Incumbent Delegate Schuyler VanValkenburg is a history and U.S. government teacher who has represented the 72nd District since 2018. He was born in New York and earned his bachelor’s degree from the University of Richmond. He currently teaches at Glen Allen High School in Henrico County and is the only active K-12 teacher serving in the General Assembly. He lives in Henrico County with his wife and is the proud father of three children.
As a public school teacher, Del. VanValkenburg has served as a critical advocate for public education in the General Assembly. He voted in favor of a 5% pay raise for teachers and will work for further salary increases. He voted to expand funding for school support staff, including access to school counselors and nurses. Counselors were a priority for him when he served on a commission for school safety in 2018 and worked to ensure investment in student mental health. VanValkenburg would like to do further work to address gun violence in schools and the school-to-prison pipeline.
Making the promise of democracy real by expanding access to voting is another one of VanValkenburg’s priorities. He was a strong supporter of the Voting Rights Act of Virginia, which prohibits discrimination at the polls. As a civics teacher, he’s passionate about getting young people involved in the democratic process. He voted in favor of a bill to give students one excused absence a year to vote or participate in a civic event.
VanValkenburg considers voting to expand Medicaid in 2018 his most important vote as a delegate. Medicaid expansion granted access to affordable health coverage to over 500,000 Virginians. VanValkenburg has more goals to make healthcare more affordable. Voting in favor of a $50 cap on insulin, he supports price regulations on prescription drug companies. He would also like to increase funding to help bridge the gap in healthcare quality between rural and urban communities.
VanValkenburg has worked for an equitable and strong economy. He sponsored legislation to promote apprenticeship and job training programs. He would like to ensure Virginia’s college and vocational programs are affordable to all who wish to attend, and he voted in favor of the Get Skilled, Get a Job, Give Back “G3” program, which makes community college tuition-free for low- and middle-income students who study in certain fields. He also voted in favor of raising the minimum wage.
Del. VanValkenburg’s opponent is Christopher Holmes (R), a Richmond native who works as an operations infrastructure manager for a healthcare company. He supports deliberate barriers to limit access to voting and opposes common-sense gun violence prevention measures. He also opposes holding law enforcement accountable for violence inflicted on communities and shifting funding away from police to communities in need of services.
Due to his support of public education, voting rights, affordable healthcare, and Virginia working families, Del. VanValkenburg is the most progressive choice in this race.
Incumbent Delegate Schuyler VanValkenburg is a history and U.S. government teacher who has represented the 72nd District since 2018. He was born in New York and earned his bachelor’s degree from the University of Richmond. He currently teaches at Glen Allen High School in Henrico County and is the only active K-12 teacher serving in the General Assembly. He lives in Henrico County with his wife and is the proud father of three children.
As a public school teacher, Del. VanValkenburg has served as a critical advocate for public education in the General Assembly. He voted in favor of a 5% pay raise for teachers and will work for further salary increases. He voted to expand funding for school support staff, including access to school counselors and nurses. Counselors were a priority for him when he served on a commission for school safety in 2018 and worked to ensure investment in student mental health. VanValkenburg would like to do further work to address gun violence in schools and the school-to-prison pipeline.
Making the promise of democracy real by expanding access to voting is another one of VanValkenburg’s priorities. He was a strong supporter of the Voting Rights Act of Virginia, which prohibits discrimination at the polls. As a civics teacher, he’s passionate about getting young people involved in the democratic process. He voted in favor of a bill to give students one excused absence a year to vote or participate in a civic event.
VanValkenburg considers voting to expand Medicaid in 2018 his most important vote as a delegate. Medicaid expansion granted access to affordable health coverage to over 500,000 Virginians. VanValkenburg has more goals to make healthcare more affordable. Voting in favor of a $50 cap on insulin, he supports price regulations on prescription drug companies. He would also like to increase funding to help bridge the gap in healthcare quality between rural and urban communities.
VanValkenburg has worked for an equitable and strong economy. He sponsored legislation to promote apprenticeship and job training programs. He would like to ensure Virginia’s college and vocational programs are affordable to all who wish to attend, and he voted in favor of the Get Skilled, Get a Job, Give Back “G3” program, which makes community college tuition-free for low- and middle-income students who study in certain fields. He also voted in favor of raising the minimum wage.
Del. VanValkenburg’s opponent is Christopher Holmes (R), a Richmond native who works as an operations infrastructure manager for a healthcare company. He supports deliberate barriers to limit access to voting and opposes common-sense gun violence prevention measures. He also opposes holding law enforcement accountable for violence inflicted on communities and shifting funding away from police to communities in need of services.
Due to his support of public education, voting rights, affordable healthcare, and Virginia working families, Del. VanValkenburg is the most progressive choice in this race.