Archives for the ‘Stafford’ Category

Laurie & Andrew Still Going Strong

Author: From http://fred2blue.wordpress.com • Jul 21st, 2008
   Category: Blog Entries.Local, Stafford

I admit, the only reason I watched this is because Laurie from Stafford, and her dog Andrew, were among the contestants. But The Greatest American Dog on CBS is actually not bad. Laurie & Andrew had no problem making it past the second episode. Especially since grooming and obedience, which are clearly Laurie’s strengths, were the main things the judges were looking at this time around. Teresa, from Fairfax, and her dog Leroy are also still in contention. My one major complaint so far is that the Stafford duo don’t seem to be getting a lot of camera time compared to the other contestants. I guess that’s what you get for not being a flamboyant goofball.

The best moment of this episode was easily when Beth Joy was driven to tears because all 3 judges thought that her dog, Bella Starlet, looked ridiculous in a dress. And you know what? They were right. Better to hear it straight from the horse’s mouth than have people laughing at you behind your back I always say.

This picture is from the first episode. (Laurie and Andrew are second from the right)



Dealing With My Inner-Barton Fink

Author: From http://fred2blue.wordpress.com • Jul 19th, 2008
   Category: Blog Entries.Local, Stafford

A fortnightly rant, FL-S style:

Maybe it is the state of lethargy brought about by successive days of extreme heat, humidity and code-red ozone; or the seemingly endless demands of family and work.  Perhaps it was the stress-inducing moment early Thursday morning when - out of nowhere - a kamikaze deer bolted across Mountain View Road in central Stafford County headlong into the side of my car, causing $3,000 worth of damage and rendering it unfit for driving.

Whatever (my) excuses, this much I do know: the muse that normally fills my noggin with material for my fortnightly F2B rant seems to have cut and run. Disappeared from sight. Skipped town. Skedaddled.

Barton Fink, I feel your pain.

Rarely do I suffer writer’s block. But when I do one would be well-advised to leave the premises. And this Saturday morning, I find myself agitated and nervous, barking at my kid who has asked one too many times if she can watch cartoons on TV, faking my way through this post.

One would think that with so much low-hanging fruit on the vine, such as…

  • Speaker Bill Howell and his Republican House Caucus doing their best Yassir Arafat immitations, walking away from the mother of all golden opportunities to offer leadership, and once-and-for-all fund meaningful Virginia transportation reform, or;
  • Former Gov. and U.S. Senate candidate Jim Gilmore’s prevarication that we can offshore-drill our way to immediate price-relief at the gas pump (we can’t), or;
  • the windfall of late-night monologue one-liners, inspired by Sen. John McCain and his penchant for verbal gaffes, or;
  • the Stafford Board of Supervisors redeploying the Trojan Rabbit from Monty Python and the Holy Grail;

…I would be able to bang out an 800-word post by my second cup of coffee.

But I struggle to string words together into coherent sentences and paragraphs.  And, the second cup of morning brew has only made me jittery.

Ah well, I hope the muse enjoys the road trip and returns home quickly.

Lastly, two shout-outs:

   Happy birthday, Pookie!  ‘Love you. 

   And to C.C., hang tight.  Better days are coming.



Stafford business owner calls for grassroots meeting in response to BPOL tax

Author: From http://rappahannockred.wordpress.com • Jul 14th, 2008
   Category: Blog Entries.Local, Stafford

I received this as a comment on my right-wing liberal blog from Crissy Sharon, owner of the Mainstreet Grill and Bar in Stafford County.  She was reacting to the Stafford Board of Supervisor’s non-Republicans imposing a BPOL tax.  After looking it over, I decided that rather than a comment, it should be a post all its own.  Thank you, Crissy, for refusiing to meekly accept this outrage.

Hello. My name is Crissy.  I own Mainstreet Grill and Bar. I started working at Mainstreet in September 2002 as a waitress, within three months I was a bartender, and then bar manager.  In September 2005, I was offered to purchase Mainstreet. Finally in January of 2006 I took over. Let me tell you I HAD NO IDEA HOW TO RUN A BUSINESS! And I am still learning everyday!

