Sun Gazette Arlington August 13, 2015

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INSIDE

Home sales, prices higher during first half of year – See Page 5

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INAUGURAL ‘40 UNDER 40’ HONOREES RECONNECT

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OVERLEE HOSTS EXHIBITION OF SYNCHRONIZED SWIMMING

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AUGUST 13, 2015

Homeless Center Eyes a New Date for Opening

Delayed Facility Set to Be Ready in September SCOTT McCAFFREY Staff Writer

THRILLS AND CHILLS HIGHLIGHT THE 2015 ARLINGTON COUNTY FAIR!

Thrills for all ages were part of the Arlington County Fair. Clockwise from top left: Malachai Whitlock and Marcus Russell react as the “Sizzle” picks up speed; Malia Spriggs and Harmony James get ready for waves on the motor-boat ride; Megan Kerbs, Sudha Baueel and Sulekha Bhandari react as the PHOTOS BY DEB KOLT “Super Shot” plummets toward the ground; and Ava Viller soars up on the trampoline. See more photos on Page 16.

After an extended pregnancy and plenty of labor pains, it appears the Arlington County government’s homeless-services center is arriving at completion. Officials with the Department of Human Services now say the new facility, which saw its planned opening pushed back from late winter to mid-spring and then delayed again, should be open by the end of September or very early October. Despite the construction delays, “we are thrilled to be moving into the homeless-services center soon,” said Kathleen Sibert, CEO of the Arlington Street People’s Assistance Network (A-SPAN). A-SPAN will operate the facility under contract to the county government. The new center will be located on two floors of an office building in the 2000 block of 14th Street North in Courthouse. County officials purchased the building from a private owner – after threatening to use eminent-domain powers to acquire it by force – and then approved a use permit for the facility in March 2013. At the time the use permit was approved, county officials estimated the new center would be open in time for the start of the 201415 winter season. Various construction delays pushed that schedule back, further alienating

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August 13, 2015

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August 13, 2015

Inaugural Crop of ‘40 Under 40’ Award Recipients Reconnect

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From left: Ron Novak and Terron Sims observe the proceedings at the “40 Under 40” gathering held in late July at Arlington Economic Development’s headquarters in Ballston; U.S. Rep. Don Beyer (D-8th) speaks at the event; and Ginger Brown and Kim Klinger were among those who received the award in 2014. LEADERSHIP ARLINGTON

An eight-month reunion may not have quite the same panache as one of 25 or 50 years, but for members of the inaugural “Arlington 40 Under 40” honorees, it provided a chance to catch up and brainstorm for the future. Those who received the awards last De-

cember were invited to a celebration-cumget-together held July 30 at Arlington Economic Development’s offices in Ballston, where they heard from U.S. Rep. Don Beyer (D-8th). Both Beyer and Victor Hoskins, the county government’s economic-develop-

ment director, offered tips for personal and professional leadership development. The 40 Under 40 awards were conceived last year by Leadership Arlington to honor the achievements of up-and-coming community leaders. The nomination period for the second class of inductees recently

closed, with awards to be presented in December. Partners in the initiative are the Arlington Chamber of Commerce, Arlington Economic Development and the Sun Gazette. – A Staff Report

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August 13, 2015

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School Board to Mull Historic Status for Stratford Site SCOTT McCAFFREY Staff Writer

Arlington School Board members on Aug. 13 could give the public its first formal inkling whether SCHOOL there will be a battle over the preservation BOARD status of the soon-toNOTES be-renovated Stratford school site. Board members may receive staff recommendations and take public input, if any, at the School Board meeting, although a final decision on whether the matter will be placed on the Aug. 13 agenda will depend on the outcome of a work session two days prior, school officials told the Sun Gazette. Even if the matter is discussed at the Aug. 13 board meeting, no formal action will be taken that night, school officials said. The county government’s Historical Affairs and Landmark Review Board (HAL-

RB) has recommended that the Stratford site, which currently houses H-B Woodlawn Secondary Program, be named a local historical district, owing in part to its architecture but more broadly due to the role the school played in the integration of Virginia schools. In February 1959, six black students began attending classes under court order, desegregating what had been an all-white school. It was one of two public schools in Virginia that were integrated that day, and marked the beginning of the end of the state government’s “massive resistance” against integration. Earlier this year, the School Board successfully fended off an HALRB proposal to give historic status to a portion of the Wilson School building in western Rosslyn, which would have saved at least a part of the century-old building from the wrecking ball. County Board members sided with the School Board, paving the way for the Wilson building to be razed. County Board members have not for-

mally indicated how they would referee another HALRB-School Board disagreement, but County Board Chairman Mary Hynes recently gave a public hint that she wanted to see both sides work together to achieve an agreement each could live with. The H-B Woodlawn Program is slated to move into a new school on the Wilson site in 2019, and the renovated Stratford building will be put back into use as a community middle school. School Board members on Aug. 13 also are expected to be briefed on planning for the Wilson school site. “It will be a great start to the year,” School Board Vice Chairman Nancy Van Doren said of the twin planning efforts currently on the horizon. Summer-School Students on Track to Meet Graduation Requirements: Arlington school officials expect all students who are finishing up requirements for high-school graduation in summer school to pass coursework and collect their diplomas.

School Board Vice Chairman Nancy Van Doren said a total of 91 students who fell just short of meeting graduation requirements this spring are taking classes in the school system’s summer-school program, and all currently are on track to meet requirements. They are among 6,100 Arlington students, of all grade levels, who are participating in remedial and enrichment summer-school programs this year. APS Augmenting Ranks of Teachers: The Arlington school system has hired 325 new teachers to address rising enrollment and staff retirements, and will be adding more to the ranks in coming weeks. School Board Vice Chairman Nancy Van Doren laid out the hiring efforts at the Aug. 5 meeting of the Arlington County Democratic Committee. The number of teachers being hired is about par for the course in a typical year for the school system, which will have about 25,600 students enrolled this fall, according to current projections.

Democrats Work to Buttress Their Precinct Operations SCOTT McCAFFREY Staff Writer

The Arlington County Democratic Committee on Aug. 5 added new precinct captains and precinct leaders, aiming to be ready for anything on Election Day. And there is more to come as the party ramps up its get-out-the-vote effort.

Obituaries

MYRTLE MILLER WOOD BALES

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Myrtle Miller Wood Bales passed away on March 11, 2015, of Falls Church, VA. Myrtle is survived by Janet Iagnemmo (Al), Douglas Wood (Carol) and Dottie Bowie. Also survived by nieces, nephews, granddaughters and great-grandsons.

Sun Gazette

She was redeceased by her husbands, Harold T. Wood and Ernest R. Bales. A memorial service will be held on Saturday, August 15, 2015, at 11:00 AM at Idylwood Presbyterian Church, 7617 Idylwood Road, Falls Church, VA 22043. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to Alzheimer’s Association, Richmond, VA.

