Citizens for Balanced Growth

Category: Frank Principi

Board of County Supervisors Votes 20 Sep To Consider Beginning Development of Rural Crescent

“Board looks at new ways to preserve Rural Crescent” by Hillary Chester, Prince William Times,  30

Board of County Supervisors remove Bi-County Parkway from county comprehensive plan in 4-3 vote; former supporter Stewart absent; Principi claims ‘dirty politics’; Candland calls vote ‘big win’ for citizens

by Jill Palermo, InsideNOVA.com, 18 March 2016

Bi-County Parkway presser
[Pictured:  “Alan Johnson (left) and Philomena Hefter, both residents on Pageland Road in Gainesville, hold a banner that says ‘Say “No!”  to Tri-County Parkway’ during a 2013 protest. Behind Johnson is state Senator Dick Black (R-13th).”]

 

“The controversial planned Bi-County Parkway was dealt yet another blow this week.

“In a surprise move Tuesday, the Prince William County Board of Supervisors voted 4 to 3 to remove the future 10-mile roadway from the county’s long-range planning blueprint, known as the ‘comprehensive plan.’

“The vote was unexpected because the board verbally agreed March 8 to open a public hearing on matter Tuesday but delay their vote until April 5 because Chairman Corey Stewart, R-At Large, said he would be traveling for business and would not be able to attend the March 15 meeting.

“But those plans apparently changed when the road’s opponents realized they had the votes needed to extract the Bi-County Parkway from the comprehensive plan.

“The vote split mostly along party lines, with Republican Supervisors Ruth Anderson, Occoquan, Maureen Caddigan, Potomac, Pete Candland, Gainesville, and Jeanine Lawson, Brentsville, voting to nix the road, while Supervisor Marty Nohe, R-Coles, joined Democratic Supervisors John Jenkins, Neabsco, and Frank Principi, Woodbridge, in voting against it.

“Candland said Thursday several supervisors believed the parkway had been debated long enough and that many believed their voices  ‘would be diminished’ if the vote were delayed.

“ ‘It was time we addressed it,’ Candland said.  ‘The vote was a big win for the citizens of Prince William County who have been held hostage by this poorly designed Bi-County Parkway routing plan.’

“Principi said he tried to protest the vote by reminding his fellow supervisors of their public statement March 8 promising to move the vote to their first meeting in April.

“But County Attorney Michelle Robl advised that because the board never voted on the delay, the verbal agreement was not binding.

“ ‘That is just dirty politics,’ Principi said Thursday. ‘It’s just not good for our community.’

“The parkway, which has been on state and local long-range transportation plans since the 1980s, would extend Va. 234 north to U.S. 50 in Loudoun County. The road is planned to be a four-lane, limited-access parkway that would ease trips between Prince William and Loudoun counties and open up another access point to Dulles International Airport.

“The road is considered key to accommodate current and future population growth and as well as economic development. For that reason, it is widely supported by business and development groups.

“But the road is also planned to skirt the western edge of the protected Manassas National Battlefield Park and is considered a threat to the county’s rural crescent, where residential development is limited to one home per 10 acres. Both are key points of contention for the road’s many opponents.

“Caddigan has been a vocal critic of the parkway because residents in neighborhoods along Va. 234, including Montclair and Ashland, fear it would draw heavier truck traffic between Dulles and Interstate 95.

“Supervisors were cautioned against removing the parkway from the comprehensive plan, however, by both the Virginia Department of Transportation and their own transportation department, because of the effect to other roads in the county.

“According to VDOT projections, the loss of the parkway would exacerbate congestion on nearly every other main north-south artery in the county, including Va. 234, Prince William Parkway, U.S. 15, Sudley Road and Pageland Lane.

“VDOT also predicts 20 percent increases in traffic on several secondary roads, including Waterway Drive and Joplin, Spriggs, Delaney and Hoadly roads.

“Also, the move could come with a big price tag. VDOT has already purchased right-of-way property along Va. 234 for which it could now ask the county for reimbursement, according to a VDOT staff report.

