Connect with us

Local News

Naming change for LFCC – want to participate in telephone town hall on May 6th?

Published

on

After celebrating our 50-year milestone, the Lord Fairfax Community College board made the decision to find a new name for our college — one that aligns with our mission, vision, and values. With an eye toward selecting a name befitting of our college’s rich history, welcoming culture, and bright future, they engaged a task force and a team of naming and branding professionals.

As they approached the end of this journey, they want to invite you to participate in a Q&A discussion about the renaming process, their aspirations for the new name, and the list of naming finalists. The discussion will take place on May 6 from 6:30-7:30 pm.

Registration will close 3 hours before the event; 3:30 on May 6. Click here to register.

From LFCC:

For 50 years, LFCC has been welcoming students from all walks of life, from every race, every religion, every socio-economic group, every generation. As our 50th-year draws toward a close, we are excited to be given the opportunity to really examine how we want to move the college forward for the next 50 years – and beyond.

After months of study, research, discussion, and contemplation, it became evident that our name – the first introduction to the college our potential students receive – must change. In the days following George Floyd’s murder, Glenn DuBois, the chancellor of Virginia’s Community Colleges, was determined that the 23 institutions he oversees in Virginia do better and contribute solutions to our nation’s ills.

“Equity and access to opportunity have been at the heart of our community college mission since we first opened our doors in 1966,” Chancellor DuBois said. “We need to invest ourselves, and our colleges, in actions that elevate equity before we can realize the rhetorical promise of equality – and that work begins now.”

In July 2020, the State Board for Community Colleges passed a resolution asking all community colleges in Virginia to review their names. This provided us with an opportunity to reflect upon and honor our past while ensuring our name and brand reflect our values and our future.

The name Lord Fairfax was chosen in 1969 – a year before the college opened. The original college board chose the name in part for its link to the region’s colonial history. Thomas, the 6th Lord Fairfax, was born in England, and would ultimately hold more than 5 million acres from Virginia’s Northern Neck to near what is now Pittsburgh. He became a friend of George Washington, although his loyalties lay with the British during the Revolutionary War. Lord Fairfax – like many large landowners at the time – used enslaved workers to further enrich himself. There are historical records indicating he also engaged in the long-term sexual abuse of enslaved women.

Our research showed that 90 percent of those surveyed were unaware of Thomas, Lord Fairfax, and some respondents found the name confusing since they associated it with Fairfax County in Virginia, and Fairfax, W.Va. Additionally, we discovered that people feel an affinity for the college because of what it has meant to them, and not to the man for which it was named.
Most importantly, we learned that when those surveyed learned more about the history of Thomas, the 6th Lord Fairfax, support for changing the name more than doubled in all demographics, except one. Among people of color, that support more than quadrupled – it increased from 14 percent to 61 percent. Integrity and diversity are among LFCC’s core values. This means we exemplify honesty, character, and respect for our communities, and we honor the uniqueness of individuals and communities. The college needs a name that honors those values.

College Board Vice Chair Mike Wenger said considering whether or not to rename LFCC was a “challenge that everyone took very seriously, saying, “Throughout the effort, everyone consistently came back to the values of the college and our shared concern for the students and communities we have served and will serve over the coming decades. It seems appropriate that these six months of self-reflection came during our 50th year and in the midst of a major strategic planning effort to lay the foundation for the next 50 years.

“The process has been comprehensive, disciplined, inclusive, deliberative, and, above all else, respectful of our responsibility for the history and future of the college. Hard-working groups reached out to constituents, dug into the records, read history, gathered data, and debated issues. We considered the overall college branding with an eye to the future. The process invited deliberations about the values we want to inculcate, the focus we hope the college brand projects, and the breadth of community reach we want to facilitate. Though this decision wasn’t easy, it was in many ways clear.”

Lt. Gen. Benjamin Freakley, who represents Shenandoah County on the Board, said, “Often, we just move forward day by day without thinking about our name, so this gives us a great opportunity to look at ourselves and determine who we are in relation to our values, our mission, where we are today as an institution, and where we want to go tomorrow. Lord Fairfax doesn’t represent anything we are about.