Like most small businesses Mainstreet pays alot of taxes. Sales Tax, Food Tax, Personal Property Taxes etc…Going on my 2 1/2 year mark I can say, slowly we have survived when other places have closed. My great staff and local regulars have helped us!  Two Mondays ago I got an email that was a forward of a forward of a forward from Supervisor Milde and I was amazed that I haven’t spent time finding out what had been going on in the “grassroots” of Stafford!  My husband just started a business in Stafford. He also received Mr. Milde’s email. (From a forward)  After talking with each other we decided to go to the BOS meeting. After along day at work I told my sitter I would be back in an hour!  Well we were there to the end! My husband spoke!  He told me to get up there but I was way to emotional to get up and speak.  What kind of business women would I be to sit in front of these men and cry (I mean with tears down my face) like a big baby!!!  At first I was mad at the four members of the board that voted for the BPOL. But I realize that I should also be mad at myself for not paying attention to what was going on in our county. I decided my best place to speak would be at my bar with local residents.  So since that night I have gotten on my soap box and spoke to my customers.  Not only telling them what I learned this past week but getting more information and learning more!

So I would like to get Stafford Residents involved.  I was thinking the last Tuesday of each month we can all meet at Mainstreet for a “GRASSROOTS MEETING”. This has nothing to do with “business” I’m not looking for people to come in and spend money. (And if they do spend alittle money on beer and food . . . I will just be paying more taxes to Stafford County so it works out for both of us . . . lol).  This is intended for people to come and learn (like me) and/or discuss local, commonwealth and federal issues. No matter what party you are. I would like to invite different state and local political people in here to discuss the issues.  Maybe start a Voter registration here!  I just need to get involved and the best way for me to do it is through my business.   

1st GRASSROOTS MEETING AT MAINSTREET WILL BE JULY 29 7pm-9pm (D.J. Note: Address is 315 Garrisonville Road in Stafford; phone number is 540-288-9277).

“The problem is not that people are taxed too little, the problem is that government spends too much.”

Ronald Reagan

To th extent that anyone from Stafford reads or listens to me, I would encourage everyone to attend this meeting to let Crissy know you’re willing to help her in her efforts.

Cross-posted to the right-wing liberal



Rogue Democrat-Controlled Board One Step Away from Stafford’s Own Kilo Decision

Author: From http://rappahannockred.wordpress.com • Jul 12th, 2008
   Category: Blog Entries.Local, Stafford

In true communist fashion, rogue supervisors George Schwartz, Jow Brito, Bob Woodson, and Harry Crisp departed from reality and responsible stewardship of Stafford County residents’ finances and just took a huge step against everyone’s personal property rights.

Stafford County Residents should be very pissed off right now…  The “protection” district, drawn by Cecilia Kirkman (extremist nutjob who forced a $60M swamp land deal on taxpayers so she wouldn’t have neighbors clogging her (public) road), randomly wanders around almost the entire county east of I-95 ignoring some of the largest waterways and so-called steep slopes that SHE ONLY says will cause poor water quality. 

Cecilia alleges that a 15% slope of a hill is cause for restricting your land use COMPLETELY for a hundred-thirty-five feet on BOTH SIDES of this slope.  Yes, this includes drainage ditches in your front yard… they may only be a foot deep, but they’re a slope!  So if you need a permit for a job you want to do, you may as well stamp DENIED on it yourself and save the trouble.

This is a SCAM- this overlay district is about stopping ALL construction of ANY KIND (deck, driveway, shed, or house) east of I-95!  The original plan covered the WHOLE COUNTY! 

They’re taking the TYPICAL Democrat INCRIMENTALIST approach…. a little today, a little more tomorrow, and a touch more the next day.  (There now, that wasn’t so bad was it?) Yikes!  What just happened to my property values??!?!

Too late, you didn’t get involved.

You’d better get involved in this process folks- this is not a partisan issue- this is a Stafford County land rights issue, your family’s rights issue, and the financial well-being of the whole county issue…

Seriously, this has to stop. Somebody should be in jail for this kind of piracy!

From The Free Lance-Star:

Stafford County officials will not study the economic impacts of a proposal that would guard part of the Potomac River basin from development, but they will also limit uses for some pro-perty owners.

Last week, the Board of Supervisors nixed the $25,000 study that was meant to evaluate how property values might be affected by the proposed overlay district.

