly demonized over the last two decades. My legislation to provide one-year driver’s privilege cards to certain undocumented immigrants will finally receive serious consideration along with in-state tuition privileges for Virginia children brought to the United States as minors. The legislature will give serious attention to investments in wind and solar energy, including incentives to make it easier and more affordable for Virginians to install solar panels on their own homes. We will also likely consider mandating renewable energy targets for the entire state. These measures will help reduce polluting, carbon-based, greenhouse gas emissions that are warming the planet at unsustainable rates. The General Assembly will finally truly take on predatory lending. Online lenders who charge 400% interest rates and hide behind out-of-state Native American tribes will face regulation. Car-title lenders who currently charge 267% interest rates authorized by Virginia law will likely face lower rates. Many of these changes will require additional resources. Virginia should not have repealed its estate tax in 2008. The repeal only affected about 50-100 families per year and has cost taxpayers nearly $2 billion since it was done. Virginia’s income tax is effectively a flat tax given that our top bracket is a $17,500. Considering all of these changes will not be easy and will require significant time, focus and consideration. Public support is critical and feedback from constituents is important to make sure the General Assembly gets these proposals right. As we work toward fulfilling our commitments to voters and prioritizing policies, I look forward to your comments and encourage you to reach out to me at scott@ scottsurovell.org. It is an honor to serve as your state senator. The writer, a Democrat, is a state senator representing the 36th District, which includes parts of Fairfax, Prince William and Stafford counties.
Guest Opinion
Career, trade programs growing at local schools As a father, former educator, son of a welder and current member of the Prince William County School Board, I am very proud of the efforts that have been made to implement and expand Career and Technical Education offerings in our schools. According to a recent study from the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, students in CTE courses graduate at a much higher rate. PWCS offers a wide variety of rigorous and engaging CTE programs designed to improve academic and technical understanding, offer leadership opportunities and deliver instruction through realistic, hands-on applications. For the first time this school year, thanks to a partnership with the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Stonewall Jackson High School is offering an electrical program. This is a partnership I helped facilitate during my first term on the board, and I am very proud to have this program in Prince William County. Furthermore, game design and development was added this year to the offerings at Colgan, Freedom, Patriot and Woodbridge high schools, while cybersecurity was added as a class offerings at Battlefield, Forest Park, Patriot and Potomac high schools. The school
JUSTIN WILK
division is also working to bring a new greenhouse to Brentsville District High School. These expanded programs complement the programs we have in place, including agriculture, automotive technology, building trades, culinary arts, JROTC, Growing Our Own (for future educators), practical nursing, biomedical science, cabinet-making, HVAC, plumbing, cosmetology, TV production and welding. Students may apply at their base schools or as full-time transfer students. Our CTE program also offers dual enrollment to students through Northern Virginia Community College. In fact, during the 2018-19 school year, PWCS had 1,459 students in dual enrollment with NVCC. To find out more about our CTE offerings, go to www.pwcs.edu. The writer is former teacher and the Potomac District representative on the Prince William County School Board.
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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
CLUES
© 2019 Blue Ox Family Games, Inc., Dist. by Andrews McMeel
CLUES
© 2019 Blue Ox Family Games, Inc., Dist. by Andrews McMeel
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SOLUTIONS SOLUTIONS
CLUES
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11/17
© 2019 Blue Ox Family Games, Inc., Dist. by Andrews McMeel
KENKEN SOLUTIONS KENKEN SOLUTIONS KENKEN SOLUTIONS
CRY DA SH GE
Answers: 1. CHRISTIE 2. CRYSTAL 3. HANNAH Today’s Answers: 1. CHRISTIE 2.Today’s CRYSTAL 3. HANNAH GRACE 5.REBA MIRANDA 6. PAIGE 7. SHELLEY 4. GRACE 5. MIRANDA 6. PAIGE 7. SHELLEY Today’s Answers: 1.4.CASTLE 2. 3. FELICITY 4. FRASIER 5. MONK 6. MACGYVER 7. BLOSSOM 4/14
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THREE PRINCE WILLIAM TEAMS REMAIN Freedom (11-0), Patriot (10-1) and Brentsville (8-3) play region semifinal football games Friday. The region finals are Nov. 30, state semis Dec. 7 and final Dec. 14.
BASKETBALL OPENING NIGHT High school basketball games can begin Monday, Dec. 2. The state finals are March 12-14.
SPORTS WWW.PRINCEWILLIAMTIMES.COM
Prince William Times | November 20, 2019
Patriot’s plan: Play in December Baldwin, Stroman help Pioneers pound Hylton 35-6 in playoff opener By Jeff Malmgren Times Staff Writer
The Patriot Pioneers accomplished a lot against Hylton, yet they didn’t seem too impressed. Patriot’s 35-6 win over the visiting Bulldogs (5-6) in the Class 6 Region B quarterfinals gave the Pioneers 10 victories for the first time. They also won a playoff game for only the third time since starting in 2012. And they extended the team’s alltime longest winning streak to nine heading into Friday’s region semifinal against visiting No. 3 Colonial Forge. Yet first-year coach Sean Finnerty appeared apathetic afterward. “This is a game we were supposed to win, so I just think of it like that,” said Finnerty, whose team is shooting for the best season in the school’s brief eight-year history. Patriot running back Tim Baldwin took the same tone. “We’re focusing on what’s ahead of us. Not really getting caught up in, ‘Oh, we’re 10-1,” said Baldwin. Baldwin, who transferred from Broad Run in Loudoun County, leads all Prince William County rushers this season with 1,367 yards and 23 touchdowns thanks to eight 100-yard performances in Patriot’s 11 games. “We’re making sure we reach our big goal,” said Baldwin, the Cedar Run District Offensive Player of the Year. “There’s five games left to the state championship. So hopefully it’s five.” Although his team lost, Hylton cornerback Juanya Braxton seemed to play with a perpetual smile. “I’m just trying to have fun out here,”
PHOTO BY DOUG STROUD
Tim Baldwin and the Patriot Pioneers (10-1) have won nine in row heading into Friday’s Class 6 Region B semifinal against Colonial Forge (9-2). The game is at 7 p.m. in Nokesville. Braxton told a referee as he covered Jalen Stroman, an all-district receiver whose older brother, Greg, recently played for the Washington Redskins and Virginia Tech Hokies. Stroman finished with 97 yards on three receptions, including a 75yard touchdown pass from quarterback Cody Rogers that gave Patriot a
20-0 lead in the second quarter. “I love when people talk, [and] I don’t let it get to me,” Stroman said. “It gets me motivated. It makes me want to go out there and just punish.” Stroman is also Patriot’s starting safety on a defense allowing 12.5 points per game. “Our defense is one of the top de-
fenses. We work for that [status]. I take pride in that,” Stroman said. Patriot limited Hylton to only 150 yards of total offense Friday, a number skewed by a 64-yard touchdown run from Colby Bond early in the second quarter. See PATRIOTS, page 10
17th straight win puts Battlefield volleyball in state semis By Jeff Malmgren Times Staff Writer
Outside hitters Emma Morris and Julianna Quintero combined for 21 kills, 20 digs and four blocks Friday as the Battlefield Bobcats advanced to the Class 6 volleyball semifinals. Winning in their first state match in the program’s 15year history, the Bobcats downed Ocean Lakes 3-0 and faced Floyd Kellam (Virginia Beach) in Tuesday’s Class 6 semifinals. “Making it this far in the playoffs is an absolute dream,” Battlefield’s second-year coach Abby Mills said. “My girls have been playing incredible and really coming together as a team.” Battlefield (20-2) has a 17-match winning streak that features victories in 46 of the Bobcats’ past 47 sets. The state final is Friday against either W.T. Woodson or Washington-Liberty at VCU’s Siegel Center. Against Ocean Lakes, Morris led Battlefield with 11 kills. Quintero had 10, Merom Arthur seven and Hillarie Adams six. Setter Kat Jenks finished with 29 assists, as well as one of the Bobcats’ nine aces and Carsen Caroll had 12 digs.
PHOTO BY RANDY LITZINGER
The Battlefield volleyball team played for a berth in Class 6 state final Tuesday.
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SPORTS
Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
Freedom rolls 60-6! Brentsville wins 32-21 Patriot preps for region semis
Eagles, Tigers advance to Friday’s region semifinals
PATRIOTS, from page 9
By Jeff Malmgren Times Staff Writer
The Freedom Eagles (11-0) posted a monumental playoff blowout by routing John Champe 60-6 in the Class 6 Region B football quarterfinals. Quarterback Quest Powell completed 14-of-21 for 257 yards and four touchdowns. Umari Hatcher caught five passes for 156 yards and two TDs. Running back J.T. Edwards ran 13 times for 141 yards and Nijhere Johnson scored a touchdown on a kickoff return. Other TDs were scored by Jalen Hamlin and Jason Hawkins. Next up for the top-seeded Eagles is a region semifinal home game with Massaponax. The Eagles have outscored opponents by an incredible 46.7 points per game.
Tigers win sixth straight
The Brentsville Tigers have eight wins for only the second time since 1998 thanks to a 32-21 football victory over George Mason in the Class 3 Region B quarterfinals. The Tigers (8-3) take a six-game winning streak into Friday’s semifinal matchup at James Monroe (8-3). Brentsville won their regular season meeting 13-10 also on the road in Fredericksburg. Guy Hayes ran 15 times for 124
PHOTO BY RANDY LITZINGER
Julian Edwards and the Freedom Eagles (11-0) host Massaponax (9-2) Friday in the region semifinals at 7 p.m.
FREEDOM’S NEXT GAME:
BRENTSVILLE’S NEXT GAME:
Friday vs. Massaponax (9-2) in region semifinal, 7 p.m.
