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The Loudoun County Health department inspected several locations around Leesburg and found five violations at one restaurant. (Shutterstock)
LEESBURG, VA Officials from the Loudoun County Health Department inspected multiple food storage and preparation businesses across the Leesburg area from March 30 to April 6, including one location with eight violations.
Due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, many inspections are being conducted virtually. So, the listed violations may not be an all-encompassing rundown of all the violations at a particular establishment.
Violations at restaurants typically focus on factors that can contribute to food contamination. The local health department also performs a re-inspection to ensure that possible violations have been corrected.
Spiraling out of control : DC-area parents clamor for full return to classrooms Print this article
LOUDOUN COUNTY, Virginia For Carri Michon and Cheryl Onderchain, most of their “new normal” has involved wrestling with their local school board.
The Virginia mothers have been religiously showing up in person to the Loudoun County School Board meetings since last summer, advocating for the full reopening of in-person learning for students despite the coronavirus pandemic. We’re the voice of many, many, many people because somebody has to fight for the children, Michon told the
Washington Examiner at one of the meetings.
Loudoun County sits about 40 minutes outside of Washington, D.C., and is one of the wealthiest counties in the country, with a median household income of over $142,000. It has just begun sending students back to school part-time by using a hybrid model, in which students spend part of the week in class and the rest learning remotely.
Mary Wanamaker “Minnie” Watriss, a painter, gardener and equestrian, died of a stroke Dec. 18 at Sinai Hospital. She was 89 and lived in Butler in Baltimore County and in coastal Maine.