Clifton
Politics
Prince William County Completes Beautification Initiative with Project in Potomac District
Provided by Prince William County Communications Office. Prince William County celebrated the completion of its county-wide beautification initiative with a ribbon-cutting ceremony in the Potomac District. This phase of the project included the planting of trees along Dumfries Road, between Spriggs Road and Fortuna Plaza, enhancing the appearance and appeal of this major thoroughfare.
Cardinal Management Group Encourages Succession Planning for HOA Communities
Like this article? Support us by subscribing here. Your donation will help us continue to provide quality-of-life news and make local impact possible. We’ve all experienced it, or at least witnessed it. Your book club has loyal members who actually talk about the book. Your volunteer organization actually accomplishes something, and people are excited to plan events. And then the leader who was the driving force behind the group moves away. Things aren’t quite what they used be. Then someone else moves, and then another, and another. Someone drops out for a personal crisis. Attendance is so spotty that eventually, it doesn’t even seem worthwhile to continue the group.
Prince William County to Launch Comprehensive Disparity Study in October
Provided by Prince William County Communications Office. Beginning in October, the Prince William County Office of Procurement will conduct a comprehensive disparity study to address gaps and disparities that potential vendors might face in doing business with the county. A critical component of the public procurement process is ensuring equitable...
State Roundup: Port of Baltimore dockworkers join East Coast strike; State Police to issue policy on using facial recognition technology
EAST COAST DOCKWORKERS LAUNCH STRIKE: Tens of thousands of dockworkers launched a strike at ports along the East Coast and the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday, stranding stacks of shipping containers on docks and idling ships outside harbors in a threat to the economy just five weeks before the election. A small group of longshoremen teeming with energy tapped their signs together in a parking lot by the Port of Baltimore’s Seagirt Marine Terminal near midnight. Ian Duncan, David J. Lynch and Dana Munro/The Washington Post.
It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency:
Our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. As a platform hosting over 100,000 pieces of content published daily, we cannot pre-vet content, but we strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation.