Prince William Times 07/27/2023

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SPORTS: Manassas team wins Babe Ruth Baseball state title, Battlefield football update. PAGE 11

July 27, 2023 | Vol. 22, No. 30 | www.princewilliamtimes.com | $1.00 Covering Prince William County and surrounding communities, including Gainesville, Haymarket, Dumfries, Occoquan, Quantico and the cities of Manassas and Manassas Park.

Cleared for takeoff: City OKs commercial flights from Manassas By Cher Muzyk

Times Staff Writer

By 2025, flights to Florida and elsewhere could be just minutes away in Manassas. The Manassas City Council voted unanimously Monday to bring commercial flights to the Manassas Regional Airport. Passenger flights are expected to get off the ground sometime in the next two years with Florida destinations likely. After holding two public hearings, the city council took the vote at Jennie Dean Elementary School, well aware that residents had concerns about noise, traffic and air pollution associated with additional aircraft flying in and out of the airport, which is now open to only private planes. “Change is hard, but it can be done,” Mayor Michelle Davis-Younger (D) told the crowd at the meeting. “This city is moving forward. This city is growing. People are coming here by the droves. Businesses want to move here. We have to be ready for it.” Lyle Sebranek was one of about 25 speakers at the July 24 public hearing who were about evenly split in support

PHOTO BY ROGER SNYDER

An aerial photo of the Manassas Regional Airport, which is now restricted to private planes but could see commercial flights in as soon as two years.. of or against the commercial flights. Sebranek told the city council he has lived on Chevalle Drive – “as close as you can get” to the airport’s runway – for 40 years with his family. Years ago, there were very few flights but “then came the larger business-type aircraft,”

he said. Sebranek urged the council to consider the quality of life of the residents who live around the airport and pause the approval to perform a preliminary noise assessment. “Jets departing an airport make noise. Lots of it.” he said. “They’re

noisy regardless of what people say.” Residents of the Great Oak subdivision located across from Va. 234 from the airport voiced similar concerns. “The sound is an issue,” said Wilson Lee who resides on Aspen Wood Court. “This has to be thought out. Your neighbors in the community deserve more time.” Manassas residents Brian Nace and Cheryl Macias said the plan would move the city forward. Adding commercial flights “seems like a very natural step to increase the city’s profile,” Nace said. “It’s our next step,” Macias said, stressing that the proposal would “elevate the visibility of our city,” bring economic development and produce jobs. “It’s largely a no-brainer,” she said. Brandon Burton, also a Manassas resident, praised the plan for its convenience: “How amazing would a 10-minute trip to the airport be?” After more than 90 minutes of public comments, Vice Mayor Pamela Sebesky (D) asked Avports about specific concerns raised by residents, including the possibility of cargo flights using the expanded airport and increased traffic. See AIRPORT, page 4

Homelessness up 35% as COVID supports end Minority, elderly, disabled residents disproportionately affected By Anya Sczerzenie Times Staff Writer

The number of Prince William County residents experiencing homelessness hit a three-year high this year and is up more than 35% since last year, mirroring regional trends, according to a recent report released by Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments. The economic stress of the pandemic, the expiration of COVID-19 era housing and income supports and a burst of new construction may have contributed to the rise in the homeless count, according to Tony Turnage, Prince William County’s director of homeless services. In the county, there are more people in homeless shelters now than there have been at any point in the past five years, according to the report, and more unsheltered people than there have been since before the COVID-19 pandemic began in 2020.

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Residents of a Woodbridge area homeless campsite line up for a hot meal, nonperishable food, snacks and new socks and T-shirts during a weekly HUGS outreach. There are no unsheltered homeless children in the county, but there were 40 families with children staying in either shelters or transitional housing during the annual “point-in-time” homeless survey conducted in January. The number of unsheltered people—those who are not living in a homeless shelter, hotel or other indoor location – was 73 when the PIT count was taken, compared to 102 in 2020. However, the number of unsheltered residents more

Nonprofit led by Gainesville mom pays off 20 schools’ meal debts, page 3

than doubled since 2022 when it was just 27. The PIT survey found 326 total residents experiencing homelessness, an increase of 35% from the 2022 PIT survey, which counted 241 such residents. It’s likely both numbers are undercounts, as it is difficult to find every homeless person when some manage to find temporary shelter during the winter. The count is conducted during the last 10 days of January each year. See HOMELESS, page 2

LIBRARY PAGE: Summer reading help, new books, page 8

88 DULLES, VA


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NEWS

Homelessness up 35% as COVID supports end

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | July 27, 2023

sometimes no one answers their calls.

According to the 2023 survey, homelessness disproportionately af“Often during extreme cold fects the county’s minority and disweather, persons will find alterna- abled residents. tive locations to live—for example, While only about 22% of Prince living with others in a hotel or mo- William County residents are African tel or seeking out family and friends American, the PIT survey found that during extreme cold weather condi- 56% of local residents experiencing tions,” Turnage said in an email. homelessness are Black. And while The county’s rising number of peo- less than 6% of country residents are ple experiencing homelessness could disabled, the survey found that 36% be attributed to better “street outreach” of unhoused county residents have and survey techniques, including iden- some kind of disabling condition. tifying and visiting the county’s homeThe number of local older adults less encampments, Turnage said. and those with disabilities experiMost of Prince William County’s encing homelessness has steadily homeless people have roots in the risen over the past five years. Discounty with 85% having lived either abilities include physical, mental and in Prince William County, Manassas emotional conditions such as traumatic brain injury, PTSD and other or Manassas Park. chronic illness“It is a comes, along with mon misconcepPrince William residents developmention that persons e x p e r i e n c i n g experiencing homelessness tal disabilities. Drug addiction h o m e l e s s n e s s by the numbers • Black: 56% that is diagnosed are largely tran• White: 35% by a doctor or sient, when, in that qualifies as reality, they are • No income: 50% • Age 55 or older: 23% disability by Sousually residents cial Security, is of the CoC (ConContributing factors considered a distinuum of Care) • Disabling conditions: 36% abling condition. from which they • Survivor of domestic violence: Rose Powers, request services,” 17% director of the the report reads. • Limited English proficiency: Christian nonTurnage said 19% profit Street Light there is “not much • Formerly institutionalized: 16% Ministries says movement be• Formerly in foster care: 7% that around 30% tween jurisdicSOURCE: METROPOLITAN WASHINGTON of the homeless tions” based on COUNCIL OF GOVERNMENTS residents they the results of earhelp are considlier surveys. ered “medically fragile.” The nonprofit Out in the woods focuses on single adults experiencing Unhoused residents have camped homelessness, who are not prioritized in the county’s undeveloped wooded for county shelters. areas – mostly behind retail corridors “These are people who have near the Potomac Mills Mall and along worked all their lives and then beSudley Road in Manassas – for years. came ill with a chronic health condiIn Woodbridge, about 10 to 15 tion that left them unable to maintain people were recently forced out of a job,” Powers said. “They would their campsites near Caton Hill and lose their job, health insurance and Telegraph roads because of a planned housing and end up in the woods.” affordable housing apartment comThe elderly and medically fragile plex, according to Kathy Schuster, homeless populations were prioriof Help Us Grow Strong (HUGS), tized for county programs during which provides weekly meals and COVID-19, including subsidized hosupplies to those living in the Wood- tel rooms and priority rehousing. bridge-area homeless camps. Powers said COVID-19 caused Schuster said between five and people who were just barely hold50 people turn out for their Saturday ing on to their housing to become outreach events, which offer neces- homeless, which could explain the sities such as toiletries, fresh fruit, recent rise. Because pandemic-era snacks, canned goods, new T-shirts programs such as subsidized hotel and socks to anyone who needs them. rooms are now ending, homeless Schuster said HUGS has recent- people who may have had a small ly seen more families take part in reprieve are now back on the streets. its weekly events – many of whom During the pandemic, the county are not homeless but struggling. She paid for hotel rooms for homeless said the expiration of COVID-19 era people who had COVID-19, so they protections has been hard on low- could quarantine away from other er-income residents. encampment or shelter residents, as “They had all this money coming well as those who were “medically in – extra food stamps and help with fragile” or had pre-existing condithe rent – and all those programs just tions that put them at a higher risk stopped with very little warning,” for COVID-19 complications. This Schuster said. “There should have program ended about a year and a been a tapering off.” half ago, Turnage said. Schuster said she often refers “We secured a hotel—all of the homeless residents to Prince William rooms—and operated it like a shelCounty’s “coordinated entry” line for ter,” Turnage said. Turnage says that he has not seen help but said they encounter waiting lists or other barriers, including that evictions rise in the county postHOMELESS, from page 1

Volunteers with HUGS, or Help Us Grow Strong, an advocacy group for Prince William County’s unhoused residents.

More minority, older residents affected

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COVID but has seen some new faces among the homeless population. “We’re seeing new people who have never touched our system before,” Turnage said. “I don’t know if the problem is getting worse, but there is a lack of affordable housing in our county. The housing choice voucher program is full, and there is a need for a variety of subsidies.” Ongoing development of the county is also a concern for the homeless population, which can be pushed out of encampments as a result. “These wooded areas are now being developed,” Turnage said. “In some cases, a landowner will find people living on their property, and they are being fined because of trash and debris. The landowner may cut grass and brush, so there’s no more hiding places. It’s imperative that we have a well-coordinated street outreach team when we find people in these places not meant for human habitation.”

Available help

The number of shelter beds for the unhoused provided by in Prince William County during the pandemic rose 75% from 186 to 328. There are now about 210 beds spread among six shelters, and some of them have restrictions on who can use them. For example, the Hilda Barg shelter is for families only. The “supportive shelter” is for disabled or medically fragile adults, and the Ferlazzo building shelter is only for adults. The county also has a rapid re-housing program based on the “housing-first” approach. It helps homeless people by subsidizing their rent and providing a case manager for up to two years to help them get back on their feet. Turnage says that the program uses an individualized rather than “cookie-cutter” approach, since each household has different needs. “If you prove you can get a job and follow the rules, we’ll make a referral to permanent housing,” Turnage said. “Not having an income is

not a reason we can’t refer you.” Case managers help those in the rapid re-housing program search for jobs, as many apartments don’t allow those without an income to rent. Powers said homeless people in the county—and across the country—often don’t have the credit history to apply for apartments and lack the funds to pay the deposit on most of them. “We’re talking $3,000 that they have to come up with just to stabilize, which is one of the reasons people stay homeless,” Powers said. “They’re caught in a cycle. It’s traumatizing. People don’t cope well, and they literally snap.” Street Light attempts to “fill the gap” caused by what Powers said is a “complete lack” of affordable housing in Prince William County. Both Prince William County and The Street Light are planning to build new centers to help the county’s homeless population. The county’s planned “homeless navigation center” will eventually expand and replace the Ferlazzo shelter and augment it with drop-in services and will be completed in the next two to three years according to Turnage. Street Light’s planned “Hope Center,” an apartment-style facility that will provide support services such as medical care and job training to the homeless, is still seeking a location and funding and remains a work in progress. Powers said that because transportation is a barrier to many homeless people, she wants to create a center where everything it needs is under one roof. “Some of them have disabilities they will always have to live with— they may never be able to work—but at least they can live optimal lifestyles and feel worthwhile, with dignity, safety and the comfort of their own home. I think every individual deserves that.” Reach Anya Sczerzenie at fauquier.com HOW TO REACH US

ISSN 1050-7655, USPS 188280 Published every Thursday by Piedmont Media LLC PUBLISHER Scott Elliott, 540-347-4222 selliott@fauquier.com REPORTERS Cher Muzyk, cmuzyk@fauquier.com Shannon Clark, sclark@fauquier.com Anya Sczerzenie, asczerzenie@fauquier.com Hunter Savery hsavery@fauquier.com SPORTS EDITOR Peter Brewington, pbrewington@fauquier.com SPORTS REPORTER Matthew Proctor, mproctor@fauquier.com

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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | July 27, 2023

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Nonprofit ‘Settle the Debt’ clears student meal debt at 20 schools By Anya Sczerzenie

Schools free of student meal debt thanks to Settle the Debt

Times Staff Writer

About one in five Prince William public schools got relief from the cost of paying for school meals that kids couldn’t afford thanks to a nonprofit group’s fundraising. Under Virginia law, schools must provide kids with lunch even if they don’t have money to pay for those meals. Schools accumulate debt for those unpaid meals, which can become a burden on their budgets. A local nonprofit called Settle the Debt was created to help schools clear those debts so their budget dollars can stay focused on supporting student learning. Settle the Debt paid off $64,947 of the approximately $400,000 in student meal debt that had accumulated this past school year—enough to cover 20 of the county’s 100 schools. Gainesville attorney and mom Adelle Settle, who runs Settle the Debt, said any donations the organization collects from now on will be used to cover meal debt incurred during the upcoming 2023-24 school year. Most of the schools’ meal debts were covered by small donations, usually between $20 and $100. But in one case, an anonymous graduate of Woodbridge Senior High School paid off its entire lunch debt of about $26,000, Settle said. Federal dollars provide free and reduced-price lunch at school for low income children at schools nationwide. Under a special federal

Adelle Settle program, about 30 of the county’s schools have free meals for all students. The Community Eligibility Provision makes lunch free for all kids at schools where at least 40 percent of students qualify for federal free or reduced-priced meals. Paying for school meals is a challenge for many Northern Virginia families that the federal government does not consider low income because requirements to qualify for free and reduced-priced student meals don’t take into account the area’s high cost of living. Many Prince William County families make too much to qualify but still struggle financially. The problem has been exacerbated by high inflation and the fact that all school meals were free during the pandemic and up until the start of this past school year. Parents got out of the routine of paying for school meals, Settle said. “The need is high right now and

Alvey Elementary Bennett Elementary Buckland Mills Elementary Coles Elementary Covington Harper Elementary Glenkirk Elementary Henderson Elementary Lake Ridge Elementary McAuliffe Elementary Mountain View Elementary

Old Bridge Elementary Penn Elementary Pennington Traditional Rosa Parks Elementary Springwoods Elementary The Nokesville School Tyler Elementary Washington Reid Elementary Williams Elementary Woodbridge Senior High School

that reflects inflation challenges and the changing economy,” Settle said. “But also, it reflects how parents weren’t accustomed to paying it, so it’s left their budget. Parents didn’t have to worry about it during the pandemic, and that flexibility helped families budget better.” Settle collects donations for Settle the Debt and decides how to dole out the money based on economic need and geography. She says she wants to spread the money “equitably around the county.” Individual donors can choose what school they want their money to go toward, but if they do not, the money goes into a general fund, which Settle the Debt allocates to various schools. Though Settle takes pride in her nonprofit, she says that she looks forward to the day when it is no longer necessary to pay off students’ meal debts. Settle is an advocate for

universal free school meals, which are already a reality in states like California and Maine. “I’m hopeful that we’ll be able to pass this, so that parents won’t struggle to cover this very important part of kids’ lives,” Settle said. Settle said that she thinks Virginia is “much closer” to passing universal free school meals than they have been in the past. “We’re ramping up our efforts to reach out to the legislature to pass free school meals,” Settle said. “Just expressing who we are, what we want and why it would be a good economic decision to make sure every kid gets school meals and does not have to pay for them.” Until universal free school meals are passed in Virginia, Settle said the organization will continue to fundraise. “My goal is always to pay off as much school meal debt as exists,” Settle said.

