n LOUDOUN
4 | n EDUCATION
8 | n PUBLIC SAFETY
15 | n PUBLIC NOTICES
Community-Supported News. Free to all.
VOL. 9, NO. 45
29
SEPTEMBER 19, 2024
Guaranteed Income Pilot Fails Board Vote BY HANNA PAMPALONI
hpampaloni@loudounnow.org
County supervisors on Tuesday killed a proposal spearheaded by Supervisor Koran T. Saines (D-Sterling) to establish a pilot project giving 60 low-income residents $500 every month for 18 months. The guaranteed income program, known as the Resident Income Stability Enhancement, or RISE Loudoun, was slated to use $2 million from the county’s budget surplus. Participation would be available to residents at or below 30% of the area median income. Saines said the program would be “another tool in the toolbox” for the county to help struggling residents. “I think this is a good idea. It’s a pilot program. Let’s test it out,” he said. The proposal outlined four main objectives—to identify barriers to opportunities for low-income residents; increase income for households below 30% AMI; assess how an increase in income affects residents’ sense of self-determination, financial stability, sense of belonging and contribution in the community and aspirations for the future; and present pilot performance results to observe impact to the community. GUARANTEED INCOME continues on page 36
Hanna Pampaloni/Loudoun Now
Medications used by members of Loudoun County Fire-Rescue will be supplied by the agency’s own pharmacy beginning Nov. 27. For the past 40 years, the county has been collaborating with local hospitals for medications, but due to federal regulations, that is set to change.
Loudoun Scrambles to Establish Fire-Rescue Pharmacy Following Federal Regulation Changes BY HANNA PAMPALONI hpampaloni@loudounnow.org
A big change is coming to the way Loudoun Fire and Rescue units operate. Beginning Nov. 27, the county will own and stock its own pharmacy to provide all medications carried by its first respond-
ers, rather than using hospital-owned medications. For the past 40 years, first responders have been effectively borrowing medications from hospitals. Any dispensed in the field were refilled by a hospital when a transported patient was admitted for treatment.
Now, regulatory changes from the federal Drug Enforcement Administration and Food and Drug Administration are requiring new safeguards to make tracking and tracing medications more secure.
ROOF LOCAL
Free Architectural Shingle Upgrade. Call to schedule your appointment now!
ECRWSSEDDM
540-441-7649
HartleyHomeExteriors.com
(mention this ad when you schedule your appointment) The Best Choice for Roofing Replacement
FIRE-RESCUE PHARMACY continues on page 36
Permit #1374 Merrifield VA
PAID
PRESRT STD U.S. Postage