“Our students come to us from different backgrounds, but they value the opportunity presented by earning an education at LFCC. The college embraces inclusion, opportunity, equality, access to education, and helping students find their way forward. Our faculty is devoted to that. We want people to feel welcome where they serve and live, and if we exclude some part of our faculty and some part of our students, that’s not who we are, whether that exclusion is intentional or unintentional. I think for our students, for our faculty, and for our future, it’s the right time to take this opportunity to rename the college and move forward, capturing all we have accomplished in the past and the bright future we have ahead.”

The college is now in the exciting phase of searching for a name that will move us forward and stand the test of time, one that will serve as a welcoming beacon to all students, a name for which we can feel pride. A task force made up of stakeholders, including students, faculty, staff, alumni, donors, and board members will work with our communities as we embark upon this task. Our goal is for the board to have a name to consider by this summer.

Following the college board’s decision to rename the college, LFCC President Kim Blosser shared with faculty and staff a video message the evening of Feb. 4, 2021. She noted, “We have a fantastic history and so much to be proud of – our college has changed the lives of many thousands of people in our service region and beyond. Our dedication to our mission and our values is what has made our community college the asset it is today. As we develop our new strategic plan and look forward to our next 50 years, we will find a name that better suits our vision of an inclusive, equitable learning environment for every student, one that improves their economic mobility and supports the economic development of the communities we serve. And we will involve our employees, our students, and our community members in this process; we will do this together.”



Front Royal, VA
64°
Mostly Cloudy
6:21 am7:59 pm EDT
Feels like: 63°F
Wind: 8mph ENE
Humidity: 73%
Pressure: 29.8"Hg
UV index: 5
SunMonTue
57°F / 43°F
70°F / 48°F
64°F / 52°F
Crime/Court1 hour ago

Virginia State Police Identify Suspect in 52-Year-Old Cold Case

Local News1 hour ago

VDOT: Warren County Traffic Alert for April 27 – May 1, 2026

Community Events3 hours ago

National Day of Prayer Event Set for May 7 in Front Royal

Business5 hours ago

SCORE Mentors Help Guide Small Businesses from Idea to Reality

Agriculture6 hours ago

New Potato Seed Breakthrough Could Transform Farming

Local News6 hours ago

Browntown Community Center Receives $5,000 Grant for Major Kitchen Renovation

Historically Speaking21 hours ago

From Panama to Tehran: Big Stick Diplomacy Then and Now

Business Growth Series1 day ago

Business Growth Series: Why Customers Call Your Competitor First

State News1 day ago

Local Governments Race to Attract Data Centers, Often In Spite of Concerns From Their Constituents

Food1 day ago

Mini Quiches with Ham and Swiss Cheese

Home1 day ago

April Showers Can Also Bring Roof Leaks

Regional News2 days ago

US Justice Department Downgrades Risk of State-Licensed Medicinal Marijuana

Regional News2 days ago

US Senate GOP Adopts Budget Blueprint Laying Path for Billions for ICE, Border Patrol

Local Government2 days ago

County Proceeds Toward FY-27 Budget Final Approval With 9-Cent Real Estate Tax Hike and Other Variables in Play

State News2 days ago

Virginia Lawmakers OK Governor’s Tweaks to Major Energy Bills, Reject Health and Labor Bill Amendments

State News2 days ago

Virginia Lawmakers Recess Special Session Without a Budget Deal

Local Government2 days ago

Warren County School Board Tackles Policy Changes, Budget Pressures at April 22 Meeting

Obituaries2 days ago

Barbara Elaine Deale-Herrold (1949 – 2026)

Obituaries2 days ago

John William “Johnny” Dehart (1956 – 2026)

State News2 days ago

GOP’s Hope to Undo Virginia’s New Redistricting Power Grows After Judge Halts Maps

Interesting Things to Know2 days ago

Buying a Cemetery Plot: What You Need to Know

Health2 days ago

Study Links Coffee Consumption to Lower Dementia Risk

Local News3 days ago

When Everyone Swims: Water Equality at Alamo Drafthouse Cinema

State News3 days ago

State Bus Line Debuts New East-West Route That Connects 10 Cities Across Virginia

State News3 days ago

Virginia Voters Back Redistricting Amendment After Months of Legal and Political Battles