“We are still working to expand our precinct teams,” said Carol Fontein, vice chair for precinct operations for county Democrats. New precinct captains were appointed for the Ashton Heights, Cherrydale, Lyon Village and Park Lane precincts. Democrats generally have two or three captains per precinct, plus precinct leaders below them. Arlington Democratic chairman Kip Malinosky said the goal will be to motivate the electorate in a year when there are no big-ticket races – president, governor, senator – on the ballot. Instead, there are a host of local and legislative races. “We’ve got 15 people to elect, and we’ve got to make sure we get all our people to the polls,” Malinosky said. “We are definitely going to be out there knocking on doors.” Of the 15 races in Arlington, only a handful will be contested – Democrats face opposition for the two County Board and one School Board seats and in three of seven General Assembly races. Four legislative seats and the five constitutional offices are unopposed. Democratic Chili Extravaganza Relocates for 2015: Every road trip needs some gas, and the Arlington County Democratic Committee will launch its general-election campaign on Labor Day (Monday, Sept. 7) with the party’s annual Chili Cookoff. Due to renovations at the event’s traditional venue in Lyon Park, the gathering will be held at the Barcroft Community House, 800 South Buchanan St. It will run from 4 to 6 p.m. “We hope it’s going to be a great day,” said Steve Baker, who is helping to organize the event. For tickets and information, see the Web site at www.arlingtondemocrats.org. Richard, Jean Barton to Be Honored by Democrats: The Arlington County Democratic Committee will honor the work of Richard and Jean Barton with a celebration on Sunday, Sept. 20 from 5 to 7 p.m. at

POLITICAL POTPOURRI

a private residence. Described as “the original Arlington political supercouple,” the Bartons have been active in local Democratic politics for decades. Richard Barton, who began his political life as an operative in Louisiana (and has the stories to prove it) in 1975 was an unsuccessful candidate for Arlington County Board, and both Bartons have long been active behind the scenes. “People are lining up” to speak at the program, said Josh Katcher, a co-chair of the Arlington County Democratic Committee’s Joint Campaign. “It’s going to be a great event.” Ticket information will be available on the Web site at www.arlingtondemocrats. org. Greens Want Expanded Grants to LowIncome Renters: The Arlington Green Party says the county government should focus on expanding its grants program to low-income renters, rather than work with nonprofits to build more housing, if it wishes to stem the loss of affordable housing in the community. In a posting on its Web site, the party analyzed the benefits of spending money on the two options, and concluded “the housing grants program provides about twice the benefits to renters than the same amount for new construction of subsidized apartments over 30 years.” “It stands to reason that if Arlington County wishes to help the identified 7,000 households living in Arlington earning under 60 percent [of area median income], the cheapest way to do so is expanding the housing grants program,” the party notes. (The complete analysis is available at http://greensofarlington.org.) The Arlington government spends about $36 million each year in local tax dollars on housing programs, Greens noted, and County Board members are expected in September to approve a new – and in some quarters controversial – plan to guide efforts to retain affordable housing in the community. Democrats OK Plan for 2016 School Board Caucus: The Arlington County

Democratic Committee on Aug. 5 approved the plan for its 2016 School Board caucus. It was an early start, but “this is Arlington – it’s always election season,” Democratic chairman Kip Malinosky noted. Under the plan adopted by Democrats, caucus voting will take place May 19 from 7 to 9 p.m. at Drew Model School and May 21 from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. at WashingtonLee High School. Two seats – those currently occupied by School Board Chairman Emma ViolandSanchez and Vice Chairman Nancy Van Doren – are on the ballot in November 2016. School Board seats in Virginia are officially nonpartisan, and political parties are prohibited from nominating candidates, but parties can “endorse” candidacies. All five incumbent School Board members won the Democratic nomination before going on to win general-election victories. Democrats plan to continue the use of “instant-runoff” voting, which has been in place in recent caucuses. Voters will rank candidates in the order of preference, with those collecting the lowest number of votes knocked out and their votes reallocated until the top candidate receives at least 50 percent of the vote. The 2016 caucus will be the first run under the instant-runoff process that involves the selection of two candidates, as four years out of every five there is only a single School Board seat on the ballot. (Complete details on the how the instant-runoff voting will work in 2016 will be available on the party’s Web site at www.arlingtondemocrats.org.) Candidate filing for the caucus begins Jan. 1, with a filing deadline of Feb. 29. If two or fewer candidates file, the caucus will be canceled and the party will hold an upor-down vote on those seeking the nominations. In recent years, contests for the Democratic nod for School Board have attracted limited interest among prospective candidates – two contenders sought the 2015 endorsement, three sought it in 2014.


April May June Six months

$696,902,256 $860,108,346 $1,052,703,171 $3,952,882,073

$653,985,429 $776,017,786 $889,877,818 $3,550,116,600

+6.6% +10.8% +18.3% +11.3%

Year-over-year sales and prices rose across the Arlington real estate market in the first half of the year, according to new figures, with overall sales volume up nearly 10 percent from 2014. A total of 1,392 properties went to closing in the January-to-June period, an increase of 5.6 percent over the 1,318 transactions in 2014, according to figures from RealEstate Business Intelligence as analyzed by the Sun Gazette. It was a roller-coaster ride, with sales up in January, March and June but down in February, April and May. The average sales price of all homes that sold during the period was $639,630, up 3.7 percent from $616,540. The average includes single-family homes, attached properties (such as townhouses) and condominiums. Total sales volume for the first half of 2015 across Arlington was $890.4 million, an increase of 9.6 percent from $812.6 million a year before. Figures represent most, but not all, sales during the period. All figures are preliminary, and are subject to revision. Regional Homes, Prices Sales Up in First Half: Year-over-year home sales across Northern Virginia were up – almost by double digits – during the first half of the year, according to new figures, while average sales prices rose more modestly. A total of 10,115 properties went to closing across the region from January to June, according to figures reported by RealEstate Business Intelligence, an arm of the local multiple-listing service, and ana-

lyzed by the Sun Gazette. That’s an increase of 9.1 percent from the 9,268 sales during the same period in 2014. Figures represent transactions in Arlington and Fairfax counties and the cities of Alexandria, Fairfax and Falls Church. Year-over-year home sales were up five of the six months, with only February posting a small (0.4 percent) decline. The strongest months were June (up 17 percent from a year before) and March (up 13.8 percent). The average sales price of all homes that went to closing during the period was $558,797, up a modest 2.7 percent from $546,967. Total sales volume for the first six months of 2015 was $5,652,227,746, up 11.3 percent from $5,079,136,009 a year before. Figures represent most, but not all, sales during the period. All figures are preliminary, and are subject to revision. Va. Home Sales Have Strong 2nd Quarter, Sales-Wise: Despite a small year-overyear decline in median sales prices, Virginia’s homes market posted its strongest second quarter since 2008, according to new figures from the Virginia Association of Realtors (VAR). Buoyed by a very strong June market, a total of 31,650 properties went to closing during the quarter, up 9.9 percent from the 28,811 sales recorded during the same period in 2014, according to preliminary figures reported July 28. Year-over-year sales were up in six of

ginia. The big boost for the Figures are from RealEstate Business Intelligence, and includes most, but not all, home quarter was provided in sales across the county during each month. June, when statewide 2014 Sales Change 2015 sales rose 21 percent 130 January +10.0% 143 from a year before. Ac164 February -8.5% 150 tivity in April and May 176 March +24.4% 219 was slightly higher than 255 April -5.5% 241 the same months in 310 May -7.4% 287 283 June +24.4% 352 2014, but did not climb 1,318 Six months +5.6% 1,392 as dramatically as June. While sales were up Volume significantly, the median $68,573,225 January +29.6% $88,837,650 sales price of all proper$96,837,618 February -6.7% $90,294,662 ties that changed hands $109,250,427 March +26.0% $137,637,707 during the quarter was $150,739,305 April +2.7% $154,775,779 down 2.6 percent from $203,046,138 May -8.8% $185,216,524 $267,000 in 2014 to $184,152,837 June +26.9% $233,601,952 $812,599,550 Six months +9.6% $890,364,274 $259,990 in 2015. Most of the geographic reporting areas saw healthy increases in seven geographic areas across the commonwealth, led by 13.9-percent increases median sales prices, but Northern Virginia in Central Virginia and in the Roanoke/ (up 0.5 percent to $390,000) was relatively flat and the second largest reporting area, Lynchburg/Blacksburg area. Hampton Roads saw an 11.5-percent in- Hampton Roads, posted a 5.4-percent decrease in sales, followed by Southwest Vir- cline to $202,000. Among other areas, median sales prices ginia at 9.8 percent, Southside Virginia at 9 percent and Northern Virginia – by far the were $230,000 in the Central Valley (up largest corridor of the commonwealth – up 4.5 percent); $219,000 in Central Virginia 8.4 percent. The Central Valley reported a (5.7 percent); $168,000 in Roanoke/Lynchburg/Blacksburg (4.3 percent); $125,000 decline of 1.1 percent in overall sales. “The strength of these second-quarter in Southwest Virginia (9.6 percent) and results points to sustained improvement $86,000 in Southside Virginia (7.5 perin Virginia’s residential real estate mar- cent). Figures represent most, but not all, sales ket,” said VAR president Deborah Baisden, whose organization represents about during the period. All figures are prelimi30,000 real-estate professionals across Vir- nary, and are subject to revision.

January-to-June Arlington Home Sales

August 13, 2015

Year-Over Year Home Sales, Prices Are Up Across County

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Opinion

Find more letters and an archive of editorials at www.insidenova.com/ news/arlington (Click on “Opinion”)

Our View: Gov. McAuliffe Does Himself No Favors The legend goes that, before finalizing important decisions, President Franklin Roosevelt would tell his staff, “Clear it with Sidney” – shorthand for ensuring that the proposal met with the approval of powerful union chief Sidney Hillman. Whether true or apocryphal, the tale is an important reminder that even all-powerful political leaders need to have all their ducks in a row, all their support lined up, before embarking on decisions that might engender controversy or blowback. Either purposely or inadvertently, Gov. McAuliffe eschewed or ignored that common-sense dictum late last month, when he announced the recess appointment of a Fairfax County Circuit Court judge to the Virginia Supreme Court. As events unfolded, it turned out

the governor had run the proposal through the Republican chairman of the House Courts of Justice Committee, who was fine with it, but had not checked in beforehand with the Republicans who really control the General Assembly. The GOP leadership, in turn, said that while McAuliffe’s pick was qualified for the post, its caucus had a better choice – a member of the Virginia State Court of Appeals – and would, as is their right, be installing him in office instead. Democrats and their acolytes in the press went into predictable spasms of outrage, most of it ginned up for political effect. Which again begs the question: Did McAuliffe purposely set this up, or did he fail to predict how the Republican leadership would react?

It’s hard to tell, but an editorial in the Virginian-Pilot newspaper – no great friend of the GOP – calls it an “unnecessary misstep” on the part of the governor, one that “illustrates concerns formed during the 2013 campaign that McAuliffe and his team lacked a grasp of process in state government and that Republicans would humiliate him for it.” Certainly the governor likely could have avoided all this by a couple of phone calls to the Republican leadership, not just one committee chairman. FDR and Sidney Hillman are long gone, but it’s still a wise move to clear big decisions with those who have the ability to help or hinder them. Republicans may look bad in this episode, but the governor looks worse.

Reality Is Standing in Way of Housing Advocates Editor: I nominate Suzanne Smith Sundburg [“Housing Proposal Has Too Many Unknowns,” Letters July 30] for president! Sundburg has done her homework; her entire letter warrants thoughtful consideration by every County Board member and staffer working on the affordable-housing issues. Other letters on the issue have been well-intentioned, but were simply emotional and totally unrealistic. Arlington alone cannot solve homelessness and domestic

abuse just by dumping high-rise affordable housing into existing neighborhoods or in scarce parkland. Razing existing housing along Columbia Pike or in Buckingham makes little sense. Arlington residents living in Westover, Lyon Village, Rock Spring, Country Club Hills, Tuckahoe, etc., would staunchly oppose any invasion of affordable housing. Most of Arlington north of Washington Boulevard is unaffordable for low-income people, and under such conditions, the opportunity for abundant affordable

housing is virtually non-existent. Housing advocates push the idea of increased “diversity” as a benefit, but they ignore the reality that Arlington already is oozing diversity throughout its school system and in many neighborhoods. Hopefully, objective thinkers like Sunburg will prevail. She would make a great candidate for office – the morass of the current candidate mediocrity currently offered is insulting to voters. Don Kreutzinger Arlington

Editor: I have been a long-time proponent of affordable housing in Arlington. But, even so, I have to admit that affordable housing has some serious problems and limitations. Perhaps these problems and limitations can be addressed and overcome. However, that will only happen if we admit they exist. Clearly, the underlying costs of affordable housing in the county are a substantial and growing burden on the taxpayers of Arlington. Not only is there the rising cost of subsidizing and incentivizing the retention of affordable housing, but there are other costs. Affordable housing requires additional school capacity and public services. Unfortunately, at the same time, the economic benefits of affordable housing may accrue to the neighboring jurisdictions (not Arlington), if those living in the affordable housing work in other jurisdictions. For example, someone – say, the care-

giver of a child – who lives in Arlington’s affordable housing but works in Fairfax, Falls Church or D.C. substantially increases the tax burden and reduces the quality of living for the Arlington taxpayer. But the benefits of affordable child care accrues to those that do not have to pay for the affordable housing. It is a clearly unjustified transfer of wealth from the Arlingtonians to those living in neighboring jurisdictions. But that is not all: Since the taxpayers in Fairfax, Falls Church or D.C. do not have to support the affordable housing of the child care-giver with their taxes, they can bid up the price for the care-giver to ensure they get the services they need. With Arlington families having less discretionary income after taxes, due to Arlington’s affordable-housing costs, the only way for the Arlingtonians to successfully compete for these critical services is to reduce their quality of living in some other area of the family budget, which further exacerbates the hidden burden of afford-

able housing. This is a significant issue that will cause affordable housing to be drastically limited in order to be sustainable, or simply forgone entirely, in order to keep Arlington as an attractive place to live. Either the qualifications for eligibility into Arlington’s affordable housing has to be tied to employment in Arlington or the supporters of affordable housing can expect substantial pushback opposing affordable housing initiatives. Of course, some will argue that affordable housing is a moral imperative. If so, it should be the responsibility of charitable and religious institutions, not the county government. Moral imperatives should be voluntary initiatives, not compulsory tax obligations. One person’s moral imperative may not be another’s. For, after all, taking care of one’s own family’s needs is an important moral imperative, as well. Stephen Carey Arlington

Even Housing Proponents Must Acknowledge Worries


Retaining Diversity One Reason to Support Affordable Housing all three I currently work in) are now financially out of reach to people like me. As a parent who was able to raise and educate my children in Arlington in the 1980s-2000s, it is hard for me to see the next generation of teachers and other young professionals forced to move to neighboring counties or other states when they want to purchase their first home or start a family. Don’t our hard-working teachers, assistants and support staff deserve to live in the community they serve every day? As a caring county resident, I do not want Arlington to become the exclusive enclave of high-income families and young people who have multiple roommates or pay rents they cannot afford in order to live here for a short time. I do want Arlington to be an inclusive, vibrant, diverse urban village where young and old, rich and poor, and all ethnic groups are welcome, and NOT just in certain neighborhoods. Don’t you agree that is what makes Arlington unique and interesting? Laura Weil Arlington