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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | July 27, 2023

Cleared for takeoff: City OKs commercial flights from Manassas AIRPORT, from page 1 Andrew King, Avports spokesperson, said that “cargo service is not contemplated in the franchise agreement.” Commercial passenger service “will be our focus,” he said, noting that “from a purely practical perspective, there’s no room for cargo service at those facilities nor are we able to build facilities for that.” With regard to traffic, King said traffic is always a concern “from both a neighbor perspective and from a business perspective.” He said Avports is committed to helping with traffic mitigation in the area. “Traffic is a major concern for any airport at any time,” King said. “If people can’t get to the airport because traffic is backed up, then airlines tend to not be happy if they can’t fill their seats.” Even prior to the franchise agreement’s approval, King said Avports has already engaged in conversations with city and Prince William County officials about traffic concerns. Traffic mitigation is also required by the Federal Aviation Administration as part of an environmental study that will be completed during the airport’s “PART 139 certification,” King said. In a lengthy discussion before the vote, several city council members acknowledged there would likely be “growing pains” associated with the change but said the area’s population is growing, and the airport needs to accommodate it. Commercial airlines have been envisioned as part of the airport’s future for more than three decades. Council members also thanked residents for their “passionate” engagement in the process. “It sent us to research … to other actions, and it made us follow through on our due diligence,” Councilman Ralph Smith (D) said. Sebesky said she heard from many constituents and understood it was a controversial deci-

TIMES STAFF PHOTO/CHER MUZYK

City of Manassas Mayor Michelle Davis-Younger, center, speaks during the Monday, July 24 meeting. She is flanked by City Manager Patrick Pate and City Councilwoman Pam Sebesky. sion. “We’ve been asked if we’ve done our due diligence. Comments that have been made by this council clearly show that due diligence has been done, that lots of questions have been asked of all involved in this project,” Sebesky said. “Therefore, when we cast our votes, it can be made with confidence, not with questions about what may or may not have been said or done.” Councilman Tom Osina (D) said when he looked into traffic concerns, he learned that the county is already aware of the planned expansion of the airport and since the bowtie interchange at the Cloverhill intersection is still in the planning phase; changes can be made to accommodate anticipated traffic growth. He also said that other local roads have the potential to be widened to alleviate congestion if necessary. With regard to potential negative environmental impacts, Osina said that he was satisfied that the “extensive environmental analysis” conducted by the FAA as part of the certification process to allow commercial traffic at the airport “will be thorough to make sure that moving to expanded flights can be done at Manassas Airport.” He said airport noise, like other noises such as air conditioning and fireworks, is common. “We accept them for living in a suburban

You are invited to a Community Meeting Learn about the Hornbaker Electric Transmission Line and Switching Station Project taking place in the Innovation Park area of Prince William County. Join us: Tuesday, August 1, 5-7 p.m. Manassas Church of the Brethren 10047 Nokesville Rd. Manassas, VA 20110 You can find event details and view a project map at DominionEnergy.com/hornbaker Use your phone’s camera or QR reader app to visit the project page directly.

environment,” Osina said. “I know there will be negative consequences. There will be more noise.” Councilman Mark Wolfe (D) said after he made the motion to approve the project. “I will hear it along with everyone else.” “I will assure you … in the next 30 years another million people will live in Northern Virginia,” Wolfe said. “That airport will grow, and there will be more planes and more flights and more noise at that airport.” “This is quite an added benefit for our city,” Councilmember Theresa Coates Ellis (R) touted the new jobs and educational opportunities the expanded airport will bring. “We have always said that our airport is a hidden gem for our communities and the surrounding area,” she said. “Now it is time for our gem to shine.” The decision means Avports will lease the airport terminal for 40 years and pay to construct a 35,000-square-foot addition to the current facility, which was built in 1996. Any physical improvements to the terminal would remain city property. The expansion of the airport will come in two phases. In the first phase, the airlines will use the existing terminal with minor upgrades, including new security checkpoints, to support about six to eight new commercial flights a day. It’s not clear how long Avports would operate under the first phase of improvements. During the second phase, the terminal will be fully upgraded and expanded to meet demand, which is expected to be about 24 to 30 flights per day. At full build out, air traffic volume is expected to increase by less than 11% of current traffic, Avports’ proposal said. Avports said it plans to operate four to six gates and aims to offer “seven-minute curb-to-gate service” to passengers. Avports could announce carriers and likely destinations within the next six to 18 months, King said in an interview after the vote. Commercial carriers “are already actively courting us,” he said. Reach Cher Muzyk at cmuzyk@fauquier.com


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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | July 27, 2023

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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | July 27, 2023

NOTICE OF A A PETITION PETITION BY BY NOTICE TO TO THE THE PUBLIC PUBLIC OF VIRGINIA POWER COMPANY COMPANY VIRGINIA ELECTRIC ELECTRIC AND AND POWER FOR AUTHORIZING THE THE FOR A A FINANCING FINANCING ORDER ORDER AUTHORIZING ISSUANCE OF DEFERRED FUEL COST BONDS ISSUANCE OF DEFERRED FUEL COST BONDS PURSUANT 56-249.6:1 PURSUANT TO TO CODE CODE §§ 56-249.6:1 CASE CASE NO. NO. PUR-2023-00112 PUR-2023-00112 On petition (“Petition”) (“Petition”) with with the State State Corporation Corporation Commission Commission (“Commission”), (“Commission”), pursuant pursuant to to On July July 3, 3, 2023, 2023, Virginia Virginia Electric Electric and and Power Power Company Company (“Dominion” (“Dominion” or or “Company”) “Company”) filed filed aa petition Code deferred fuel fuel cost cost bonds. bonds.theSpecifically, Specifically, the Company Company seeks: seeks: Code §§ 56-249.6:1, 56-249.6:1, for for aa financing financing order order to to finance finance certain certain deferred deferred fuel fuel cost cost balances balances through through deferred the i.To securitization; i.To finance finance the the deferred deferred fuel fuel costs costs and and associated associated up-front up-front financing financing costs costs through through securitization; ii. ii. For For approval approval of of the the proposed proposed securitization securitization financing financing structure; structure; iii. For approval to sponsor the issuance of deferred fuel pledge of of deferred deferred fuel fuel cost cost property, property, in in one one or or more more series series or or tranches tranches in in an an aggregate aggregate iii. For approval to sponsor the issuance of deferred fuel cost cost bonds bonds secured secured by by the the pledge principal deferred fuel fuel cost cost bonds bonds are are issued; issued; principal amount amount not not to to exceed exceed the the securitizable securitizable balance balance as as of of the the date date the the first first series series deferred iv. in connection connection with with the the issuance issuance of of deferred deferred fuel fuel cost cost bonds bonds and and on on going going financing financing costs; costs; iv. For For approval approval of of the the financing financing costs, costs, including including up-front up-front financing financing costs costs incurred incurred in v. bill, charge, charge, collect collect and and receive receive non-bypassable non-bypassable deferred deferred fuel fuel cost cost charges charges sufficient sufficient to to v. For For approval approval to to create create deferred deferred fuel fuel cost cost property, property, including including the the right right to to (i) (i) impose, impose, bill, recover financing costs, costs, and and (ii) (ii) obtain obtain periodic periodic formulaic formulaic adjustments adjustments to to the the deferred deferred fuel fuel cost cost recover the the principal principal of, of, and and interest interest on, on, the the deferred deferred fuel fuel cost cost bonds bonds and and on on going going financing property; property; and and vi. vi. For For approval approval of of the the tariff tariff to to implement implement the deferred fuel cost charges. During Assembly (“Legislation”). (“Legislation”). The The Legislation Legislation During its its 2023 2023 Session, Session, the the Virginia Virginia General General Assembly enacted Chapters 775 (HB 1770) and 757 (SB 1265) of the 2023 Virginia Acts of Assembly became charge securitization, securitization, that that may may be be used used by by an an became effective effective on on July July 1, 1, 2023. 2023. As As stated stated in the Petition, the Legislation, inter alia, creates a new financing vehicle, utility cost recovery charge electric authorization to to issue issue deferred deferred fuel fuel cost cost bonds bonds electric utility utility to to recover recover certain certain deferred deferred fuel fuel costs, as codified at Code § 56-249.6:1. Under the Legislation, an electric utility may seek authorization with distinct from from the the utility’s utility’s base base rates rates or or fuel fuel factor factor with lower lower financing financing costs costs that that are are secured secured by by deferred fuel cost property and include a dedicated fuel cost charge that is separate and distinct on on customer customer bills. bills. Historically, fuel factor factor adjustment adjustment process process prescribed prescribed by by Historically, Dominion Dominion has has recovered recovered its its prudently prudently incurred fuel expenses on a dollar-for-dollar basis from its customers through an annual fuel law (“Prior Period Period Factor”). Factor”). Generally, Generally, the the Prior Prior PePelaw (“fuel (“fuel factor”). factor”). Dominion’s Dominion’s total total fuel fuel factor factor consists of a current period factor (“Current Period Factor”) and a prior period factor (“Prior riod revenues collected collected through through the the fuel fuel factor. factor. The The riod Factor Factor includes includes any any fuel fuel deferral deferral balance, balance, which reflects the under-recovery or over-recovery of actual fuel expenses after applying revenues Company during the the prior prior fuel fuel period. period. Specifically, Specifically, Company asserts asserts that that the the fuel fuel deferral deferral balance balance continues to be substantial, due in part to significant marketplace commodity price increases during Dominion’s June 30, 30, 2023 2023 under-recovery under-recovery of of expenses expenses Dominion’s projected projected June June 30, 30, 2023 2023 fuel fuel deferral deferral balance is approximately $1.275 billion. This balance represents the sum of the projected June during mitigation plan plan adopted adopted by by the the Commission Commission during the the July July 1, 1, 2022 2022 to to June June 30, 30, 2023 2023 fuel fuel period, and two-thirds of the remaining June 30, 2022 fuel deferral balance under a three-year mitigation in Case Case No. No. PUR-2022-00064. PUR-2022-00064. in As discussed discussed further further in in the the May May 12, 12, 2023 2023 Order Order Establishing 2023-2024 Fuel Factor Proceeding in Case No. PUR-2023-00067, were the Company As Company to to seek seek recovery recovery of of both both the the Current Current Period Factor Factor and and the the Prior Prior Period Period Factor Factor through through the fuel factor, a typical residential customer using 1,000 kilowatt-hours (“kWh”) per month Period month would would see see aa net net increase increase of of $7.92 $7.92 per per month for for the the period period of of July July 1, 1, 2023 2023 to to June June 30, 2024, which is comprised of a $14.72 recovery of prior period charges and a $6.79 reduction month reduction in in current current period period charges. charges. Instead, Instead, in in Case Case No. PUR-2023-00067, PUR-2023-00067, Dominion Dominion supports supports implementation implementation of only the Current Period Factor through the fuel factor, which represents a decrease No. decrease of of $6.79 $6.79 per per month month beginning beginning July July 1, 1, 2023 for for aa residential residential customer customer using using 1,000 1,000 kWh kWh per month. 2023 Rather than than seeking seeking to to implement implement the the Prior Prior Period Period Factor through the fuel factor, Dominion requests authorization in the present proceeding, Rather proceeding, pursuant pursuant to to the the Legislation, Legislation, to to issue issue dedeferred fuel fuel cost cost bonds bonds in in the the amount amount of of approximately approximately $1.2702 billion, which consists of approximately $1.2578 billion of deferred fuel costs ferred costs plus plus approximately approximately $12.410 $12.410 million million of of up-front financing financing costs costs to to issue issue the the deferred deferred fuel cost bonds. Dominion states that this amount is an estimate of the June 30, 2023 fuel deferral up-front deferral balance, balance, reduced reduced by by the the share share attribattributable to to the the customers customers who who are are able able to, to, and and elected to, opt out of, or are exempt from, the fuel securitization bond financing. The Company utable Company further further states states that that in in early early August, August, itit will will make aa supplemental supplemental filing filing in in this this docket docket to to update the final fuel deferral balance, and that once the final balance is known, it will be able to calculate make calculate the the final final amount amount that that will will be be subject to to securitization. securitization. subject Dominion seeks seeks to to utilize utilize aa special special purpose purpose entity entity to to issue issue securitized securitized bonds bonds to to finance finance the the fuel fuel deferral Dominion deferral balance balance as as of of June June 30, 30, 2023. 2023. The The Company Company asserts asserts that that the the proceeds proceeds from from these these bonds would would be be used used to to satisfy satisfy the the unrecovered unrecovered fuel fuel balance balance and and reduce reduce the the near-term near-term impact impact to bonds to customers. customers. According to to Dominion, Dominion, the the amortization amortization of of these these bonds bonds would would be be structured structured to to provide provide an an annual annual revenue According revenue requirement requirement (including (including payments payments of of interest, interest, principal, principal, and and ongoing ongoing financing financing costs) over over the the term term of of the the securitization securitization period. period. Customers Customers subject subject to to the the fuel fuel securitization securitization would costs) would be be billed billed aa separate separate non-bypassable non-bypassable fuel fuel securitization securitization charge charge on on aa per per kWh kWh basis basis (“Deferred Fuel Fuel Cost Cost Charge”) Charge”) beginning beginning soon soon after after the the issuance issuance of of the the bonds, bonds, which, which, if if approved approved by (“Deferred by the the Commission, Commission, is is expected expected to to occur occur in in early early 2024. 2024. The The Deferred Deferred Fuel Fuel Cost Cost Charge would would be be subject subject to to periodic periodic true-ups true-ups to to ensure ensure that that the the revenue revenue requirements requirements associated associated with Charge with the the bonds bonds are are received received on on aa timely timely basis. basis. In its Petition, Dominion analyzed two transaction structures for the bonds – one with a scheduled final maturity date of approximately seven In its Petition, Dominion analyzed two transaction structures for the bonds – one with a scheduled final maturity date of approximately seven years, years, and and one one with with aa scheduled scheduled final final mamaturity date date of of approximately approximately ten ten years. years. The The Company Company states states that that an an approximately approximately seven seven year year amortization turity amortization of of the the deferred deferred fuel fuel cost cost bonds bonds would would result result in in an an estimated estimated initial initial monthly monthly charge to a typical residential customer using 1,000 kWh per month of $3.05, and the approximately ten year amortization bond structure would result in an estimated initial monthly charge to a typical residential customer using 1,000 kWh per month of $3.05, and the approximately ten year amortization bond structure would result in an estimated initial monthly charge of of $2.29. $2.29. As As the the Company Company notes, notes, these these bill bill impacts impacts are are estimates, estimates, as as the the actual actual interest interest rates, charge rates, terms, terms, tranches, tranches, and and other other characteristics characteristics of of the the bonds bonds will will be be determined determined at at the the time time of pricing pricing of of the the bonds bonds and and will will depend depend on on prevailing prevailing market market conditions. conditions. of Interested persons persons are are encouraged encouraged to to review review Dominion’s Dominion’s Petition Petition and and supporting supporting documents documents in in full Interested full for for details details about about these these and and other other proposals. proposals. The Commission Commission entered entered an an Order Order for for Notice Notice and and Hearing Hearing in in this this proceeding proceeding that, that, among other other things, scheduled public hearings on Petition. The deterThe things, scheduled public hearings on the the Company’s Company’s Petition. The Commission Commission determined that, that, to to the the extent extent practicable, practicable, for all all purposes purposes including discovery, prefiling prefilingamong testimony, and hearing dates, the procedural schedules in this docket (PUR-2023-00112) and Case mined for including discovery, testimony, and hearing dates, the procedural schedules in this docket (PUR-2023-00112) and Case No. PUR-2023-00067 (Dominion’s fuel factor proceeding) shall be combined – without the cases or case numbers being consolidated. No. PUR-2023-00067 (Dominion’s fuel factor proceeding) shall be combined – without the cases or case numbers being consolidated.