Friday at James Monroe (8-3) in region semifinal, 7 p.m.
yards and three touchdowns. He now has 1,032 rushing yards and 16 touchdowns. Brady Hoad ran 11 times for 118 yards and Kyler Cornwell ran seven times for 48 yards and one TD. Yuri Smaltz added a six-yard touchdown run and had a 27-yard reception.
Gar-Field finishes 7-4
Gar-Field’s best football season
in eight years ended Friday with a 40-0 loss to host Colonial Forge in the Class 6 Region B quarterfinals. The sixth seeded Indians (7-4) won more than three games for the first time since going 9-3 in 2011, when Gar-Field last earned a playoff berth. But No. 3 Forge ended the Indians’ 2019 run and knocked their postseason record to 2-9 since 1998.
“That six points is going to bite me [later] tonight,” Stroman said. “It’s going to get me. I might have to do them push-ups [for giving up] the six.” “Everyone does their jobs well,” linebacker Joey Lacey said of his Patriot defense. “We trust the man beside us, so we’re going to stay [disciplined] where we’re supposed to be and not make a superhero play.” Offensively, Baldwin led Patriot with 113 yards and four touchdowns on 21 carries behind an offensive line that included the likes of Tyler Negron, Donovan Sprouse, Chandler Brown, Will Lowry and Justin Peterson. “He just runs like a grown man,” Finnerty said. “I couldn’t imagine tacking him, especially one-on-one. He is a physical, punishing running back who can also put a move on you.” Baldwin was tough on himself. “In all honesty, I didn’t think I played all that well tonight,” Baldwin said. “Based on some of the runs I had, and me getting caught in the backfield sometimes.” “But, to be honest, we think we played another bad game” against Hylton, Baldwin said. “That’s a testament to our coaching staff and the [players] we have that we won 35-6 and we played a bad game.”
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Prince William Times | November 20, 2019
Follow the Manassas Ballet Theatre to the Land of the Sugar Plums Manassas Ballet Theatre will present “The Nutcracker” Dec. 18-23 with The Manassas Ballet Theatre Orchestra on the Merchant Stage at the Hylton Performing Arts Center. This annual tradition is a festive celebration for the holidays. Join sweet Clara, naughty Fritz, the party guests and dancing dolls and, of course, Drosselmeyer and the Nutcracker Prince as they lead the way through a dreamy journey of fantasy and sweets. “The Nutcracker” is a holiday show for all ages, featuring the international company dancers and the orchestra. The Manassas Ballet Theatre prides itself in being accompanied by live music for all productions. “Dancing to live music has always been of the utmost importance to me,” said MBT Artistic Director Amy Wolfe.
If you go
What: “The Nutcracker” When: Dec. 18, 19, 20, 21 and 22 at 7:30 p.m. and Dec. 21. 22 and 23 at 3 p.m. Where: Hylton Performing Arts Center, 10960 George Mason Circle, Manassas Tickets: $40-$80 Information: www.manassasballet. org or 703-257-1811 For more information about the performance and show times, visit www. manassasballet.org or call 703-2571811. Tickets start at $40 and are available at Hylton.calendar.gmu.edu or 888-945-2468. MBT performances are held at the Hylton Performing Arts Center, 10960 George Mason Circle, Manassas.
COURTESY PHOTO
Mannassas Ballet Theatre presents “The Nutcracker,” Dec. 18-23. Manassas Ballet Theatre is a 501(c) (3) nonprofit corporation founded in 1983. Its mission is to enhance the quality of life in Northern Virginia by providing accessible, affordable professional ballet performances, educational outreach to the community, and the highest caliber of training to students of all levels at the affiliated
school, Manassas Ballet Academy. MBT is funded in part by the National Endowment for the Arts, the Virginia Commission of the Arts, Prince William County and the City of Manassas, and is the resident ballet company of the Hylton Performing Arts Center on the Manassas campus of George Mason University.
Gift program aims to brighten holidays for 5,300 needy kids The Un-Trim-A-Tree Holiday Gift Program is in full swing and needs your help in providing the simple of joy of the season of two toys to a needy child. We’ll give you the child’s name, age, gender, sizes and their two wishes. It’s a great way to show your kids and grandkids philanthropy and it’s fun! Please visit www.volunteerprincewilliam. org to learn more. All you have to do is tell us how many kids you want to shop for. We currently have 1,360 kids waiting for you! The Manassas Christmas Parade is Saturday, Dec. 7, in Old Town Manassas. Volunteers are needed at intersections to help folks cross the street as well as to keep everything moving. This super-fun day has been the start of the holiday season for 73 years! Come join the fun and volunteer for a few hours that morning. Please email Nora at nora@greenteaminc.com to learn more. Speaking of the Manassas Christmas Parade, please bring a new, unwrapped toy to support the UnTrim-A-Tree Holiday Gift Program for a needy child in our community. We are the first float to go and will gladly take your donation from the parade route. Help us bring the joy of the season to the more than 5,300 children registered this year! Prince William Special Olympics is kicking off its winter programs this month. The program run until 2020. The sports include alpine skiing and basketball at Hampton Middle School on Wednesdays at 6:30 p.m. and at Stonewall Middle on Saturdays at 4 p.m. The powerlifting program is at Potomac High School
on Thursdays at 7:30 p.m. The floor hockey program is at GMU on Sundays at 5 p.m. There’s still time to register your athlete and to volunteer by emailing Peggy at areacoordinator@pwsova.org or Rose Ann at outreach@pwsova.org. The Annual Christmas Bird Count is Sunday, Dec. 22, starting at 7 a.m. at Merrimac Farm, Cedar Run, Foggy Bottom, Nokesville Park, Prince William Landfill as well as portions of Prince William Forest Park, Quantico Marine Base and Fauquier County. You can help by identifying and counting birds or by making chili and corn bread for the hungry birders at 11 a.m. at the Merrimac Stone House. Please RSVP at alliance@pwconserve.org or 703-499-4954. The City of Manassas needs volunteers for the Annual Winter Wonderland Train Show at the Candy Factory Dec. 13-17. Please call 703368-1873 to reserve your spot. Girls on the Run is celebrating the end of its season with a 5K run in Woodbridge on Nov. 23. Volunteers are needed for several roles. Please email Meagan at mperkins@gotrnova.org to learn more. The Ethiopian Community Development Council needs volunteers at its Annual Refugees’ First Thanksgiving Dinner on Sunday, Nov. 24, from 4-8 p.m. in Arlington. Please call 703-685-0510, ext. 222, to learn more. Carried to Full Term is having its Fourth Annual Gala- Life is a Gift on Saturday, Dec. 7, at the Evergreen Country Club. Volunteers age 18 and up are needed for set-up, guest check-in and silent auction
MARY FOLEY
assistance. This promises to be a fun evening. Please email Dawn at dawn.harrison@carriedtofullterm. org for all the specifics. SERVE Food Pantry needs volunteers to pick up food donations from area grocery stores and restaurants so parents have the resources needed to provide for their families. Volunteers must be ages 21+ with a valid driver’s licenses and be able to lift up to 50 pounds as well. Please email Navarra at ncannon@nvfs.org to learn more. Thanksgiving is just around the corner, and ACTS Hunger Prevention Center wants your assistance during Operation Give Thanks (formerly Operation Turkey) to ensure that every family receives a Thanksgiving meal this year! Their goal is to reach 1,000 families. Volunteer opportunities are available through Nov. 26. Please contact Shirley at scouteau@actspwc.org or 703-4418606, ext. 212, to schedule your volunteer activity and learn more. The 2020 Virginia Governor’s Volunteer Awards program is looking for nominations in a host of different categories including youth, senior, young adult, adult, family, corporate, faith-based, education and community organization. Please nominate your
volunteers online at virginiaservice. virginia.gov by Dec. 6. Catholic Charities is looking for volunteer ESOL teachers for Hogar Education’s winter semester which runs Dec. 2- March 5. Classes are held on Tuesdays and Thursdays, 9 a.m. to noon and 6:30 to 9:30 p.m., as well as Saturdays from 10 a.m. to noon. Volunteers can commit to teach one class per week. Training will be provided Nov. 23, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., at 8251 Shoppers Square, Manassas. The Salvation Army is gearing up for its Christmas Kettle program and needs volunteers to ring the kettle bell at various locations around the community. It’s a great opportunity for a club, family or office to job share this to bring extra joy to those in need in the community. Please call Sgt. Rowe at 703-5808991 to learn more. National Alliance on Mental Illness needs volunteers to share their lived experience of mental health condition as they gear up for the new Ending the Silence program in area middle and high schools. Please call Pat at 703-992-5708 to learn more. The American Red Cross is recruiting volunteers to help with blood drives, present disaster preparedness to elementary school-age kids, promote Red Cross school clubs and support other volunteers in the community. Please call 703-5848444 to learn more. The Retired and Senior Volunteer Program is looking for volunteers age 55+ to drive veterans or spouses to their doctor’s appointments. Please call Jan at 571-2925307 to learn more.
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BUSINESS
Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
Newspapers in Education Program
One year post Amazon, home prices up 12% Staff Reports
Teachers deliver valuable information through our Newspapers in Education Program. From art, math, social studies, to local events, the creative lessons our teachers present using the Prince William Times makes it an indispensable teaching tool...a living textbook enabling students at all levels to develop good reading skills while gaining an understanding of their community and the world around them. Thank You to our Prince William Times Newspaper in Education Partners for providing newspapers to Prince William County classrooms every week. Please visit these local businesses today to show your appreciation.
