Fairfax City - 最新蜜桃影像 DC Neighborhood Stories from American University Tue, 06 Dec 2022 15:44:56 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/uploads/2024/05/cropped-The_Wash_4_Circle-1-32x32.png Fairfax City - 最新蜜桃影像 32 32 GMU opens new college of public health, a first for Virginia /2022/12/06/gmu-opens-new-college-of-public-health-a-first-for-virginia/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=gmu-opens-new-college-of-public-health-a-first-for-virginia /2022/12/06/gmu-opens-new-college-of-public-health-a-first-for-virginia/#respond Tue, 06 Dec 2022 15:44:56 +0000 /?p=14981 With nearly 3,200 students, the college at George Mason University is the first of its kind in Virginia, where no other university has created a formal public health college.

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Last month, George Mason University launched an official college of public health, an interdisciplinary move that officials say took more than a decade to make.

The college is the first of its kind in Virginia, where there has yet to be another standalone public health college. Bob Weiler, associate dean of academic affairs at George Mason, said conversations about creating the college began at the end of 2004.听

鈥淚t has required a lot of time and a lot of effort by a lot of people here at Mason, particularly within the college as well,鈥 Weiler said. 鈥淎nd so, just to see the actual transition to solidify and actually happen is really exciting.鈥

The college is made up of 1,900 undergraduate and 1,300 graduate students. It offers six undergraduate degrees, eight master鈥檚 degrees, five doctoral degrees and six professional certificate programs. The school is made up of the following:聽

  • Nursing
  • Global and Community Health聽
  • Health Administration and Policy
  • Nutrition and Food Studies
  • Social Work

Weiler said before George Mason created a designated college, Virginia was one of 13 states without a college of public health. He added it was also one of the largest states to be without such a college.

鈥淭o lead the nation in healthy outcomes, we as a state must establish schools dedicated to education, research and community service in public health,鈥 he said. 鈥淎s a school of public health, we see it as a responsibility to the region and to the state itself.鈥

Colin Greene, the state鈥檚 , said it was excellent for George Mason officials to bring the college to the state. He said having an understanding of the different facets of health helped him in his career as a doctor. It was also what inspired him to get a master鈥檚 degree in public health, he said.

George Mason statute in the center of campus. Provided by Ron Aira/Creative Services/George Mason University

鈥淚 think the fact George Mason is opening this college is great for the Commonwealth,鈥 Greene said.听

George Mason鈥檚 public heath school may be the first college of its kind in the commonwealth, but there are other public health college initiatives spread across communities in Virginia, Greene鈥檚 office noted. Eastern Virginia Medical School teamed up with Old Dominion University and Norfolk State University last March in an effort to . Virginia Commonwealth University has also been working to make a public health college since last year, officials said.听

Rebecca Sutter, a nursing professor, said George Mason鈥檚 college approaches public health with an interdisciplinary lens.

鈥淭he interdisciplinary nature of the college, and I would say the interprofessional nature, really lends itself to [improving health outcomes],鈥 said Sutter, who had already been a professor at George Mason for 10 years. 鈥淪taying siloed in health and public health is not going to lead to a change that we know we need to have.鈥

Students gather for a lecture in George Mason鈥檚 new college of public health. Photo provided by George Mason University.

Sutter said the COVID-19 pandemic was proof of the need for people across sectors to work together and for the college to come to George Mason.

鈥淚t really is timely as we’re coming out of a public health emergency and our COVID-19 responses,鈥 she said. 鈥淎s people know now, we just didn’t have the infrastructure and we just didn’t quite get it right.鈥

Taylor Thomas, a George Mason senior and global and community health major, said an interdisciplinary look at health would only make health infrastructure stronger. To Thomas, public health is not just vaccines or illness. She said it was also food access and other .

鈥淚 don’t think those are the parts of public health that people think of very often,鈥 she said. 鈥淗aving this change to the college of public health, I think, is reflective of what people really should know about public health in the broader community.鈥

Thomas is set to graduate at the end of this month. But she said she knows that although her time in the college is already ending, the college鈥檚 impact on the community was only beginning.听

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Read claims win in tight Fairfax City mayoral race against Yi /2022/11/09/read-claims-win-in-tight-fairfax-city-mayoral-race-against-yi/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=read-claims-win-in-tight-fairfax-city-mayoral-race-against-yi /2022/11/09/read-claims-win-in-tight-fairfax-city-mayoral-race-against-yi/#respond Wed, 09 Nov 2022 16:06:37 +0000 /?p=14484 Catherine Read is claiming to have clinched the Fairfax City mayoral election Tuesday in a tight race against Sang Yi, a slim win for Democrats. As of the morning of Nov. 9, Read snagged about 50 percent of the vote with 4,757 ballots, compared with Yi, who earned 49 percent, or 4,639 votes, with eight […]

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Catherine Read is claiming to have clinched the Fairfax City mayoral election Tuesday in a tight race against Sang Yi, a slim win for Democrats.