August 13, 2015

Editor: As a school social worker, I get to see first-hand how both children and adults are affected when they cannot afford secure and adequate housing. Crowded or inadequate homes cause children’s attendance and grades to suffer when they do not have privacy or a quiet place to study. These children move often and sometimes have to change schools or move out of the county in the middle of the school year, disrupting their education and friendships. The human cost to their parents is also great. A depressed and anxious parent who is struggling to pay the rent is less able to cope with parenting and support their children’s education. Don’t you agree that shelter is a basic human right? As a school employee on a teacher’s contract and a single woman on the road to retirement, I would like to stay in Arlington, which has been my home since 1981. I was recently lucky enough to purchase a condo in South Arlington, but found in my real-estate search that most neighborhoods (including one I lived in for 30 years and

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Just What Is Tejada Trying to Hide? Editor: An internal auditor has been recommended by the Arlington County government’s external auditor for many years, and would be similar to what other jurisdictions currently have. So what does County Board Vice Chairman Walter Tejada have to hide by not wanting one? It looks like Mr. Tejada just approves what is put before him, without question, and this is not reassuring to the taxpayers who expect that their money is being looked after in a competent fashion. Did Mr. Tejada question the loan of water-enterprise funds to purchase a building at 2020 14th St. North? A conflict of interest appears when using the fund, because it would have saved the General Fund interest, allowing the County Board more funds to spend their way. The water users would have been on the losing end. Shouldn’t Mr. Tejada understand the basics of how the county is supposed to operate legally, after many years as a County Board member? Where were Mr. Tejada’s questions on the increase in water rates and the increase in sewer rates, when the water expense and the sewer expense are not broken out separately in the budget? What was his decision based upon? This points to the lack of transparency; providing more of it in the budget would go far to reduce community distrust. Another suggestion would be to include as a county goal the “efficient and effective delivery of services,” not just the phrase “world-class” that just generates expensive awards. The proposed composition of the audit committee to oversee the independent auditor should diminish the involvement of staff to foster independence and generate trust in the process. The whole point of an independent auditor is lost with the chief financial officer and another representative from the county manager’s office on the

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Use Innovation, Creativity in Dealing with Fire Station #8 Editor: Improving emergency response time in the under-served areas of North Arlington at the expense of the Hall’s Hill community and the adjacent neighborhoods would be a mistake. A better solution would be to build an 11th fire station north of 25th Street North and bring the neglected Fire Station #8 up to current standards. If public safety is a top priority for Arlington, the money can be found. Arlington faces some serious challenges, but to frame issues in a way that pits neighborhood against neighborhood and black against white is a hurtful and shortsighted mistake. The deeply moving witness offered by our African-American neighbors

at the recent public meeting recalled the struggle of their parents and grandparents to receive public services during the last century. Arlington’s population has increased by more than 28 percent since the existing 10 fire stations were established. The increase in school population north of Lee Highway demonstrates that a significant part of this increase has occurred in these underserved areas. County management long has recognized that extensive areas of far-north Arlington can’t be reached by first-responders in time. At the same time, Fire Station #8 provides essential backup service to the Ballston corridor, its new homes and apartments.

It is past time for the County Board to approve the construction of an 11th fire station on one of the sites under consideration, while upgrading the existing Station #8. As Arlington focuses on redeveloping Lee Highway, additional calls on Station #8 to serve this revitalized area will be inevitable. The county government has called public meetings to discuss the relocation, but has failed to convince residents in any of affected neighborhoods that its plan is sound and based on an objective assessment of current and future needs. Much of the concern about building a fire station at the Old Dominion Drive and 26th Street North parcel is linked to the loss of most of the 7.5 acres of public

green space. Were the footprint of the station minimized, much of this concern would be met. The major threat is from the planned 30 parking spaces linked to the badly needed new salt-distribution center. But, with four existing paved parking facilities adjacent, the county government could easily arrange access to one of these during snowemergency periods, when these church and university parking facilities are unlikely to be used. Such an innovative approach would allow retention of half of the site for badly needed park use. Charlie Flickner Arlington

Why Won’t Arlington Democrats Tackle Issue of Confederate Names? Editor: County Board Chairman Mary Hynes was quoted in The Washington Post as saying board members plan to ask the county’s legislative delegation to sponsor a bill changing the name of Jefferson Davis Highway. She said the county would not ask for a name change for Lee Highway, “because – unlike Davis – Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee actually lived in Arlington,” the article said. Is this Mrs. Hynes basis’ for keeping Lee’s name: because he “actually lived in

Arlington”? Does she not know Lee’s history? Lee thought black people inferior to whites. Through his wife’s estate, Lee owned many slaves, and fought to preserve the institution of slavery for economic gain to keep slaves in a permanent state of human bondage in chains forever. Lee and Davis were unrepentant white supremacists who fervently believed the Southern cause, slavery and segregation were right and just. Shortly after the Charleston massacre of nine African-American church members, I

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e-mailed a petition to all five of the County Board members, demanding changing the name of Jefferson Davis Highway. No response. I also called for the cancellation of the Arlington County Democratic Committee’s headquarters lease at 2001 Jefferson Davis Highway. Locating the headquarters there speaks volumes about the county’s white leadership’s disrespect of African-American families and their children. All over America, thousands of people are calling for the removal of statutes, mon-

uments, plaques, markers, street names, roads, schools and signs that have offended African-American men, women and children for generations. Here in Arlington, the white leadership talk about “progressive values” and inclusion, at the same time memorialize Confederate leaders known as white supremacist and traitors. Good-bye, Mary Hynes. Thank you for not running for re-election. During your retirement, you may want to to read up on Robert E. Lee and Jefferson Davis. Bobbie Fisher Arlington

Every Effort Should Be Made In Order to Keep Fire Station #8 Where It Is Now Editor: Apparently our current fire chief has little or no regard for the High View Park/ Hall’s Hill community. It appears he has already made the decision to move Fire Station #8 regardless of how residents feel about it. Meetings concerning this move serve only to pacify the residents of both the John M. Langston Civic Association and the Old Dominion Citizens Association, a

proposed relocation site. When asked for basic information to support the decision for the move, we were told that it is gathered in a manner that is “over our heads.” What an insult! Fire Station #8 is a vital part of our community historically, and all measures should be taken to see that it remains. Delores Little Arlington

Community Input Needed on Station #8 Editor: I am writing regarding the planned development at 26th and Old Dominion. I don’t doubt that some kind of development will happen at this site. I take exception to moving forward without a full site plan for this location, and without input from a community task force. Yes, community meetings are taking place now, but it feels like too little, too late, based on the county’s timeline. Shouldn’t a vote for site selection be taken once the new [County] Board members are seated and can be held accountable for their votes

and oversight of the project? It also seems like this is the perfect opportunity to use guidance from the nearly finalized Community Facilities plan. With such limited available space, I can’t understand why this site is exempted from the plan’s guidance. The county has not fully disclosed the overall vision for this location. How can we, as a community, back such a plan without the confidence that’s it been thought through in the fullest manner? Meghan Keller Arlington

Winter Potholes Remain a Mess Across County Editor: A couple of weeks ago I was driving home from Falls Church down Lee Highway. All of a sudden – kabam! –the crunch of metal on my right front tire of my brand new car was a realization that I had driven through the cluster of potholes near the intersection of Lee and North George Mason Drive. This section of Lee Highway is the

major east/west route through the county, but these clusters of potholes have not been properly repaired since the winter. I thought I was driving through the streets of Iraq. Arlington County government and the Virginia Department of Transportation: Really? Mary White Arlington


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Artist’s rendition shows proposed townhouses that will replace the George Washington Carver Cooperative Homes. EFFORT IN PLACE TO PRESERVE HISTORY OF CARVER HOMES: Arlington

HISTORY TASK FORCE SEEKS PUBLIC COMMENT: The Arlington County gov-

ernment’s Historical Task Force is seeking community input on how local history should be collected, preserved and shared. “Preserving Arlington’s historic government and community records is a big job, and we need your feedback,” county offi-

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Arlington Free Clinic will hold its 21st annual benefit gala on Saturday, Oct. 24 from 6 p.m. to midnight at the Ritz-Carlton Tysons Corner. The black-tie affair will include dinner, dancing and live and silent auctions. Last year’s 20th-anniversary gala raised $1.3 million to support the clinic’s operations. For information on tickets and sponsorship opportunities, call (703) 979-1425, ext. 143, or see the Web site at www.gala.arlingtonfreeclinic.org.

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REGISTRATION CONTINUES FOR SENIOR OLYMPICS: Registration continues

for the Northern Virginia Senior Olympics, to be held Sept. 12-25 at venues across the region. Local residents age 50 years or older are eligible to participate. New events this year include nine-ball pool and cornhole. Registration is $12 and includes participation in multiple events. The registration deadline is Aug. 28 if submitted by regular mail, Sept. 4 if done online; there will be no on-site registration. For information and a complete schedule of events, see the Web site at www.nvso. us. Volunteers are needed to support the competition; for information, call (703) 403-5360 or see the Web site at www.volunteerfairfax.org. REGISTRATION OPEN FOR DEVELOPMENT FORUM: The Arlington Depart-

ment of Community Planning, Housing and Development will hold its first-ever Development Forum on Thursday, Sept. 10 from 8:30 to 11 a.m. in the County Board Room, 2100 Clarendon Blvd. The event will allow the community to learn development-related process changes and receive updates on major projects currently in process. The forum is free; while walk-ins are welcomed, registration is requested. For information, see the Web site at http://departments.arlingtonva.us/planning-housing-development/cphd-development-forum/.

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County officials are working to preserve and memorialize the history of George Washington Carver Cooperative Homes, even as the 44-unit community in the Arlington View neighborhood is set to be razed for redevelopment. The county government’s Historical Affairs and Landmark Review Board recently reviewed two historical markers that will be placed on the parcel: one memorializing the history of the community, the other noting the contributions of Albert Cassell, its architect. In addition, the county library system’s Center for Local History is conducting oral histories with some residents of the community, recording their stories for posterity. One history has been completed, while another is in the works, said Judith Knudsen, who heads the Center for Local History. The apartment cooperative was built in 1945 to house African-American residents of Arlington forced from their homes to make way for construction of the Pentagon and its roadways. The 3.35-acre site is bounded by South Rolfe Street, 13th Road South, South Queen Street and 13th Street South. Originally owned by the federal government, the property was first offered to the Arlington County government – which declined to buy it – before being sold to its residents for $123,000 in 1949. The loan was paid off in 1974, and the property is now assessed at $7.59 million, according to county figures. A developer plans to place 50 townhouses on the parcel while also providing a mini-park, streetscape improvements and an interior alley system. The townhouses will replace the eight two-story buildings that currently are on the parcel, with Perma-Stone on the main level and pink stucco on the second. In the early 2000s, a process was started to win National Register of Historic Places status for the parcel, which could have limited redevelopment options, but the proposal never reached completion. The property is listed as an “Important Property” in the county government’s Historic Resources Inventory, which places some requirements on the developer, but does not mandate preservation. The site is located three blocks north of Columbia Pike just west of Interstate 395, and is part of the Columbia Pike Neighborhoods Special Revitalization District.

cials said in a recent statement. “We want to better understand what aspects of our history you most value, and we want your great ideas about how the county can make its historic records more accessible to the public and future generations.” The task force was launched in January; its members are looking at how the county government currently collects and manages historical records, and is examining “best practices” among communities nationwide. The group plans to make recommendations to the county manager by the end of the year. To participate in the task force’s online survey, see the Web site at www.peakdemocracy.com/2916.

August 13, 2015

Arlington Notes

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Arlington Notes II FIRE CHIEF UPPED TO DEPUTY COUNTY MANAGER: How many deputy county

managers does it take to help run the county government? The total is headed up to four. Arlington officials announced Aug. 5 that acting County Manager Mark Schwartz has appointed Fire Chief James Schwartz – no relation – to be a deputy county manager in charge of public-safety agencies and the Department of Technology Services. James Schwartz is the third deputy county manager appointed in recent weeks, joining Gabriela Acurio and Michelle Cowan. Carol Mitten, who served as a deputy manager with Mark Schwartz under former County Manager Barbara Donnellan, also has the job title. (County officials point out that while the number of deputy county managers has doubled in recent weeks, the total combined number of deputy managers and assistant managers – seven – is unchanged.) James Schwartz joined the Arlington County Fire Department in 1984 and has been chief since 2004. “No one is more qualified than Jim Schwartz to help lead our region’s preparedness efforts,” Mark Schwartz said in a statement. “His leadership on Sept. 11, and every day since, has helped to improve the safety of our entire region.” Joseph Reshetar, currently assistant fire chief for operations, has been named acting chief, effective Sept. 8, while the county embarks on a search process.

Reshetar joined the fire department in 1985; as assistant chief for operations, he is responsible for the 300 staff positions spread over 10 fire stations. NAACP CHIEF FOCUSES ON COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT: The new head of the

Arlington branch of the NAACP plans to make community engagement and a closer working relationship with local police her top priorities. “We’ve been kind of under the radar,” NAACP president Karen Nightengale said at a recent gathering. “We want to make sure we come out and be visible – reconnect with the community.” Nightengale earlier this year succeeded Elmer Lowe Sr. as president of the civilrights organization, which traces its roots in Arlington back to 1940. In remarks to the Arlington County Democratic Committee, Nightengale said the local NAACP aims to work with public-safety agencies on a local and regional basis to discuss areas of concern. “We’re really blessed in Arlington,” she said. “We have minimal problems. But we do have problems.” The Arlington NAACP is embarking on a school-supply drive to benefit local youth, and will hold its annual Freedom Fund Banquet in October. The Arlington branch meets the third Monday of each month at 7 p.m. at Walter Reed Community Center. For information, see the Web site at https://www.facebook. com/NAACP7047.

Members of the board of directors of the Arlington Street People’s Assistance Network (A-SPAN) pose for a group shot. The organization recently received the Center for Nonprofit Advancement’s 2015 Board Leadership Award.

In the midst of the controversy over relocation of Arlington’s Fire Station #8, the county library system has compiled an online timetable of the history of the Hall’s Hill Volunteer Fire Department. It was that group of volunteers, which formed in 1918, that provided fire service to the predominantly African-American neighborhood in North Arlington (and some surrounding whites-only neighborhoods) during the era of integration in Virginia. The timetable was compiled by Peter Golkin of the library staff with the assistance of Judy and Arthur Branch, Capt. Chuck Karamric, Jimmie Taylor, Hartman Reed and the Arlington Virtual Fire Museum. It is available at the Web site at http://library.arlingtonva.us.

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The history notes that the Hall’s Hill firefighters began with a 60-gallon chemical tank, which was pulled by six men over unpaved roads. Company equipment in those early days was stored at John Langston Elementary School. The volunteer department elected its first officers and trustees in 1925; a year later, it purchased its first motor-driven engine, a 1917 Mitchell, with funds raised through door-to-door canvassing and pledges. In 1951, the original paid AfricanAmerican firefighters of what became known as Fire Station #8 began to be hired by the county government. In order, they were Alfred Clark, Julian Syphax, George McNeal, Archie Syphax, Hartman Reed, James K. Jones, Carroll Deskins, Henry Vincent, Carl Cooper, Ervin Richardson, Jimmy Terry, Wilton Hendricks, Bill Washington and Bobby Hill.

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A state agency charged with guiding public officials about Virginia’s Freedom of Information Act has issued a ruling that could impact the way governing bodies across Northern Virginia conduct business when behind closed doors. The state FOIA Advisory Council says the Prince William Board of Supervisors acted improperly when members retreated into closed session in June to talk about raising board members’ salaries. The panel issued its formal opinion Thursday, at the request of Prince William Today and InsideNova.com, which first reported the topic of the closed meeting. The opinion, signed by Maria J.K. Everett, executive director of the advisory council, said the board’s June 16 closed-session salary discussion was “devoid of personnel considerations” because the board was discussing salary increases generally and not specific employees or individual board members. Therefore, she said, it is “not a proper topic for a closed meeting under the personnel exemption” of the state’s Freedom of Information Act. The letter carries with it no potential criminal or civil sanctions, but does act as something of a public shaming for those who were engaged in the meeting. Everett cited a 1982 Virginia Attorney General’s opinion about a closed session the Fairfax County School Board held to discuss an administrative restructuring that led to the elimination of a deputy superintendent’s position. In that instance, the Fairfax board was correct to discuss the topic in private, the opinion said, because the matter affected a specific employee. But the opinion, issued by then-Attorney General Gerald Baliles, goes on to explain that more general policy discussions “devoid of personnel considerations” are not covered by the personnel exemption of the FOIA law. And that’s where Everett found what she called “an informative analogy” for the situation faced by the Prince William supervisors in June. Prince William supervisors “met to discuss salary increases generally that would not take effect until after the next election, not to discuss individual members of the board,” Everett wrote. Everett’s opinion was based on information in two Prince William Today articles that detailed objections from Supervisors Pete Candland and Jeanine Lawson to the closed-session discussion. None of the supervisors interviewed disputed that the closed session was held to discuss the salary-increase proposal. The plan, which was never brought up for a vote in public session, would have raised supervisors’ annual salaries from $43,422 to $53,795 and the chairman’s salary from $49,452 to $58,032.

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August 13, 2015

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Business Briefcase OVERALL OFFICE-VACANCY RATE SEES LITTLE CHANGE: Arlington’s overall of-

fice-vacancy rate for the second quarter of 2015 was essentially unchanged from a year before, but there were a few wide changes – up and down – in individual corridors. The overall office-vacancy rate of 20.6 percent for the April-to-June period was up slightly from 20.5 percent in 2014, according to figures from CoStar reported by Arlington Economic Development. A number of commercial corridors recorded major swings: The vacancy rate of 16.8 percent in Clarendon/Courthouse was up from 9.9 percent a year ago, while the rate of 8.7 percent in Virginia Square was down from 17 percent. Ballston saw vacancy rates rise from 15.3 percent to 18.3 percent, while Rosslyn (down 0.4 percent to 28.5 percent) and Crystal City (down 0.8 percent to 23 percent) saw relatively little movement. Across Northern Virginia, the secondquarter office-vacancy rate of 17.3 percent was up from 17.1 percent a year before, according to CoStar. AVERAGE HOTEL OCCUPANCY, ROOM RATES RISE: Arlington’s hotel industry

concluded a successful first half of the year, with both overall occupancy and average room rates higher than the same period in 2014. For the first six months of 2015, the average hotel-occupancy rate of 78.9 percent was up from 76.7 percent a year before, according to figures from Smith Travel Research, reported by Arlington Economic Development. The average room rate for the first six months of the year was $166.90, up from $156.53 a year before – an increase of 6.6 percent. NRECA INTERNS LOOK AT FEASIBILITY OF SOLAR ON HQ BUILDING: Nineteen

summer interns at the National Rural Elec-

tric Cooperative Association (NRECA) are wrapping up a project examining the feasibility of siting electricity-generating solar panels on NRECA-owned buildings in Arlington and in Lincoln, Neb. The team designed a 17.4-kWp solar array, developed financing models, identified regulatory hurdles and incentives, and designed a communications plan. “This cross-departmental collaboration among interns is a first for NRECA,” said Jo Ann Emerson, CEO of the cooperative. “Not only does this project provide more meaningful participation in the work of the association, it teaches valuable project management and coordination skills. And in return, NRECA gains insight into our next-generation workforce.” “The interns used tools and materials NRECA created for member cooperatives developing solar-energy projects,” said Jim Spiers, vice president of business and technology strategies at NRECA, whose team conceived the project. “Their experience will help us refine those tools and make them more useful to our members deploying solar projects.” The interns worked in technical, financial, regulatory and communications teams to research and outline a plan for the project. They weighed the costs and benefits of solar models and financing options that NRECA developed for its member co-ops through the U.S. Department of Energy’s SunShot Initiative. “When you go into an internship, you want to get as much out of it as you can,” said intern Kristen Laubscher. “This project gave me hands-on experience in what I’ve been researching and learning about.” NRECA technical research analyst T.J. Kirk, a former NRECA intern, served as project manager for the project. “The interns drove this project,” Kirk said. “I’ve just been sitting in the back seat watching the meetings happen and the plans get developed, all entirely by the in-

terns.” With summer drawing to a close and many interns heading back to college, their work will provide a foundation of research for deciding whether or not to green-light the solar array. Either way, it’s a win, association leaders believe. “The project is the cake, and the solar panels are the icing,” Spiers said. “If we install the panels, it’s wonderful. If we don’t, we will have learned immensely from it.” The National Rural Electric Cooperative Association represents the nation’s more than 900 private, not-for-profit, consumer-owned electric cooperatives, which provide service to 42 million people in 47 states. Its national headquarters is located in Ballston.

ing to create marketing tools aimed at the international tourism market. The county government’s tourism arm has coordinated with The Brand USA to produce three 2.5-minute Arlington tourism videos for those around the globe. Shoots took place in July at attractions and businesses across the county. The final products are expected to be completed in late August. Videos will be targeted to those living in Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, India and the United Kingdom, with secondary efforts targeted to Colombia, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Italy, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands, Russia, South Korea and Taiwan.