On September September 5, 5, 2023, 2023, at at 10 10 a.m., a.m., the the Hearing Hearing Examiner Examiner assigned assigned to to this case case will will hold hold aa telephonic telephonic hearing, with witness present in the Commission’s courtroom, the purpose of On hearing, with no no present in theprovide Commission’s courtroom, for for the purpose of receiving the the testimony testimony of public public witnesses. witnesses. On or or before before August August 29, 29,this 2023, any any person person desiring desiring to offer testimony as aawitness public witness shall to the Commission (a) your name, receiving of On 2023, to offer testimony as public witness shall provide to the Commission (a) your name, and (b) the telephone number that you wish the Commission to call during the hearing to receive your testimony. This information may be provided to the Commission in three ways: and (b)filling the telephone number you wish the Commission to call during the hearing to receive testimony. information be provided to thetoCommission in three ways: (i) by out a form on thethat Commission’s website at scc.virginia.gov/pages/Webcasting; (ii) byyour completing andThis emailing the PDFmay version of this form SCCInfo@scc.virginia.gov; (i) out a (804) form on the Commission’s scc.virginia.gov/pages/Webcasting; (ii) by completing and emailing the PDF version of this form to SCCInfo@scc.virginia.gov; or by (iii)filling by calling 371-9141. This publicwebsite witnessathearing will be webcast at scc.virginia.gov/pages/Webcasting. or (iii) by calling (804) 371-9141. This public witness hearing will be webcast at scc.virginia.gov/pages/Webcasting. Beginning at 10 a.m. on September 5, 2023, the Hearing Examiner will telephone sequentially each person who has signed up to testify as provided above. Beginning at 10 a.m. on September 5, 2023, the Hearing Examiner will telephone sequentially each person who has signed up to testify as provided above. On September 6, 2023, at 10 a.m., in the Commission’s second floor courtroom located in the Tyler Building, 1300 East Main Street, Richmond, Virginia 23219, the Hearing Examiner On 2023, to at 10 a.m.,testimony in the Commission’s second floor courtroom the Tyler Building, 1300 East Street, Richmond, willSeptember convene a6, hearing receive and evidence related to the Petition located from theinCompany, any respondents, andMain the Commission’s Staff.Virginia 23219, the Hearing Examiner will convene a hearing to receive testimony and evidence related to the Petition from the Company, any respondents, and the Commission’s Staff. To promote administrative efficiency and timely service of filings upon participants, the Commission has directed the electronic filing of testimony and pleadings, unless they contain To promote administrative efficiency timely service participants, the Commission has directed the electronic filing of testimony and pleadings, unless they contain confidential information, and requiredand electronic serviceof onfilings partiesupon to this proceeding. confidential information, and required electronic service on parties to this proceeding. An electronic copy of the public version of the Company’s Petition may be obtained by submitting a written request to counsel for the Company: Elaine S. Ryan, Esquire, McGuireAn electronic copy of the public of the Company’s Petition may 23219, be obtained by submitting a written request to counsel for also the Company: Elaine S. Ryan, Esquire, McGuireWoods LLP, Gateway Plaza, 800version East Canal Street, Richmond, Virginia or eryan@mcguirewoods.com. Interested persons may download unofficial copies of the public Woods 800 documents East Canal filed Street, Virginia 23219, or eryan@mcguirewoods.com. Interested persons also may download unofficial copies of the public versionLLP, of theGateway PetitionPlaza, and other in Richmond, this case from the Commission’s website: scc.virginia.gov/pages/Case-Information. version of the Petition and other documents filed in this case from the Commission’s website: scc.virginia.gov/pages/Case-Information. On or before August 29, 2023, any interested person may submit comments on the Petition by following the instructions found on the Commission’s website: On or before August 29, 2023, any interested person may submit the Petition by following instructions found on the website: scc.virginia.gov/casecomments/Submit-Public-Comments. Thosecomments unable, ason a practical matter, to submitthe comments electronically mayCommission’s file such comments by U.S. mail to the Clerk of scc.virginia.gov/casecomments/Submit-Public-Comments. Those unable, as2118, a practical matter,Virginia to submit comments All electronically may file such comments by U.S. mail to the Clerk the State Corporation Commission, c/o Document Control Center, P.O. Box Richmond, 23218-2118. such comments shall refer to Case Nos. PUR-2023-00067 andof the State Corporation Commission, c/o Document Control Center, P.O. Box 2118, Richmond, Virginia 23218-2118. All such comments shall refer to Case Nos. PUR-2023-00067 and PUR-2023-00112. PUR-2023-00112. On or before August 1, 2023, any person or entity wishing to participate as a respondent in this proceeding may do so by filing a notice of participation at scc.virginia.gov/clk/efiling. On or before 1, 2023,matter, any person to participate as a respondent thisnotice proceeding do so by filing of participation at scc.virginia.gov/clk/efiling. Those unable,August as a practical to fileora entity notice wishing of participation electronically may fileinsuch at the may address listed above.a notice Such notice of participation shall include the email Those unable, as aparties practical to file aifnotice of participation electronically may file such notice at the listed above. Suchon notice of participation shall Pursuant include the addresses of such or matter, their counsel, available. The respondent simultaneously shall serve a copy of address the notice of participation counsel to the Company. to email 5 VAC addresses such parties or counsel, ifofavailable. The respondent shall serve a copyofofPractice”), the notice any of participation on counselshall to thesetCompany. 5 VAC 5-20-80 B,ofParticipation as their a respondent, the Commission’s Rules ofsimultaneously Practice and Procedure (“Rules notice of participation forth: (i) Pursuant a precise to statement 5-20-80 B, Participation as a respondent, of the Commission’s Rules of Practice and Procedure (“Rulesand of Practice”), any notice of participation shall setAny forth: (i) a precisecorporastatement of the interest of the respondent; (ii) a statement of the specific action sought to the extent then known; (iii) the factual and legal basis for the action. organization, of theor interest of the respondent; (ii) a statement of the specific soughtbytocounsel the extent then known; the factual and legal forofthe action. All Anyfilings organization, corporation, government body participating as a respondent must beaction represented as required by 5and VAC(iii) 5-20-30, Counsel, of thebasis Rules Practice. shall refer to Case tion, government body participating as a respondent must beinformation representedabout by counsel as required by 5 VAC 5-20-30, Counsel, of the Rules of Practice. shall referOrder to Case Nos.or PUR-2023-00067 and PUR-2023-00112. For additional participation as a respondent, any person or entity should obtain a copy ofAll thefilings Commission’s for Nos. PUR-2023-00067 Notice and Hearing. and PUR-2023-00112. For additional information about participation as a respondent, any person or entity should obtain a copy of the Commission’s Order for Notice and Hearing. On or before August 9, 2023, each respondent may file with the Clerk of the Commission, at scc.virginia.gov/clk/efiling, any testimony and exhibits by which the respondent expects to establish case. 9, Any respondent unable, asmay a practical to file testimony and exhibits electronically may file such U.S. mailand to exhibits the Clerkbyofwhich the Commission at theexpects address On or beforeits August 2023, each respondent file withmatter, the Clerk of the Commission, at scc.virginia.gov/clk/efiling, anyby testimony the respondent listed above.itsEach testimony shall include a summary one page. All testimony and exhibits shall be by served thetoStaff, the Company, and all other to establish case.witness’s Any respondent unable, as a practical matter,not to to fileexceed testimony and exhibits electronically may file such U.S.on mail the Clerk of the Commission at respondents the address simultaneous with its filing. testimony In all filings, respondents shall comply the Rules of Practice, as modified but notonlimited to: the 5 VAC 5-20-140, andrespondents service, listed above. Each witness’s shall include a summary not with to exceed one page. All testimony and herein, exhibitsincluding, shall be served the Staff, Company, andFiling all other and 5 VAC 5-20-240, Prepared testimony and exhibits.shall All filings to Case PUR-2023-00067 and PUR-2023-00112. simultaneous with its filing. In all filings, respondents complyshall withrefer the Rules ofNos. Practice, as modified herein, including, but not limited to: 5 VAC 5-20-140, Filing and service, and 5 VAC 5-20-240, Prepared testimony and exhibits. All filings shall refer to Case Nos. PUR-2023-00067 and PUR-2023-00112. Any documents filed in paper form with the Office of the Clerk of the Commission in this docket may use both sides of the paper. In all other respects, except as modified by the Commission’s Order filed for Notice andform Hearing, all filings fully the requirements of 5 VAC Copies andpaper. format,Inofallthe Rules of Practice. Any documents in paper with the Office shall of thecomply Clerk of the with Commission in this docket may 5-20-150, use both sides of the other respects, except as modified by the Commission’s Order for Notice and Hearing, all filings shall comply fully with the requirements of 5 VAC 5-20-150, Copies and format, of the Rules of Practice. The public version of the Company’s Petition, the Commission’s Rules of Practice, the Commission’s Order for Notice and Hearing, and other documents filed in the case may be viewed at: version scc.virginia.gov/pages/Case-Information. The public of the Company’s Petition, the Commission’s Rules of Practice, the Commission’s Order for Notice and Hearing, and other documents filed in the case may be VIRGINIA ELECTRIC AND POWER COMPANY viewed at: scc.virginia.gov/pages/Case-Information. VIRGINIA ELECTRIC AND POWER COMPANY


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OPINION WWW.PRINCEWILLIAMTIMES.COM

Prince William Times | July 27, 2023

GUEST OPINION

Why renaming a school for George Hampton helped correct an error in history Following the death of community leader George Hampton, I read about many of his awards as a military officer, public servant and member of his beloved Omega Psi Phi fraternity. Despite these achievements, some initially questioned his qualification to have a school named in his honor. The record will show that perhaps he was overqualified. George was a brilliant man who made significant achievements in every arena of his life. He and his wife, Delores, were political powerhouses and civil rights advocates. This renaming was not the first time George stood firm for the African American community to know and have access to its history. For decades, he celebrated Juneteenth in his backyard before it became a national holiday. At the end of the numerous listings of his accomplishments is a mention of a school named after him, sometimes as an afterthought. I am writing this tribute as a reminder of the impact of renaming the former Mills E. Godwin Middle School to George Hampton Middle School. This school’s renaming and naming of Fannie Fitzgerald Elementary were two of the most historical and impactful recent acts in the school division. Both events brought unknown historical facts to the forefront. When Fannie Fitzgerald Elementary School was named in 2008, the school board was considering two options: naming the school for Kyle Wilson, a fallen firefighter, or for Fannie Fitzgerald. The school board selected Fannie Fitzgerald because it came to everyone’s attention that she and three other Black female teachers (later known as the “Courageous Four”) were transferred in 1964 to all white schools overnight in what became a unique plan to successfully desegregate our county schools. The county’s schools were fully desegregated in 1966. Ironically, when George was encouraged to agree to have a school named in his honor eight years later, in 2016, the competitor was the same fallen firefighter. Standing-room-only crowds filled the boardroom during the naming vote for a new elementary school, and dozens spoke on behalf of both Kyle Wilson and George Hampton. The compromise came when Justin Wilk, the Potomac District school board representative, suggested the school be named for Wilson and that George Hampton’s name replace that of Mills Godwin, a former governor who had been one of the architects of the

LILLIE JESSIE

“Massive Resistance” in Virginia. Godwin’s name was on one of the county’s older middle schools. For many, Wilk’s suggestion was the first time we learned Godwin was one of the architects of the massive resistance – a strategy that involved closing down schools rather than desegregating them. Before the vote, I asked George if he would consider having Godwin Middle School renamed in his honor. His response was yes; his children attended that school. He later told me the newness of the school did not matter. He did not want his name on a school that did not want him. In essence, the school board did not rename Godwin; George allowed us to use his name as a replacement. This sudden change in the school’s name resulted in a “massive resistance” to another kind. There was even resistance to providing the needed funding to rename the school. In a telling move, the school division considered using the old letter “G” in Godwin instead of buying a new one. A school committee, led by Emmitt “Joe” and Vera Fletcher, played a pivotal role in fighting for equitable spending for the renaming. They were adamant about creating a school worthy of the recognition George deserved, and that they did. Readers need to know what the renaming of a school meant to George personally. He saw it as a way to leave a legacy to his children. He also told me and the Fletchers that it was one of his most outstanding achievements. He laughingly said, “Before this, the biggest part of my day was going back and forth to the doctors.” This recognition allowed us to spotlight the greatness of this man and to allow him to become one of the most lauded and recognizable figures in our county and, I dare say, the nation. Thank you, George Hampton, for standing strong so that students and our nation could correct an error in history in a public forum. In the words of philosopher George Santayana: “Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it.” Lillie Jessie is the Occoquan representative on the Prince William County School Board.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

When history is inconvenient The Prince William Board of County Supervisors had a chance to redeem itself by taking a non-partisan stance in support of historic preservation. Of course, they kicked it away. Tuesday’s party-line vote to defeat two resolutions to consider documented historic areas adjacent to the Manassas National Battlefield Park for inclusion in the list of County Registered Historic Sites reminds us of how firmly our Democratic supervisors remain in the grip of their developer patrons. Despite their insincere claims of honorable intent, it’s clear what’s going on here. Prince William Digital Gateway supporters view any

attempt to preserve historic areas along Pageland Lane as an impediment to their mercenary plans and have so instructed their puppets whose campaigns they bankrolled. Look it up. When you add spending from her own campaign to that of political action committees on her behalf, pro-development interests spent close to half a million dollars in a failed attempt to saddle us with another four years of their enabler, Ann Wheeler. Now, with their window of opportunity closing, those unfulfilled donors are demanding immediate payback. BILL WRIGHT Gainesville

In support of the Prince William Digital Gateway Sometimes, it seems that everyone has an opinion on the Prince William Digital Gateway. Many of the arguments in opposition are similar to ones used for almost any development anywhere. If we are never going to develop any land in Prince William County ever again, then we should realize the potential costs involved. Harm to the economy, job losses, higher taxes due to a smaller business base and on and on. If we are going to develop land in Prince William County, then we should consider things like the huge stretch of high voltage power lines cutting through the county along Pageland Lane. Prince William County also already has fiber optic cables in the same general area. Let’s support using those resources to finish creating a productive high-tech corridor to produce much needed economic and job growth with less disruption to our environment than some other suggested uses for that area. Let’s support the Prince William Digital Gateway. LORI POLLACCI Manassas Letters to the Editor

The Prince William Times welcomes letters to the editor from its readers as a forum for discussion of local public affairs subjects. WRITE: Letters to the Editor, 53 South Third Street, Warrenton, VA 20186 EMAIL: news@fauquier.com Letters must be signed by the writer. Messages sent via email must say “Letter to the Editor” to distinguish them from other messages not meant for publication. Include address and phone for verification (Not to be published.) Letters are subject to editing for clarity and length. Personal attacks will not be published. Long letters from those with special authority on a current issue may be treated as a guest column (with photo requested). Due to volume, letters cannot be acknowledged. All letters are appreciated. Letters must be received by 5 p.m. Monday to be considered for Wednesday publication.


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THE LIBRARY PAGE

THE LATEST NEWS FROM AND ABOUT THE PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY

WWW.PRINCEWILLIAMTIMES.COM

Prince William Times | July 27, 2023

Help for picking the right summer reads for students By Kirk Johnson

Contributing Writer

Summer Reading is here, which often means a mad rush for the same titles as students from schools all over Prince William County and the City of Manassas scramble to find the books on their school’s suggested reading lists. Your library makes every effort to have plenty of copies of those books—and both Prince William County Schools and Manassas City Schools coordinate with our selection staff when putting them together—but inevitably, some titles fly off our shelves faster than every student can get to them. So it’s good to remember that these lists are suggestions, not requirements, created by educators in collaboration with librarians to provide students with good examples for summer reading. There are plenty of other options, often by the same author, for books with similar plots, styles, themes, reading levels, etc. – all available at your library. While some lists offer “substitute” suggestions, and of course, library staff are on hand to help, your library also offers readers’ advisory tools in the Digital Library. NoveList is a long-running readers’ advisory tool from reputable library publisher EBSCO. There is a version of the database specifically tailored for grade school and middle school-aged children (as well as preschool ages). NoveList K-8 Plus provides a variety of ways to find a book to meet your reading needs or interests—thematic browsing, curated subject lists, genre lists and an advanced search function that allows patrons to specify Lexile reading ranges, search solely for award-winning titles, etc.

It’s a powerful tool backed by librarian input, publisher information and professional reviewers. Unlike commercial sites, which are often driven by marketing information and publisher preference, NoveList K-8 Plus lets users choose the parameters regardless of what sales execs or algorithms would prefer to highlight.

Access the database in our Digital Library from home at pwcva.gov/digitallibrary. The database will check for copies on hand so you can plan your next visit to your local library in advance. Check NoveList K-8 Plus out today. Kirk Johnson is a manager in the Prince William Public Libraries Materials Services Division.

What’s Hot at Prince William Libraries: July 2023 By Kirk Johnson

Contributing Writer

Some patrons may have noticed a lack of new print titles coming to your local library the past few weeks. We reached the end of our fiscal year and had “wrapped up” our purchasing a bit earlier than usual, so by the end of the month, our “new book” offerings were getting slim. Thank you for your patience! The good news is that July 1 is “Happy New Fiscal Year” for us, and we have already begun ordering, receiving, cataloging and processing new books for our eager patrons and under-filled shelves. Here are just a

few new titles coming to your local library—all mysteries, just to emphasize the sheer volume coming your way. Edgar Award-winning crime writer Paul Doiron has been entertaining detective fiction fans for years with his Mike Bowditch series. The latest installment, “Dead Man’s Wake,” finds Maine Game Warden Mike Bowditch dealing with a fatal speedboat “accident” that he suspects was anything but unintentional. Fans of the series will welcome this latest outdoor mystery. Continuing with the “mystery set in a scenic setting” theme, “Have You Seen Her,” by bestselling author Catherine McKenzie, puts three women with “dark secrets” in the

middle of Yosemite National Park. They cross paths, setting off a reckoning for all three of them. Amy Suiter Clarke examines the nature of cults, their potential for taking over entire communities, and the potentially problematic nature of true crime nonfiction in her latest novel, “Lay Your Body Down.” The main character is Del Walker, who had fled a small town to escape an oppressive church years earlier. Circumstances pull her back when an ex-boyfriend is found dead. She is convinced that he was killed and that the cult was involved. On a lighter note—if you’re a fan of cozy mysteries, you might already

be familiar with Miranda James’ “Cat in the Stacks” mystery series. “Hiss Me Deadly” is the latest title in the series, which is for cat lovers and library aficionados alike. If you’re more of a gritty-urban-detective fan, the latest Lisa Jackson “Detectives Bentz and Montoya” novel, “The Last Sinner,” is right up your alley. Set in New Orleans, this is a great introduction to this series and Jackson, a very prolific author. These books are coming to your local library, with many more to follow. We can promise that. Kirk Johnson is a manager in the Prince William Libraries materials services division.


