Free Meals at schools mean a lot

Do the people in Louisa County know that ALL of our school children get free breakfast and free lunches, AND they have carry home food for the weekend? This is available to all students regardless of income. This same program was available over the summer. The schools provide students with free tee shirts also. All of this tells me a lot about the people we elect to the school board and the board of supervisors. I am especially grateful to our superintendent of schools who has made it possible.

So please be mindful when you vote to replace those individuals that are presently serving our county. It wasn’t so many years ago when these services were not offered.

Lewalta Haney
Louisa 

This letter was previously published in the latest edition of the Central Virginian newspaper and is reprinted here with the author’s permission. 

Made possible by Governor Northam

During this pandemic, I think we have all realized how important having our schools and businesses open is to both the mental and fiscal health of our families and our community. We rely on the school system to not only educate our children, but also for child care.

We have two children in Louisa County Public Schools, run a small business out of our home, and work in a locally owned business in the town of Louisa. Last year was difficult both financially and mentally for our family. Since businesses and schools have opened we are all much happier and our income has quadrupled. This has been made possible by Governor Northam.

Thank you, governor, for taking a strong stand to combat the spread of Covid. If it weren’t for the mask and vaccination mandates, my children would not be in school, and our household would barely be able to make ends meet. Masks and vaccines make a huge difference in combating the spread of Covid. Northam is following the CDC recommendations; he is keeping our families safe and our economy open.

When I look at some of the states without mask mandates, and see many school districts closing as soon as they opened this fall as children became ill, I know that Virginia is doing the right thing. In each case, it has been the governor of the state who has made the difference. We have a choice in this election. We can continue these forward-thinking policies and keep our schools and businesses open by voting for Terry McAuliffe for governor, or we can return to the surging pandemic.

McAuliffe’s opponent, Glenn Youngkin, believes we should continue to mandate vaccinations for measles, mumps, and rubella. Why not for Covid? His position is contradictory and dangerous. Vaccine mandates work. Similar ones have been used frequently in our country’s history to combat the spread of disease.

We have the ability to protect our children and keep our economy open. Voting for Terry McAuliffe just makes sense.

Thank you,

Sara Macel 
Louisa

This letter was previously published in the latest edition of the Central Virginian newspaper and is reprinted here with the author’s permission. 

Education an important factor in Governor’s race

Both of our candidates for governor claim, in their campaign material, to support education. However, on closer look, you can quickly see different ways of “supporting education.”

According to his campaign materials, Glenn Youngkin wants to support education by “funding children, not buildings.” How does this support our public education system? It doesn’t. It takes money away from public schools.

Terry McAuliffe, on the other hand, wants to raise teacher pay and invest in our public schools. He would expand pre-K and make sure every student could get online. He includes expansion of STEM-H and computer science programs in his plans. To accomplish this, McAuliffe will support local school districts in connecting students with needed technology as well as providing necessary training and professional development to educators. His plan is to improve access to effective education for all of Virginia’s children.

You can see that one is supporting public education, and the other is supporting private schools.

Our public education system has been underfunded. Access to technology and the internet remains a barrier for many students. Teachers are underpaid. There are teachers who love their profession, but who cannot afford to continue teaching and support their families. We need to catch up in order to provide the best teachers and the kind of schools we need for our children.

Consider joining me in supporting education for Virginia’s students with a vote for Terry McAuliffe.

Ann Tourangeau
Louisa

This letter was previously published in the latest edition of the Central Virginian newspaper and is reprinted here with the author’s permission.

Another view of commitment

In the Sept. 23 issue of The Central Virginian, a letter writer asks what commitment means to you. This letter is in reference to the candidates in our upcoming local election. They claim that a candidate must profess their commitment to a national political party in order to demonstrate personal integrity. To me, integrity is shown by commitment to one’s personal values, not those of a group. Committing to a group may require an individual to take actions which do not align with their core beliefs and values.

The author is naively simplistic in describing individuals within each of the two major political parties. Is this person really unfamiliar with the concepts of moderate, conservative and progressive elements within each party? These various groups hold very different views on the issues at hand, and opinions often overlap on some level between different party members on numerous issues. Very few people are at the extreme end range of opinions, but rather hold complex, nuanced views. When people commit to a party above their own judgement, they put themselves at risk of becoming a pawn, and worse. This is not to say you shouldn’t affiliate with a political party if you so choose; just keep an open mind and use your own judgement to vote the way your heart and mind guide you.

The letter writer says that in order to select a candidate for the Louisa County Board of Supervisors, one must know their national party affiliation. However, it is only in recent years that candidates in local races identified as Republican or Democrat. What does commitment to a national party mean for somebody who is running for a position in which they will be solving the specific problems of Louisa County? We need people who can work together unencumbered by the divisiveness we see on the national stage.

As citizens, we all have a responsibility to learn about the candidates and the issues, rather than abdicating our power to an organization that produces overly simplified and sometimes inaccurate sound bites. The more options and opinions that are presented to us, the better we can analyze and develop our understanding of the issues. The candidates are participating in forums; they have websites, and they have generally been very available to anyone who wants to know where they stand. Yes, it takes a little more work. However, informed citizens are what it takes to have good government.