“It is not immediately clear how much the county might have to pay the state, however, since those details were not included in the report.

“It also remains unclear what effect the supervisors’ vote will have in the long term, considering the parkway remains on state long-range plans as well as those in Loudoun and Fairfax counties.

“Principi said he, too, has ‘issues’ with some aspects of the Bi-County Parkway as planned, but contends that taking it off the county’s transportation blueprint is not the responsible way to deal with those challenges.

“ ‘The vote on the Bi-County Parkway was a vote to stop that other conversation,’ Principi said.  ‘The system is broken if we don’t build this road.’ ”

Nov 2015 Email To Citizens Re. Stone Haven: More Houses, Ever-Increasing Taxes, Ever-Worsening Services … Had Enough Yet?

fwd_-8-dec-stone-haven_-marching-to-4000-more-houses-ever-increasing-taxes-ever-worsening-services2
Text Excerpts
——– Forwarded Message ——– Subject: 8 Dec Stone Haven: Marching to 4,000 More Houses, Ever-Increasing Taxes, Ever-Worsening Services? Date: Sat, 21 Nov 2015 12:04:24 -0500 From: Stephenson, Ralph & Kathy <stephenrk1@verizon.net> To: Stephenson, Ralph & Kathy <stephenrk1@verizon.net> [+ BCC addressees] CC: Stewart, Corey <cstewart@pwcgov.org>, Caddigan, Maureen <mcaddigan@pwcgov.org>, Candland, Peter <gainesville@pwcgov.org>, Jenkins, John <jjenkins@pwcgov.org>, May, Mike <mcmay@pwcgov.org>, Nohe, Marty <mnohe@pwcgov.org>, Principi, Frank <fprincipi@pwcgov.org>, Lawson, Jeanine <jlawson@pwcgov.org>, Ruth4Supervisor@gmail.com <Ruth4Supervisor@gmail.com>, Ruth Anderson <rmva@comcast.net> Had Enough Yet? PW Roads Now (already VA’s most crowded; 70-mile roundtrip commute to Fairfax Co. = 3-4 hrs/day) Future PW Roads (After Corey Stewart, developers, and their allies build over 4,000 more houses in Linton Hall corridor) 1 2 3 4 PW Schools Now (already VA’s most crowded) Future PW Schools 5 6 Property taxes 2007 Property taxes 2015 (up 26.5%) Our home in Braemar along Linton Hall Rd. was valued @ $120K more in 2007 than it is now in 2015, yet our real estate taxes were only $3,669 in 2007. Nov 2007 Corey Stewart-R elected Chairman of PW Board of County Supervisors (BOCS) on the strength of promises to be fiscally conservative, reduce taxes, and control residential growth, noting that “when we approve large developments, we are essentially approving a tax increase.” See: http://pwcbg.org/Stewart_ProposedTaxIncreases_PoliticalWhiplash.html Stewart begins to seek statewide political office, becomes strongly pro-residential development, and consequently raises over $1M from developers 2008-present. See: http://www.vpap.org/candidates/61061/donors_sector_totals/ Ralph & Kathy Stephenson Prince William Citizens for Balanced Growth http://pwcbg.org In 2015, our real estate taxes are $4,642, up 26.5% despite low inflation since 2007. The quality of county services continues to decline (increasingly overcrowded schools, roads, etc) while taxes go up. Why? Because large residential developments are almost always tax-negative. Incompetence and misuse of funds is the only other logical explanation for dysfunctional county services despite large tax increases. In either case, Chairman Stewart is ultimately responsible. Stone Haven Returns 8 Dec, Just as Bad as Before County public notice signs — the little white signs that are too small to read as you drive by — went up around the Stone Haven property 20 November afternoon. The signs announce that the Stone Haven vote by the Board of County Supervisors (BOCS) will be held 8 December 7:30 pm at the county’s McCoart Building in mid-county off the Prince William Parkway @ 1 County Complex Ct, Woodbridge, VA As you all may recall, on 13 January 2015 a final vote on the big Stone Haven residential development project just south of Jiffy Lube Live was “deferred to date uncertain” as at least 4 of 8 