A Program of Webinars for Elected Leaders Ends with Award ‘Dinner’

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A screenshot collage from the virtual NOVA Leadership Dinner featuring Mark J. Rozell, Charniele Herring, and Dick Saslaw.
Clockwise from top left, Mark J. Rozell, Charniele Herring, and Dick Saslaw. Screenshots by Buzz McClain/Schar School of Policy and Government

Originally published on December 3, 2020

More than 50 viewers, about half of them elected leaders, tuned in Wednesday, December 2, for the presentation of the second annual Regional Leadership Awards, presented by the Schar School of Policy and Government.

Wednesdays virtual NOVA Leadership Dinner was the final event of a series of policy-focused webinars for the region’s elected officials, including those elected in early November. It is the third year the Schar Schools Regional Elected Leaders Initiative (RELI) has provided support and education to area representatives in an effort to create cross-border collaboration and innovative policy development.

Throughout the fall, representatives from a number of organizations provided detailed information to elected leaders about major public policy issues that face the region, including transportation, energy, the environment, affordable housing, and economic development.

The award dinner” served as RELI’s 2020 finale  and included an hour-long question-and-answer session with Virginia House Majority Leader Charniele Herring—a 1993 graduate from George Mason University who will be the schools Winter Commencement speaker—and Virginia Senate Majority Leader Dick Saslaw. Schar School Dean Mark J. Rozell hosted the session.

This years awards for exceptional regional leadership were given to: 

  • Delegate Vivian Watts (D-39th), who in 2017 became the longest-serving woman in Virginias statehouse. Virginia Secretary of Transportation Shannon Valentine introduced Watts.
  • Loudoun County District Supervisor Matthew Letourneau (R-Dulles), who Rozell recalled as my best student at Catholic University 20 years ago,” was introduced by Kate Mattice, executive director of the Northern Virginia Transportation Commission.

The Schar Schools RELI bipartisan efforts to bring new perspectives and build consensus on vital regional issues is important said RELIs Mary Hynes. Hynes and former Arlington County Board member Jay Fisette are RELIs coordinators.

Regionalism doesnt just happen,” said Hynes, also a former Arlington County Board member. At RELI we use the Schar Schools unique thought-leader position to foster regionalism by bringing all of Northern Virginias elected legislative-body leaders together.

Our hope is that our webinars and Regional Leadership Awards prompt learning, conversation, and coordinated local actions focused on our shared challenges in, among others, housing, transportation, and climate action.”

Plans are already in the works for the 2021 RELI, Hynes said.

RELI looks forward to helping shape how 2021 approaches our regional needs and their statewide implications as the pandemic comes under control, schools are able to safely reopen, the economy gains ground, and our transportation needs are clarified,” she said.

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