As of the morning of Nov. 9, Read snagged about 50 percent of the vote with 4,757 ballots, compared with Yi, who earned 49 percent, or 4,639 votes, with eight of nine precincts reporting. The absentee ballots and early voters. 聽

鈥淪o many people made this victory possible!鈥 Read wrote on Twitter Nov. 9. 鈥淭hank you to every person who believed this was possible!鈥

Catherine Read tweets after claiming victory in the Fairfax City mayoral race.

Officials with the Fairfax City Electoral Board said Wednesday that provisional votes still needed to be counted. The office also would count qualifying mail-in ballots that come in over the next few days, officials said.

Preliminary voting data shows the majority of people voted for Yi in five of the six polling places, while Read got the majority of absentee votes. Neither candidate responded to a request for comment on the results Nov. 9.

The unofficial results of Tuesday鈥檚 election come after Yi, a city council member and a Republican congressional staffer, battled Read, a Democrat and civic engagement strategist, for the mayor鈥檚 seat in a months-long, partisan campaign for a .听

Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) endorsed Yi over the summer. Fairfax City Mayor David Meyer, a Democrat who is not seeking another term, donated to Read鈥檚 campaign, according to data from the Virginia Public Access Project.

Tom Ross, a city council member and Democrat who is running to keep his seat, said outside the polling station Nov. 8 that he was supporting Read.

鈥淚’ve been on council with Sang for two years,鈥 Ross said. 鈥淎nd I respect the fact that he served there, but I don’t agree with his values or with the kind of leadership style he has. So that’s why I endorsed Catherine.鈥

Katy Johnson, a community member, came to vote at the community center that day with her two children in tow. Johnson was happy to vote, but she said she was frustrated seeing the race become partisan.听

鈥淲e’re supposed to be independent, and I’ve literally lost friends because I think that we should be nonpartisan,鈥 Johnson said. 鈥淚 think the local elections are not the national elections and these are our neighbors. We鈥檙e all one Fairfax city.鈥

Jill Butterfield, another community member, said the partisanship impacted her decision regarding who to circle on her ballot.

鈥淲hen I looked into what Mr. Yi was supporting, it all looked fine in a very generic kind of way,鈥 Butterfield said. 鈥淏ut honestly, when I found out that Glenn Youngkin was campaigning for him or supporting him, it was like 鈥楴o, not happening.鈥 鈥澛

This year鈥檚 race was also a costly one. Yi raised more than $169,000 for his mayoral campaign, including about $67,000 from his city council bid, according to the Virginia Public Access Project. Read has raised about $90,000, according to the project.

Yi based his campaign on issues related to . Some citizens at the polling place said they voted for Yi because they think he supports development. Others said they voted for him because they wanted to vote for a Republican.

Signs for mayoral candidates Catherine Read and Sang Yi line the Stacy C. Sherwood Community Center, where members of Fairfax City cast their ballot.

Susan Steiner, a community member who volunteered for Yi鈥檚 campaign, said she voted for Yi because he was an active member of the community.

鈥淗e’s a man of the community,鈥 Steiner said. 鈥淲e see him on our walks with his dogs, his children and his beautiful wife. He is a great neighbor.鈥

If elected, Yi would have become the Commonwealth of Virginia鈥檚 first Korean American mayor, if elected. Loretta Herrington, another community member volunteering for Yi鈥檚 campaign, said that representation mattered.

鈥淔rankly, this is a community that’s very diverse,鈥 Herrington said. 鈥淗e represents all of us. And by that I mean, it’s time for the next generation to take leadership.鈥

Yi has not made a public comment on race as of 8:45 a.m. Nov. 9.

Read, who had previously lost a bid for a city council in 2012, based part of her campaign on social issues, and . She also pitched other municipal issues, .

Paul Wyche, a sophomore at George Mason University, said he voted for Read because of her stance on social justice. Wyche said he was able to meet Yi at George Mason before deciding who to vote for.听

鈥淚 am necessarily against Sang, but I voted for Catherine Read,鈥 Wyche said. She was kind of the better choice for me, especially for the whole political climate going on nowadays with abortion rights.鈥

The Fairfax City electoral board will , which will be finalized by Nov. 15, 2022.

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