supervisors (Maureen Caddigan, Mike May, Peter Candland, and Jeanine Lawson) expressed their intent to vote against the project, with Frank Principi a possible swing vote against as well. (5 of 8 BOCS votes are needed to approve a proposal.) Deferring the vote was Prince William Board of County Supervisors (BOCS) Chairman Corey Stewart’s way of avoiding imminent defeat and buying some time so he and his developer allies could twist one or two more supervisors’ arms enough to get them to vote in favor of Stone Haven after the 3 Nov 2015 elections. PWCBG remains opposed to Stone Haven; nothing of significance has changed in the “new” proposal. The changes that we know of are merely cosmetic: holding back 150 acres (4 homes per acre) from this 1,000-house proposal that could and will be submitted later as a second proposal that will bring the total number of houses — 1,600 — right back up to virtually the same level as in 2014. (Click here for more info on Stone Haven: http://pwcbg.org/Stonehaven_Brentswood2.html ) Watch the Dominoes Fall — At Least 4,000 More Houses Even worse, if Stone Haven succeeds, Prince William (PW) Station, whose owners are closely watching the Stone Haven fight, is next and will likely bring another 2,000 houses. (PW Station is just north of Stone Haven.) Pioneer Assemblage to the south would add another ~450 houses. So watch the dominoes fall if Stone Haven wins. This is really not only about 1,000 or 1,600 houses on the Stone Haven property. It’s about 4,000 more houses within a couple miles of each other, tax negative, putting about 8,000 more cars on I-66 and other local roads, and probably 2,000-4,000 more schoolchildren in local schools (figure 0.5-1 school child per average 3-person household), where PW already has the worst traffic and the most crowded classes (in terms of teacher: student ratio) in the state. BOCS’ Responsibility for the Current Mess + Corey Stewart, the Million-Dollar Man The Board of County Supervisors (BOCS) should change the entire county Comp Plan (they created it in the first place several years ago) to be more in line with current zoning — if they’re worried that it’s drifted too far away from zoning realities and thus their activities regarding it may be open to legal challenge. They should also slow down residential development overall to improve the roughly 85:15 residential: commercial tax ratio (note your ever-rising real estate property taxes), and stop dumping so much of the county’s residential development on the Linton Hall corridor. We’re sick of it and disgusted by some of the BOCS members’ corrupt and inexcusable behavior on this issue, the worst of all being Sellout-Chairman Corey Stewart, the county’s million-dollar man (over $1M in developer campaign contributions and counting.) Good News: Two More Victories for Citizens; You Can Make a Difference At the last BOCS meeting on 17 Nov, the BOCS announced that it has withdrawn the Blackburn residential development proposal from consideration. That would have put 415 more high-density residential units along Balls Ford Rd. The one potentially good thing about this proposal — the carrot of some commercial development being included to help improve the county’s tax situation — was phony because the commercial development was not “phased,” meaning it didn’t have to be built until after the residential housing was almost entirely completed, and thus the commercial would almost certainly have never been built. Also, Pioneer Assemblage, aka Strathmore, has reduced its housing request from the maximum allowed in this case, 800, to 465 which, though still high-density, is half as high-density as it would’ve been. The BOCS and developers are beginning to hear you. We particularly appreciate the sensitivity of BOCs members Maureen Caddigan (Dumfries), Mike May (and soon Ruth Anderson, Occoquan), Pete Candland (Gainesville), and Jeanine Lawson (Brentsville) to ordinary citizens’ concerns about residential development and bad land use policy, as well as the potential of a growing partnership with Frank Principi (Woodbridge). You can make a difference. Make sure the entire BOCS continues to hear your voice, loud and clear. What Can You Do To Help? If we can get to and finish it well before 8 Dec, we’ll send you an updated Stone Haven flier that continues to tell an ongoing Prince William County story: residential developers have no truly compelling public reasons for high-density housing projects. In fact, these unnecessary tax-negative residential developments overcrowd our roads and schools, corrupt our politics, and needlessly damage the environment. So the residential developers must rely on lies, hoping that those who are gullible, uninformed, and/or have a vested interest in residential development will be able to shout down everyone else. Here are links to the last flier we did on the lies being told to sell Stone Haven: http://pwcbg.org/StoneHavenFlier_BACK1.docx and http://pwcbg.org/StoneHavenFlier_FRONT1.docx .) It’s important for local citizens to hold their ground on Stone Haven and pressure their local representatives to do likewise. We’ll get from the county the kind of government we’ve worked for and earned through either our vigilance or neglect. If we don’t hold our ground, after this comes the deluge: 4,000 more homes, 8000 more cars added to the most crowded roads in the state, thousands more schoolchildren added to the most crowded schools in the state, higher taxes for everyone, and very possibly ultimately lower property values as PW County’s livability continues to decline. Specifically, what can you do to help? E-mail the BOCS at BOCS@pwcgov.org and tell them what you think. Feel free to use info from this message in contacting them and getting this info circulating on social media sites and elsewhere online. If you know of others who are willing, ask them to help as well. If you feel comfortable doing so, also please lobby in person any of the BOCS members that you can. Here’s their contact info: http://www.pwcgov.org/government/bocs/Pages/BOCS-Landing-Page.aspx And come to the 8 December 2015 vote by the BOCS on Stone Haven and sign up to speak against it. We promise you that the residential developers and their allies will be there in force, trying to drown out your voice. If you let us know, we’ll sign you up early to speak. BOCS members judge public opinion on a given issue on this: turnout at the public decision meeting, particularly those speaking for or against the given proposal, as well as ordinary citizens contacting them before the vote. Let us know if you have questions. We’ll be in touch. PWCBG Prince William Citizens for Balanced Growth (PWCBG) stands for the following principles: http://pwcbg.org/WhyBalancedGrowthIsImportant.html PWCBG periodically sends out alerts warning citizens of major land use issues affecting them that will be coming before the Board of County Supervisors for decision. We do not use your e-mail for any purpose other than that, and we hide your e-mail address from other recipients (bcc:). If you do not wish to be contacted, please respond to this address (ralph@pwcbg.org) asking that your e-mail be removed. Remember that the kind of county government we get will be what we’ve worked for and earned through either our vigilance or neglect. It’s up to us to either take back our government, or stand idly by and watch while well-heeled residential developers and their political allies, including some BOCS members, continue to destroy our quality of life through harmful land use policies that negatively impact our roads, schools, taxes, property values, and quality of life. “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.” — Margaret Mead Ralph & Kathy Stephenson Prince William Citizens for Balanced Growth (PWCBG) http://pwcbg.org