The proposed Potomac River Resource Protection Overlay district covers 24,600 acres east of U.S. 1.

It requires buffers around sensitive waterways and certain slopes adjacent to streams. The buffers would improve water quality in streams and rivers but would also restrict what some property owners could do with their land. New developments and changes to existing lots would be subject to the restrictions.

Several dozen property owners protested the overlay district during a May public hearing. At that meeting, board members delayed their decision on enacting the district and agreed to consider the economic analysis.

But during a quiet work session last week, supervisors voted 4-3 to proceed without the analysis.

Griffis–Widewater Supervisor Bob Woodson said in an interview that the analysis was not the best use of county funds, especially during a tight budget cycle that has forced Stafford to cut its spending.

“We think our latest proposal was a good one, and we think that the county has enough resources to make a good determination of what may be the economic impact,” he said.

But Aquia Supervisor Paul Milde said the analysis would have shown how the overlay district could limit the county’s tax revenue from future development.

“That means high-paying jobs won’t be here, that means the commercial tax base doesn’t expand there,” Milde said. “It will certainly reduce our commercial tax base and therefore further burden our residential tax base. The question is, how much?”

The overlay district includes both Milde’s and Woodson’s districts.

County staff is sampling about seven parcels in the proposed overlay district to see how the proposed buffers could affect properties.

The staff also supported the economic analysis.

“I think that any information that can be made available to the Board of Supervisors during the decision-making process is a good thing,” said County Administrator Anthony Romanello.

Without the analysis, Rock Hill Supervisor Cord Sterling said, it will be difficult to make an informed decision on the overlay district proposal.

“I don’t know the cost-benefit analysis,” he said. “I have not seen a demonstration of enough data to support this.”

The supervisors will consider the overlay district after the completion of the sampling studies, sometime in November.



UPDATE: FXBG Area Duo to Compete on CBS-TV Show, “The Greatest American Dog”

Author: From http://fred2blue.wordpress.com • Jul 10th, 2008
   Category: Blog Entries.Local, Spotsylvania, Stafford

UPDATE from Dan:  What a kooky show, chock full of odd-ball dog owners.  Laurie and Andrew stuck out of the pack because the duo is, comparatively speaking, so…normal.  That may be why they were not featured as well as the other pairs, in last night’s series debut or in the doggie talent show (oh, I kid you not).

Laurie and Andrew gained praise from the show’s judges, for how well they work together, and have moved on to the next round.  We just hope the rest of TV Land gets to know the team from Stafford, Va. as well as we do in Fred2Blue Land.  They are quite a pair!

Laurie Williams is prohibited by show producers from discussing the series, but has agreed to answer your questions about helping dogs and their humans to live in harmony.  Laurie’s exclusive Fred2Blue column is…COMING SOON!

First it was Rock from Spotsy, the winner last year on FOX TV’s Hell’s Kitchen.

Then, also from Spotsy, insurance executive Chandler who this season vied for betrothal to DeAnna (did I say that????) on ABC’s The Bachelorertte.

We’ve also had a Fredericksburg-area contestant or two on CBS’s Survivor, but who can recall since there’s been like 20 seasons of that washed-up and wheezing show.

But now, Stafford gets to watch as two of its own, dog behavior expert Laurie Williams and “Andrew”, the frisky 10-pound Maltese member of her family, compete on this season’s newest reality television show, CBS TV’s The Great American Dog.

Here’s the contestant biography.

I’m not one for reality television (or for that matter, most of what is on television). But when I spotted Laurie’s name in today’s WaPo, listed among the many show contestants, to be sure I became very interested.

Many dog lovers in the Fredericksburg-area know Laurie Williams, personally.  She owns Pup ‘n Iron, the canine fitness and learning center par excellence based in Stafford County, Va.  

I worked with Laurie two years ago when our dog, then a puppy, and our daughter, then a 5-year old human tornado, well, had issues

Within minutes of Laurie’s arrival at our home, she had my two children getting along.  Laurie established peace in the land where previously there had been none!

As every veterinarian in Fred2Blue Land will attest, Laurie Williams is a true-talent. She has helped - and successfully empowered - hundreds of area families to overcome the physical and behavioral challenges sometimes faced when a dog enters the home.

Because of Laurie Williams, we have a happy home. And, our fur-covered family member has a great life!