ARLINGTON CHAMBER ADDS NEW MEMBERS: The Arlington Chamber of

Convention and Visitors Service is partner-

Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport to Houston any given afternoon, take a deep breath – your flight could well end up significantly late. United Airlines Flight 282, which departs Reagan National at 5:43 p.m. headed for Houston Intercontinental, arrives 30 or more minutes late more than half the time, based on data from May recently reported by the Bureau of Transportation Statistics. That ranks 61st worst for on-time performance among the 80 flights nationally that were chronically late at least 50 percent of the time during the month. Fourteen times out of 26, Flight 282 arrived a half-hour or more behind schedule in May. When flights were late, the average delay was 91 minutes, according to federal figures. The flight was the only one from Reagan National or Washington Dulles International Airport to make the list for May. Nationally, the worst offender was Spirit Airlines Flight 315, which travels between Tampa and Houston. The flight was delayed 21 of 24 times during the month, or 88 percent of the time.

n Michael Emery of Arlington earned a master of science degree in international relations and Rebecca Smith of Arlington earned a bachelor of science degree during recent commencement exercises at Troy University.

ing for admission. The decision is designed to provide “an admissions alternative to students who don’t think their scores adequately reflect their academic achievement or potential,” university officials said. It will apply to students who have grade-point averages of 3.0 or higher on a 4.0 scale in high school. The move serves two broad purposes that are consistent with the mission and values of Marymount, said Francesca Reed, the university’s associate vice president for enrollment management. “It will allow for a more holistic view of a student’s academic achievement, and attract a broader pool of qualified, interested students who have a strong record of academic success,” Reed said. She added that, unlike SAT/ACT scores, grade-point averages are a significant pre-

dictor of success at Marymount. Reed said the change will have longterm benefits for the university by broadening the geographic applicant pool, and will most likely increase the number of firstgeneration-to-college enrollees, as well as minority students and students with learning disabilities. The policy change begins with the class enrolling in fall 2016. Standardized-test scores will still be required from those applying for certain programs, such as Honors, Physical Therapy, Clare Booth Luce, and Forensic and Legal Psychology Scholars. Home-schooled applicants also will be asked to submit test scores. According to the National Center for Fair & Open Testing, more than 850 bachelor-degree-granting schools no longer require all applicants to submit SAT or ACT scores, Marymount officials said.

Schools & Military n Jennifer Sklarew of Arlington has completed degree requirements for a Pd.D in public policy at George Mason University. Her dissertation was “Shock to the System: How Catastrophic Events and Institutional Relationships Impact Japanese Energy Policy-Making, Resilience and Innovation.” Sklarew is a former Fulbright-Hays Fellow. n Emma Dick of Arlington earned a juris doctor degree, with distinction, during recent commencement exercises at the University of Iowa.

n Sarah Jensen, the daughter of Steven and Laura Jensen of Arlington and a graduate of Yorktown High School, has been named to the dean’s list for the spring semester at the University of Rochester. n Hazel Andrade of Arlington has been elected to membership in the National Society of High School Scholars.

Ayse Bozkurt of Arlington earned a

Marymount University is joining a

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Commerce has announced the following new members (principal contact points in parentheses): Servpro of North Arlington (Bogdan Rati); Carlson Consulting (Carolyn Carlson); TopGolf Alexandria (Casey Eiliff); Arlington Dentistry by Design (Joseph Khalil); Courthouse Art of Dentistry (Joseph Khalil); Teal Center for Therapeutic Bodywork (Jennifer Williams); Theralution (Victor Washington); Virginia Center for Orthodontics (Crissy Markova); Jennifer Kamber, CWPS; Welter Law Firm (Eric Welter); Arthritis Foundation (Jody Haltenhof); Bishop O’Connell High School (Joe Vorbach); La Cocina Va. (Patricia Funegra); Arcland Property Co. (Noah Mehrkam); Van Metre Cos. (Mike Daugard); Pinstripes (Ben Heinking); University of Phoenix (Drew Jenkins); and Design TLC (Tara Claeys). ARLINGTON VISITORS BUREAU CREATES TOURISM VIDEOS: The Arlington

ONE LOCAL FLIGHT MAKES MOST-DELAYED RANKING: If you are headed from

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Featured Property of the Week

Storybook Cape Cod Showcases Style

Set Amid Bucolic Surroundings, Home Exudes Creativity

first dinner party, the paint is fresh and the warm-colored hardwoods add to the ambiance. Our tour of the three levels finds enchanting spaces everywhere. On the main level, highlights include the gourmet’s kitchen (with an eat-in area, plus access to the rear yard), to the pleasant family room with lovely neighborhood views. Proving the home’s versatility, there is a main-level bonus space that works well as an office, library or guest bedroom. The second level is highlighted with charming details (like cottage-style windows and glass doorknobs). The large master retreat has enough room for a king-sized bed and plenty of furniture, and is set apart from the other rooms on this level for privacy.

The lower level offers a creative recreation room – perfect for everyone from teens to seniors – as well as plentiful storage space. Elegant and bewitching, the home is ready to open a new page in its 75-year history. It’s well worthy of consideration. Articles are prepared by the Sun Gazette’s real estate advertising department on behalf of clients. For information on the home, contact the listing agent. For information on having a house reviewed, contact the Sun Gazette’s real estate advertising department at (703) 738-2520.

Facts for buyers Address: 2372 North Quincy Street, Arlington (22207). Listed at: $1,095,000 by the McEwenLunger Team, Long & Foster Real Estate (703) 608-6661. Schools: Taylor Elementary, Williamsburg Middle, Yorktown High School.

CallCarol, Carol,Jerry Jerry & Jinx - McEwen-Lunger.com & Jinx - McEwen-Lunger.com Call Carol, Jerry Jinx - McEwen-Lunger.com Family Team in&Arlington! #1#1 Family Team in Arlington!

Call

#1 Family Team in Arlington!

Looking for privacy? Don’t want neighbors towalks? take nature walks? Looking for privacy? Don’t want neighbors too close? too Likeclose? to take Like nature Want toa plant a big garden? BUT to be min? Want to plantfor big garden? . . . BUTwant ..... .need to. .be. need downtown indowntown 15 min? Looking privacy? Don’t neighbors too close? Like in to15 take nature walks? Want to plant a big garden? We’ve got the for us you! Call at 703-622-4441 property for Call at in 703-622-4441 . . We’ve . BUTgot . .the . need to property beyou! downtown 15usmin? We’ve got the property for you! Call us at 703-622-4441

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Cape Cod aficionados, stop what you’re doing and take a look at this week’s featured property. Set on a picture-perfect, private street, this pre-war (1940) home features something nearly unique among the Cape Cod genre: three bedrooms and two baths on the upper floor. It’s a rarity that combines with the elegance found throughout the home to make for an enchanting experience – convenient living in a large (nearly 3,700 square feet) property that retains a warmhearted, small-town charm while being just minutes to Key Bridge, Chain Bridge and I-66. The property currently is on the market, listed at $1,095,000 by the McEwenLunger Team of Long & Foster Real Estate. Featuring fine accoutrements and solid construction coupled with the open airiness so desirable today, the home is a winning combination of form and function. Natural sunlight is plentiful, the banquet-sized dining room awaits your

“Millennials” prefer walking over driving by a substantially wider margin than any other generation, according to a new poll conducted by the National Association of Realtors and the Transportation Research and Education Center at Portland State University. The 2015 National Community and Transportation Preference Survey found that Millennials, those aged 1834, prefer walking as a mode of transportation by 12 percentage points over driving. Millennials are also shown to prefer living in attached housing, living within walking distance of shops and restaurants, and having a short commute, and they are the most likely age group to make use of public transportation. The poll also found that Millennials show a stronger preference than other generations for expanding public transportation and providing transportation alternatives to driving, such as biking and walking, while also increasing the availability of trains and buses. Millennials likewise favor developing communities where people do not need to drive long distances to work or shop. “Realtors don’t only sell homes, they sell neighborhoods and communities,” said NAR president Chris Polychron, executive broker with 1st Choice Realty in Hot Springs, Ark. “While there is no such thing as a onesize-fits-all community, more and more homebuyers are expressing interest in living in mixed-use, transit-accessible communities.” As a whole, the survey found that Americans prefer walkable communities more so than they have in the past. Forty-eight percent of respondents reported that they would prefer to live in communities containing houses with small yards but within easy walking distance of the community’s amenities, as opposed to living in communities with houses that have large yards but they have to drive to all amenities. And while 60 percent of adults surveyed live in detached, single-family homes, 25 percent of those respondents said they would rather live in an attached home and have greater walkability. When choosing a new home, respondents indicated that they would like choices when it comes to their community’s transportation options. Eighty-five percent of survey participants said that sidewalks are a positive factor when buying a home, and 79 percent place importance on being within easy walking distance of places.