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In the year since Amazon picked Northern Virginia for its new headquarters, average and median home prices are rising and properties are selling more quickly. That’s according to the Northern Virginia Association of Realtors, which released its October sales report on Wednesday, Nov. 13 – the one-year anniversary of the Amazon announcement. NVAR covers Fairfax and Arlington counties, the cities of Alexandria, Falls Church, Fairfax and the towns of Vienna, Herndon and Clifton. “The average number of days on the market for listings in our [area] was down about 27% compared to last October,” NVAR President Christine Richardson said in a news release. “And in Alexandria, properties stayed on the market for an average of just 10 days – a 68% drop in the course of one year.” Average and median home prices were up by about 7% and 12%, respectively, according to NVAR CEO Ryan Conrad, but low market inventory remains “a challenge.” But the inventory has been mostly good news for sellers because properties are getting showings and “multiple” offers, said Gary Lange, an NVAR board member and realtor with Weichert, Realtors in Vienna. But price point is a factor. “Anything under $800,000 moves quickly depending on how close you are to D.C., while properties $1.3 million and above are sitting on the market longer and struggle to get traffic and offers. Competition in that price point is fierce,” Lange said.
Median NOVA home price October 2019: $549,900 October 2018: $490,000
Buyers conditioned by home-improvement shows are still choosy about home interiors, Lange said. “Buyers continue to look for ‘HGTV homes’ first, and sellers whose homes aren’t move-in ready have to be realistic with their pricing,” Lange said. “As we move into the slower months it will be imperative for sellers to temper their expectations on pricing.” A total of 1,719 homes sold in Northern Virginia in October, an 9.21% increase from October 2018 home sales, which numbered 1,574. Active listings were down about 33% from the prior year, with 2,556 active listings in October 2019, compared to the 3,767 homes on the market in October 2018. The average sales price rose 6.58% compared with last October, to $607,230. The October 2018 average price was $569,748. The median price for homes sold this October was $549,900, an increase of about 12% compared to the median price of $490,000 from October 2018. Amazon has 200 employees in temporary office space in National Landing with 200 additional open positions advertised for hiring, Richardson said in the release. Construction on two 22-story towers for the Amazon headquarters will begin next year and will provide office spaces for 12,000 employees. Amazon expects to hire 25,000 to 40,000 employees for HQ2 over the next 10 years.
New Wawa under construction on Sudley Road in Manassas Staff Reports Construction is under way on what will soon be the seventh Wawa gas station in the Prince William County and Manassas area. The new gas station and convenience store known for its made-toorder sandwiches will be located at the site of the former Don Pablo’s Mexican Kitchen restaurant on Sudley Road in Manassas. Frontier Companies, based in Miami, Florida, began demolition of the former restaurant on Sept. 3. The team is tasked with providing a “pad complete” delivery on behalf of the landlord as well as turn-key Wawa building by the end of the year, according to a Frontier Companies press release. Frontier Companies purchased the 1.65-acre lot in November 2018. Don Pablo’s closed in 2016. The property is in the busy Sudley Road or Va. 234 business corridor outside Manassas on an out parcel to a Lowe’s Home Improvement store. The gas and convenience store
will consist of 7,860 square feet of air-conditioned space, eight fueling pumps and 46 parking spaces. “This is the fourth Wawa Frontier has been selected to build,” Derek Hopkins, project manager, said in the press release. “We’re familiar with the brand and its requirements and are excited to begin working on another one this year, this time for the Manassas community.” Frontier Companies has a large presence in the Virginia/Metro D.C. area. Its building division is working on remodeling a Chick-fil-A restaurant in Manassas and recently completed a new Aldi in Falls Church, the press release said. The Prince William Board of Supervisors voted unanimously on June 26, 2018, to approve a special permit for a new Wawa gas station. Wawa has more than 750 convenience stores (more than 500 with gasoline) in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia and Florida, according to the company website.
CALENDAR
Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
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UPCOMING EVENT Wednesday, Nov. 20
Spanish Conversation: 1-2:30 p.m. For adults. Refreshments served. Chinn Park Regional Library, 13065 Chinn Park Drive, Woodbridge. Free. English Conversation: 7-8:30 p.m. For adults. Speakers of all languages welcome. Haymarket Gainesville Community Library, 14870 Lightner Road, Haymarket. Free.
Thursday, Nov. 21
Passport Services: 3-7 p.m. For all ages. Haymarket Gainesville Community Library, 14870 Lightner Road, Haymarket. Free. Human Trafficking Awareness Night: 6:30 p.m. For adults and children over 12. Learn the signs. Hylton Performing Arts Center, 10960 George Mason Circle, Manassas. Free.
Friday, Nov. 22
Occoquan Holiday Open House: 4-8 p.m. Historic Occoquan, Mill Street. Annual Tree Lighting: 4-8 p.m. 314 Mill St., Occoquan. Free and open to the public.
The Crooked Road on Tour: 8 p.m. Hylton Performing Arts Center, 10960 George Mason Circle, Manassas. Tickets $30. Gobble Up Turkey Trot: 9:30 a.m. Run a 10K along the roadways of the Marine Corps Base. Marine Corps Marathon, 3399 Russell Road, Quantico. “The Nutcracker”: 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. Featuring the Northern Virginia Ballet. Hylton Performing Arts Center, 10960 George Mason Circle, Manassas. $35 adults, $25 seniors (55 and up), and children and youth (ages 1-17). Native Americans of Prince William Walking Tour: 11 a.m.-noon. For ages 5 and up. Neabsco Regional Park, 15125 Blackburn Road, Woodbridge.
Sunday, Nov. 24
“The Odyssey”: 7 p.m. Hylton Performing Arts Center, 10960 George Mason Circle, Manassas. Tickets $44, $37, $26. Monthly Bird and Nature Walk: 8-11 a.m. Dress for the weather, bring insect repellant, binoculars and cameras. RSVP to 703-499-4954. Merrimac Farm Wildlife Management, 15020 Deepwood Lane, Nokesville. 2019 Run for the Wounded 5K, 10K, and Half Race #2: 7:30 a.m. Supports the Wounded Warrior Project. Prince William Forest Park, 18100 Park Headquarters Road, Triangle. Registration fee. Dale City Farmers Market: 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Dale City Commuter Lot, 14090
Gemini Way, Dale City. 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, Nov. 25
English Conversation: Noon. For adults. Speakers of all languages welcome. Central Community Library, 8601 Mathis Ave., Manassas. Free. Monday Bingo: 5:30-9:30 p.m. Doors open at 5:30, games start at 7 p.m. American Legion Post 364, 3640 Friendly Post Lane, Woodbridge.
Tuesday, Nov. 26
Historic Prince William: 7:30-8:30 p.m. Presentation on the history of Prince William County. Montclair Community Library, 5049 Waterway Drive, Dumfries. Free. Passport Acceptance Services: 3-7 p.m. For all ages. Haymarket Gainesville Community Library, 14870 Lightner Road, Haymarket. Free.
Ongoing Events
“Superpower Dogs”: Family-friendly film will show daily at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. until Dec. 31. Experience the lifesaving superpowers and extraordinary bravery of some of the world’s most amazing dogs. National Museum of the Marine Corps, Medal of Honor Theater, 18900 Jefferson Davis Highway, Triangle. $6 per person. “We, The Marines”: The film will show daily every hour on the hour
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. until Jan. 3, 2021. Action-packed film where audiences will experience becoming and serving as a member of the U.S. Marine Corps. Narrated by Academy Award-winning actor and Marine Gene Hackman. National Museum of the Marine Corps, Medal of Honor Theater, 18900 Jefferson Davis Highway, Triangle. $5 per person. Native Legacy-The Patawomeck Indians of Virginia: On display until Feb. 23. Learn how the first people to settle this area lived. Reproduction tools, sketches by 17th century artist John White, and other objects will illustrate the life of the Native peoples who lived here for thousands of years before Europeans arrived. Manassas Museum, 9027 Center St., Manassas. Free. Veterans and the Arts Initiative “Exploring Identity with Women Veterans” Exhibit: On display until Dec. 7. Featuring the work of seven women who served during the Vietnam War-era through post-9/11-era and in several branches of the military, and it demonstrates their perceptions and reflections, as well as the photographic techniques as they learned together. Hylton Performing Arts Center, Buchanan Partners Art Gallery, 10960 George Mason Circle, Manassas. Free. One Sketch at a Time: An Exhibit of Urban Sketchers: On display until Dec. 9. Featuring local area artists involved in the Urban Sketchers movement. Center for the Arts, 9419 Battle St., Manassas. Free.
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REAL ESTATE WWW.PRINCEWILLIAMTIMES.COM
Prince William Times | November 20, 2019
Catlett Cape Cod offers the best of country living This beautiful, five-bedroom Cape Cod in Catlett, tucked away on a woodsy 5-acre lot, offers the best of country living with quick access to Va. 28 and Interstate 95. The home boasts a porch, an attached three-car garage with an apartment, a three-stall barn with tack room and hay storage and a fenced pasture. When you enter the home, you will find beautiful wood floors in family room with a wood-burning fireplace, 9-foot ceilings, granite countertops with stainless appliances and a master bedroom on the first floor. The upper level offers bedrooms, a Jack-n-Jill-style bath and study area. On the lower level, there’s a recreation room, two possible additional bedrooms, a full bath and walk-out to the yard. There’s also a huge deck,
which is partially covered making it perfect for entertaining. An enclosed breezeway attaches the house to the apartment and garage. The upper level of garage offers the perfect rental apartment with family room, kitchen, full bath, bedroom and laundry. This one-of-a-kind property, located at 11545 Bristerburg Road, offers the possibility of owner financing at a competitive rate to a qualified buyer. Offered at $699,000. Call Tammy Roop at Century 21 New Millennium for details 540-270-9409. Tammy Roop Century 21 New Millennium Tammy.roop@c21nm.com 540-270-9409
Ask the Arborist
Todd Hagadone Jr. I.S.A. Certified Arborist Inspection for Damage Prevention Heavy, wet snows, wind, ice and rain. That’s winter. It’s not uncommon to see a lot of limbs down on properties after serious winter storms. Cleanup takes care of the debris, but an arborist should make a careful inspection of the trees and shrubs on your property to ensure that the damage they have sustained during the harsh weather will not cause problems later. Heavy snows may have injured the trunks and branches of trees. Splits may occur in multi-stemmed plants that may need cabling and bracing or pruning to eliminate the weakened branches. Leaning trees, trees that are subject to high wind loading (top heavy) or trees on sloping ground are susceptible to root failure. The buttress roots should be inspected carefully.
