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New Rappahannock Food Pantry will open Thursday
The Rappahannock Food Pantry will open Thursday, June 27, at its new location in the Town of Washington where residents will be able to do their shopping inside the new and improved pantry.
Chris’ Corner: The ‘Taj Mahal’ of food pantries
Food Pantry Treasurer Pete Stenner, a retired Marine Corps colonel and volunteer extraordinaire with various organizations in Rappahannock County, with great pride described the new Food Pantry as the “Taj Mahal of pantries” at its annual fundraising dinner on Saturday.
State commission applauds Town of Washington boundary line adjustment proposal
After a public hearing at the Rappahannock County courthouse on Monday, state officials with the Commission on Local Government (CLG) determined that a boundary line adjustment in the Town of Washington will “enhance the commonwealth’s interests.” The commission will make a final decision in July.
Emerging solutions: What it takes to build affordable housing
Experts, incentives, philanthropists . . . and good will
Affordable housing can be built.
It requires real estate lawyers, tax specialists, sociologists, investors, architects, funders and philanthropists. There is often an underpinning of subsidies, policies and targeted incentives involving local, state and federal government.
Final hearing is Monday on town-county boundary proposal
State officials from the Commission on Local Government (CLG) will meet with the Rappahannock County Board of Supervisors and Washington Town Council on Monday for a public hearing on the town boundary line adjustment.
County and town officials will give a joint presentation to the commission at 3 p.m. at the county courthouse before opening the floor for questions from the public. A public hearing to hear comments on the proposed agreement will be held at 7 p.m. at the courthouse.
Town of Washington board approves Rush River Commons signage, ponders packing shed’s future
The Town of Washington’s Architectural Review Board (ARB) unanimously approved plans for signage at Rush River Commons at its Monday meeting, despite some concern over the prominence of the signage detracting from the town.
Previously, the plans were in front of the town’s Planning Commission, where engineers on the project were petitioning for a special use permit. At a March meeting, a clerical error on the part of the
Rush River Commons’ signage plans move forward
The Washington Town Council and Planning Commission voted unanimously Monday to refer plans for signage around Rush River Commons to the Architectural Review Board for further review.
At the joint meeting, Planning Commission Chair Caroline Anstey said errors made by the Rush River team were found in the signage application that was approved by town staff.
Two directory signs should not have been included in the initial proposal because they are part of the residential side of the project, which falls under a different zoning district, according to Anstey.
Rush River Commons shows off new food pantry at ‘topping off’
Rush River Commons creator and backer Chuck Akre addresses a crowd of residents gathered at the project's "topping off" ceremony Tuesday afternoon. To his left are project spokesperson Betsy Dietel and former Food Pantry director Mimi Forbes. Washington Town Council member Bradley Schneider is to Akre's right.
“It’s a no-frills building,” Rush River Commons creator and backer Chuck Akre said at the ceremony, which was attended by contractors and engineers who worked on the project, along with nearly 100 residents. “All of you have played a role in getting it to this point.”
Washington Town Council, planners table Rush River Commons’ signage proposal
Developers delete project sign from plan -
The Washington Town Council and Planning Commission voted Monday to table a proposal for signage in and around the Rush River Commons’ development near the entrance to the historic town, and will meet jointly later this month for a final vote.
The Rush River Commons’ team, known as Black Kettle LLC, submitted an application for a special use permit in order to display signs larger than the 15-square foot maximum per building, as laid out in the town’s Zoning Ordinance.
Commentary: New beginnings: A challenge to help our community by helping the pantry
Lots of moving and shaking is going on at Rush River Commons as you enter the Town of Washington. Our new Food Pantry has its walls up and its roof on.
I had the pleasure to walk through the other day with Richie Burke and Rick Lessard to see the wonderful high ceilings and windows. This will bring in light to fresh new aisles. A walk-in refrigerator/freezer provided by a grant from the PATH Foundation will store our meat and vegetables that are donated or purchased from local farms. We will have privacy areas to interview our clients, and a new loading dock to safely unload supplies by our numerous volunteers from local grocery store donations.
Mayor updates progress of Rush River Commons
Town of Washington Mayor Joe Whited met with the Rush River Commons’ team last week and reports that things are moving along. He said the team anticipates having the Food Pantry complete by the end of May, and the office building facing Warren Avenue, the elevator block of which is going up now, finished sometime in October.
Rush River Commons evokes a memory
I stopped at the Washington post office on Friday, Jan. 12 to pick up mail and noticed that the crew trailer at Rush River Commons, across from the post office, had been moved down the fence a ways, and that the crew had brought in more dirt. Several days ago it looked like a pond.
Town boundary line adjustment reaches final phase
A plan for a boundary line adjustment in the Town of Washington was heard by the Commission on Local Government (CLG), a state agency, marking the final phase for the contentious proposal.
Mayor Joe Whited gave a brief overview of the proposal to the commission in Richmond last Friday, and CLG officials will come to the Town of Washington on May 20 for a public hearing on the boundary line adjustment. County and town officials will also give a joint presentation before opening up the floor for questions from the public.
Boundary line adjustment update
The Commission on Local Government, a division of the Virginia Department of Housing and Community Development, will hold its first hearing on the town’s boundary line adjustment proposal on Jan. 5.
Long-awaited new Rappahannock Food Pantry home ‘a gift for everybody’
Thanksgiving is a busy time for most food pantries and Rappahannock’s own is no exception. It’s also a time when many in Rappahannock are thankful for what they see in the near future: Completion of a new, long-awaited permanent home for its food pantry.
Town approves landscape plan for Rush River Commons
The Washington Town Council approved a landscape plan and utilities application Monday for the Rush River Commons’ development as construction continues along Warren Avenue.
Some of the landscaping will now encroach onto the town-owned Leggett Lane property. Town attorney Martin Crim said he will negotiate an encroachment license with representatives of Black Kettle, the organization that owns the development, which will be responsible for maintenance of the plants.
Boundary line adjustment proposal nears finish line
Town of Washington attorney Martin Crim told members of the Town Council Monday night that he has received a final proposal for a boundary line adjustment in the town, and the body is expected to take action at its October meeting.
Rush River Commons: Building on an ‘unbuildable’ site
For many in Rappahannock County, the approval process for Rush River Commons was the main game. But behind the scenes teams of engineers already were busy, wrangling with their own major task: how to build on a site that any for-profit developer in their right mind likely wouldn't touch.
Town of Washington considers creating Economic Development Authority to boost business
Washington Mayor Joe Whited on Monday proposed that the Town Council create an Economic Development Authority to assist in efforts to bring more business to town that could diversify and bolster the local economy.