Watch for the premiere of The Great American Dog on CBS (locally on WUSA 9), airing this Thursday July 10 at 8PM Eastern Time (7PM Central). And let’s root for two of Fred2Blue Land’s finest!



McCain Victory 2008 Regional Republican HQ Open House is July 17

Author: From http://rappahannockred.wordpress.com • Jul 9th, 2008
   Category: Blog Entries.Local, Politics, Spotsylvania, Stafford

Attention Fredericksburg Area Republicans!
Plan to attend this open house reception:
McCain Victory 2008
Regional Republican Headquarters
Thursday July 17, 6:30pm - 8:30pm
150 Riverside Parkway Suites 210-215
(Directions: Exit 133-B off I-95. Left at first light. Proceed 150 yards, turn left entering Riverside Business Park. Proceed to end of complex. Locate 4-story building on Right (faces I-95). Strayer College is on ground floor for reference. Take elevators to second floor.)
Attendees include: Congressman Rob Wittman, Delegate Mark Cole,
and other state and local offiicials.
Hors d’oeuvres and beverages served.
———————————————————————
While you’re there, help support your local GOP committee and purchase some McCain Victory 2008 campaign gear!


Children’s Classic Retold as…Goodnight Bush

Author: From http://fred2blue.wordpress.com • Jul 8th, 2008
   Category: Blog Entries.Local, Spotsylvania, Stafford

I don’t suppose we’ll see this parody of Margaret Wise Brown’s children’s literary classic, Goodnight Moon in the stacks at the Rappahannock Regional Library, any time soon…

…so, here’s a taste:

In the situation room
There was a toy world
And a flight costume
And a picture of –

A refinery plume

And there were war profiteers
giving three cheers

A nation great
A church and state

A pair of towers
And a balance of powers

A Grand Old Party to war in a rush

And Dick Cheney whispering “hush”

Goodnight Bush…

Listen to NPR’s All Things Considered reporter Melissa Block’s story on the parody here. And check out the book’s LOL website.



F2B Exclusive: July 4th Weekend Holiday Crash on I-95 (UPDATE)

Author: From http://fred2blue.wordpress.com • Jul 6th, 2008
   Category: Blog Entries.Local, Stafford

UPDATE by Dan:  On Monday, July 7, Pamela Gould of the FL-S reports that the I-95 crash shown below was in fact a fatality.

There was a nasty accident at approximately 1:30 P.M. today on I-95 northbound in Quantico. My friend, Stuart Katz of Florham Park, N.J. was just a few cars behind this incident and captured these amazing images of a departing medevac helicopter.

We don’t know the status of the person or persons rushed from the scene.

Another reminder that the July 4th holiday is historically the most-deadly one of the year. Travel safe, everyone!



Send In The Clowns

Author: From http://fred2blue.wordpress.com • Jul 4th, 2008
   Category: Blog Entries.Local, Spotsylvania, Stafford

…don’t bother.  They’re here!

A fortnightly rant, FL-S style…with a h/t each to “Big Eyes the Klown,” Stephen Sondheim, and the late Larry Harmon, once known to kiddies across the U.S. as “Bozo”.  Harmon died yesterday at the age of 83:

My best friend’s dad is a Klown.

No, really…

His dad is a Shriner Klown, you know, the folks who maniacally drive those little convertible cars in circles and figure 8s along the Fourth of July parade route.

The house where my best friend grew up was like being backstage at the circus. Sprawled across the dining room table: rainbow wigs. Along the perimeter of the bathroom sink: tins of clown-white makeup. On the floor by the foot of the stairs: clown shoes.  And, someplace in plain sight: his dad’s trademark BIG EYES sunglasses.

Throughout his many years of klowning, Big Eyes has done “mitzvah” work, most notably providing a moment of joy to sick kids in hospital fighting very adult diseases like leukemia.     

But it is on days like today, the Fourth of July - when the residents of some Connecticut town or city line up their beach chairs along the main thoroughfare and see Big Eyes and the rest of the Klowns from Pyramid Shriners #9 on parade - that I really think of his dad, and smile.

And that’s what Klowns are for. To make us forget our worries.

But, I tell ya, we really could have used Big Eyes, Blinkie, Dizzy, and the rest of the crew this week to liven up some really sour acts in our political three-ring circus.