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
It’s worthwhile to protect your investment in your landscape with inspections to avoid expensive tree and shrub replacements later on. A program of managed health care for trees and shrubs involves regular inspections throughout the year by a professional arborist – to identify and correct conditions before they reach the “crisis” stage. If you have any questions from this article or would like to schedule a property inspection please contact me at
abanner@bartlett.com (703) 397-8410.
www.bartlett.com
December is a30 great SOLD MARKET LAST DAYS time is a FOUR LEGGED WORD to sell! to be used after we sell your property! Middleburg Farm for Sale: Country Estate offered on 44 or 102 private acres. The 5 bedrooms, 5 baths modern farmhouse is designed to take full advantage of the setting and views of the Bull Run Mountains. Open floor plan is perfect for entertaining. Luxury master suite with fireplace is on the main level. Great options for a home office with highspeed internet available. Outdoors; large screened porch, flagstone patio, pergola and firepit surrounded by beautiful gardens and landscaping with a peaceful pastoral and mountain backdrop. Outbuildings include a shop, storage build and 4 bay oversized equipment garage. For more information contact Toni. VALO356874 44.9ac $2,700,000 or VALO357382 102.5ac $3,800,000
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OBITUARIES
Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
15
OBITUARIES Vickie Lorraine Chew-Reynolds Vickie Lorraine Chew-Reynolds, 57, of Manassas, Virginia, passed November 13, 2019. Funeral services will be held on Saturday, November 23, 2019, 1:00 pm, at Oak Shade Baptist Church, 3287 Old Catlett Road, Catlett, Virginia, 20119. Online condolences can be given at www.joynesfuneralhome.com
Lynne Stewart Via Ahalt Lynne Stewart Via Ahalt went home to be with the Lord Nov 7th 2019. She passed peacefully with her husband by her side after a brave fight against cancer. Lynne is survived by her husband of 28 years Charles Ahalt, his family and many very good friends. A service/celebration of life will be held between 3pm and 6pm at Cornerstone Church, 40 Rock Pointe Lane #202, Warrenton, VA 20186. At 3:30 a short remembrance service will take place. Dress is casual
Kenneth Franklin Downs Kenneth Franklin Downs, age 67, of Culpeper, VA, passed away November 10, 2019 at his residence. Born July 15, 1952 to David Earl Downs and Doris Rollins Downs Inskeep, he made his life as a stonemason. All services are private. Fond memories and condolences of Kenneth may be shared with the Downs family through clore-english.com. The Downs family has entrusted Clore-English Funeral Home with these arrangements.
Justin Charles Hunt Justin Charles Hunt, 40 of Front Royal, Va. passed away in Lost River West Virginia on November 2, 2019. Justin was born in Fairfax Virginia to Phyllis and Glen Hunt and resided for most of his life in Warrenton and Front Royal. He recently moved to Lost River, with his wife Amy, where he loved the solace of the West Virginia countryside. Throughout his life he had a passionate love for music, the outdoors and anything with wheels. Surviving Justin are his parents Phyllis and Glen Hunt, wife Amy Cotter, sister Glenda Hunt, his niece Pearl and nephew Piney, whom he cherished deeply and always brought smiles to their faces. He will be remembered by all for his kindness and loving heart Arrangements are being handled by Maddox Funeral Home, Front Royal, Virginia. Online condolences may be made to the family at maddoxfuneralhome.com
Craig Ashley Wood Craig Ashley Wood, affectionately called “Woody” by his friends, 66, passed away October 13, 2019. He was born December 3, 1952 in Poughkeepsie, New York, son of Alice Marie (Yankouski) Wood and the late James Ashley Wood. Woody served in the United States Navy from December 21, 1972 until December 15, 1977. During his tenure he served on the USS Blue Ridge, the command ship in the final phase in the evacuation of American civilians and at risk Vietnamese from Saigon, as well as the USS Fort Snelling. Surviving in addition of his mother, Alice, of Columbia, South Carolina are his companion, Wanda Cornwell; sister, Wendy Dougall and husband, Thomas; niece, Molly Dougall ; nephew, William Dougall; as well as brother by choice, Michael Bullington and Don Ferrell. In addition to his father, he was preceded in death by a brother by choice, William Kervick. A memorial service will be held 2 p.m., November 24, 2019 at Wyndham Garden Inn,10800 Vandor Lane, Manassas, Virginia 20109, officiated by Don Ferrell.
Let us help you place a Memorial or Obituary Call
540.351.1664
Elizabeth W. Gaines Elizabeth W. Gaines, 93, of Warrenton, VA, passed on November 18, 2019, at her residence. Funeral Arrangements are incomplete at this time. On line condolences can be posted at www.joynesfuneralhome.com
Mary F. Vandegriff Mary Vandegriff, age 88 of Catharpin, Virginia, went to heaven on Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2019 while visiting with her daughter in California. Mary was raised near the historic town of Rogersville, Tennessee. There she graduated high school, played on the basketball team, was 4H State Champion Sheep Judge, and a member of First United Methodist Church. Mary attended the University of Tennessee and was a member of the Kappa Delta Sorority. At UT, she met WWII veteran Dub Vandegriff. They married at First United Methodist in a double wedding with her sister. Mary retired with Fairfax County Public Schools. She was an active member of First Baptist Church of Annandale and later of Manassas Baptist Church for more than 40 years, active in the Elizabeth McIntosh Hammill Chapter of the D.A.R. and the 8th Air Force 95th Bomb Group Veterans Association. And she loved painting, flowers being a favorite subject. Mary is survived by her four children, four grandchildren, sisters Carolyn and Sarah, cousins, and many nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her husband of 66 years, Dub Vandegriff, her father, Charles, Sr., mother, Frances, and brother, Charles, Jr. Family, faith and friends were always her priority. We will forever remember this wonderful lady we called mother, aunt, sister and friend who was always quick with a smile and easy to laugh. Mary was laid to rest in Rogersville, Tennessee, on Saturday, Nov. 9, beside Dub and many of her family members. Memorial contributions may be made to the EMH Chapter, NSDAR, % Diane Victor-Zalenski, Treasurer, 7416 Albemarle Dr., Manassas, VA 20111-4149 or Manassas Baptist Church.
David Gene Arnold David Gene Arnold, born April 21, 1946 in Keyser, WV died November 13, 2019. He was the son of Louise Josephine “Louie Jo” Arnold Newkirk Godfrey also of Keyser, and Grandson of David “Uncle Dave” Arnold of Knobley Farm. Dave, as he liked to be called, was a resident of Mineral County until 1969. He was a graduate of Keyser High School, Class of 1964, and joined the U.S. Air Force where he served as an Air Traffic Controller. He was a Veteran of Vietnam, an Air Force Commendation Medal recipient for Meritorious Service, and received an Honorable Discharge in 1968. He was a member of the River’s Edge Veterans Association and a 32nd Degree Mason. He returned to Keyser where he met and married Shirley Kay Arnold, daughter of Harlton W. Arnold of Elk Garden, and Elva Kathleen Shoemaker of New Creek, WV. Dave had been hired by the Federal Aviation Administration as an Air Traffic Controller shortly after his discharge from the Air Force and he served thirty-seven years in that capacity, retiring in 2006. His assignments were mostly in the Washington, D.C. area except for two years teaching Air Traffic Control in Oklahoma City. In 1979, he and Shirley returned to Virginia. Dave and Shirley lived in Warrenton, VA for thirty years and had two daughters. The youngest daughter April Lynn died in 1993 and is survived by her sister Dawn Michelle Arnold of Pawleys Island, SC. Dave and Shirley have two granddaughters, Kaylynn Marie who is currently attending NC State, and Ava Christine who is a Junior in High School in Pawleys Island. In 2012, Dave and Shirley moved to Rivers Edge in Shallotte, NC where they built their retirement home in 2013. A Celebration of Life wasconducted Tuesday, November 19, 2019 at 2:00 pm in the chapel of Brunswick Funeral Service with military honors. A second service will be conducted in Warrenton, VA at a time to be announced under the direction of Moser Funeral Home, Warrenton, VA. Memorials may be directed to REVA, 495 Laurel Valley Dr., Shallotte, NC 28470, and/or Liberty Hospice, P.O. Box 200, Supply, NC 28462 Online condolences may be made to the family at www. brunswickfuneralservice.com Brunswick Funeral Service, Shallotte
16
CLASSIFIEDS
Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 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 Rentals —
001 Apartments Old Town Warrenton, 1 BR, 1BA apt. 2nd floor, secured entrance, quiet & private. Avail now. $1250/mo. Application, deposit & job vitrifaction required. 540-272-4056
066
Rentals — Shared Housing
ROOM FOR RENT FEMALE, FULL H O U S E PRIV I L E G E S , $500/MO PLUS 1/2 UTILS. 540-788-4924 220
Farm Equipment
Ford 7700 Farm Tractor Asking $8000. Call 540-292-1242 After 4 pm
224
Firewood
FALL SPECIAL!! 2 cords/$400 4 cords/$675 703-357-2180
FIREWOOD
seasoned hdwood, $200/ cord + delivery more then 15 m l s f r o m Nokesville.
