MANASSAS, Va. â Giving a solid answer on his view of the Bi-County Parkway, Virginia Attorney General and Virginia Republican Gubernatorial candidate Ken Cuccinelli supports the Bi-County Parkway between Interstate 95 in Dumfries and Dulles Airport.
âWith the tremendous growth in Loudoun, and Prince William County, and the region, we need new transportation options, but the current proposal on the table is unacceptable,â said Cuccinelli. âWe cannot be closing roads down just so we can build a new roadâŠwe need all the transportation options we can get.â
Heâs referring to an agreement between the state the National Park Service to close U.S. 29 at Va. 234 inside the Manassas National Battlefield Park once the Bi-County Parkway, now under study, is built.
Cuccinelli, of Prince William County, said that as governor he would work to let âlocalsâ to determine the best route for the highway.
His opponent, Terry McAullife, of Fairfax County, avoided a direct position on the proposed highway, but said Dulles is a cargo hub that needs to be expanded so more goods can be shipped to China and Korea.
â⊠I do not make [transportation] decisions [as governor], nor will I make decisions until I have all the facts in front of me,â said McAuliffe. âI want to get all of the stakeholders in the roomâŠI love a win-win situationâŠto have economic development⊠and local say in how things are done.â
Neither candidate shook hands today, nor did they ever occupy the stage at the same time. But both men who want to sit in Virginiaâs Governorâs Mansion came to the Hylton Performing Arts Center in Manassas to field questions from members of several regional chambers of commerce for a âBattleground Forum.â
In addition to the pressing transportation issues, education, jobs, and healthcare questions dominated the discussion.
While he incorrectly stated that Virginia ranks 50th in public school teacher pay (it ranks 30th among all U.S. states in average teacher salaries), Cuccinelli and McAuliffe both agreed the Virginiaâs Standards of Learning tests are outdated.
âSOLS donât work. This high stakes multiple choice test at the end of the yearâŠit doesnât work for students and it doesnât work for parents,â said McAuliffe.
Both men also agreed on drilling off Virginiaâs Atlantic coastline to find new sources of energy. But the candidates are divided over coal â which is abundant supply in the southwest portion of the state.
âThe war on coal is a war on the poor in VirginiaâŠI will fight for them. My opponent said we need to move past coal,â said Cuccinelli.
Both men took each other to task over attracting new businesses and jobs to the state, with McAuliffe noting he wants more tax incentives to bring large companies to the state, while Cuccinelli said he wants to review all tax credits, but would not say which ones need to be repealed.
âMy opponent says any job from the Federal Government is a not a good job. I donât believe that. As governor, I want to go to the Federal Government to get as much money as I can for Virginia. Thats the job of the governor.â said McAuliffe.
The Attorney General used the jobs platform to once again attack McAuliffe for his automotive companyâs decision to build an auto factory in Mississippi, not Virginia, and producing some 1,500 jobs in that state.
âTerry is the only candidate that has chased business out of this state,â said Cuccinelli.
McAuliffe used Cuccinelliâs reputation as an ideological conservative who sued the federal government over the implementation of Obamacare, and has been an outspoken opponent on a womanâs right to choose.
âIn this race you have a choice for rigid ideology and mainstream compromise,â said McAuliffe. âI like mainstream compromise.â
As a new federal healthcare mandate expands in Virginia, McAuliffe says itâll provide quality care to more than 400,000 Virginians in need.
His opponent said once the state is forced to pay for Obamacare as a whole, it will need to add an additional $200 million to its annual budget to meet the federal mandate. He also used the Obamacare initiative to distance himself from current Republican Governor Robert F. McDonnell, who has been under fire for accepting corporate gifts for his daughterâs wedding and not reporting them as required by law.
âGovernor McDonnell took a broad view of Medicaid. I take a deep and narrow view
and do not support medicaid expansion, itâs been the largest, fastest growing, out of control part of our budget, once we get in we canât get out without federal permission,â said Cuccinelli.
Todayâs forum comes before the two are set to debate on Sept. 25, at the Fairfax Chamber of Commerce.
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Inspired by local physicians who were among the nationâs first to adopt the concierge medicine model, Northern Virginia is now a hub for its surging popularity. These leading physicians are redefining the patient experience with same-day appointments, direct availability, unhurried visits, and deeply personalized care:
After almost 40 years in practice, Manassas-based Internist John Cary, MDâs change to concierge medicine enabled focused attention for each individual, and the launch of his innovative diet program for those with type 2 diabetes. âThe goal is to promote enough weight loss to reach an acceptable A1C of 6% with no medication,â he explains. âAchieving that can take several months of very close follow up. As I tell my patients, we are in this together.â
Jay Tyroler, MD considers his patients quite literally as family. âI believe thereâs nothing more honorable than helping patients when theyâre sick, or scared, or feeling vulnerable, and I care for them exactly as I would my loved ones.â Whether for a specialist referral, urgent health issue or ongoing follow up, âMy patients know Iâm always just a phone call away.â

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