First, to the Stafford County Board of Supervisors Chambers, the site Tuesday night of a contentious (that’s being kind) public hearing and vote on the Business Professessional Occupational License (BPOL).  Passions flared as hundreds of local business owners, squared off against a goodly number of BPOL proponents, vented their spleens over the impending passage of BPOL.  There were so many people there to address the Board in public session that we hear the actual vote to accept BPOL didn’t happen until after 3AM.

While I wasn’t there, I do hear from several people that at least one public speaker was threatened with removal from the chambers.

What is this?  South Korean Parliament?

The proponents will tell you that BPOL was intended, among other things, to stabilize the wild year-to-year fluctuations in Stafford County’s revenue stream and make sure that there would always be enough money in the annual budget for schools, public safety, and other requirements.  We were told that its passage would end the yearly bickering over school funding.

Yet, we now hear the resulting package - negotiated on, then voted in 4-3 by the seven bleary-eyed board members - earmarks all of the revenue from BPOL for transportation improvement.  From the FL-S:

The entire board, however, agreed that revenue generated by BPOL will be used to upgrade county roads and help pay the debt service on a potential transportation bond.

So much for stabilizing school-funding.

It would appear that in their zeal to pass this thing, the members in approval gave the dissenters exactly what they wanted.  And, mark your calendars: next year’s public hearing on setting the FY 2010 assessment should be a circus!  So, too, should the races for BOS in Aquia, Falmouth, and Hartwood Districts.

Then, a candidate for Congress “suspends” his campaign.

When, Dr. Keith Hummel approached the powers that be that he wanted to run for Congress, he admitted to all the key-influencers and decision-makers that he had once gone through personal bankruptcy reorganization. 

It seemed innocous enough.  And, who among us hasn’t known someone that had gone through the hardest, and most-embarrassing, of financial situations?  Very few, I’d guess.

Many accepted that notion that perhaps there was only one bankruptcy filing.  One person I know, and respect very much, was in a public setting where Dr. Hummel spoke.  She said (he) ”lied to all of us.  In public session, he stated there was one bankruptcy.  One not, THREE!”

After the nomination, the questions about Dr. Hummel started bubbling up.  And, sure enough, an easy-to-run public records search spit out not just one bankruptcy filing in the Eastern District, but three.  And the list of past creditors was long, very long.  Pages long.

Was Dr. Hummel forthright in discussing his financial history?  Not being part of the formal process, I cannot say.  Unlike my friend, I was not in the room.  That said, my friend is an honest broker.  I have no reason to disbelieve her account.

I do know this much.  The machinery to vet and nominate a First District Congressional candidate broke and needs to be fixed.   Questions that should have been asked by the nominating committee, due diligence that should have been done by them, were not.  Information provided may not have been given truthfully, or vetted completely.

The Hummel campaign suspended operations.  And I speak for many that believe Dr. Hummel should do now the right thing and formally withdraw from the race.  Doing so would would clear the way for a replacement candidate to come forward.

Then, we need to take a really good look at how all this happened and do everything possible to assure ourselves and the public, that this will never happen again.

Politics should be fun, especially on the Fourth of July.  But in the end, it is and should remain serious business.



Stafford BOS Democrats Approved New BPOL Taxes During Economic Lull

Author: From http://rappahannockred.wordpress.com • Jul 2nd, 2008
   Category: Blog Entries.Local, Politics, Stafford

Party like a Stafford County DemocratJust like when a 12th Century king declares he wants a bigger bejeweled crown and some more wenches, so he sends a goon squad out to plunder his subjects and shake them until hidden coins fall out of their socks, so reigns Chairman George Schwartz in Stafford.  “The subjects free will, be damned” you can almost hear him utter when the public hearing session began in a crammed-packed chambers.

If you like keeping some of your money, Stafford County may not be the right place for you. Regardless of your party affiliation yesterday, if it’s not crystal clear that our homegrown crew of elitist Democrats will tax you into bankruptcy when times are good, and tax you even more when times are bad, then you just aren’t living in reality anymore, and you certainly aren’t living in Stafford County. 

As if one should need any proof of this on a national level, “America’s chickens have come home to roost” here in Stafford!  And after they roost, they’re going to eat your cat and steal your wallet.

