Elizabeth Bennett-Parker is the vice mayor of Alexandria and was the youngest woman elected to Alexandria’s city council. She attended Cornell University and the University of London. She serves on Alexandria’s community criminal justice board and commission on employment. She also runs a small business that targets food insecurity and co-leads a nonprofit job training and personal development program for underserved women. She and her husband live in Alexandria with their two rescue pets.
As a city council member, Bennett-Parker expanded access to early childhood education by securing additional funding and supporting zoning changes to increase the number of education facilities in the city. As a delegate, she hopes to continue her work to develop quality early care and equity-focused education by reducing classroom size, improving outdated facilities, and giving schools new learning materials. She supports raising teacher pay and advancing universal school meal programs that deliver healthy food to Virginia students.
Bennett-Parker wants to boost Virginia working families by guaranteeing paid family and medical leave so that people don’t have to choose between a paycheck or taking care of a loved one or themselves if they are sick. She plans to raise revenue for the state by making sure that the huge corporations and millionaires and billionaires that have benefited from our community are paying their fair share too. She also wants to ensure that minorities and women are prioritized in opportunities for new businesses.
Bennett-Parker understands the urgency of the climate crisis and sponsored a resolution on the Alexandria City Council calling the climate crisis an emergency. She worked to ensure that all new construction in the city has zero carbon emissions and that property owners have access to tools to make energy improvements. She will ensure the just transition to 100% renewable energy in the Commonwealth guarantees that communities’ rights and livelihoods are protected when shifting to sustainable energy production.
As chair of the Virginia Railway Express, Bennett-Paker is aware of the region’s transportation needs. Bennet-Parker wants to modernize and expand transportation infrastructure in Northern Virginia so that people have more options and mobility. Bennett-Parker also recognizes that the district suffers from an affordable housing crisis. As a city council member, she voted to increase funding for affordable housing and expand the number of affordable housing units. Climate change has made flooding issues worse for her district and Bennett-Parker will work with the General Assembly to secure more funding for stormwater infrastructure in the district.
Bennett-Parker is running against Republican candidate J.D. Maddox, a veteran, and former federal employee. Maddox opposes efforts to stop the school-to-prison pipeline by removing police officers from schools. He is also against collective bargaining rights for municipal employees, which allows workers to negotiate salaries with their employers as a union.
Due to her support of public education, the environment, Virginia working families, and improved transportation infrastructure, Elizabeth Bennett-Parker is the most progressive choice in this race.
Elizabeth Bennett-Parker is the vice mayor of Alexandria and was the youngest woman elected to Alexandria’s city council. She attended Cornell University and the University of London. She serves on Alexandria’s community criminal justice board and commission on employment. She also runs a small business that targets food insecurity and co-leads a nonprofit job training and personal development program for underserved women. She and her husband live in Alexandria with their two rescue pets.
As a city council member, Bennett-Parker expanded access to early childhood education by securing additional funding and supporting zoning changes to increase the number of education facilities in the city. As a delegate, she hopes to continue her work to develop quality early care and equity-focused education by reducing classroom size, improving outdated facilities, and giving schools new learning materials. She supports raising teacher pay and advancing universal school meal programs that deliver healthy food to Virginia students.
Bennett-Parker wants to boost Virginia working families by guaranteeing paid family and medical leave so that people don’t have to choose between a paycheck or taking care of a loved one or themselves if they are sick. She plans to raise revenue for the state by making sure that the huge corporations and millionaires and billionaires that have benefited from our community are paying their fair share too. She also wants to ensure that minorities and women are prioritized in opportunities for new businesses.
Bennett-Parker understands the urgency of the climate crisis and sponsored a resolution on the Alexandria City Council calling the climate crisis an emergency. She worked to ensure that all new construction in the city has zero carbon emissions and that property owners have access to tools to make energy improvements. She will ensure the just transition to 100% renewable energy in the Commonwealth guarantees that communities’ rights and livelihoods are protected when shifting to sustainable energy production.
As chair of the Virginia Railway Express, Bennett-Paker is aware of the region’s transportation needs. Bennet-Parker wants to modernize and expand transportation infrastructure in Northern Virginia so that people have more options and mobility. Bennett-Parker also recognizes that the district suffers from an affordable housing crisis. As a city council member, she voted to increase funding for affordable housing and expand the number of affordable housing units. Climate change has made flooding issues worse for her district and Bennett-Parker will work with the General Assembly to secure more funding for stormwater infrastructure in the district.
Bennett-Parker is running against Republican candidate J.D. Maddox, a veteran, and former federal employee. Maddox opposes efforts to stop the school-to-prison pipeline by removing police officers from schools. He is also against collective bargaining rights for municipal employees, which allows workers to negotiate salaries with their employers as a union.
Due to her support of public education, the environment, Virginia working families, and improved transportation infrastructure, Elizabeth Bennett-Parker is the most progressive choice in this race.