B E S T P R I C E S AROUND!! 703-577-1979 Furniture/
228 Appliances E A Clore - 6 Dining Chairs. Light Cherry finish. $899. 703-367-0598. Lawn/Garden
248 Equipment
Rear tine tiller, self propelled, 5 HP Briggs & Straton, needs work. FREE 571-284-6143
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 BEACH SET-2 Fully Reclining Chairs & Matching Umbrella $40 540-337-2000
It took 6 YEARS to graduate. Find a job in about 6 MINUTES. Times Classified 347-4222
Miscellaneous
256 For Sale
Beatles memorbiliapicture, black & white (60´s), albums, 45´s & magazines.571-3444300 B r e a d M a k e r, R i c e / Vegetable Steamer Crock Pot,Rice M a k e r , $ 1 0 . 540-337-2000 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 Keurig Elite Coffee Brewer System - NEW $79.00 540-337-2000 NEW AND USED STAIRLIFTS for sale starting at $1800.00 Call Tom at (540) 932-7300 or (434) 327-4697 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 Small gas engine tachometer. LN. $70 CASH. Orange, Va. 540-672-4697 Woodstove Fireplace insert, flat black, new electric blower, good condition. $250, OBO. 540-341-4377
273
Pets
German Rottweiler puppies. Show quality parents Tails docked. Shots, dewormed, first month tick flea and heart worm prevention. 5 males 4 females. Starting at $1,000.00. Vet checked and ready t o g o n o w . 434-465-1335. Mini Dachshund Puppies - just in time to enjoy over the holidays! We have male and female puppies available. For pricing & more information please email: tommyandlesley@ gmail.com Rottweiler puppies, akc registered, ready to go 11/28/19. 1st shots wormed, tails docked, $ 8 5 0 . c a l l 540-867-5236.
273 Pets
Prince William SPCA
ADOPT VOLUNTEER DONATE ADVOCATE www.pwspca. org Rottweiler puppies, akc registered, ready to go 11/28/19. 1st shots wormed, tails docked, $ 8 5 0 . c a l l 540-867-5236.
350
Business Services
For all your heating and cooling needs. Rc´s AC Service and Repair, 540-349-7832 or 540-428-9151 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
Hagan Build & Design. Specializing in basements but we do it all! 540-522-1056. Free estimates, licensed and insured. 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
N U T T E R S PA I N T I N G & SERVICES Call Erik, 540-522-3289
Domestic
365 Services
TIDY MAIDS HOUSE CLEANING RESIDENTIAN & COMMERCIAL. LICENSED & I N S U R E D 571-228-7572
375
Home Healthcare
ELDER CARE, I am an honest, caring and dependable CNA and want to take care of your loved one. Excellent references. Over 30 years exp. 571-732-7475,0571-732-7446.
376
Home Improvement
Addison´s Building & Remodeling. Additions, basements, b a t h r o o m s , sundecks, repairs. Licensed Insured. 540-244-2869 Affordable Roofing with Terry´s Handyman Services, LLC. Licensed & Insured. Commercial & residential. Senior discounts. 540-937-7476 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
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 Total Lawn Care, home services. Cranium Services giving you peace of mind. Call Glenn 571-839-8495; glenn@ craniumservices. com; cranium. services.com
Miscellaneous Wanted
ABC Licenses
WANTED FREON
Need extra $$$ for the holidays? Cert. professionals pay CA$H. R12 R500 R11. 312-827-6204 Refrigerantfinders.com/ad
410
Announcements
410
Announcements
Did you know:
Prince William Public Library offers...
TUTORING WITH THE LITERACY VOLUNTEERS OF AMERICA
✒ Tuition-free adult literacy classes ✒ English as a Second Language ✒ Pre-GED and ✒ GED tutoring For more info: pwcgov.org/library
605 Automobiles - Domestic 1999 Mitsubishi Mirage, 151K, insp. in June, runs well, $750 obo. 434-589-1420. 2000 LEXUS RX300 STOCK#9267. AWD, A L L P O W E R , LEATHER, VERY NICE, 105K MILES, $7950. CROWN, O R A N G E V A 1-800-442-2769 www. crownautosales.net 2002 Chevy Blazer, 102K mls, $1700. 2012 Nissan Sentra, 73K m l s , $ 5 5 0 0 . 703-380-5901 GOOD CONDITION! 2009 FORD FOCUS SEL SEDAN, 125k miles, moon roof, lthr, Exc. Cond. $4200 obo, 434-227-0743 2012 HYUNDAI ELANTRA LTD, leather, sunroof, new factory engine, exc. cond. 540-885-5331
640 Motorcycles ’06 HONDA GOLDWING TRIKE 1800 series, 1 owner, 12,000 miles, like new. Call 540-298-8128 or 540-421-9509. 2003 Hyosung GV250 Motorcycle ($800). Vtwin engine with dual exhaust; Garage kept; low mileage; new battery; needs minor work to get up and running as it’s been unused for 3 years. E-mail nefaunt@aol.com YAMAHA - VW TRIKE will trade for car or motorcycle. As is. REDUCED TO $5000.00 Firm. 540-221-1302.
Sport Utility
665 Vehicles
2 0 0 8 Vo l v o X C 9 0 ; loaded; 3rd row seat; 1 owner; excel cond; no accidents; mls. 167K, $ 4 7 5 0 O B O . 540-222-5049 OR clpcvc@yahoo.com 2009 Chevy Avalanche Extended/crew cab, bed liner, and bed cap. 4 door, 220,000 miles, 2 New Front tires. Ask for Jack. $7,000 540-672-5597
675
Full name(s) of owner(s):
SIZZLING WINGS LLC
Trading as: WINGSTOP 476 8803 Centreville Road, Manassas, Prince William, Virginia 20110-5520 The above establishment is applying to the VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF ALCHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL (ABC) for a BEER ON PREMISES license to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages. Mitchell Lowe, President NOTE: Objections to the issuance of this license must be submitted to ABC no later than 30 days from the publishing date of the first of two required newspaper legal notices. Objections should be registered at www.abc. virginia.gov or 800-552-3200. Full name(s) of owner(s): CHATHA II LLC Trading as: ECLIPSE, 5615 Wellington Road, Suite 101, Gainesville, Prince William County, Virginia 22193 The above establishment is applying to the
Trucks/ Pickups
1990 FORD F-250 4x4, XLT LARIAT, 351 Engine, Automatick, 104k miles, Exc. Cond. 540-421-8822 or 540-298-1443. 2005 FORD F250 SuperDuty 6.0L Turbo Diesel. 4x4, insp. May. 51K, garage kept, great tow vehicle (13,500#). ARE cap. $15,000 obo. Call 434-589-1420.
VIRGINIA ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL (ABC) AUTHORITY
for a Beer and Wine on premises/Mixed Beverage Restaurant license to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages. Gurleen Singh Chatha, Member Note: Objections to the issuance of this license must be submitted to ABC no later than 30 days from the publishing date of the first of two required newspaper legal notices. Objections should be registered at www.abc.virginia.gov or 800-552-3200.
Legal Notices
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BY THE TOWN COUNCIL OF THE TOWN OF DUMFRIES, VIRGINIA ON December 3, 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 an ordinance to Enact Chapter 27 of the Code of The Town of Dumfries, Virginia to create a “Town of Dumfries Commercial Property Assessed Clean Energy (C-PACE) Financing Program,” in accordance with the Commonwealth of Virginia’s Clean Energy Financing Law, § 15.2-958.3 of the Code of Virginia of 1950, as amended. The program will facilitate loans to finance renewable energy production and distribution facilities, energy efficiency improvements, or water usage efficiency improvements in the Town. 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. Run dates: November 20, 2019 & November 27, 2019
Call Your Rep Today To Place Your Ad 540-347-4222
CLASSIFIEDS
Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
Legal Notices PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS ONE COUNTY COMPLEX COURT PRINCE WILLIAM, VIRGINIA 22192 November 26, 2019 Public Hearings 7:30 p.m. 1.
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Rezoning #REZ2019-00034, Youth for Tomorrow: To rezone ±181.61 acres from A-1, Agricultural, R-4, Suburban Residential, and B-1, General Commercial, to PBD, Planned Business District, with associated development and PBD use waivers/modifications and for a sign modification, to expand the current Youth for Tomorrow campus (max. height of 45-50 ft.) and to allow for the development of a data center facility (max. height of 75 ft.). The subject site is located northeast of the intersection of Linton Hall Rd. and Hazel Circle Dr.; ±1,300 feet north of Linton Hall Rd. and Nokesville Rd.; west of Broad Run; and is identified on County maps as GPINs 7595-33-7921, 7595-33-5562, 7595-34-8517, 7595-42-7663 (portion), 7595-43-9199, 7595-44-3671, 7595-44-4815, 7595-52-1880, 7595-54-7331, and 7595-55-1032 (portion). The site is designated SRL, Suburban Residential Low, SRM, Suburban Residential Medium, GC, General Commercial, and ER, Environmental Resource, in the Comprehensive Plan, and is located within the Airport Safety Overlay District – Brentsville Magisterial District – Planning Comprehensive Plan Amendment #CPA2018-00015, Technology and Connectivity: Comprehensive Plan Amendment to provide policy guidance for telecommunications infrastructure and guide development of new emerging technologies including, but not limited to, Broadband, 5G Wireless Infrastructure, and Smart Regions – Countywide – Planning
For additional information, contact Andrea P. Madden, Clerk to the Board of County Supervisors, at 703-792-6600. You may appear at the Board of County Supervisors’ Chamber in the McCoart Building, One County Complex Court, Prince William, Virginia, at the designated time to express your views. ACCESSIBILITY TO PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES: The hearings are being held at a public facility believed to be accessible to persons with disabilities. Any persons with questions on the accessibility of the facility should contact Andrea P. Madden, Clerk to the Board, at One County Complex Court, Prince William, Virginia, or by telephone at (703) 792-6600 or TDD (703) 792-6295. Persons needing interpreter services for the deaf must notify the Clerk to the Board no later than Thursday, October 21, 2019. Run Dates: November 13 and November 20, 2019
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Legal Notices NOTICE PLANNING COMMISSION PUBLIC HEARING CITY OF MANASSAS - CITY HALL COUNCIL CHAMBERS, FIRST FLOOR 9027 CENTER STREET December 4, 2019 - 7:00 P.M. Notice is hereby given that the Planning Commission will conduct a public hearing on the following item(s). All interested parties are encouraged to present their views at this hearing. SUP #2020-01: Firestone Complete Auto Care 8805 Liberia Avenue To consider a special use permit to allow a minor motor vehicle repair use at the 8805 Liberia Avenue (±0.77 acres within the Home Depot parking lot). Additional modifications include a waiver to increase allowable parking from 24 spaces to 32 spaces and to relocate allowable wall signage through a comprehensive sign plan. The property is zoned B-4, General Business and is designated Mathis Corridor and a Gateway/Corridor in the Comprehensive Plan. PUBLIC HEARING CONTINUED FROM NOVEMBER 13, 2019 Manassas 2040 Comprehensive Plan (CPA #2018-2000) The Commission will continue the previously-advertised public hearing on the draft 2040 Comprehensive Plan before making its recommendation to the Manassas City Council. After the public hearing the Commission may approve, amend and approve, or disapprove the Plan. The Comprehensive Plan is the City’s key policy document for land use, development, housing, infrastructure, transportation, and related economic and social issues. A complete draft of the plan may be examined at the Department of Community Development, City Hall, 9027 Center Street, Room 202, Manassas, VA 20110, and is also available online at: www.manassascity.org/planmanassas 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 Monday, December 2, 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 Wednesday, November 27, 2019. For additional information, contact the Community Development Office at 703/257-8223 or TTY 7-1-1. Run dates: November 20 and November 27, 2019.