Beth Croghan
Louisa 

This letter was previously published in the latest edition of the Central Virginian newspaper and is reprinted here with the author’s permission.

Thank You Supervisor Bob Babyok

I would like to thank Louisa County Green Springs District Supervisor Bob Babyok for all of his hard work keeping the residents of the Green Springs district informed and always being available to answer our questions, hear our concerns, and represent our interests with grace and humility.

My wife and I have been residents of Zion Crossroads for 14 years. When we moved to the area, there was no Walmart, Lowes, Sheetz, etc, only a couple of gas stations, and a whole lot of trees. In the first 10 years we lived here, we met our previous supervisor, Richard Havasy exactly once. That meeting happened when the Stonegate apartments were first announced. At the time, there was genuine concern among residents as to whether Zion Crossroads could support such a project and he was finally forced to interact with his constituents after several residents banded together and demanded a meeting. Otherwise, he had been completely absent.

The last 4 years have been in sharp contrast. Bob has always been available and goes out of his way to talk to as many of his constituents as possible on a daily basis. We see him often, as he makes the rounds through the different neighborhoods in the district and attends every community event at which he is welcome. In addition, we have run into him at Walmart, Sheetz, Rhett’s, the Tavern at Spring Creek. His call to service is front and center in everything he does going all the way back to his 20 years of service in the United States Air Force. Several of his constituents have been shocked when they learn that his pay for the job does not even cover his expenses. Even more impressive has been his deep knowledge of the issues facing Louisa county that can only be attained by someone who truly listens.

The one thing, however, above all else that has struck me about Bob is what a terrible politician he is. Most elected officials will pander, make promises they can’t keep, promises that turn into excuses, and eventually devolve into personal attacks and finger-pointing. Bob has always been up front about the limits of his position (We’re in favor of limited government, right?). When he makes a mistake, he owns up to it and will promise to do better. A good politician would lie and make up stories in order to make everyone feel good and hopeful while personally attacking anyone who disagrees. A terrible politician like Bob tells the truth. A good politician will start fundraising the day they announce their candidacy while devising schemes to benefit personally from their position. Bob, being the terrible politician that he is, refuses to fundraise, turns down all offers for donations, and spends thousands of dollars of his own money to fund his campaign. All in all, if we look at the state of politics today, and what it takes to be a successful self dealing politician, Bob is as terrible at self dealing as they come.

I’d like to take a moment and address Bob’s opponent in the upcoming November 2nd election, Rachel Jones. We first met Rachel sometime around 2008 when the Spring Creek sports club opened. Rachel joined Spring Creek as a sports club member so that she could bring her children to the pool during the summer. I can honestly say, Rachel is one of the nicest people we have met since we moved here, although it has been a few years, as our kids have grown older, as kids have a tendency to do. Still, I can remember how our kids used to play together in the kiddie pool while we talked about the trials and tribulations of parenthood. I was impressed by her service in pursuit of making sure her children have access to a quality preschool education through Zion United Methodist church. For those that vote at the Zion precinct, take a minute and look around the gymnasium and notice the attached preschool.

Rachel was instrumental in bringing that facility to fruition. This shows a commitment to her community and to education.

All in all, if Rachel had decided to run as an independent, as nearly every other Board of Supervisors candidate has done in the 200+ years of the county’s existence, I would not only vote for her, but I would actively support her campaign. Unfortunately, she was recruited to run under a partisan umbrella, and her campaign is being funded by a small group of residents with very different priorities than most of the residents of the Green Springs district. They are cynically betting that there are enough voters that will vote on a strictly party line basis to take control of the board of supervisors. These residents have been against every phase of development at Zion Crossroads and share a single goal of slowing further growth and they are hoping that by injecting partisan politics into the county government, they can slow future growth.

As residents who want to see our community continue to grow and flourish, the last thing we need, in my opinion, is to bring the ugly partisan politics that have infected our state and federal governments to the county board of supervisors. Fortunately, we already have a county supervisor that possesses both a call to serve and is an independent not beholden to any donor or political party, which is why as a 14 year resident of Louisa County, I am proud to support the reelection of Bob Babyok to the Louisa County Board of Supervisors.

Jim Noble

A shorter version of this letter was previously published in the latest edition of the Central Virginian newspaper and is reprinted here with the author’s permission.

Challenger will get the work done in the 56th

There is work to be done on behalf of the people of the 56th district. We count on the legislators that we send to Richmond to do that work for us.

Louisa County’s current delegate, John McGuire, has made it abundantly clear that the people of the 56th district are not of interest to him. As evidenced by a recently released voicemail, he sees himself in Washington, not Richmond. In a message left for a big money Texas donor, Del. McGuire describes him[1]self as a “potential nominee for a top-five congressional seat — VA-07.”

It’s the same thing he did in 2020 when he tried to win the nomination for congressman, but failed. You can’t be in two places at once. You can’t do a good job when your heart and head are somewhere else. We have an alternative. We can elect Blakely Lockhart this November. She is rooted solidly in our district, and dedicated to serving its people. Let McGuire pursue his dreams elsewhere. We have work to do here.

McGuire pursue his dreams elsewhere. We have work to do here.

Tamara Haymore
Louisa

This letter was previously published in the latest edition of the Central Virginian newspaper and is reprinted here with the author’s permission.