CALENDAR

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | July 27, 2023

9

CALENDAR OF UPCOMING PRINCE WILLIAM EVENTS JULY 27 TO AUG. 2 ONGOING EVENTS “The Art of Photography: Through the Eyes of Earl J. Hooks”: Through July 29. ARTfactory, 9419 Battle St., Manassas. The exhibition will also address the artist’s history with the local and national chapters of the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc. For more information, contact Jordan Exum at 703-330-2787 or email jexum@ VirginiaARTfactory.org. Thursday, July 27 Prince William Farmers Market: 3 to 7 p.m. Prince William Farmers Market, 7 County Complex Court, Woodbridge. Thursday Farmer’s Market: 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Every Thursday, through October 26. Covered open-air venue. Pets allowed. Harris Pavilion, 9201 Center St., Manassas. 1-1 Resume Reviews: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. For adults. Get tips and feedback on how to make a resume compelling and concise from an area recruiter. Registration required; call 703-7928740. Montclair Library, 5049 Waterway Drive, Dumfries. Free. Halloween in July Story Trail: 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. For all ages/families. Read “Creepy Carrots,” by Aaron Reynolds while walking outside. Wear a favorite costume. Treats at the end. No registration required. Haymarket Gainesville Library, 14870 Lightner Road, Haymarket. Free. Open Mic Night: 6 to 8 p.m. Every Thursday. Jirani Coffeehouse, 9425 West St., Manassas. Trivia: Thursday Night Team Trivia: 7 to 9 p.m. Cedar Run Brewery, 12801 Hazelwood Drive, Nokesville. Brains and Beer Trivia Night: 7 to 8:30 p.m. Bring a team of up to six players. Food trucks on site. Tin Cannon Brewing Company, 7679 Limestone Drive, Gainesville. Bingo Night: 7 p.m. Every Thursday. Prizes for all winners. Food truck on site. Ornery Beer Taproom, 8088 Flannery Court, Manassas. Board Game Night: 6 to 9 p.m. Great Mane Brewery, 6620 James Madison Highway, Haymarket. Live Music: 5 to 9 p.m. Featuring Shane Gamble. Farm Brew Live, 9901 Discovery Blvd., Manassas. Friday, July 28 Fridays at 5 Concert series: 5 to 9 p.m. Featuring Justin Trawick and The Common Good. Sean T. Connaughton Plaza, 1 County Complex Ct, Woodbridge. Presented by Prince William County Parks, Recreation and Tourism. Free admission and parking. Summer Concert: 8 to 10 p.m. Featuring Jimi Smooth. Stonebridge at Potomac Town Center, 14091 Potomac Town Place, Woodbridge. Fresh Music Fridays: 7 to 8 p.m. Featuring The Nighthawks Swing Band. Harris Pavilion, 9201 Center St., Manassas. Friday Conservation Corps: 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. Volunteers are needed; flexible schedule. All are welcome; volunteers under 18 years old must be accompanied by an adult. Register at: www.leopoldspreserve.com/calendar. Leopold’s Preserve, 16290 Thoroughfare Road, Broad Run. Sensory Friendly Storytime: 10:30 to 11 a.m. For ages 3 to 6. Preschool children of all abilities are welcome to an interactive story time emphasizing socialization and sensory engagement. Space is limited, and registration is required; call 703-792-8330. Potomac Library, 2201 Opitz Blvd., Woodbridge. Free. Teen Eats Cooking Class: 2 to 3 p.m. For grades 6 to 12. Learn how to make Dessert Tortilla Wraps. Registration required; call 703792-4800. Chinn Park Library, 13065 Chinn Park Drive, Woodbridge. Free. English Conversation: 12:30 to 2 p.m. For adults. Speakers of all languages are welcome. First come, first served until capacity is reached. Potomac Library, 2201 Opitz Blvd., Woodbridge. Free. Summer Garden Club: 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. For all ages. Learn what is growing in the library garden. Wear sunscreen and appropriate clothing to be outside in the garden. Bring a refillable water bottle. All supplies and garden tools will be provided. Registration required; call 703-7928740. Montclair Library, 5049 Waterway Drive, Dumfries. Free. Ribbon Cutting: 4 to 5 p.m. Join PW Chamber members and guests to welcome Urban Air Adventure Park to the community. Ribbon cutting at 4:30 p.m. Urban Air Adventure Park, 14173 Crossing Place, Woodbridge. Bunco Night: 7 to 9 p.m. Guys and ladies are

welcome. Bring $5 cash to play and a snack to share. Tin Cannon Brewing Company, 7679 Limestone Drive, Gainesville. Live Music: The Winery at Sunshine Ridge Farm, 15850 Sunshine Ridge Lane, Gainesville. 5 to 8 p.m. Featuring Jason Masi. Heritage Brewing Company, 9436 Center Point Lane, Manassas. 6 to 9 p.m. Featuring The Coozies. Farm Brew Live, 9901 Discovery Blvd., Manassas. 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. Featuring Hijynx. Water’s End Brewery, 12425 Dillingham Square, Lake Ridge. 6 to 9 p.m. Featuring Joe Downer. Great Mane Brewery, 6620 James Madison Highway, Haymarket. 7 to 9 p.m. Featuring The Sunstones. Effingham Manor, 14325 Trotters Ridge Place, Nokesville. 6 to 9 p.m. Featuring Zachary Brewer. USA BBQ food truck on site. Saturday, July 29 Saturday Farmer’s Market: 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Every Saturday through Nov. 25. More than 100 vendors; weather permitting; live bands will perform. No pets allowed. Prince William Street Commuter Lot, 9024 Prince William St., Manassas. Saturday Night Concert: 7 to 9 p.m. Featuring The Country Current. Harris Pavilion, 9201 Center St., Manassas. Free. An Evening with the PUN-DEMICS: 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Enjoy an evening of comedy and improv. Cash bar is available, and doors open at 7 p.m. Tickets available at: https://www. virginiaartfactory.org/events/july-pun-demics. ARTfactory, 9419 Battle St., Manassas. Tickets $20 online; $25 at the door. Volunteer Workday Pond Cleanup: 8:30 a.m. Wear clothing that can get dirty; waterproof boots/shoes; bring a water bottle. Gloves, grabbers and trash bags will be provided. Meet at 16051 Green Bay St. cul-de-sac. Carpooling is encouraged. Register at: https://www. leopoldspreserve.com/events-1/volunteerworkday-pond-cleanup/form. Leopold’s Preserve, 16290 Thoroughfare Road, Broad Run. Preschool Fair: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. For adults. Meet and greet local preschool and early childhood education administrators. Learn about options available to you and children. Chinn Park Library, 13065 Chinn Park Drive, Woodbridge. Free. Riverside Crafts: 11 a.m. to noon. Additional dates: Wednesday, Aug. 2; same times. Join the Park Rangers for a unique crafting experience. Leesylvania State Park, 2001 Daniel K. Ludwig Drive, Woodbridge. Parking fee. Pond Discovery: 1 to 2 p.m. Learn about the life that lives in the pond and the animals that call the ecosystem home. Leesylvania State Park, 2001 Daniel K. Ludwig Drive, Woodbridge. Parking fee. Colonial Games: 3 to 4 p.m. Additional dates: Tuesday, Aug. 1, 11 a.m. to noon. Discover the games children used to play during the colonial time era. Leesylvania State Park, 2001 Daniel K. Ludwig Drive, Woodbridge. Parking fee. Guided Sunset Paddle: 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. All participants must be 6 years or older. No paddling experience is required. Reservations required; call 703-583-6904. Wear appropriate clothing, footwear, sunglasses, sunscreen, and bring water. Leesylvania State Park, 2001 Daniel K. Ludwig Drive, Woodbridge. Registration fee and parking fee.

Music at the Fountain: 1 to 2 p.m. Featuring Zac Quintana. Virginia Gateway, 14017 Promenade Commons St., Gainesville. Last Sunday Bird Walk at Merrimac: 8 a.m. Look for birds through the uplands to the floodplain. Dress for the weather; bring binoculars and cameras. Meet at the Cedar Run Parking lot at 8 a.m. Register by calling 703-4905200. Merrimac Farm Wildlife Management Area, 15020 Deepwood Lane, Nokesville. The Addams Family School Edition: 7 p.m. Additional dates: Saturday, July 29, 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Presented by the ARTfactory’s Pied Piper Theatre. For tickets and information, call 703993-7759. Hylton Performing Arts Center, 10960 George Mason Circle, Manassas. $20 adult; $15 seniors and youth (under age 17). Monday, July 31 Lake Ridge Book Club: 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. For adults. The group will be discussing “The Cat Who Saved Books,” by Sosuke Natsukawa. For more information, call 703-792-5675. Lake Ridge Library, 2239 Old Bridge Road, Woodbridge. Free. Health Literacy Conversation Workshop: 12:30 to 2:30 p.m. Students will improve English speaking and listening skills while learning about important health topics. Chinn Park Library, 13065 Chinn Park Drive, Woodbridge. Free. Master Gardeners-Native Plants: 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. For adults. Learn about hardiness zones, soil composition, turf vs. trees, pruning, do’s and don’ts in plant care and management, garden structure and native species. Register by calling 703-792-8740. Montclair Library, 5049 Waterway Drive, Dumfries. Free. Tuesday, Aug. 1 Acoustic Tuesday: 7 to 8 p.m. Featuring Grayson Moon. Bring a blanket or a lawn chair. Harris Pavilion, 9201 Center St., Manassas. Free. Community Partnership Breakfast: 9 to 10:30 a.m. A networking partnership hosted by the Town of Occoquan. Learn how to boost business through event sponsorships, partnership and advertising opportunities. Registration is required; go to: www.visitoccoquanva.com/

partnership. Occoquan Town Hall, 314 Mill St., Occoquan. Free. Wildlife Center: 2 to 3:30 p.m. For all ages/ families. Learn about the Center’s work providing healthcare to native wildlife; meet several non-releasable animal ambassadors. Potomac Library, 2201 Opitz Blvd., Woodbridge. Free. Wildlife Center: 10:30 to 11:15 a.m. For all ages/ families. Learn about the Center’s work providing healthcare to native wildlife and meet several non-releasable animal ambassadors. Dale City Library, 4249 Dale Blvd., Dale City. Free. English Conversation: 10 a.m. to noon. For adults. Speakers of all languages are welcome. Bull Run Library, 8051 Ashton Ave., Manassas. Free. Trash It Tuesdays: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Volunteers are needed to clean the park. Check out a bucket and grabber from the Volunteer Hub. Return the bucket and receive a voucher for a free ice cream. Leesylvania State Park, 2001 Daniel K. Ludwig Drive, Woodbridge. Parking fee. Cornhole Tournament: 6:30 to 9:30 p.m.; 6:30 registration; 7 p.m. bags fly. $1 off beer for competitors. Eavesdrop Brewery, 7223 Centreville Road, Manassas. Wednesday, Aug. 2 Breast Cancer Support Group: 6:15 to 8:25 p.m. Information and emotional support for breast cancer patients. Sentara Northern Virginia Medical Center, 2300 Opitz Blvd., Hylton Education Center, Rooms CG, Woodbridge. Wednesday Walks at Bristoe Station Battlefield: 7 to 8 p.m. Tour the park with staff and volunteers and learn its history. Bristoe Station Battlefield Heritage Park, 10708 Bristow Road, Bristow. Free; donations encouraged. PAWS for Reading: 5 to 6 p.m. For ages 8 to 12. Practice reading with a furry friend from K-9 Caring Angels. Stop by the Youth Services desk at the time of the program to sign up for a time slot. Montclair Library, 5049 Waterway Drive, Dumfries. Free. Heritage Bike Night: 6 to 9 p.m. Come show off a bike and hang out. Weekly prizes. Heritage Brewing Company, 9436 Center Point Lane, Manassas.

Treasury's PropertyProgram Program Treasury'sUnclaimed Unclaimed Property Returns EachYear! Year! ReturnsMillions Millions to to Citizens Citizens Each

Look the2022 2022list list of of unclaimed unclaimed properties Look forforthe properties Treasury's Unclaimed Property Program in next week's newspaper. in next week's newspaper. Returns Millions to Citizens Each Year! What is Unclaimed Property?

What is Unclaimed Property?

Look forInactive the or2022 list of unclaimed properties dormant bank accounts, uncashed checks, Inactive dormant bank accounts, uncashed checks, customer refunds, safe deposit box contents, securities, inornext week's newspaper. customerdividends, refunds, safe deposit boxproceeds, contents, securities, insurance policy etc. dividends, insurance policy proceeds, etc.

What Unclaimed Property? This is ais FREE Public Service, No Fees! SearchThis our free for the entire list of unclaimed is website a FREE Public Service, No properties Fees! and start your claim today! Inactive or dormant bank accounts, uncashed checks,

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Live Music: customer refunds, safe contents, securities, start deposit your claimbox today! The Winery at Sunshine Ridge Farm, 15850 Sunshine Ridge Lane, Gainesville. 5 to 8:30 p.m. dividends, insurance policy proceeds, etc. Featuring Delta Spur. Search our free website for the entire list of Heritage Brewing Company, 9436 Center Point Lane, Manassas. 6 p.m. Featuring Smylin’ Jack unclaimedFacilitated properties and startofyour claim today! by Virginia Department the Treasury Band. Farm Brew Live, 9901 Discovery Blvd., Manassas. 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. Featuring JParis. Facilitated by Virginia Department of the Treasury Eavesdrop Brewery, 7223 Centreville Road, Search our free website for the entire list of unclaimed properties and Manassas. 3 to 6 p.m. Featuring Working Man’s Band. start your claim today! The Winery at La Grange, 4970 Antioch Road, Haymarket. 1 to 4 p.m. Featuring Janna Audey.

This is a FREE Public Service, No Fees!

Sunday, July 30 Farmers Market: Dale City Farmers Market: 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Dale City Farmers Market, 14090 Gemini Way, Dale City. Haymarket Farmers Market: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Town of Haymarket, 15000 Washington St., Haymarket.

Facilitated by Virginia Department of the Treasury


10 PUZZLE PAGE

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | July 27, 2023

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD

7/26

Find the 7 words to match the 7 clues. The numbers in parentheses represent the number of letters in each solution. Each letter combination can be used only once, but all letter combinations will be necessary to complete the puzzle.

CLUES

SOLUTIONS

1 deluge (5) 2 Arizona city near Sedona (9) 3 Fred, Wilma or Pebbles (10) 4 throw blanket material (6) 5 Lady Bird, in the 1960s (6) 6 consciously alluring (11) 7 bit of snow (5)

___________ ___________ ___________ ___________ ___________ ___________ ___________

OOD

AFF

FL

GST

IR

FL

FLO

ECE

STO

FLA

FL

INT

TUS

IO

FLE

FLA

US

KE

NE

TAT

© 2023 Blue Ox Family Games, Inc., Dist. by Andrews McMeel

KENKEN SOLUTIONS

7/23

Today’s Answers: 1. FLOOD 2. FLAGSTAFF 3. FLINTSTONE 4. FLEECE 5. FLOTUS 6. FLIRTATIOUS 7. FLAKE

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11

MORE SWIMMING RECORDS FOR CAMILLE SPINK

Former Battlefield High superstar sprint swimmer Camille Spink, who won four state titles as a senior in 2023, recently set two Prince William Swim League age 15-18 records for the Piedmont Tsunamis. Spink, who’ll swim at the University of Tennessee, won the 100 individual medley in 1:02.43 and 50 backstroke in 27.94.

SPORTS WWW.PRINCEWILLIAMTIMES.COM

Prince William Times | July 27, 2023

BATTLEFIELD FOOTBALL SUMMER UPDATE

PURPLE POWER IN HAYMARKET At 23-2 the last two years, Hatfield has Bobcats on the prowl By Matthew Proctor Times Staff Writer

In two years as Battlefield High’s football coach, Greg Hatfield has lost just two games. In Hatfield’s first year in 2021 after moving in from Eastern View, the Bobcats won the Class 6 Region B title and reached the state semifinals. Battlefield posted a second consecutive undefeated regular season in 2022, before an upset loss to Colonial Forge in their regional opener. At 23-2 the last two seasons with two Cedar Run District titles, Hatfield has established a winning culture in Haymarket. The Bobcats won the Class 6 state title in 2010 under coach Mark Cox, a supreme feat that Hatfield would love to emulate. “You have to make sure you have the core values of your program very stable. That’s where your stability comes from. So, your expectations don’t change, your methodology doesn’t change, and I feel like we keep getting better at that,” said Hatfield. Returning much of his roster from last season’s Cedar Run champion squad, including starting quarterback Braden Boggs, Hatfield believes the Bobcats are in position to fight at the top of the region once again. “You’re only going to be as good as your weakest player on the field, and so you want the gap between one and eleven to be as small as you can make it,” he said. “I feel like we’re better because there’s more continuity and more kids know what to expect. What they’re going to expect from me and then what I’m going to expect from them.” That continuity is especially prevalent on the offense, where Boggs and two of his top receivers, senior Brandon Binkowski and junior Bryce Banning, return to the starting lineup. Boggs, a 5-foot-11 senior, is described as athletic, tough and extremely competitive. Hatfield is confident in the signal caller but wants to see him elevate his game by “making those around him better.” “He’s a really experienced football player. If he can help those guys around him get better, we’re better,” Hatfield said. With last year’s leading rusher Jelon John-

COURTESY PHOTO

Battlefield, which opened in 2004, won the Class 6 state football title in 2010. The Bobcats are 23-2 the last two years with back-to-back Cedar Run District titles. son graduated, there will be a new face lining up alongside Boggs in the backfield. Hatfield isn’t sure who’s going to receive the bulk of the carries yet, citing the running back-by-committee route as a possibility, but he likes the potential of the group that includes senior Jason Campbell and juniors Sage Davis and Cam Binkowski. While Battlefield’s season opener is less than a month away, the Bobcats have been hard at work all summer long. Hatfield said the team has participated in seven-on-seven scrimmages and competed against other teams throughout the offseason, but his main focus is working the team in the weight room. “We really concentrate on strength and conditioning, and we’ve had really good turnouts in the weight room. I think our kids have bought into what we’re doing,” he said. “We’ve gotten stronger as a team.” Starting with Hylton on Aug. 25, the Bobcats play all four of their non-district games, all Cardinal District opponents, in the first four weeks, then enter district play. “Our district and county is good. There’s a lot of tough kids in our county. Obviously, (reigning Class 6 state champion) Freedom’s the cream of the crop, but Gainesville is going to be a really good

BATTLEFIELD SCHEDULE

Aug. 11 HOME scrimmage vs. Westfield, 10 a.m. Aug. 17 Scrimmage at Lake Braddock, 5 p.m. Aug. 25 HOME vs. Hylton, 7 p.m. Aug. 31 at Potomac, 7 p.m. Sept. 8 at Gar-Field, 7 p.m. Sept. 14 HOME vs. Woodbridge, 7 p.m. Sept. 22 at Freedom (South Riding), 7 p.m. Sept. 29 HOME vs. Unity Reed, 7 p.m. Oct. 6 BYE Oct. 13 at Gainesville, 7 p.m. Oct. 20 at Osbourn Park, 7 p.m. Oct. 27 HOME vs. Osbourn, 7 p.m. Nov. 3 HOME vs. Patriot, 7 p.m. football team. Coach (Sean) Finnerty over at Patriot, they’re going to be really good. Then you have Osbourn, who’s always tough, and then Unity Reed. Everybody in our district is just tough and athletic, and there’s no weeks off,” Hatfield said. Battlefield hosts traditional rival Patriot on Nov. 3 to end the season. The Bobcats topped the Pioneers 17-7 in the season finale last year to win the Cedar Run District title. Battlefield plays two Thursday games, Aug. 31 at Potomac and Sept. 14 at Woodbridge.

Greater Manassas wins Babe Ruth Baseball age 16-18 state title, regionals next By Peter Brewington Times Staff Writer

COURTESY PHOTO

Comprised of high school players from Osbourn Park, Osbourn, Gainesville, Patriot and Brentsville, Greater Manassas won the Babe Ruth Baseball Virginia 16-18 state title last week, sending them to this week’s Southeast Regional in Centreville and Clifton.

Greater Manassas won the age 1618 Babe Ruth Baseball Virginia state title, downing Greater Loudoun 11-6 on July 17 in Lawrenceville. Greater Manassas went 4-0 in the tournament, downing Brunswick 14-0, Mecklenburg 10-5, then eliminating Stafford 6-5 in the semifinals. The team is composed of players from Osbourn, Osbourn Park, Gainesville, Patriot and Brentsville high schools. Pitcher Eli Laughman, a rising junior at Osbourn Park, was tournament MVP with two wins and a save. Luke Shearin, also of Osbourn Park,

batted .615. Leadoff hitter Lucas Johnson of Brentsville batted over .500, and Luke Pierce (Patriot) had eight RBI. Next up for manager Bill Laughman’s team is this week’s six-team Babe Ruth Baseball Southeast Regional, which opened Wednesday in Clifton and Centreville. Greater Manassas met host Southwestern Youth Association in its first game Wednesday. Citrus Park (Fla.), Greater Loudoun, Stafford and Lake Norman-Western North Carolina are also competing. The event concludes Saturday, July 29, followed by the Babe Ruth national tournament starting Aug. 13 in Cape Girardeau, Mo.


12

PIEDMONT HOME CONNECTION WWW.PRINCEWILLIAMTIMES.COM

Fauquier Times | July 27, 2023

New home buyers can sometimes select custom features such as backyard amenities. SUBMITTED

The case for buying a new home By Jessica Saadeh

Long & Foster R ealty

In case you haven’t heard, it’s tough to be a homebuyer right now. In the Washington, D.C. metro area, the total number of homes available for sale in June was 27% lower than June of last year. In Fauquier County, there were 88 newly listed homes compared to 145 last June, which is a decrease of 39%. Lack of available homes means that, despite higher interest rates, demand from buyers is still high. It is common in this market for properly priced homes to receive multiple offers within a few days of listing. In order to be competitive, buyers are waiving home inspections, offering above list price with room for escalation clauses and making offers sight unseen. Despite all of these efforts, some buyers are losing out on house after house. The process can be defeating, especially for a first-time buyer. We are in a seller’s market and have been for some time now. With

all of the competition and frustration with buying resale, it may be tempting to buy new construction instead. Though their price tags are generally higher than resale, new homes have their advantages. With a custom or semi-custom home from a builder, buyers can choose their floor plan, upgrades (such as cabinets, tile and high-end kitchen appliances) and lot location. Some communities offer amenities such as golf courses, walking trails and swimming pools. There is comfort in knowing that everything in the home is brand new. Appliances, windows and building materials are likely to be energy efficient, which will save money on upkeep and utilities during the first several years of ownership. Builders give buyers multiple opportunities to inspect the home during the building process and will make changes if needed, as well as offering warranties on the work. Some new communities will build “spec homes,” which are mostly complete

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

at the time they are offered for sale. Spec homes are not as customizable as the home was begun from scratch (though some options may still be available), but you will not have to wait as long to move in. The average turnaround for a custom or semi-custom home is three to six months depending on factors like material availability, weather and contractor delays. A spec home will likely be delivered in a similar timeline to a resale home (about 30 days). Even when buying a home from a builder, having a buyer’s agent by your side is a good idea. Your agent acts as your advocate, representing your interests in a transaction. The nice people in the sales office represent the builder’s best interests. The sales price, for example, is negotiable. Your agent will be able to do a price analysis to help you determine how much to offer. Your agent will also be able to navigate the contract and make sure that everything is in order and the terms meet your expectations. They can provide insight and advice regarding upgrades that give the most return on your home’s value and which ones may not be worth the extra expense. It’s important to read and understand every document that you receive before you sign it, so it doesn’t hurt to have an extra pair of eyes to look it over if any questions arise. A buyer’s agent will be with you every step of the way from your first viewing of the model home to the closing table. Choosing a builder is a crucial decision. An experienced agent will be knowledgeable about local builders and communities that have built in the past. It may even be possible to talk to someone who has already purchased a home from that builder and ask about their experience.

Most national builders have multiple communities being built at the same time. If you want to see a model home, but your community of choice doesn’t have one yet, your agent may be able to make an appointment to see a model that is built in another area. It’s also a good idea to shop around for your mortgage. Builders will have a preferred lender, but you’ll want to have a good basis for negotiation on interest rates and closing costs. Your agent will be able to refer you to different lenders. You can also check with the bank that you use for your checking or savings accounts. The right financing can make a big difference in your monthly payment. Buying a brand-new home can be an exciting, daunting experience. Make sure that you have the right agent behind you, who will have your back and work on your behalf, so that when you receive the keys at closing, you will feel comfortable and confident with your purchase. Market Data Provided by BrightMLS.

Jessica Saadeh

Long and Foster Inc. 492 Blackwell Road Warrenton, Va. 20186 540-270-3306 or 540-349-1400 Jessica.saadeh@inf.com longandfoster.com/JessicaSaadeh


CLASSIFIEDS 13

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | July 27, 2023

PRINCE WILLIAM

CLASSIFIEDS

ADVERTISING DEADLINES: Business Directory: Thursday at noon. All other classified ads: Monday at 3 p.m. TO PLACE YOUR AD: Call 540.270.4931 or email classifieds@fauquier.com Rentals

Announcements

Two bedroom basement apartment avail Aug 1. Separate entrance, full size windows. Smoke, pet free. W/D. All util included. Nokesville area. 1st, last mo rent req. $1495/mo. Call 540-788-1165. Rentals

Amissville, 1BR apt, priv. ent, full bath, kitchenette. Incds. util. 703-314-9493 Near Warrenton, 1BR, W/D, cable avail, AC, gas hear, NO pets, $ 1000/mo + dep. 703-314-8027 n Merchandise Miscellaneous Sale 45 RPM record collection original 50' s/60's app. 2500 various prices; tony the tiger keychains. 571-344-4300 BASEBALL CARDS: many complete sets, not old but excellent condition 1980's 571-344-4300 BEATLES, ELVIS memorabilia - albums, 45's, other items, Celtics merch., raisinettes, hot wheels/matchbox cars 571-344-4300 BROOKLYN DODGERS 1955 WORLD SERIES CHAMPIONS POSTER, 24x30, wooden frame, excellent. 571-344-4300

Buying old Comic Books, 1940 through 1980s, Call Tim 540-834-8159 COMICS APP. 1000, 1970'S-80' S,SUPERMAN, BATMAN, SPIDERMAN, ARCHIE, DISNEY, DC, MARVEL Excellent. 571-344-4300 Joe Gibbs 1991 football card as super bowl coach, racing book. both autographed 571-344-4300

n Merchandise Miscellaneous Sale OLD COLLECTOR BOOKS - Wizard of Oz, Longfellow, Tennyson, Irving, Eliot, Hugo, Chambers, Others, many sets 571-344-4300 Old tools, hammers, chisels, screwdrivers, files, vices, many other items to choose from. 571-344-4300 Ringling Bros. Programs 1991-2005, Oympic Magazines/Programs, Olympic Mdse. (1980), 571-344-4300 Yankee

memorabilia - Mantle, Jeter, Dimaggio, Ruth/Gehrig, yearbooks (1970's-80' s) figurines, plates, books, magazines, cards, etc.

571-344-4300

n Services

190

ALPACAS

20 Girls l l l l 12 Boys Clover Meadows Farm Alpacas Gsinesville, VA 20155 703-231-8241 Employment

DRIVER & DISPATCHER

Full time/part time dispatcher. Must be able to pass a background check. Driver must have a state tow card. Inquiries please call Foster's Towing at 540.347.1427. Employment

DRIVER & DISPATCHER

Full time/part time dispatcher. Must be able to pass a background check. Driver must have a state tow card. Inquiries please call Foster's Towing at 540.347.1427. Full Time Employment

Exp'd Admin Assistant

Warrenton, VA commercial real estate firm has an immediate FT opening for an admin assistant. Detail oriented, ability to multitask, and MS Office knowledge a must. Industry related training will be provided. Website: mkassociates.com Send resume & salary expectations to: Resume@mkassociates.com Part Time Employment

Business Services

Classic Painting & Decorating. Free Consultations & E s t i m a t e s . 703-447-5976 703-444-7255 GORMANS TREE & LANDSCAPING SERVICES. Seasonal Clean up. Snow removal, grinding, mowing, take downs. Free e s t i m a t e s . 540-222-4107; 540-825-1000 JBS Excavation & Clearing, Free estimates, tree removal, horse arena, driveways & landscaping. No job too big or too small. 703-582-0439

Yard/Estate Sales

HUGE 2-Day ESTATE SALE At Multi-Acre Farm In Catharpin, Va (lots of free parking) Sat. July 29 9a-3p /Sun. July 30 10a-3p Sanders Lane, Catharpin, VA (take route 234 & turn on Sanders Ln, sale Apprx 1 mi on rt, watch for signs) THOUSANDS of Items-Home, Barn, Yard and SEVERAL Outbuildings!!! Antiques, Furniture & Collectibles of ALL Kinds!!

Yard/Estate Sales

Multi Fam YD/DOWNSIZING Sale. 7-29 @ 184 Franklin Meadows Dr. CulpeperFur, Antiques, Electric, Tools, High end W/M clothes/shoes, All household items, Xmas @ much more.

Bookkeeper - Accounting

Warrenton, VA national commercial land services firm has an immediate Part Time (30+/-hours/week) opening for a bookkeeper, detail oriented, ability to multi-task, MS Office knowledge, Excel and Quickbooks a must. Industry related training will be provided. Send resume & salary expectations to: Resume@mkassociates.com Website: www.mkassociates.com n Services

n Services

Business Services

Business Services

METICULOUS CLEANING Best rates around!!! Refs 703-314-9493

Remodels; New Homes; Windows; Painting; Garages; Bathrooms; Kitchens; Decks;. Class A. Lic & insured. GMC Enterprises of VA, LLC. 540-222-3385

METICULOUS CLEANING Best rates around!!! Refs 703-314-9493 ABC Legal

Full name(s) of owner(s): NAI SATURN EASTERN LLC Trading as: SAFEWAY FUEL CENTER #2635 12651 BRAEMAR VILLAGE PLAZA BRISTOW, PRINCE WILLIAM, VIRGINIA 20136 The above establishment is applying to the VIRGINIA ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL (ABC) AUTHORITY for a Off-Premises Wine and Beer license to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages. Cody Perdue, Director/Officer Date notice posted at establishment: July 27, 2023 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

PUBLIC NOTICE PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY BOARD OF EQUALIZATION

Public notice is hereby given that public hearings and/or work sessions will be held by the Prince William County Board of Equalization on the dates listed below for the purpose of hearing appeals of real estate property assessments due to inequalities or errors in assessments. Upon reviewing written appeals and hearing oral support for appeals (if presented), the Board will give consideration AND INCREASE, DECREASE OR AFFIRM such real estate assessments. Before a change can be granted, the taxpayer or his agent must overcome a clear presumption in favor of the assessment. The taxpayer or agent must provide a preponderance of the evidence that the assessment of the property is not uniform with the assessments of other similar properties or that the property is assessed in excess of its fair market value.

