n LOUDOUN
Pg. 4 | n EDUCATION
Pg. 8 | n PUBLIC SAFETY
Pg. 10 | n OBITUARIES
Pg. 26 | n PUBLIC NOTICES
Pg. 29
LOUDOUN REMEMBERS 9|11
VOL. 6, NO. 42
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SEPTEMBER 9, 2021
Election 2021: 47 Days of Voting Start Next Week BY RENSS GREENE
rgreene@loudounnow.com
to immigrant and low-income youth. The proposal also includes a vision for an aquaponics program incorporated into its curriculum that would also serve to generate revenue for scholarships to defray the cost of tuition for students. The Nexus School is expected to serve around 165 students on the property at any given time. The public hearing on that application was first scheduled for July, then delayed until September, and now has been placed
This year’s election is still more than 50 days away, but voting will begin next week. The early voting program launched in response to the pandemic last year is now standard operating procedure in the commonwealth, with residents permitted to cast their ballots for the Nov. 2 election in person or in the mail starting Friday, Sept. 17. On the ballot are the offices of the governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general; all 100 seats in the House of Delegates; seats on the town councils in Round Hill, Middleburg and Purcellville; and three county government bond questions. The 2020 general election saw a raft of major changes to Virginia voting law amid the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Long subject to the Voting Rights Act, which put the commonwealth under increased federal oversight to deter racial discrimination in voting laws, the state in 2020 passed laws reinforcing the right to vote such as allowing no-excuse absentee voting and repealing the requirement to present a photo ID. The local Office of Elections built on that by placing ballot drop-off boxes at more than a dozen locations across the county. Loudoun went on to see not only record turnout, but record early voting turnout. Loudoun had already cleared 50% voter turnout by the time Election Day arrived.
PAXTON PROPERTY continues on page 38
EARLY VOTING continues on page 39
Lauren Fleming/Loudoun Now
The ample acreage at the former estate of Rachel Paxton in the heart of Leesburg, according to her will, must be used to serve convalescent children in perpetuity. Since the early 2000s, the Arc of Loudoun, a nonprofit serving children and adults with special needs or disabilities, has been located there.
Paxton Campus Vision Faces New Test BY KARA C. RODRIGUEZ krodriguez@loudounnow.com
The future of 16 acres in northeast Leesburg is again the subject of debate, almost 20 years after it nearly was sold to a residential homebuilder. And that debate is again testing the limits of a 100-year-old will. The Paxton property, now home to the Arc of Loudoun nonprofit that serves children and adults with special needs or disabilities through a variety of programs,
could soon house another nonprofit, with a special exception application by the INMED nonprofit filed with the Town of Leesburg last year. The application seeks approval to construct an 11,488-square-foot school building and accompanying 27,000-square-foot greenhouse and classroom on seven acres of the property. The Nexus School, as it is envisioned, would serve the educational needs of children in grades six through 12 that do not adapt well to traditional classroom settings, with particular attention
Call Today! Limited Space for the Fall Semester GIVE YOUR CHILD A COMPETITIVE ˀ ADVANTAGE.
ECRWSS Postal Customer Dulles Campus near the intersection of Routes 28 & 606
Lower School Middle School High School 703-759-5100 www.FairfaxChristianSchool.com
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