“Woodbridge District Supervisor’s Message: Frank J. Principi”

from Prince William County Reports published by the Prince William Board of County Supervisors

Winter 2012 p. 15

“We have accomplished many great things in the Woodbridge Magisterial District during the past four years, and I look forward to building on this momentum. We will continue to implement our vision of a New Woodbridge. A vision the community developed through a charrette and numerous summits, workshops and town hall meetings. We will focus on improved economic development, multimodal solutions to traffic congestion and the revitalization of our older neighborhoods.

“In four years, we will look back with satisfaction at the progress we have made. Our goal is to manage growth and redevelopment in ways that will provide ‘smart’ transit-oriented mixed-use communities where residents and workers can easily walk to recreation, shopping and employment.

“We will see continued growth at Stonebridge Town Center. The completion of Phase II will add additional upscale restaurants, retail and office space to the Woodbridge District.

“The expansion of Route 1 from Neabsco Mills Road to Featherstone Road and from Mary’s Way to Annapolis Way will be well underway, opening the opportunity to move forward with the redevelopment of North Woodbridge as a transit-oriented mixed-use community. In addition, we will work with regional stakeholders to complete a market analysis for passenger ferry service and the feasibility of bringing Metro to the Woodbridge District.

“Future growth must involve our older commercial and residential areas. I will continue to encourage strict enforcement of zoning laws, proactive business and neighborhood sweeps, and resident involvement to improve the appearance of our community. Additional sidewalks and trails will allow all our residents the opportunity to enjoy our parks and waterfront.

“We need your help to continue our progress. Please consider being engaged by joining the civic association, participating in an upcoming litter clean up or attending a future town hall meeting. For more information, go to www.NewWoodbridge.org or call 703-792-4646.”

Prince William’s Stewart eyes U.S. Senate bid

by Wesley P. Hester, Richmond Times-Dispatch

21 April 2011

Corey Stewart, Chairman of the Board of County Supervisors (Republican, former Occoquan Supervisor)

Summary: Stewart considers U.S. Senate bid; his role in county illegal immigration debate viewed; Democratic Supervisor Principi says Stewart used illegation immigration issue for political gain, “neglecting” his constituents to run for higher office

(“Prince William’s Stewart eyes U.S. Senate bid” by Wesley P. Hester, Richmond Times-Dispatch, 21 April 2011)

“Woodbridge — On a recent Tuesday afternoon in the lobbby of Prince William County’s administration building, Corey Stewart succinctly summarized his statewide profile to a small gaggle of reporters.

” ‘I’ve been a very controversial figure, and people either love me or hate me,’ said Stewart, 42.

“The moment of blithe self-awareness followed a ceremonial announcement of his bid for re-election as at-large chairman of the Prince William Board of County Supervisors. Elected countywide, the position answers to more than 400,000 constituents.

“But with political ambition to spare, Stewart, an affable international trade attorney and spirited conservative, has designs on higher office — a seat in the U.S. Senate.

” ‘I might do it,’ the Republican said of the 2012 bid he has been not-so-subtly hinting at for months.

“And if he does, it won’t be quietly.

“After four years on the county board and shortly after being elected chairman, Stewart in 2007 found himself launched onto the national stage as a central figure in an intensely emotional debate.

“Championing what briefly would become the toughest illegal immigration law in the country, Stewart was vilified and lionized for pushing the county policy on his way to re-election.

“The policy — nearly identical to the one later considered in Arizona — required police officers to check the immigration status of anyone they had “probable cause” to believe was in the country illegally.

“Cries of discrimination ignited and divided the community, launching impassioned protests and seething rage.

” ‘It was a very scary situation,’ said Stewart’s wife, Maria, ‘very hateful, just awful.’

” ‘They hanged me in effigy,’ Stewart said casually, brewing a cup of tea in their two-story brick home in Woodbridge. ‘There were threats. But in some ways, that kind of fortified me. I knew I was making a difference because of the controversy.’

“The furor followed decades of booming residential growth that led to huge demographic shifts in what is now the state’s second-largest county.

“Minorities now outnumber whites in the once-rural locality after its Hispanic and Asian populations nearly tripled over the past decade, according to new census data.

“The idea to tighten controls on illegal immigration didn’t come from Stewart.

“It was introduced by fellow board member John T. Strirrup Jr. on behalf of a group called Help Save Manassas, led by Greg Letiecq, whose blog played a central role in the debate.

” ‘We just had a huge number of problems,’ Letiecq said. ‘It got to where you either had to pick up and leave or stand and fight. We decided to stand and fight, and it exploded. It got uglier than anyone could imagine.’

“Despite the looming hailstorm, Stewart was quick to adopt the issue as his own, moved, he said, by the frustrations of the residents he heard from and the problems they highlighted.

“Overcrowded homes were popping up everywhere, crime was becoming an issue, and hospitals were overrun with illegal immigrants seeking primary-care treatment in emergency rooms, Letiecq said.

“Stewart added that teachers bogged down with students who didn’t speak English, and police frustrated they couldn’t report offenders they suspected of being illegal immigrants, also began complaining.

” ‘As soon as he realized the scope of the problem, he stepped up,’ Letiecq said. ‘His attitude was, “I don’t care what rocks people throw at me, we’re going to fix this problem.” It was fearless.’

“Ultimately, the policy passed in 2008, but the county board significantly altered it eight weeks later because of concerns that it would open the county to racial-profiling allegations.