The Public Meetings and Hearings will be held from 7:00p.m. to 9:00p.m. at the Prince William County McCoart Building in the Board Chambers or conference rooms located at 1 County Complex Court or in the Development Services Building(*) at 5 County Complex, Woodbridge, Virginia 22192 on the dates listed below: AUGUST 3, 2023

AUGUST 17, 2023 AUGUST 24, 2023 AUGUST 31, 2023

SEPTEMBER 7, 2023

SEPTEMBER 14, 2023

SEPTEMBER 21, 2023(*) SEPTEMBER 28, 2023 OCTOBER 5, 2023(*) OCTOBER 12, 2023 OCTOBER 19, 2023 OCTOBER 26, 2023

NOVEMBER 2, 2023(*) NOVEMBER 9, 2023

NOVEMBER 16, 2023 NOVEMBER 29, 2023 NOVEMBER 30, 2023 DECEMBER 6, 2023 DECEMBER 7, 2023

DECEMBER 13, 2023 DECEMBER 14, 2023

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ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ132108-03-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re IRVING, ANAIYAH LONDON The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ANAIYAH IRVING It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) AARON MITCHELL appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 09/07/2023 11:00AM Aneicia Howell, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ156514-02-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re POLZER, DIOR The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF DIOR POLZER It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) UNKNOWN appear at the abovenamed Court and protect his or her interests on or before 09/07/2023 11:00AM Aneicia Howell, Deputy Clerk


14 CLASSIFIEDS

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | July 27, 2023

Foreclosure

TRUSTEE’S SALE OF 14980 DEEPWOOD LANE, NOKESVILLE, VA 20181. In execution of a certain Deed of Trust dated September 8, 2004, in the original principal amount of $164,000.00 recorded amongst the land records of Prince William County, Virginia as Instrument Number 20040909015407. The undersigned :\IZ[P[\[L ;Y\Z[LL ^PSS VɈLY MVY ZHSL H[ W\ISPJ H\J[PVU PU MYVU[ VM the Circuit Court building for Prince William County, located at 9311 Lee Avenue, Manassas, Virginia on Monday, August 28, 2023, at 11:00 AM, the property described in said Deed of Trust, located at the above address, and more particularly described as follows: Beginning at an iron pipe found on the west side of Deepwood Lane State Route 645 and being the common corner of N/F Coleman; thence running with the line of Coleman S 78 degrees 59’ 01” W 1584.03 feet to an iron pipe found common corner with Coleman and NF McDowell; thence running with the line of McDowell N 78 degrees 45’ 57” W 708.60 feet to an iron pipe found common corner with McDowell and Parcel 2; thence running with the line of parcel 2 N 79 degrees 57’ 45” E 1492.09 feet to an iron pipe set; thence S 47 degrees 48’ 29” E 91.37 feet to an iron pipe set; thence N 78 degrees 59’ 01” E 500.00 feet to an iron pipe set; thence N 42 degrees 11” 31” E 161.52 feet to an iron pipe set on the west side of Deepwood Lane; thence with said Lane S 47 degrees 48’ 29” E 175.00 feet to an iron pipe found; thence S 08 degrees 55’ 32” W 132’70 feet to the point of beginning containing 10.0000 acres, more or less. TERMS OF SALE: All Cash. A bidder’s deposit of ten percent (10%) of the sale price or ten percent (10%) of the original principal balance of the subject Deed of Trust, whichever is lower, in the form of JHZO VY JLY[PÄLK M\UKZ WH`HISL [V [OL :\IZ[P[\[L ;Y\Z[LL T\Z[ IL present at the time of the sale. The Balance of the purchase price ^PSS IL K\L ^P[OPU ÄM[LLU KH`Z VM ZHSL V[OLY^PZL 7\YJOHZLY»Z deposit may be forfeited to Trustee. Time is of the essence. If the sale is set aside for any reason, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled to a return of the deposit paid. The Purchaser may, if provided by the terms of the Trustee’s Memorandum of Foreclosure Sale, be entitled to a $50 cancellation fee from the Substitute Trustee, but shall have no further recourse against the Mortgagor, the Mortgagee or the Mortgagee’s attorney. A form copy of the Trustee’s memorandum of foreclosure sale and contract to purchase real estate may be obtained by contacting the Substitute Trustee. Additional terms, if any, to be announced at the sale and the Purchaser may be given the option to execute the contract of sale electronically. This is a communication from a debt collector and any information obtained will be used for that W\YWVZL ;OL ZHSL PZ Z\IQLJ[ [V ZLSSLY JVUÄYTH[PVU :\IZ[P[\[L Trustee: Christopher Chipman, Esq., 12701 Marblestone Drive, Suite 350, Prince William, VA 22192. For more information, contact: Compton & Duling, L.C., counsel for the Substitute Trustee, 12701 Marblestone Drive, Suite 350, Prince William, VA 22192, 703-583-6060, website: www.comptonduling.com. Legal Notices

TOWN OF DUMFRIES PUBLIC HEARING ON PROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO THE TOWN CODE REGARDING TOWN MANAGER’S AUTHORITY AND RELATED MATTERS The Town Council of Dumfries will hold a public hearing, regarding the proposed amendments to Town Code Sections 2-80 and 2-83, regarding the Town Manager’s authority and related matters, including amendments related to the positions of the Town Clerk, Town Treasurer, and Town Attorney, on August 8, 2023, at 7:00 PM. The meeting will be held in Council Chambers, located on the 2nd Floor of the John Wilmer Porter Municipal Building, 17739 Main Street, Dumfries, VA 22026. The meeting will also be broadcast live on the Town’s YouTube Channel and local Public Access Channel. Those unable to attend may send comments and/or questions via email to PIO@dumfriesva.gov. The proposed amendments are available for public inspection on the Town website (www.dumfriesva.gov).

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Legal Notices

Legal Notices

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ157043-01-00; JJ157044-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re ARAUJO BANEGAS, SOFIA L; ARAUJO BANEGAS, MARCO ANTONIO The object of this suit is to: DETERMINE CUSTODY OF SOFIA LINDALI ARAUJO BANEGAS; MARCO ANTONIO ARAUJO BANEGAS It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) MARCO ANTONIO ARAUJO ESCOTO appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/31/2023 10:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ156446-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re: GUEVARA-CAMPOS, JONATHAN The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY AND SPECIAL JUVENILE IMMIGRATION STATUS FOR A MINOR CHILD: JONATHAN GUEVARA-CAMPOS It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) WILBER ALEXANDER GUEVARA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 09/11/2023 10:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ143565-01-01; JJ143566-01-01 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re ARNOLD, ARIAH SIMONE; ARNOLD, ARIANNA SOPHIA The object of this suit is to: AMEND CUSTODY ORDER FOR ARIAH SIMONE ARNOLD; ARIANNA SOPHIA ARNOLD It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) JACQUES NICK FLEMMINGS appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 09/06/2023 11:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ156046-04-00; JJ138947-03-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re HAITHCOCK, LANA; HAITHCOCK, CECILIA RENEE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF LANA HAITHCOCK; CECILIA HAITHCOCK It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) ELLORY SMITH appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/09/2023 10:00AM Evelyn Ruiz, Deputy Clerk k ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ132108-03-00; JJ156514-02-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re IRVING, ANAIYAH LONDON; POLZER, DIOR The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ANAIYAH IRVING; DIOR POLZER It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) ASHLEY POLZER appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 09/07/2023 11:00AM Aneicia Howell, Deputy Clerk

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ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ156996-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re GARCIA ERAZO, BRANDON ISAAC The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN A DETERMINATION OF CUSTODY AND A FINDING OF ELIGIBILITY FOR SPECIAL IMMIGRANT JUVENILE It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) RONAL ADAN GARCIA ERAZO appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/24/2023 11:00AM Evelyn Ruiz, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ156998-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re MENJIVAR RIVAS, ANA E The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN SOLE LEGAL AND PHYSICAL CUSTODY OF MINOR CHILD, ANA ELIZABETH MENJIVAR RIVAS It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) OSCAR ALBERTO MENJIVAR HERNANDEZ appear at the abovenamed Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/24/2023 10:00AM Evelyn Ruiz, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ157051-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re RODRIGUEZ TURCIOS, LEONARDO J The object of this suit is to: PETITION FOR CUSTODY AND MOTION FOR FACTUAL FINDING: LEONARDO JAFETH RODRIGUEZ TURCIOS It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) ALEJANDRO FIGUEROA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 09/05/2023 11:00AM Jasmin Henderson, Deputy Clerk

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CLASSIFIEDS 15

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | July 27, 2023 Legal Notices

Legal Notices

CITY OF MANASSAS 9800 Godwin Drive - Manassas, VA 20110 NOTICE PLANNING COMMISSION PUBLIC HEARING CITY OF MANASSAS JENNIE DEAN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL 9601 PRINCE WILLIAM STREET MANASSAS, VIRGINIA 20110 Wednesday, August 2, 2023 - 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 #2023-0004, Iglesia De Dios Septimo Dia; 9394 Forestwood Lane To consider a special use permit for the use Place of Assembly (50 or more persons) for a proposed church in HU L_PZ[PUN VɉJL I\PSKPUN ;OL \ZL OHZ H WYVWVZLK TH_PT\T H[[LUKHUJL VM WLYZVUZ ;OL WYVWLY[` PZ aVULK ) )\ZPULZZ 6ɉJL HUK PZ SVJH[LK PU [OL :\KSL` 4LKPJHS *OHYHJ[LY (YLH VM [OL *VTWYLOLUZP]L 7SHU SUP #2023-0007, Independent Hills Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses; 9828 and 9912 Cockrell Road ;V JVUZPKLY H ZWLJPHS \ZL WLYTP[ [V L_WHUK [OL \ZL ¸(ZZLTIS` 7SHJL VM VY TVYL WLYZVUZ H[ HUK *VJRYLSS 9VHK [V PUJS\KL L_WHUZPVU VM [OL L_PZ[PUN JO\YJO I\PSKPUN HUK MVY HKKP[PVUHS WHYRPUN ;OL HWWSPJH[PVU PZ Z\ITP[[LK JVUJ\YYLU[S` ^P[O YLaVUPUN HWWSPJH[PVUZ 9,A HUK 9,A *VJRYLSS 9VHK PZ aVULK 9 : 4VKLYH[L +LUZP[` :PUNSL -HTPS` 9LZPKLU[PHS HUK *VJRYLSS 9VHK PZ aVULK 9 3V^ +LUZP[` :PUNSL -HTPS` 9LZPKLU[PHS )V[O WYVWLY[PLZ HYL SVJH[LK PU [OL 5LPNOIVYOVVK )\ZPULZZ *OHYHJ[LY (YLH VM [OL *VTWYLOLUZP]L 7SHU REZ #2023-0005, Independent Hills Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses; 9912 Cockrell Road ;V JVUZPKLY H WYVɈLY HTLUKTLU[ MVY HU L_PZ[PUN JO\YJO SVJH[LK H[ *VJRYLSS 9VHK [V YLWLHS [OL WYVMMLYZ ;OL HWWSPJH[PVU PZ Z\ITP[[LK JVUJ\YYLU[S` ^P[O ZWLJPHS \ZL WLYTP[ HWWSPJH[PVU :<7 HUK YLaVUPUN HWWSPJH[PVU 9,A ;OL WYVWLY[` PZ aVULK 9 : 4VKLYH[L +LUZP[` :PUNSL -HTPS` 9LZPKLU[PHS HUK PZ SVJH[LK PU [OL 5LPNOIVYOVVK )\ZPULZZ *OHYHJ[LY (YLH VM [OL *VTWYLOLUZP]L 7SHU REZ #2023-0006, Independent Hills Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses; 9828 Cockrell Road ;V JVUZPKLY H YLaVUPUN MVY *VJRYLSS 9VHK MYVT 9 3V^ +LUZP[` :PUNSL -HTPS` 9LZPKLU[PHS [V 9 : 4VKLYH[L +LUZP[` :PUNSL -HTPS` 9LZPKLU[PHS [V LUHISL HU L_WHUZPVU VM [OL L_PZ[PUN JO\YJO SVJH[LK H[ *VJRYLSS 9VHK ;OL HWWSPJH[PVU PZ Z\ITP[[LK JVUJ\YYLU[S` ^P[O ZWLJPHS \ZL WLYTP[ HWWSPJH[PVU :<7 HUK YLaVUPUN HWWSPJH[PVU 9,A ;OL WYVWLY[` PZ aVULK 9 3V^ +LUZP[` :PUNSL -HTPS` 9LZPKLU[PHS HUK PZ SVJH[LK PU [OL 5LPNOIVYOVVK )\ZPULZZ *OHYHJ[LY (YLH VM [OL *VTWYLOLUZP]L 7SHU REZ #2023-0004 & ZTA #2023-0001, Grace Methodist Church; 9350 Main Street (Currently Bull Run Unitarian Universalists) Add to the Adopted List of Historic Landmarks ;V JVUZPKLY H aVUPUN THW HUK aVUPUN [L_[ HTLUKTLU[ YLX\LZ[ HTLUKPUN [OL /PZ[VYPJ 3HUKTHYR SPZ[ [V HKK [OL I\PSKPUN SVJH[LK H[ 4HPU :[YLL[ [OL .YHJL 4L[OVKPZ[ *O\YJO )\PSKPUN ;OPZ I\PSKPUN PZ J\YYLU[S` KLZPNUH[LK *VU[YPI\[PUN PU [OL /PZ[VYPJ 6]LYSH` +PZ[YPJ[ ( SHUKTHYR I\PSKPUN PZ HU PUKP]PK\HSS` WYV[LJ[LK WYVWLY[` ^P[OPU [OL /PZ[VYPJ 6]LYSH` +PZ[YPJ[ [OH[ PZ JVU[YPI\[PUN HUK HSZV TLL[Z HKKP[PVUHS YLX\PYLTLU[Z ZPNUPM`PUN [OL PTWVY[HUJL VM [OL I\PSKPUN [V [OL WYLZLY]H[PVU VM OPZ[VYPJ KV^U[V^U 4HUHZZHZ ;OL WYVWLY[` PZ SVJH[LK H[ [OL ZV\[O^LZ[ JVYULY VM *O\YJO :[YLL[ HUK 4HPU :[YLL[ PZ ^P[OPU [OL +V^U[V^U *OHYHJ[LY (YLH VM [OL *VTWYLOLUZP]L 7SHU HUK PZ SVJH[LK ^P[OPU [OL +V^U[V^U *VYL

4LTILYZ VM [OL W\ISPJ JHU Z\ITP[ JVTTLU[Z [V [OL 7SHUUPUN *VTTPZZPVU I` ]PZP[PUN ^^^ THUHZZHZ]H NV] JVTOLHYPUN LTHPSPUN [OL 7SHUUPUN *VTTPZZPVU H[ WSHUUPUNJVTTPZZPVU'THUHZZHZ]H NV] VY THPSPUN H SL[[LY [V [OL *VTT\UP[` +L]LSVWTLU[ 6ɉJL H[ .VK^PU +YP]L 4HUHZZHZ =PYNPUPH VY I` JHSSPUN HUK SLH]PUN H ]VPJLTHPS (SS ^YP[[LU LSLJ[YVUPJ JVTTLU[Z ^PSS IL WYV]PKLK [V 7SHUUPUN *VTTPZZPVU HUK PUJS\KLK PU [OL TLL[PUN TPU\[LZ 0U WLYZVU JVTTLU[Z HYL HSZV WLYTP[[LK ;OPZ TLL[PUN PZ ILPUN OLSK H[ 1LUUPL +LHU ,SLTLU[HY` :JOVVS H[ 7YPUJL >PSSPHT :[YLL[ PU 4HUHZZHZ PU H W\ISPJ MHJPSP[` ILSPL]LK [V IL HJJLZZPISL [V WLYZVUZ ^P[O KPZHIPSP[PLZ (U` WLYZVU ^P[O X\LZ[PVUZ VU [OL HJJLZZPIPSP[` VM [OL MHJPSP[` ZOV\SK JVU[HJ[ [OL *P[` *SLYR H[ [OL HIV]L HKKYLZZ VY I` [LSLWOVUL H[ 7LYZVUZ ULLKPUN PU[LYWYL[LY ZLY]PJLZ MVY [OL KLHM T\Z[ UV[PM` [OL *P[` *SLYR UV SH[LY [OHU ! H T VU Friday, July 28, 2023. ( JVW` VM [OL Z[HɈ YLWVY[ ^PSS IL H]HPSHISL PU [OL *VTT\UP[` +L]LSVWTLU[ 6ɉJL HUK VUSPUL H[ ^^^ THUHZZHZJP[` VYN HM[LY ! W T VU Wednesday, July 26, 2023. -VY HKKP[PVUHS PUMVYTH[PVU JVU[HJ[ [OL *VTT\UP[` +L]LSVWTLU[ 6ɉJL H[ VY ;;@ ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ156659-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re LOPEZ GARCIA, MARTHA LORENA The object of this suite is to: OBTAIN AN ORDER FOR CUSTODY OVER A MINOR CHILD WITH FINDINGS OF FACT FOR SPECIAL IMMIGRANT JUVENILE STATUS It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) REYNA DEL S GARCIA HERNANDEZ appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/15/2023 11:00AM Jasmin Henderson, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ157048-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re CHILENO VILLALOBOS, BRANDON A The object of this suite is to: PETITION FOR CUSTODY AND SIJS STATUS OF BRANDON ADIEL CHILENO VILLALOBOS It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) ERIK ADIEL CHILENO GONZALEZ appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 09/05/2023 10:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk

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ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ121662-02-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re HOWARD, CHRISTIAN KINGSLEYCHA The object of this suit is to: RELIEF OF CUSTODY FOR CHRISTIAN K.C. HOWARD It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) UNKNOWN, UNKNOWN appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/15/2023 11:00AM Evelyn Ruiz, Deputy Clerk

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ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ121662-02-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re HOWARD, CHRISTIAN KINGSLEYCHA The object of this suit is to: RELIEF OF CUSTODY FOR CHRISTIAN K.C. HOWARD It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) JANICE CHAE HOWARD appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/15/2023 11:00AM Evelyn Ruiz, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ152460-02-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re SANCHEZ HERNANDEZ, ARQUIMIDES The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY AND SPECIAL IMMIGRANT JUVENILE FINDINGS It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) WALTER MIGUEL SANCHEZ MENDEZ appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/04/2023 10:00AM Jasmin Henderson, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ156748-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re MEDINA FERRUFINO, MARIA JOSE The object of this suit is to: SEEK CUSTODY AND LEGAL CUSTODY OF MINOR CHILD MARIA JOSE MEDINA FERRUFINO It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) ANDUVIS ONIEL MEDINA ORDONEZ appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/01/2023 10:00AM Jasmin M Henderson, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ156858-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re: GOMEZ RAMIREZ, ANDERSON JOSUE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ANDERSON JOSUE GOMEZ RAMIREZ It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) LUIS ALFONSON GOMEZ MELENDEZ appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/07/2023 10:00AM Jennifer Hall, Deputy Clerk

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16 CLASSIFIEDS Legal Notices

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ157023-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re WILLIAMS, PRINCE JIHAD SABOOR The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF PRINCE JIHAD SABOOR WILLIAMS It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) DARNESHA P WILLIAMS appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/31/2023 10:00AM Aneicia Howell, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ157023-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re WILLIAMS, PRINCE JIHAD SABOOR The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF PRINCE JIHAD SABOOR WILLIAMS It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) UNKNOWN appear at the abovenamed Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/31/2023 10:00AM Aneicia Howell, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ152905-02-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re AMAYA REQUENO, KIMBERLY JOHANA The object of this suite is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF KIMBERLY AMAYA REQUENO It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) MOISES AMAYA REQUENO appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 09/05/2023 10:00AM Jennifer Hall, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ152905-02-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re AMAYA REQUENO, KIMBERLY JOHANA The object of this suite is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF KIMBERLY AMAYA REQUENO It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) LUZ MARINA REQUENO DE AMAYA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 09/05/2023 10:00AM Jennifer Hall, Deputy Clerk

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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | July 27, 2023 ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ157046-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re ESTRADA PEREZ, VICTORIA C The object of this suite is to: PETITION FOR CUSTODY AND SIJS STATUS OF VICTORIA CLARISSE ESTRADA PEREZ It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) HECTOR A ESTRADA VALIENTE appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 09/05/2023 10:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ157905-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re PERDONES MAYA, ERANDY GERARDO The object of this suite is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ERANY GERARDO PERDONES MAYA It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) YADEL MAYA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/24/2023 10:00AM Jennifer Houchin, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ152389-03-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re: RECINOS MORALES, ALEJANDRA The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ALEJANDRA RECINOS MORALES It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) EBONY SHARON MORALES appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/14/2023 01:30PM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ152389-03-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re: RECINOS MORALES, ALEJANDRA The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ALEJANDRA RECINOS MORALES It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) ANDERSON ALEJANDRO RECINOS appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/14/2023 01:30PM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ115176-02-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re LAZO FUENTES, JENNIFER EMELY The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF JENNIFER EMELY LAZO FUENTES It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) ARACELY D FUENTES BUSTILLOS appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 09/21/2023 11:00AM Pilar Barrera, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ155868-02-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re: PEREZ ORELLANA, MARIANA The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF MARIANA PEREZ ORELLANA It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) MARIO PEREZ appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 07/25/2023 11:00AM Laska Via, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ117137-01-01 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re: VALDEZ BRUNO, SIANY The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF SIANY VALDEZ BRUNO It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) SIAN BRUNO-MARQUEZ appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 07/13/2023 11:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ155869-02-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re: ORELLANA CARDONA, AYLIN. The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF AYLIN CARDONA ORELLANA It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) UNKNOWN appear at the abovenamed Court and protect his or her interests on or before 07/25/2023 11:00AM Laska Via, Deputy Clerk

Notice is hereby given that the following watercraft has been abandoned for more than 60 DAYS on the property of: Occoquan Harbour Marina, 13180 Marina Way Woodbridge VA 703-494-3600. Watercraft is a 1997 Cruiser 3650 36 ft in length, color white, Vessel official no. 1059641, Hull Identification no. CRSUSK42C797. 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 Wildlife Resources with questions.

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ157013-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re BOYD, CARLEE REBECCA The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF CARLEE BOYD It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) CHRISTOPHER WHITFIELD appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/23/2023 10:00AM Aneicia Howell, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ156511-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re: ANYIAM, SONIA ONYINYECHI The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF SONIA ONYINYECHI ANYIAM It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) CHINEDU ANYIAM appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 09/12/2023 10:30AM Brian Donnell James, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ156511-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re: ANYIAM, SONIA ONYINYECHI The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF SONIA ONYINYECHI ANYIAM It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) TINA NKECHINYERE ANYIAM appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 09/12/2023 10:30AM Brian Donnell James, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ153864-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re GOODSON, TRANIYAH TERESA The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF TRANIYAH TERESA GOODSON It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) UNKNOWN FATHER appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/21/2023 10:00AM Jennifer Hall, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ156867-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re MERAZ CASCO, JUSTIN A DALY The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF JUSTIN ADALY MERAZ CASCO It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) SELVIN AGRIPINO MERAZ AVILA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/21/2023 10:00AM Jennifer Hall, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ156870-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re MARTIN, KAI'ASIA YUE'SONALI The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF KAI'ASIA YUE'SONALI It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) JORDAN ELIJAH LEAHY appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/31/2023 10:00AM Jennifer Hall, Deputy Clerk


OBITUARIE S OBITUARIE S OBITUARIE S Carol Jean Blythe

CLASSIFIEDS/OBITUARIES 17

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | July 27, 2023 Legal Notices

Legal Notices

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ156872-01-00 Legal Notices PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE OFDistrict PUBLICATION (ORDER ) General County Commonwealth VirginiaRelations VA. (X) Juvenile and of Domestic CODE §Court 8.01-316 District CASE# JJ156872-01-00 Commonwealth of Virginia, in re P R I N C E EASTON W I L L IMCARHTUR AM COUNTY WRIGHT, J&DR-JUVENILE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN ( ) General District County CUSTODY OF EASTON MCARH(X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations THUR WRIGHT District Court that (X) the defendant It is ORDERED Commonwealth of Virginia,WRIGHT in re (X) DE'VANTE MAURICE WRIGHT, EASTON MCARHTUR appear at the above-named Court and The object is to: OBTAIN protect his oforthis hersuitinterests on or CUSTODY OF EASTON MCARHbefore 08/31/2023 10:00AM THUR WRIGHT Jennifer Hall, Deputy Clerk It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) DE'VANTE MAURICE WRIGHT ORDER OF PUBLICATION appear at the above-named Court and Commonwealth of Virginia VA. protect his or her interests on or CODE § 8.01-316 before CASE#08/31/2023 JJ138948-03-00 10:00AM Jennifer Deputy P R I N C EHall, W I L L I AClerk M COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE OFDistrict PUBLICATION (ORDER ) General County Commonwealth VirginiaRelations VA. (X) Juvenile and of Domestic CODE 8.01-316 District§Court CASE# JJ138948-03-00 Commonwealth of Virginia, in re PRINCE WLEENA ILLIAM COUNTY HAITHCOCK, ROSE J&DR-JUVENILE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN (CUSTODY ) General District County OF LEENA HAITHCOCK (X)is Juvenile andthat Domestic Relations It ORDERED (X) the defendant District CourtHILLMAN appear at the (X) AVERY Commonwealth of and Virginia, re above-named Court protect in his or HAITHCOCK, LEENA ROSE her interests on or before 08/09/2023 The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN 10:00AM CUSTODY LEENA HAITHCOCK Evelyn Ruiz,OF Deputy Clerk It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) AVERY HILLMAN appear at the above-named Court and protect his or ORDER OF PUBLICATION her interests on orofbefore 08/09/2023 Commonwealth Virginia VA. CODE 10:00AM § 8.01-316 Evelyn Deputy Clerk CASE#Ruiz, JJ156511-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE OFDistrict PUBLICATION (ORDER ) General County Commonwealth VirginiaRelations VA. (X) Juvenile and of Domestic CODE §Court 8.01-316 District CASE# JJ156511-01-00 Commonwealth of Virginia, in re: P R I N C E SONIA W I LONYINYECHI LIAM COUNTY ANYIAM, J&DR-JUVENILE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN ( ) General District County CUSTODY OF SONIA ONYINYECHI (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations ANYIAM District Court that (X) the defendant It is ORDERED Commonwealth of Virginia, ANYIAM in re: (X) TINA NKECHINYERE ANYIAM, ONYINYECHI appear at SONIA the above-named Court and The object is to: OBTAIN protect his oforthis hersuitinterests on or CUSTODY OF SONIA ONYINYECHI before 09/12/2023 10:30AM ANYIAM Brian Donnell James, Deputy Clerk It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) TINA NKECHINYERE ANYIAM ORDER OF PUBLICATION appear at the above-named Court and Commonwealth of Virginia VA. protect his or her interests on or CODE § 8.01-316 before 10:30AM CASE#09/12/2023 JJ157040-01-00 Brian James, P R I NDonnell CE W I L L I ADeputy M C Clerk OUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE OFDistrict PUBLICATION (ORDER ) General County Commonwealth VirginiaRelations VA. (X) Juvenile and of Domestic CODE 8.01-316 District§Court CASE# JJ157040-01-00 Commonwealth of Virginia, in re P R I N C E HERNANDEZ, W I L L I A M AZLY COUN ONDONEZ MT Y J&DR-JUVENILE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN (CUSTODY ) General District County OF AZLY MAGDALENA (X) JuvenileHERNANDEZ and Domestic Relations ORDONEZ District Court that (X) the defendant It is ORDERED Commonwealth of Virginia, in re (X) GERSON GENARO ORDONEZ ONDONEZ HERNANDEZ, AZLY M REYES appear at the above-named The object of this his suit or is her to: OBTAIN Court and protect interests CUSTODY AZLY MAGDALENA on or before OF 09/07/2023 10:00AM ORDONEZ HERNANDEZ Aneicia Howell, Deputy Clerk It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) GERSON GENARO ORDONEZ REYES appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 09/07/2023 10:00AM Aneicia Howell, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ157040-01-00 Legal P R I Notices NCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ORDER OFDistrict PUBLICATION ( ) General County Commonwealth VirginiaRelations VA. (X) Juvenile and of Domestic CODE 8.01-316 District§Court JJ157040-01-00 CASE# JJ156872-01-00 Commonwealth of Virginia, in re P R I N C E HERNANDEZ, W I L L I A M AZLY COUN ONDONEZ MT Y J&DR-JUVENILE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN (CUSTODY ) General District County OF AZLY MAGDALENA (X) JuvenileHERNANDEZ and Domestic Relations ORDONEZ District Court that (X) the defendant It is ORDERED Commonwealth of Virginia, in re (X) NELYS YOLANDA HERNANDEZ ONDONEZ HERNANDEZ, AZLY WRIGHT, EASTON MCARHTUR appear at the above-named CourtMand The object is to: OBTAIN protect his oforthis hersuitinterests on or OF MAGDALENA CUSTODY OF AZLY EASTON MCARHbefore 09/07/2023 10:00AM ORDONEZ HERNANDEZ THUR AneiciaWRIGHT Howell, Deputy Clerk It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant NELYS YOLANDA HERNANDEZ (X) DE'VANTE MAURICE WRIGHT ORDER OF PUBLICATION appear at the above-named Court and Commonwealth of Virginia VA. protect his or her interests on or CODE § 8.01-316 09/07/2023 10:00AM before 10:00AM CASE#08/31/2023 JJ157152-01-00 Aneicia Jennifer Deputy P R I N C Howell, EHall, W IDeputy L L I AClerk MClerkC O U N T Y J&DR-JUVENILE ORDER OFDistrict PUBLICATION ( ) General County Commonwealth VirginiaRelations VA. (X) Juvenile and of Domestic CODE 8.01-316 District§Court CASE# JJ138948-03-00 JJ157152-01-00 Commonwealth of Virginia, in re P R I N C RIVERA, E W I LEDISON L I A M DANIEL COUNTY REYES J&DR-JUVENILE The object of this suite is to: OBTAIN (CUSTODY ) General District OF County EDISON DANIEL (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations REYES RIVERA District Court that (X) the defendant It is ORDERED Commonwealth of RIVERA Virginia, in re (X) DAYLIN IRANIE appear at HAITHCOCK, LEENA ROSE REYES RIVERA, EDISON DANIEL the above-named Court and protect The ofinterests this suite suit is this is to:orOBTAIN his object or herof on before CUSTODY LEENA HAITHCOCK OF EDISON DANIEL 09/11/2023 OF 10:00AM It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant REYES RIVERA Jennifer Hall, Deputy Clerk (X) HILLMAN at the It is AVERY ORDERED that (X) appear the defendant above-named Court RIVERA and protect his or (X) DAYLIN IRANIE appear at ORDER OF PUBLICATION her interests on orofCourt before 08/09/2023 the above-named and protect Commonwealth Virginia VA. his or10:00AM interests on or before CODE § her 8.01-316 Evelyn Deputy Clerk 09/11/2023 10:00AM CASE#Ruiz, JJ157047-01-00 Jennifer Deputy P R I N C EHall, W I L L I AClerk M COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ORDER OFDistrict PUBLICATION ( ) General County Commonwealth VirginiaRelations VA. (X) Juvenile and of Domestic CODE 8.01-316 District§Court CASE# JJ156511-01-00 JJ157047-01-00 Commonwealth of Virginia, in re P R I N CRIVAS, E W IVERONICA LLIAM C JOVEL AOUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE The object of this suite is to: (PETITION ) General District County OF VERFOR CUSTODY (X) Juvenile and Domestic ONICA ALEJANDRA JOVELRelations RIVAS District Court that (X) the defendant It is ORDERED Commonwealth Virginia, re: Virginia, atin in the re (X) JOHN DOEof appear ANYIAM, SONIA ONYINYECHI JOVEL RIVAS, VERONICA A above-named Court and protect his or The object this suit issuite to: OBTAIN objectofon of is to: her interests or this before 09/05/2023 CUSTODY OF SONIA ONYINYECHI PETITION CUSTODY OF VER10:00AM FOR ANYIAM ONICA ALEJANDRA JOVEL Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk RIVAS It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) TINA NKECHINYERE JOHN DOE appear ANYIAM at the ORDER OF PUBLICATION appear at the above-named Courthisand above-named Court protect or Commonwealth of and Virginia VA. protect his or herbefore interests on or her interests on or 09/05/2023 CODE § 8.01-316 before 10:30AM 10:00AM CASE#09/12/2023 JJ157020-01-00 Brian Donnell James, Ataa P R I NDwamena, CE W I Deputy L L I ADeputy MClerk C Clerk OUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ORDER OFDistrict PUBLICATION ( ) General County Commonwealth VirginiaRelations VA. (X) Juvenile and of Domestic CODE 8.01-316 District§Court JJ157020-01-00 CASE# JJ157040-01-00 Commonwealth of Virginia, in re: P R I N C E SAMIRAH WILLIA M COUNTY WEBER, YVONNE J&DR-JUVENILE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN (CUSTODY ) General District County Y WEBER OF SAMIRAH (X) andthat Domestic Relations It isJuvenile ORDERED (X) the defendant District Court (X) LEE WEBER appear at the of and Virginia, Commonwealth Virginia, in re above-named Court protectin his re: or WEBER, SAMIRAH YVONNE ONDONEZ HERNANDEZ, AZLY M her interests on or before 08/22/2023 of this suit is to: OBTAIN The object 10:00AM OF Y WEBER CUSTODY OFSAMIRAH AZLY Clerk MAGDALENA Aneicia Howell, Deputy It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant ORDONEZ HERNANDEZ (X)is ORDERED LEE WEBER appear at the It that (X) the defendant took above-named Court and protect his or (X) GERSONIt GENARO ORDONEZ her interests on at or before 08/22/2023 REYES appear the above-named 5protect YEARS 10:00AM Court and his or her interests Aneicia Howell, Deputy Clerk on or before 09/07/2023 10:00AM to fi nally decide to Aneicia Howell, Deputy Clerk