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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ118211-03-01;JJ118212-0301 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re GONZALEZ LOUGHEED, BIANKA C; GONZALEZ LOUGHE, ALEXA LUZ The object of this suit is to: AMEND CUSTODY FOR BIANKA GONZALEZ LOUGHEED; AMEND CUSTODY FOR ALEXA LUZ GONZALEZ LOUGHEED It is ORDERED that the defendant LUIS JOEL GONZALEZ MIRANDA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/06/2020; 10:30 AM Keshara Luster, Deputy Clerk
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147000-01-00; JJ147001-0100; JJ147002-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re ABDALE, MARLEY The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF MARLEY ABDALE JJ147000-01-00; LEYLA S. ABDALEJJ147001-01-00; ZAYDEN ABDALE JJ147002-01-00; It is ORDERED that the defendant MANUEL AHMED ABDALE appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/17/2019; 10:30 AM Grace E. Custer, Deputy Clerk
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No JJ147376-01-00; JJ147378-0100 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re CASTELLANOS PAEZ, CHRISTOPHER; CASTELLANOS PAEZ, JACOBO The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF CHRISTOPHER AND JACOBO CASTELLANOS PAEZ It is ORDERED that the defendant UNKNOWN FATHER appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/13/2019; 10:30 AM Abby Cook, Deputy Clerk
Legal Notices
PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS ONE COUNTY COMPLEX COURT PRINCE WILLIAM, VIRGINIA 22192 December 3, 2019 Public Hearings 2:00 p.m. 1.
Adoption of an Ordinance to Vacate Easements, Buffers, and Areas on the Grace Christian Church, Inc. Property, 17100 Van Buren Road, Dumfries, GPIN 8189-67-8233, and 17150 Van Buren Road, Dumfries, GPIN 8189-76-0162: The easements, buffers, and areas to be vacated were created by deed and plat recorded as Instrument Numbers 200708150093584 and 200708150093585, among the land records of Prince William County, and are more particularly shown on the plat entitled “Plat showing the Vacation of Easements on the Property of Grace Church GPIN 8189-67-8233 and GPIN 8189-76-0162”, prepared by The Engineering Groupe, Inc., and dated October 25, 2019. The easements, buffers, and areas to be vacated include the following: waterline easements, sanitary sewer easements, storm drain easements, stormwater management easement, maintenance access easement, sight distance easement, ingress/egress easements, public combination sanitary sewer and waterline easement, private combination sanitary sewer and waterline easement, buffer areas, Highway Corridor Overlay District (HCOD) buffers, landscape buffers, and permanent conservation areas – Potomac Magisterial District – Development Services
7:30 p.m. 1.
Special Use Permit #SUP2019-00046, Dar Al Noor Mosque Expansion: To allow for the expansion of an existing religious institution with related facilities, to include a private school, additional parking, outdoor recreational amenities, and associated signage modifications for a new freestanding sign with electronic message board. The subject property is located on the north side of Hoadly Rd.; ±310 feet east of the intersections of Hoadly Rd. and Lost Creek Ct. and Hoadly Rd. and Websters Way; is addressed as 5404 Hoadly Rd.; and is identified on County maps as GPIN 8093-51-4254. The site is zoned A-1, Agricultural; is designated SRR, Semi-Rural Residential, in the Comprehensive Plan; is located within the Domestic Fowl Overlay District; and partially located within the Hoadly Road Highway Corridor Overlay District – Coles Magisterial District – Planning
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Rezoning #REZ2016-00029, Devlin Road Rezoning: To rezone ±269.9 acres from A-1, Agricultural, to PMR, Planned Mixed Residential, to allow for the development of a maximum of 516 single family detached units. The site is located on the north side of Linton Hall Rd., generally between Devlin Rd. and Piney Branch. The site extends northward from Linton Hall Rd. to the general area of Chris Yung Elementary School. The site is partially located in the Airport Safety Overlay District, and is designated as SRL, Suburban Residential Low, and ER, Environmental Resource, in the Comprehensive Plan – Brentsville Magisterial District – Planning
For additional information, contact Andrea P. Madden, Clerk to the Board of County Supervisors, at 703-792-6600. You may appear at the Board of County Supervisors’ Chamber in the McCoart Building, One County Complex Court, Prince William, Virginia, at the designated time to express your views. ACCESSIBILITY TO PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES: The hearings are being held at a public facility believed to be accessible to persons with disabilities. Any persons with questions on the accessibility of the facility should contact Andrea P. Madden, Clerk to the Board, at One County Complex Court, Prince William, Virginia, or by telephone at (703) 792-6600 or TDD (703) 792-6295. Persons needing interpreter services for the deaf must notify the Clerk to the Board no later than Thursday, November 28, 2019. Run Dates: November 20 and November 27, 2019
POLICE AUCTION Auction This Year Will Be On-Line Starting Date December 2, 2019 at propertyroom.com LIST IS SUBJECT TO ADDITIONS OR DELETIONS The Prince William County Police Department receives lost and stolen property which it will return to owner as required by law, upon satisfactory proof of ownership. If you believe that you have lost property or had property stolen which may now be in the possession of the Prince William County Police, you should contact the Criminal Evidence Section at (703) 792-6165. ITEM DESCRIPTION Bicycles - Assorted Makes/Sizes Car Accessories Clothing - Assorted Household Items Sports Accessories CD´s - Assorted Tools - Assorted Stereo Equipment Games Mopeds
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147482-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re DAILEY, KAL´EL CHRISTOPHER The object of this suit is to: DETERMINE C U S TO D Y O F D A I L E Y, K A L’ E L CHRISTOPHER (DOB:09/23/2019) PURSUANT TO 16.-241 OF THE 1950 CODE OF VIRGINIA AS AMENDED. It is ORDERED that the defendant UNKNOWN FATHER appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 11/20/2019; 10:00 AM Stephanie Wilson, Deputy Clerk
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147586-01-00; JJ147587-0100 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re EDMONDS, CHLOE MAE The object of this suit is to: TO OBTAIN CUSTODY OF EDMONDS, CHLOE JJ147586-01-00; EDMONDS, DAKARI JJ147587-01-00 It is ORDERED that the defendant DARTANYAN EDMONDS appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/06/2020; 10:30 AM Abby Cook, Deputy Clerk
Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ114826-03-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re BEALE, ARIYANA M The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ARIYANA M. BEALE It is ORDERED that the defendant ANDREA BEALE appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/13/2019; 10:30 AM Grace Custer, Deputy Clerk
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147464-01-00; JJ147465-0100; JJ147466-01-00; JJ147467-01-00; JJ147468-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re PEREZ HERNANDEZ, JUNIOR R; The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF PEREZ HERNANDEZ, JUNIOR R JJ147464-01-00; PEREZ HERNANDEZ, KIARA JJ147465-01-00; PEREZ HERNANDEZ, MICHAEL JJ147466-01-00; PEREZ HERNANDEZ, OWEN JJ147467-01-00; PEREZ HERNANDEZ, RICHARD JJ147468-0100 It is ORDERED that the defendant AURA L. HERNANDEZ HERNANDEZ appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/23/2019; 10:30 AM Abby Cook, Deputy Clerk
NOTICE OF DISPOSAL OF UNCLAIMED FIREARMS AND OTHER WEAPONS Pursuant to the provisions of Section 15.2-1721 of the Code of Virginia, as amended, notice is hereby given that the Prince William County Police Department will seek an order from the Circuit Court of this jurisdiction to destroy the below listed unclaimed weapons which have been in the possession of the Police Department for more than one hundred twenty days. The rightful owners of these weapons may request the return of said weapons by contacting the Property Section of the Police Department at 703-795-6165 within (10) days of this notice. Positive proof of ownership to include make, model, caliber, and serial number is required. UNCLAIMED WEAPONS Revolvers Semi-Automatic Pistols Rifles Shotguns
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147508-02-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re VALLE RIVERA, HANSON The object of this suit is to: TO OBTAIN CUSTODY OF VALLE RIVERA, HANSON; VALLE RIVERA, CINDY; VALLE RIVERA, MELANIE It is ORDERED that the defendant RIVERA FUENTES, GLENDA L appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/06/2020; 10:00 AM Constance Eskridge, Deputy Clerk
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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
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Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147329-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re GRANADOS SORTO, ESMERALDA The object of this suit is to: PETITION FOR CUSTODY OF ESMERALDA DE LA PAZ GRANADOS SORTO It is ORDERED that the defendant JOSE SANTOS GRANADOS ALVARENGA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/18/2019; 8:30 AM Keshara Luster, Deputy Clerk
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Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147460-01-00; JJ147461-0100; JJ147462-01-00; JJ147463-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re HENSEN, BENJI; HARVEY; KOBE AND REMY The object of this suit is to: CUSTODY RIGHTS FOR BENJI, HARVEY, KOBE AND REMY HENSEN It is ORDERED that the defendant CASANDRA KIMBERLY BROWN appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/23/2019; 10:30 AM Abby Cook, Deputy Clerk
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Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147380-01-00; JJ147380-0200 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re JACKSON, LONDYN RENEE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN FULL C U S TO D Y A N D V I S I TAT I O N O F LONDYN JACKSON It is ORDERED that the defendant ANTHONY JACKSON appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/03/2020; 10:30 AM Abby Cook, Deputy Clerk