“The revised version remains in effect in the county, requiring immigration checks of everyone arrested, regardless of appearance. Under the previous version, officers could check a person’s status at any time, even during routine traffic stops.

“A report released last year by the University of Virginia concluded that the number of illegal immigrants in the county had declined because of the policy and that it had some impact in reducing certain types of crime.

” ‘They found that the rhetoric surrounding the policy probably had more to do with the departure of the illegal immigrants than the policy itself, and I completely agree,’ Stewart said. ‘That’s fine with me. However it worked, it did work.’

* * * * *

“Eric Byler and Annabel Park documented the immigration debate in a series of YouTube videos that they later made into the documentary film ‘9500 Liberty.’

“A constituent of Stewart’s, Byler describes the period of several months that he documented as a culture war that Stewart believed in and knew could benefit him politically.

” ‘He’s a sensitive man, and what’s important to his constituents is important to him,’ Byler said. But he added that the issue presented a well-timed tool to help with Stewart’s re-election bid.

“Byler, whose documentary paints Stewart’s effort as misguided, said there seemed to be little factual basis for the policy.

” ‘To Corey, politics is about perceptions — what people believe — not necessarily about the facts,’ he said.

“Byler said he was not surprised when Stewart launched his Virginia Rule of Law campaign to spread Prince William’s policy across the state after the Arizona immigration debate.

” ‘Corey knows that he has to be where the conversation is,’ Byler said. ‘I think he feels most at home in a big angry circus, and he knows immigration will create that.’

“The Rule of Law campaign has failed to gain much political traction. A bill sponsored by Del. L. Scott Lingamfelter, R-Prince William, that would have taken the Prince William policy statewide was defeated at this year’s General Assembly session.

“Nonetheless, the message has endeared Stewart to tea-party and other conservative groups that could help him in 2012.

* * * * *

“The son of a Minnesota longshoreman who belonged to a union, Stewart is an unlikely right-wing conservative.

” ‘I was one of the few Republicans in my family, the black sheep,’ he said. ‘I used to argue with my dad a lot. He hated Reagan, and I loved him.’

“After graduating from Georgetown University’s Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, Stewart served a brief stint on Capitol Hill working for then-Sen. David Durenberger, R-Minn., before heading to Japan to teach English.

“It was there that he met his Swedish wife, Maria, whom he brought home to Minnesota in 1994, attending the William Mitchell College of Law before taking a job with a law firm in Fairfax County in 1998 and moving to Prince William in 2001.

“After being elected to the board in 2003, Stewart won the chairmanship in a special election the same day in 2006 that former Gov. George Allen lost his U.S. Senate seat to Jim Webb.

” ‘He lost Prince William County by about 6,000 votes, and I won it by about 6,000 votes,’ Stewart said of Allen.

“That’s one of the reasons Stewart thinks he could defeat Allen for the Republican nomination in the 2012 Senate race and win the election.

” ‘If I’m on the ballot’ in the general election, ‘I’ll win Prince William County, I may win Loudoun County, I won’t do badly in Fairfax, and even if I just come close to breaking even in Northern Virginia … I’ll win,’ he said.

* * * * *

“If Stewart does run, he’ll bring the illegal immigration debate with him.

“It’s what he knows, what he’s known for and, as Byler points out, ‘unlike health care, he can create distance from himself and George Allen on immigration.’

” ‘The race is going to be about George Allen,’ Stewart acknowledged. ‘But he’s got no headroom; he’s a known quantity. People have already judged him, and the support he can gain on top of what he’s already got is very limited.’

“The problem, he said, is that if too many others jump in, and stay in, they’ll split the vote and hand the nomination to Allen, which is why Stewart is hedging his bets.

” ‘I’m not going to enter a race I’m going to lose,’ he said. ‘I’m not a kamikaze.’

“The tally on the GOP side is already at five.

“Jamie Radtke, a Richmond tea-party activist, was the first in the door, followed by Allen, Hampton Roads attorney David McCormick, Chesapeake minister and tea-party activist E.W. Jackson Sr., and most recently Northern Virginia businessman Tim Donner.