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Obituaries

Legal Notices Obituaries

Carol JeanObituaries (Seibel) Blythe, age 72, of Haymarket, Virginia passed away at her home on 9 ORDER OF PUBLICATION July 2023 Commonwealth of Virginia VA. after a courageous multi-year battle CODE § 8.01-316 with ovarian cancer. CASE# JJ157040-01-00 ANKansas girl, Carol was the second of PRINCE WILLIAM COU T Y JeanCity Carol (Seibel) Blythe, age 72, HayCarol Jean (Sei four children born to Louis Seibel andofBarbaJ&DR-JUVENILE market, Virginia passed away at her home on 9 Virginia p market, ( ) General District County ra (Bliss) and raised in Overland Park, Kansas. 2023 after a courageous multi-year battle July 2023 (X) Juvenile and Domestic July Relations She graduated from William Woods College after a c District Court with ovarian cancer. with ovarian cance in 1972 she majored in Spanish and was Commonwealth of Virginia, in Kansas rewhere A City girl, Carol was the second of A a member of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority.Kansas City ONDONEZ HERNANDEZ, AZLY M children born to Seibel four children born The object of this suit is to:four OBTAIN After graduation sheLouis married her and highBarbaschool ra (Bliss) and raised in Overland Park, Kansas. ra (Bliss) CUSTODY OFMichael AZLY MAGDALENA sweetheart, Blythe, and they began a thirty-year career in the and raise ORDONEZ HERNANDEZ She graduated from William Woods College She graduated fro Army. Carol did an Army spouse does and somehow managed It is ORDERED thateverything (X) the defendant in 1972 where she majored in Spanish and was in 1972 sustain YOLANDA a career as aHERNANDEZ Department of the Army Civilian. She moved the where she (X)toNELYS a member of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority. a member of the A appear the above-named Court and her husband’s reassignments. familyatfour times by herself following After graduation protect his or her interests After on orgraduation she married her high school She was the 1980 disco queen of the Katterbach Officers Club in before 09/07/2023 10:00AM sweetheart, Michael Blythe, and of they a thirty-year career in she the sweetheart, Blythe, and they bega Germany. Following the birth herbegan second sonMichael in Nurnberg, Aneicia Howell, Deputy Clerk Army. Carol did everything an Army spouse does and somehow managed Army. Carol did everything an Army spouse hitchhiked home from the hospital because her husband was in the to sustain a career as a Department of the Army Civilian. She moved the to sustain a career as a Department ORDER PUBLICATION field. OF Carol earned a master’s degree in Guidance Counseling from of the A family four times herself following husband’s four times by herself her hu Commonwealth of byVirginia VA. herfamily Long§ 8.01-316 Island University during their assignment toreassignments. the West Pointfollowing facCODEShe was the 1980 disco queen of the Katterbach Officers Club in She was the 1980 disco queen of the K ulty. As an education counselor for the Army, she counseled soldiers at CASE# JJ157152-01-00 Germany. Following the birth of her second son in Nurnberg, she Germany. Following the birth of her sec P RFort I N CRiley, E WFort I L L IMeade, AM CKorea, O U N Tand Y Hawaii. hitchhiked home from the hospital because her husband was in the hitchhiked home from the hospital becau J&DR-JUVENILE When the 1st Infantry Division deployed to the Middle East during ( ) field. General District County Carol earned arecognized master’s degree in Guidance Counseling from degree in field. Carol earned master’s the Gulf War, leaders that they were leaving manyathousands (X)Long Juvenile andUniversity Domestic Relations Island during their assignment to the West Point fac-their assign Long Island University during of families District Court behind at Fort Riley. An unknown number of young wives ulty. As an education counselor for the Army, she counseled soldiers at for the Arm ulty. As an education counselor Commonwealth of Virginia, in had re never written a check. She developed didn’t speak English, and more Fort Riley, Fort Meade, Korea, and Hawaii. Fort Riley, Fort Meade, Korea, and Hawai REYES RIVERA, EDISON DANIEL the plan and helped build and operate the Family Support Center. The object ofthe this1st suite is to: OBTAIN When Infantry Division deployed to the Middle East during When the 1st Infantry Division deploye At FortOF Meade, she was the head of the Education Center before CUSTODY EDISON DANIEL the Gulf War, leaders recognized that they were leaving many thousands the Gulf War, leaders recognized that they w givingRIVERA up her career to join her husband in Singapore in 1999. There REYES of families behind at Fort Riley. An unknown number of young wives of families behind at Fort Riley. An unkno It is defendant sheORDERED was hiredthat to (X) runthethe US Education Information Center, created speak English, and more had written a check. Sheand developed speak English, more (X)didn’t DAYLIN IRANIE RIVERA appear at never to assist Singaporeans in their efforts todidn’t attend universities in the US.had never w thethe above-named Courtbuild and and protect plan and helped operate the Family Support Center. the plan and helped build and operate the F from she joined the College Board and behisOn or their her return interests on overseas, or before At Fort Meade, she was the head of the Education Center before At Fort Meade, she was the 09/11/2023 came the10:00AM Director of International Education in Washington DC. head of th giving up her career totraveled join herinhusband inseven Singapore in 1999. There up her career to join her husband i Jennifer Hall, Deputy Clerk Carol lived, worked, or six ofgiving the continents – visiting she was hired to run the US Education Information Center, created she was hired to run the US the pyramids of Egypt, temples of Angkor Wat, and the Taj Mahal.Education I ORDER OF Singaporeans PUBLICATION in their efforts totoattend to assist in in thetheir US. assist universities Singaporeans Following her of professional career, Carol focused her vast energies onefforts to at Commonwealth Virginia VA. On their return from overseas, she joined the College Board and beOn their return from overseas, CODE § 8.01-316 beekeeping, the Daughters of the American Revolution where she was she joined came the Director of International Education Washington DC. came the in Director of International Educ CASE# JJ157047-01-00 a docent at the National Headquarters, and being a grandma. P RCarol I N C Elived, Wworked, I L L I A M or traveled C O U N T in Y six ofCarol the seven continents – visiting lived, worked, or traveled in six of th Carol was the proud mother of two sons, Devin and Christopher, J&DR-JUVENILE the pyramids of Egypt, temples of Angkor Wat, and the Taj Mahal. the pyramids of Egypt, temples of Angko the District prouder grandmother of five grandchildren: Emma, Christo( ) and General County her professional career, Carol focuseditsher vast energies on her professional Carol f (X)Following Juvenile Domestic Relations pher, Lena,and Blaine, and Jack. A family isFollowing without North Star, and career, the beekeeping, the Daughters of the American Revolution where she was beekeeping, the Daughters of the America District Court Kansas City Chiefs are missing a most devoted fan. Commonwealth Virginia,Headquarters, in re a docent at theofNational beingatathe grandma. aand docent National Headquarters, and JOVEL RIVAS, Carol wasVERONICA the proudAmother of two sons, Devin and proud Christopher, Carol was the mother of two so The object of this suite is to: and the prouder grandmother of five grandchildren: Emma, Christoand the prouder grandmother of five gran PETITION FOR CUSTODY OF VERpher, ALEJANDRA Lena, Blaine,JOVEL and Jack. A family ispher, without its Blaine, North Star, and the Lena, and Jack. A family is wi ONICA RIVAS It is ORDERED that (X) are the missing defendant Kansas City Chiefs a most devoted fan. Chiefs are missing a most dev Kansas City

Carol Jean Blythe Carol Jean B

(X) JOHN DOE appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 09/05/2023 10:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ157020-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DR-JUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re: WEBER, SAMIRAH YVONNE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF SAMIRAH Y WEBER It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) LEE WEBER appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 08/22/2023 10:00AM Aneicia Howell, Deputy Clerk

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• Interior/Exterior Painting & Drywall • Media Rooms/Wet Bars • Kitchens & Baths • Basements • Additions • Trim Carpentry • Flooring Tile/Vinyl • Seamless Gutters • Siding/Windows r 4QQƂPI 5JKPINGU /GVCN 5NCVG • Decks • Concrete Finishing • Power Washing/Sealing

540-522-1056 • 703-862-5958 Free Estimates • References Licensed & Insured hagansremodeling@yahoo.com

Construction

G RAVEL ALL PROJECTS No Job Too Small Mulch • Topsoil • Fill Dirt • Driveway Maintenance • Gravel Spreading • Horse Lots

Michael R Jenkins 540-825-4150 540-219-7200 CALL ANYTIME

We deliver days, evenings and even weekends!

mbccontractingservices@yahoo.com Driveways

JBS Excavating & Clearing LLC

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

AFFORDABLE ROOFING WITH TERRY’S HANDYMAN SERVICES, LLC (C) 540-270-7938 tws12661@aol.com Licensed & Insured Residential & Commercial Senior Discounts This could be your ad Call 540.270.4931

(703) 582-0439 Hauling

CALL DAVID WASSENAAR BULK HOUSEHOLD TRASH REMOVAL Basements540-717-7258 Furniture

EMPLOYERS! GoWell Urgent Care in Warrenton offers pre-employment and DOT physicals, PFTs, drug and breath alcohol screens, and workman’s comp cases!

New Extended Hours! 8AM – 8PM Daily

Please call Janan today at 540-351-0662. Carpentry

a division of DAVE THE MOVER

Construction

Landscape Deck Pro LLC

Minor Concrete Works, LLC

703-963-4567 www.landscapedeckpro.com Free estimates • Senior Citizen Discounts Licensed and Insured

RESURFACING REINFORCED READY MIX

“Where Quality is Always in Season”

Call: 540-878-9673 • Licensed & Insured

Tree Work Stump Removal Lot Clearing Decks

Landscaping Patios Retaining Walls Grading/Driveways

Fencing Mowing Mulching Power Washing

Excavating

DIRT HILL EXCAVATING Land Clearing Specialists

540-414-4155 • Lot Clearing • Leveling / Grading

• Basements • Roadways • Ponds

www.DirtHillExcavating.com

Place Your Ad Here 540.351.1163

40+ YEARS EXPERIENCE

IF YOUR AD ISN’T HERE

YOU GIVE YOUR BUSINESS TO SOMEONE ELSE 540.351.1163

Sheds PROFESSIONAL REMOVAL OF CONTENTS: Attics Heating & Air Conditioning

Appliances & More

Home Improvement

For all your

Heating and Cooling needs, call on

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

NUTTERS PAINTING & SERVICES -SPECIALIZING IN -

•Painting (Int&Ext) r 3PPàOH 3FQBJST • Siding r (VUUFST r %SZXBMM

r $BSQFOUSZ r :BSE .BJOUFOBODF r7JOZM 5SJN 'BTDJB 8SBQ r 'FODJOH (VUUFS $MFBOJOH r #SJDLXPSL r#BUISPPN 3FNPEFMJOH r1SFTTVSF 8BTIJOH r $SPXO .PEFMJOH r%FDL 8BUFS 4FBMJOH r5SFF 3FNPWBM

CALL ERIK 5405223289 FREE ESTIMATE 20 YEARS EXP.• LICENSED/REF’S AVAILABLE DISCOUNT PRICING | NUTTERSPAINTING@AOL.COM

Home Improvement

Resseman Home Improvements “No job too small for our attention!”

• Bathroom, Basement, and Kitchen Remodeling • Custom Sheds, Electrical Serices, and Door Installation • Trim and Crown Molding • Decks and Flooring

Brian Resseman | 703-909-6024 | Bresseman2@gmail.com

THE RIGHT

TOOLS FOR YOUR BUSINESS

Put your ad in the Business & Services Directory

Call 540.351.1163


BUSINESS SERVICE DIRECTORY 19

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | July 27, 2023

BUSINESS SERVICE DIRECTORY Landscaping

Painting/Drywall

Gormans Tree & Landscaping Service

Snow Removal • Topping • Pruning Feeding • Take Downs • Stump Grinding • Firewood • Excavating Mulching • Landscaping Lawn Care/Mowing Bush Hogging •Pressure Washing

Seasonal Clean Up

Tree Services/Firewood

A TO Z PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR • DRYWALL REPAIRS/ CAULKING/POWERWASHING/DECK STAINING FAUX FINISHING • BARNS, SILOS AND MINOR REPAIRS • HOA WORK ALSO

LIC. & INS./FREE ESTIMATES WE NOW ACCEPT CREDIT CARDS

Free Estimates • Licensed • Insured

James Gorman 540-825-1000 or 540-222-4107

Brian’s Tree Service

• Tree removal • Tree Trimming

• Deadwooding • Stump removal

A 5-Star Rated Company

Senior Citizen Discount - 20% OFF Licensed • Fully Insured • Free Estimate 540.222.5606 • 540.937.4742 Tree Services/Firewood

Masonry

Spring into that new look you always wanted without SUPER competitive prices

AJ’S M ASONRY

ʄ RENOVATION ʄ RESTORATION ʄ REPAIR ʄ POWER WASHING JACK HONEYCUT T Jack@ajmasonry.com |(703) 819-5846 WWW.AJMASONRY.COM

30 YEARS & COUNTING

703.470.5091 ASK FOR VERN Painting/Drywall

If you want a classy job call...

Masonry

Also: House Painting & Landscape Work

540.270.9309 Masonry

North’s Custom Masonry 9L[HPUPUN +LJVYH[P]L >HSSZ ࠮ :[VUL^VYR 7H[PVZ HUK >HSR^H`Z -PYL WP[Z -PYLWSHJLZ *OPTUL`Z 9LWVPU[PUN )YPJR *VUJYL[L HUK WH]LY KYP]L^H`Z Angie’s list member

Call Brian 540-533-8092

DAVE THE MOVER LLC HONEST & CAPABLE WE PUT OUR HEART INTO EVERY MOVE!

www.DaveTheMover.com 540.229.9999/Mobile 540.439.4000 2ưFH Local

• Creative • Professional • First Class Painting Services • Home painting & carpentry repairs • 30 years of hands on experience • Small company with personal service Free Consultations & Estimates 703-447-5976 & 703-444-7255 Painting/Drywall

10% off for Military & Seniors

540-533-8092

Franky Mejia, Master Tree Technician 571-464-4483 • Franky@Frankystreecare.com

- All phases of Masonry - Gravel & Grading Driveways - Fencing Honest and Dependable

Sell it in the Classifieds and jog all the way to the bank. We’ll help you place your ad

540.351.1163

SPECIALS

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

Tree Services/Firewood

­

GET NOTICED

→ Free Estimates → Many References → Drywall & Plaster Repair 540-364-2251 540-878-3838 Licensed & Insured

Painting/Drywall

Call 540.351.1163

Out-of-Town

Tread Mill getting dusty?

Landscaping

Free estimates, BBB, Lic/Ins.

Moving/Storage

Tree Trimming & Removal

- ALL PHASES OF LANDSCAPING 25% OFF

• Chimney Repairs • Brick/Stucco Work

All tree services provided

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

Fully Insured

• Concrete Steps • Flagstone Walkways • Stone Features

Tree Services/Firewood

NORTH'S TREE SERVICE & LANDSCAPING

Brocato Masonry & Improvements Install/Restore:

• Lot clearing

QUALITY WORKMANSHIP

Classified advertising

540.364.1195

Marshall, VA | Licensed & Insured | Free Estimates Roofing

Brian Watts - Warrenton Phone: (540) 729-1649 Email: RescueRoof@aol.com MyRescueRoofing.com

This Could be Your Ad! Call 540.351.1163

fauquier.com

PrinceWilliamTimes.com


20

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | July 27, 2023

Expert primary and specialty care in your own backyard At UVA Health, we’re committed to the health of our communities. That’s why we offer a full array of services near you. Providing expert primary and specialty care, access to ground-breaking research and clinical trials, Virginia’s first NCI-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center, and the #1 children’s hospital in the state. All to keep you and your family healthy, and provide you with world-class care. So, the moment you need us, rest assured we’re here for you.

uvahealth.com/backyard


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