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Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147399-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re RAMIREZ CASTANEDA, ANDRES The object of this suit is to: PETITION FOR CUSTODY OF ANDRES EDGARDO RAMIREZ CASTANEDA It is ORDERED that the defendant EDGARDO ANTONIO RAMIREZ AREVALO appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/03/2020; 10:30 AM Abby Cook, Deputy Clerk
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147593-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re SANCHEZ MENDEZ, EILENE The object of this suit is to: TO OBTAIN CUSTODY OF EILENE SANCHEZ MENDEZ It is ORDERED that the defendant JOSE P SANCHEZ REYES appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/23/2019; 10:30 AM Keshara Luster, Deputy Clerk
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147603-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re OTERO RIVERA, MAUBRICIO ALEXAN The object of this suit is to: TO OBTAIN CUSTODY OF MAUBRICIO ALEXANDER OTERO RIVERA It is ORDERED that the defendant JUAN ANTONIO OTERO ESCALANTE appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/13/2020; 10:30 AM Grace Custer, Deputy Clerk
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147541-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re MEJIA HOLLAND, LIZAHBELLE LEE The object of this suit is to: TO OBTAIN CUSTODY OF LIZAHBELLE LEE MEJIA HOLLAND It is ORDERED that the defendant DEVIN HOLLAND appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/13/2020; 10:30 AM Grace Custer, Deputy Clerk
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147326-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re ARIAS GARCIA, ELDER BENIGNO The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY AND SUPPORTING FACTUAL FINDINGS FOR ELDER BENIGNO ARIAS GARCIA It is ORDERED that the defendant ELDER LEONIDAS ARIAS RIVAS appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/10/2019; 10:00 AM Helen Cisler, Deputy Clerk
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ORDER OF PUBLICATION
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Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147155-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re ELEONU, CHISOM OKACHI The object of this suit is to: CUSTODY FOR PURPOSES OF ADOPTION OF CHISOM OKACHI ELEONU It is ORDERED that the defendant EMENIKE ELEONU appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/03/2020; 10:00 AM Helen Cisler, Deputy Clerk
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147511-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re SILVA POSADAS, EDRAS A The object of this suit is to: TO OBTAIN CUSTODY OF SILVA POSADAS, EDRAS A It is ORDERED that the defendant POSADAS FUNEZ, GLENIS AMADA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/27/2019; 10:30 AM Constance Eskridge, Deputy Clerk
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147379-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re POLLARD, JAYSHAWN JAYCEON The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN JOINT CUSTODY OF JAYSHAWN JAYCEON POLLARD It is ORDERED that the defendant UNKNOWN FATHER appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/23/2019; 10:30 AM Abby Cook, Deputy Clerk
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147163-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re JOHNSON, JABARI KW´MAYNE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN JOINT CUSTODY OF JOHNSON, JABARI KW’MAYNE It is ORDERED that the defendant UNKNOWN appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/23/2019; 10:00 AM Theresa Robinson, Deputy Clerk
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Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ144655-02-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re RUSHBROOK, LORETTA EDNA MAE The object of this suit is to: TO OBTAIN CUSTODY OF RUSHBROOK, LORETTA EDNA MAE It is ORDERED that the defendant UNKNOWN FATHER appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 11/27/2019; 10:00 AM Constance Eskridge, Deputy Clerk
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147195-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re CRABTREE, HARMONY FAITH The object of this suit is to: TO OBTAIN CUSTODY OF HARMONY FAITH CRABTREE It is ORDERED that the defendant RANDALL HILLRIEGEL appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/06/2020; 10:30 AM Grace Custer, Deputy Clerk
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Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147592-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re SANTAMARIA BARRIENTOS, JOHANA The object of this suit is to: TO OBTAIN CUSTODY OF JOHANA N SANTAMARIA BARIENTOS It is ORDERED that the defendant DAVID SANTAMARIA VALLLE appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/06/2020; 10:30 AM Keshara Luster, Deputy Clerk
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ122991-04-02; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re RICHARDSON, ANTONIO ZAQUEL The object of this suit is to: TO OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ANTONIO Z RICHARDSON It is ORDERED that the defendant ANTONIO RICHARDSON appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/03/2020; 10:00 AM Helen Cisler, Deputy Clerk
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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
Legal Notices
Public Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §§1-211.1;8.01-316,-317,20-104 Case No. CL 19007629-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT Commonwealth of Virginia, in re MANFREDIS E. VILLALOBOS ROBLES v. JOYCE PERALES The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN A NAME CHANGE FOR A MIN O R C H I L D J O Y C E S T E FA N I E PERALES VILLALOBOS It is ORDERED that the defendant JOYCE PERALES appear at the abovenamed Court and protect his or her interests on or before December 10,2019; Ana I Seger, Deputy Clerk III
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Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147085-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re SCOTT, ZOLTAN LAEL PIERRE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ZOLTAN LAEL PIERRE SCOTT It is ORDERED that the defendant TEVIN SCOTT appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/17/2019; 10:30 AM Keshara Luster, Deputy Clerk
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147383-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re BONILLA MATUTE, CRISTOPHER R The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF BONILLA MATUTE, CRISTOPHER R It is ORDERED that the defendant DIMAS BONILLA, BAUDILIO appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/23/2019; 10:00 AM Keshara Luster, Deputy Clerk
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Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ136543-01-01; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re PATTERSON, LAYLA The object of this suit is to: TRANSFER CASES FOR CUSTODY AND VISITATION FOR LAYLA PATTERSON It is ORDERED that the defendant BRANDON PATTERSON appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/17/2019; 10:30 AM Abby Cook, Deputy Clerk
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147320-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re OSORIO RODAS, GREYDIS E The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN SOLE LEGAL AND PHYSICAL CUSTODY OF GREYDIS E OSORIO RODAS It is ORDERED that the defendant JOSE JUIS OSORIO GARCIA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/09/2019; 10:30 AM Keshara Luster, Deputy Clerk
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ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147459-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re PINEDA MEJIA, DIEGO JESUS The object of this suit is to: TO OBTAIN CUSTODY OF DIEGO J. PINEDA MEJIA It is ORDERED that the defendant JUAN DIEGO PINEDA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/06/2020; 10:30 AM Abby Cook, Deputy Clerk
Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147604-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re ALAS ORELLANA, AUNER ISREAL The object of this suit is to: TO OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ALAS ORELLANA, AUNER ISREAL It is ORDERED that the defendant appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/07/2020; 10:30 AM Constance Eskridge, Deputy Clerk
Legal Notices
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POLICE AUCTION Auction This Year Will Be On-Line Starting Date June 1, 2019 at propertyroom.com LIST IS SUBJECT TO ADDITIONS OR DELETIONS The Prince William County Police Department receives lost and stolen property which it will return to owner as required by law, upon satisfactory proof of ownership. If you believe that you have lost property or had property stolen which may now be in the possession of the Prince William County Police, you should contact the Criminal Evidence Section at (703) 792-6165. ITEM DESCRIPTION Bicycles - Assorted Makes/Sizes Car Accessories Clothing - Assorted Household Items Sports Accessories CD´s - Assorted Tools - Assorted Stereo Equipment Games Mopeds
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147185-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re QUINTANA ROSALES, KEYLA The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF KEYLA QUINTANA ROSALES It is ORDERED that the defendant appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/18/2019; 10:30 AM Grace Custer, Deputy Clerk
Milestone Communications is proposing to construct a new telecommunications tower facility located at 705 Waterloo Road (approx. 900’ NE of Lower Waterloo Rd & Old Waterloo Rd), Warrenton, Fauquier County, VA 20180. The new facility will consist of a 132-foot stealth stadium light pole telecommunications tower. Any interested party wishing to submit comments regarding the potential effects the proposed facility may have on any historic property may do so by sending comments to: Project 6119004639 - MRH EBI Consulting, 6876 Susquehanna Trail South, York, PA 17403, or via telephone at (785) 760-5938.