Stafford County Democrats George Schwartz, Joe Brito, Bob Woodson and Harry Crisp have approved a highly controversial businesses tax, called the Business, Professional and Occupational License or “BPOL” in a meeting that stretched until later than 3:00 am!

These liberals call it a ”revenue generator” for the cash-strapped jurisdiction, but let’s be clear: RAISING TAXES IS NOT A REVENUE GENERATOR- it’s a TAX INCREASE! 

A revenue generator could be the world’s largest ball of yarn at a two-seat diner along Route 1.  Tourists come, spend their money, we tax them for pancakes, the diner employs people, they buy things, and the economy goes round and round.  If we’ve planned our area correctly, the tourist might also decide to fill up with gas while he’s here and “ooh” look at that, something to buy at the farmer’s fruit stand across the street! … more tax income and revenue generation for the county…  The farmer gets so busy that he eventually sells to Giant Foods, and the Diner outgrows his two-seater and upgrades to an IHOP franchise a year later, and viola-a growing economy emerges from the FREE MARKET as it was always intended  (I’m leaving out the part where Stalinistic building permits, Marxist zoning restrictions and hippy environmental lobyists restrict the sale of the grocery store to less than 10,000sf, and tell the diner owner what he can’t do with his own property which results in a lawsuit that he eventually wins, but nevertheless slows the process to a grinding halt for 36 months just to get a siteplan review—but that’s for another rant.)

What all Democrats seem to never grasp is that REDISTRIBUTING WEALTH is UN-AMERICAN and quite SOCIALIST!  A tax on businesses is a TAX.  It is something that someone else takes from you that they didn’t earn.  Taxing a business for the 15th time - literally, is no way to foster a healthy business economy.

After many DOZENS of people spoke out against this tax in person, they shoved it through anyway.  The only people who spoke for it, were the usual crowd of liberals who offer the all famous lines, “someone should do something about our need for more cash.”  Isn’t it amazing how that someone is always “someone else” whose checkbook must be opened?  Not one supporter of BPOL offered an alternative.

How much combined business experience do to the elected board of supervisors have?  On the Democrat side= ZILCH.  All three Republicans have owned or currently own a business though! So we can very clearly see who understands the impacts of adding more taxes to a fragile balance of our local economy!

Perhaps we shouldn’t be building $50,000,000 new schools when our student population is declining?  Perhaps we shouldn’t be using $60,000,000 to buy swamp land when we have dangerous roads to pave?  Perhaps we shouldn’t be building mega-million dollar police, fire & rescue headquarters buildings until we can afford it?  Perhaps we shouldn’t be restricting 12,000 acres from any development whatsoever if near a 15% grade?  Perhaps we should be lobbying our state and federal boards for more of our own tax dollars to come back so we aren’t a “donor” county and state for road money?

Perhaps we could use some of these savings to improve our infrastructure, invest in tourism initiatives and incentivize new businesses?  Nnnaaahhhhh- Let’s just raise the taxes on bread, daycare, gasoline, groceries, diapers, car repairs, water, eyeglasses, shoes, firewood and everything else people need.  THAT’S what it means to be a Stafford Democrat apparently.

Beginning in 2010 (thank God for a small favor) the county will charge half the maximum rate allowed by state law. Gross receipts up to $200,000 will be exempt.

Now is the time for Democratic families to take a serious look at their values and consider that even if they ‘like’ big government spending, they may not be able to ‘afford’ it any more.  After all, when is enough enough? 

At what point in your tax level are you no longer a FREE WORKING AMERICAN?  At what point are you a subservient socialist worker?  We’re already above the 50% mark of how much taxes you pay in total of your income!  When do we start standing in lines for bread and socks?

The DMV is now charging you $5 to stand in line and talk to a live human teller! Someone remind me WHY WE NEED A DMV IN THE FIRST PLACE?  My car runs just fine without a sticker on the windshield or a license plate on the back. Everything else is JUST ANOTHER TAX.

I’ve never seen so many NEW TAXES introduced during such a slow economy. My family is tightening up, why can’t my government?  I suppose it’s just “someone else’s job” to worry about that since our government is rapidly becoming no longer “of the people, by the people, and for the people”, but rather, “tax the people, from other people, to my people.”