Incumbent Amy Jackson is seeking reelection to her second term on the Alexandria City Council. A native of Alexandria, she earned her bachelor’s degree in communication from Virginia Tech and two master’s degrees in education from George Mason University. Jackson worked as an educator in Fairfax County Schools for 16 years. She serves on multiple committees and boards, including the Children, Youth and Families Collaborative Commission, and the INOVA Alexandria Hospital Task Force. She and her family reside in the Seminary Hill neighborhood.
Jackson is making recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic a priority and understands the racial disparities involved in the response to the pandemic. Jackson pursued passing a mask mandate ordinance in the city before Governor Ralph Northam had issued one for the state. She supports requiring vaccination for all city employees and public school employees. Jackson also advocates for keeping our communities safe from gun violence and pushed for an ordinance that prohibits firearms on city property.
Jackson plans to continue centering race and social equity in every issue she considers as a council member. She promises to fund much-needed social programs geared toward services like women’s issues, mental health, and youth at risk. During her time on Council, she has advocated for “All Alexandria,” a resolution that commits the city to racial and social equity. She supports holding police accountable for abusing its power by establishing a citizen review board and body cameras for police officers.
As a former educator, Jackson understands that strong schools are the backbone to thriving communities and is committed to fully funding Alexandria’s public education system. Seeing that the pandemic exposed the lack of access to the Internet, she advocates for the creation of a municipal broadband network. She will address obtaining more funding for Pre-K programs and investing in declining school infrastructure. She believes that getting to the root of Alexandria’s achievement gap involves understanding how educational inequalities start in kindergarten.
Jackson wants working families to live with dignity in Alexandria and supports the collective bargaining rights of municipal employees. She wants to encourage the construction of affordable housing units by getting rid of a waiver that incentivizes developers not to build affordable housing. She also believes in securing housing for the city’s aging population and homeless community members. She supports the use of co-location to build affordable housing on school property.
Due to her support of working families, public education, the environment, racial and social equity, Jackson is a progressive choice in this race.
Incumbent Amy Jackson is seeking reelection to her second term on the Alexandria City Council. A native of Alexandria, she earned her bachelor’s degree in communication from Virginia Tech and two master’s degrees in education from George Mason University. Jackson worked as an educator in Fairfax County Schools for 16 years. She serves on multiple committees and boards, including the Children, Youth and Families Collaborative Commission, and the INOVA Alexandria Hospital Task Force. She and her family reside in the Seminary Hill neighborhood.
Jackson is making recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic a priority and understands the racial disparities involved in the response to the pandemic. Jackson pursued passing a mask mandate ordinance in the city before Governor Ralph Northam had issued one for the state. She supports requiring vaccination for all city employees and public school employees. Jackson also advocates for keeping our communities safe from gun violence and pushed for an ordinance that prohibits firearms on city property.
Jackson plans to continue centering race and social equity in every issue she considers as a council member. She promises to fund much-needed social programs geared toward services like women’s issues, mental health, and youth at risk. During her time on Council, she has advocated for “All Alexandria,” a resolution that commits the city to racial and social equity. She supports holding police accountable for abusing its power by establishing a citizen review board and body cameras for police officers.
As a former educator, Jackson understands that strong schools are the backbone to thriving communities and is committed to fully funding Alexandria’s public education system. Seeing that the pandemic exposed the lack of access to the Internet, she advocates for the creation of a municipal broadband network. She will address obtaining more funding for Pre-K programs and investing in declining school infrastructure. She believes that getting to the root of Alexandria’s achievement gap involves understanding how educational inequalities start in kindergarten.
Jackson wants working families to live with dignity in Alexandria and supports the collective bargaining rights of municipal employees. She wants to encourage the construction of affordable housing units by getting rid of a waiver that incentivizes developers not to build affordable housing. She also believes in securing housing for the city’s aging population and homeless community members. She supports the use of co-location to build affordable housing on school property.
Due to her support of working families, public education, the environment, racial and social equity, Jackson is a progressive choice in this race.