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. CJJ37612; CHARLOTTESVILLE J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re a female child born to Monica P. Andrade Charlottesville Dept. of Social Services V Monica P. Andrade & Francisco Alexander Rosales The object of this suit is to terminate the residual parental rights of Monica P. Andrade & Francisco Alexander Rosales, the Mother and the Father of a female child born to Monica P. Andrade on June 17, 2018. It is ORDERED that the defendants, Monica P. Andrade & Francisco Alexander Rosales, appear in the above-named Court to protect his or her interest on or before 1/14/2020 at 10:00 AM. Amy C. Shifflette, Deputy Clerk
PUBLIC NOTICE
ABANDONED VESSELS
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ123307-01-01; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re WOODRUFF, JOSIAH ANDRUW The object of this suit is to: MODIFY VISITATION ORDER FOR JOSIAH WOODRUFF It is ORDERED that the defendant SHANELE JONES appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/20/2019; 1:30 PM Helen Cisler, Deputy Clerk
Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147282-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re MARTINEZ RODRIGUEZ, DEYSI The object of this suit is to: PROTECT THE WELFARE OF THE MINOR CHILD DEYSI MARTINEZ RODRIGUEZ It is ORDERED that the defendant JOSE A MARTINEX MEDRANO appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 11/21/2019; 10:30 AM Keshara Luster, Deputy Clerk
Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ144602-08-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re HALL, ALEX J. The object of this suit is to: RELEASE CUSTODY OF ALEX J. HALL It is ORDERED that the defendant MATTHEW E. HALL appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/23/2019; 1:30 AM Abby Cook, Deputy Clerk
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ147574-01-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re ARIAS DIAZ, YELITZA S The object of this suit is to: TO OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ARIAS DIAZ, YELITZA S It is ORDERED that the defendant ARIAS REYES, JOSE HENRY appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/06/2020; 10:00 AM Constance Eskridge, Deputy Clerk
Notice is hereby given that the following watercraft has been abandoned for more than 60 DAYS on the property of EZ Cruz Marina, 16245 Neabsco Road Woodbridge, VA 22191 (703) 670-8111.
● 1998 Maxum SCR VA2755AV HULL: BLZA65MSH79 ● 1996 Four Winds U-17 OH6058BU HULL:FWNMV024F5596 ● 1987 Sea Ray VA8319BT HULL: SERE01509L687 ● 1978 Chris-Craft VA8403AZ HULL: CCH08036M78C ● 1991 Chris-Craft 272 HULL: CCBFS103A191 ● 30’ Sea Ray Moon Dancer HULL: SERT4684J687 Application for Watercraft Registration/ Title will be made in accordance with Section 29.1-733.25 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
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE §8.01-316 Case No. JJ114826-03-00; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J & DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (x) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re BEALE, ARIYANA M The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ARIYANA M. BEALE It is ORDERED that the defendant UNKNOWN appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/13/2019; 10:30 AM Grace Custer, Deputy Clerk
CLASSIFIEDS
Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
21
Employment Full Time Employment
Full Time Employment
Full Time Employment
LEAD TEACHERS & TEACHER AIDES
RECEPTIONIST
Micro Assembly Technician
FT/PT. Seeking dynamic individuals that love the preschool environment and can work flexible hours.
Apply in person at Jack and Jill. 200 Green Street Warrenton, Va
Sheehy Ford Of Warrenton is looking to fill a Full time/part time receptionist position. Customer Service skills are required.
Please email resumes to mariraimondi@sheehy.com
Full Time Employment
Full Time Employment
HIRING
● ● ● ● ● ●
FOREMEN TRUCK DRIVERS PIPE FOREMEN PIPE CREW LABORERS EQUIPMENT OPERATORS GUARANTEED TIME!!
EXCELLENT PAY AND BENEFITS. Call 540-222-2535
Full Time Employment
CDL Drivers, Crew Leaders, Laborers,
FIRE PROTECTION SERVICE AND SALES
PT for Fire Protection Co. 4 days/week, Fauquier area. Retires Welcome. We will train in sales & service of fire extinguishers. Co. vehicle provided, good driving record req.d. Contact Henry @ 800 892-1012
Culpeper; Fauquier & Prince Wm Areas EXCELLENT WAGES! 540-727-0024 for phone interview Mon- Fri
Full Time Employment
(Leesburg, VA)
Law Clerk
(Immigration & Int’l Business)
at Thoronka Law Office: req. LLM or its foreign equiv. & 12 m. exp. in job offered or related fields. Alternatively, employer accepts bachelor’s degree or its foreign equivalent & 5 yrs exp in job offered or related fields such as Law Clerk, Paralegal, Special Legal Consultant, Legal Consultant. Any suitable combination of education, training, or experience is acceptable. Work Loc’n: Woodbridge, VA. Send resume to HR, Thoronka Law Office, 12656 LAKE RIDGE DR, Suite C, WOODBRIDGE, VA 22192
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
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.
YOUR REAL ESTATE COULD BE HERE!
Full Time
545 Employment
Full Time Employment
CAREGIVERS WANTED
Asphalt and Concrete Skills
Compensation: Based on Experience Employment type: full-time The Kauffman Group Inc. For an interview or more information please email: helpwantedloudoun@ gmail.com
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
Full Time
545 Employment
This Could Be Your Ad! Call Your Rep Today to Place Your Ad 347-4222
To subscribe, call 540-351-1665 or email nkeyser@fauquier.com
Call 540-351-1664 or email classifieds@fauquier.com to place your ad.
22
CLASSIFIEDS
Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
BUSINESS SERVICE DIRECTORY Heating and Air Conditioning
Excavation
Home Repair
Moving/Storage
For all your
Heating and Cooling needs, call on
RC’S A/C SERVICE & REPAIR (540) 349-7832 or (540) 428-9151
Lawn
Pet Services
Builder Lawn Maintenace • Planting • Mulching Bed Design • Spring/Fall Cleaning • Seeding Aeration • Dethatching • Top Soil • Sod Fertilization Programs • Trimming/Pruning Gutter Cleaning • Debris Removal Family Owned & Operated • Licensed and Insured
540-347-3159 •703-707-0773
Health & Beauty Landscaping Cleaning
“maggiegirl”
Pet Sitting Services
Home Improvment Nutters Painting & Services – SPECIALIZING IN –
Construction
• 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
Call Erik 540-522-3289 Free Estimates 20 years exp. Licensed/Ref’s Available • Discount Pricing nutterspainting@aol.com
Mowing, Lawn Maintenance, Trimming, Topping, Spraying, Removal, Stump Grinding, Mulching, Pruning, Cabling, Planting, Grading, Seeding, Power Washing, Retaining Walls, Patios, Walkways
540-923-4087 540-214-8407
4 200
g Ma
gie
15 20
Daily Visits & Weekends Holidays Dogs cats and Horses Licensed & Insured
Call Suzy
540-347-1870
“My life has gone to the dogs
Advertise?
Licensed & Insured Free Estimates All major credit cards accepted
GEORGEDODSON1031@GMAIL.COM
www.DODSONTREECAREANDLANDSCAPING.com
Masonry Driveways
G RAVEL ALL PROJECTS
We deliver days, evenings and even weekends!
CALL ANYTIME
Michael R. Jenkins
540-825-4150 • 540-219-7200 mbccontractingservices@yahoo.com
Advertise Here And Watch Your Business GROW
FIND... an expert in the
Advertise.
Business & Services Directory
Fauquier.com
CLASSIFIEDS
Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
23
BUSINESS SERVICE DIRECTORY Power Washing
Windows Cleaning
Remodeling
Tree Service/Firewood
POTOMAC WINDOW CLEANING CO.
FIREWOOD SEASONED HARDWOOD, $200/CORD
WINDOW CLEANING: Inside & Outside • By Hand • Residential Specialist POWER WASHING: No Damage, Low Pressure. Soft Brushing By Hand • Removes Dirt On Brick, Concrete, Wood & Siding
PLUS DELIVERY MORE THAN 15 MILES FROM NOKESVILLE.
SNOW PLOWING YARD CLEAN UP
CHASE FLOOR WAXING SERVICE
703-577-1979
Family Owned & Operated for 30 Years | Working Owners Assures Quality & Knowledgeable Workmanship
703.356.4459 | LICENSED • BONDED & INSURED
Painting/Wallpaper
Roofing
Tile
Tree Service/Firewood
T&J Ceramic Tile, Inc.
If you want a Classy Job call ...
LICENSED & INSURED • FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED
Free Estimates • Installation & Repair • Residential & Commercial • New Homes or Remodel Work
Painting & Decorating, LLC
• Home painting & carpentry repairs • 30 years of hands on experience • Small company with personal service Free Consultations & Estimates.
Roofing
Creative • Professional • First Class Painting Services
Tim Mullins (540)439-0407 • Fax (540)439-8991 tandjceramictile@comcast.net www.tandjceramictile.com
Call today! 540-349-1614 or 703-444-7255 Fully licensed & Insured
Tree Service/Firewood
Painting/Wallpaper
Piedmont Painting * Free Estimates * Many References * Drywall & Plaster Repair
540-364-2251 540-878-3838 LICENSED & INSURED
Power Washing
Roofing Professional Services Tree Service/Firewood NORTH'S TREE SERVICE & LANDSCAPING Family Owned & Operated for Over 30 yrs. Quality Work Guaranteed CALL ABOUT - COMPLETE TREE SERVICE OUR
- ALL PHASES OF LANDSCAPING - All phases of Masonry - Gravel & Grading Driveways - Fencing Honest and Dependable
25% OFF SPECIALS
Fauquier Community Food Bank & Thrift Store Donations - No Monday Tues - Friday 9:00 - 3:00 Sat 9:00 - 1:00 249 E. Shirley Ave. Warrenton, VA 20186 540-359-6054 Fauquier_thrift@yahoo.com
540-533-8092
Free Estimates • Lic/Ins • BBB Member • Angie’s List Member
Your Ad Could Be HERE. Classified ADs Work! Times Newspapers Classified Call 540-347-4222
Never miss a beat. Get the latest news at Fauquier.com To subscribe, call 540-351-1665 or email nkeyser@fauquier.com
24
Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 20, 2019
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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 11/24/19
Mon- Sat: 10am-9pm Sun: 11am-7pm