” ‘If the George Allen nonsupporters are divided among three or four of us, he wins without a majority; he wins with a plurality,’ Stewart said.

“As for the Democrats, Stewart is less concerned.

“:Timothy M. Kaine, a former Democratic National Committee chairman and a former governor, announced his run this month.

” ‘I don’t think he’s all that strong,’ Stewart said. ‘People don’t think about him much at all. You’re hard-pressed to think of an accomplishment.’

“Stewart said Kaine will be haunted by his role as DNC chairman, inextricably linking him to the Obama administration and its policies.

“Beyond Kaine, he said, ‘the Democrats have no bench.’

* * * * *

“Of the leap from local government to the U.S. Senate, Stewart touts spending cuts and infrastructure built during his tenure as chairman.

“He points out proudly that Prince William’s tax bills are significantly lower than those in Northern Virginia localities with Democratic-controlled governments such as Arlington County and Alexandria, which he describes as ‘practically socialist.’

” ‘I’ve been forced to learn how to get things accomplished within a limited budget,’ he said, calling the at-large chairmanship ‘essentially being the governor of 400,000 people.’

“Not all his colleagues agree that Stewart is suited for higher office.

” ‘I don’t think he’s qualified for chairman, let alone the United States Senate,’ said Woodbridge District Supervisor Frank J. Principi, a Democrat who led the effort to repeal the county’s original immigration policy.

“He claims Stewart used the issue for political gain and gave the county a black eye in the process.

” ‘His political rhetoric has branded Prince William County and given it a bad reputation, particularly among a very diverse community,’ he said, also criticizing him for running for chairman while contemplating a Senate run.

” ‘I believe he’s truly neglecting his 400,000 constituents by trying to be the master of the universe,’ he said.

“Stewart said his interest in higher office is about making a difference on a larger level and bringing a ground-level approach to addressing the nation’s problems.

” ‘Local leaders are forced to deal with the real world each day. That’s why we’re more accountable as organizations than state or federal government,’ he said.

“Stewart says the same issues that have defined his tenure in Prince William would become his platform for a Senate run: fiscal responsibility and immigration.

” ‘I truly think that the country could be headed into a hellhole economically unless we have some very drastic spending reductions of the kind that no one alive today has seen,’ he said. ‘And at the end of the day, the only way to truly fix the illegal immigration problem is on the federal level.’

“Maria said she’s bracing herself already.

” ‘I think that he really wants to do it, and I think that he can do it,’ she said, adding that naysayers would only encourage him.

” ‘So many times people have told him, “Don’t do it, don’t do it, you’ll destroy your career,” and he’s like, “I don’t care, it’s what I believe. ” ‘ ”

“Principi wins Woodbridge seat”

InsideNova.com, 27 November 2007

“Republican Chris Royse conceded the race for the Woodbridge District seat to Democrat Frank J. Principi at 10:55 p.m. Tuesday.

“Independents Steven Keen, 52, and Luis Ramirez, 58, also ran against Principi to replace Supervisor Hilda M. Barg, D-Woodbridge, who will retire at the end of her fifth term in January.

“Unofficial election results showed that Principi won 44 percent of the vote in the four-way race.

“Principi was pleased with the results, especially considering that he was in a race against three other ‘hardworking, serious candidates.’

“Principi’s first plan is to meet with county officials.

” ‘I need to meet with some of the department heads and attend some of the meetings as supervisor elect to prepare to hit the ground running in January,’ he said.

“During the campaign, Principi, 46, said he would try to bolster relationships with state and federal officials, and look to them to help the county get money to ease transportation problems.

“He also said he would try to mend the relationship between the School Board and the Board of County Supervisors, which he said was strained over last year’s budget cuts, and bring business development to theWoodbridge District.

” ‘I want to focus on getting people moving again. I want to be for managed growth with town center, urban, vibrant growth kinds of development where people can work live and play in the same neighborhood,’ he said.

“Principi said he knocked on 8,000 doors during the campaign.”

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