August 13, 2015

Real Estate

Millennials Favor Walkability More Than Other Generations

13

Sun Gazette


August 13, 2015

®

4600 Lee Highway Arlington, VA• 22207 I 703-522-0500 I email: arlington.va@longandfoster.com I www.arlingtonvahomes.com • TITLE • INSURANCE RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE

Arlington North — New Listing

$1,425,000

Ashton Heights

John Plank,

$989,900

Associate Broker

(703) 528-5646

John.plank@LNF.com

#1 in McLean

23% Long & Foster

N SUM EN4 P P O 1-

#1 Sales agent for 20+ years

14%

6%

CHRISTINE RICH www.BestArlingtonHomes.com CHRISTINE.RICH@longandfoster.com

703-362-7764

Superior Service, Outstanding Results!

6%

5%

KW - Mc Lean / 22101

McEnearney Associates

The one you have been waiting for. Lovingly updated 5 BR 3 BA bungalow on pristine private lot. Breathtaking period detail, beautifully updated kitchen and bath, pristine wood floors, expansive family room with BR and full bath on lower level, extremely flexible space. Blocks to METRO, parks, grocery, schools, recreation unlimited amenities.

Washington Fine Properties

No one has more expertise selling homes than Long & Foster®.

Max Value Close to Everything!

Backyard Patio

Carol, Jerry & Jinx 703-622-4441 See more at McEwen-Lunger.com

Special Cape Cod with 3 bedrooms and 2 renovated baths, up! The main floor has two more bedrooms (home offices?) with another 1½ bathrooms. Open kitchen with views of dramatic water feature, big patio and private backyard. The Lower level has a big Rec Room for future “man cave” with separate entrance, another bathroom and storage galore!! Five minutes to Key or Chain Bridges; bike path at front door; walk to 4 parks or Taylor School!

2534 Military Rd., $899,000

The #1 Family Team in Arlington DC/Woodridge $665,000 5 Bed/4 Bath/Off-street Parking

MLS#: DC8715641 * Renovated house w/parking & garage door * Open floor plan w/main level bedroom & full bath * Kitchen w/SS appliances, range hood, beverage fridge, granite * Master bed & full bath upstairs plus 2 more bedrooms, full bath, & front load W/D * LL bedroom, rec room, full bath, wet bar, beverage fridge, 2nd W/D hook-up * Wood floors * Front porch, rear deck * EZ to new Ivy City retail & MOM’s * More! * Please call for a private showing.

W G NE TIN S LI

Close to Bike Path & Lyon Village Shopping Center

Call a local leader in residential real estate sales to ensure your home sells quickly at a favorable price.

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Serving Northern VA Home Buyers & Sellers since 1986

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COMING SOON COMING SOON-Colonial Village Colonial Village COMING SOON-Colonial Village $294,000— $294,000—One Bedroom / One One Bedroom / OneUpdated Bath $294,000—One Bedroom / One— Bath—Completely Completely Updated Bath—Completely Updated

Buying/Selling/Leasing in Northern Call-Text Me 24/7 703-967-9844 Buying/Selling/Leasing in Virginia? Northern Virginia? Call-Text Me 24/7 703-967-9844 Buying/Selling/Leasing in Northern Virginia? Call-Text Me 24/7 703-967-9844

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2015 Washingtonian Magazine Top Real Estate Agent.

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2360 N. Quincy Street call LIBBY for service that sells!!! 703-284-9337

Here are jusat a few remarks from our satisfied clients!

If you are thinking of selling or buying real estate, Please call us, for complete satisfaction. Thank you.

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NT

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FO

Your Life is Changing — I Can Help!® $659,000

Unpack and enjoy!! The owners of wonderful colonial have meticulously maintained and expanded this home! Beautiful 3 bedroom 1 full and 2- 1/2 bath Colonial in this wonderful Barcroft neighborhood. Den/family side room addition with larger 3rd bedroom above, (not the typical 3rd small bedroom colonial). The half bath in Master could easily be made a full master bath. Wonderful side porch / mudroom opens up to this amazing flat backyard with great shed. French doors from the dining room open up to a nice deck making it easy to entertain. A finished lower level w/nice 1/2 bath. Off Street parking and a quiet not thru street. Great proximity to Columbia Pike, and Rt 50. From George Mason and Rt 50, South on George Mason, right on 6th Street South, first left onto S. Stafford. Home on right.

LD

SO

Voted Arlington’s Favorite Realtors

Bob & Tricia

Clark 703-855-1655

STACEY ROMM 703-298-8197 (C) STACEY.ROMM @Longandfoster.com

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Call me today for a FREE, NO OBLIGATION consultation. I can tell you what your best options are. I can sell your property free of hassle for you.

Solange.Ize@Gmail.com

$1,400/mo.

RE

610 South Stafford St. Arlington, VA 22204

TIRED OF REPAIRING YOUR OLD HOUSE?

SOLANGE IZE 703-861-7706

Call Solange Ize at 703-861-7706 or send me an email at Solange.ize@gmail.com

See ALL of our listings at www.longandfoster.com

S

! old

PATRICK EVANS 703-919-4338 Patrick.Evans @LongandFoster.com

You missed this one because,

you aren’t one of our clients! 3 Bedrooms and 2 Baths up, Family Room off Kitchen with slider to a custom built flagstone patio, PLUS, a Sun Room on the other side overlooking professional landscaping in back. Down there’s a great Rec Room with another full Bath, and a large storage room and laundry room. Walk to Taylor School, Carol, Jerry and 5 min to DC. Would you have been & Jinx interested in this property? If you had been 703-622-4441 one of our clients, you would have known about this private sale! If you’re interested See more at McEwen-Lunger.com in finding, not just looking, contact us!

The #1 Family Team in Arlington

www.insidenova.com

Sun Gazette

AMANDA AMANDA AMANDA CARTER CARTER CARTER

ARLINGTON/Arlington Oaks MLS#: AR8709971 * RARE FIND! Top floor sunny corner unit with private balcony and fireplace in Arlington Oaks * Metro bus at the corner & convenient to Ballston Metro * Approx. 1 block to Army National Guard Readiness Center & Foreign Service Institute * No pets * No smoking * Tenant pays for parking sticker * $56k income to qualify * Please call for a private showing.

McLean Offices 703-873-3500 • 6862 Elm Street | 703-790-1990 • 1311A Dolley Madison Blvd.

year or early next year, now is the time to get ready. Call me soon to talk about your housing needs.

sherryschaffer.com sherry.schaffer@longandfoster.com

1 Bed/1 Bath/Fireplace

N SU-4 EN6 1 P O 8/1

“A successful closing. Not to mention you found a qualified and motivated buyer in an impressively short time period and got us to closing quickly.”

dream home. Great location – minutes

SHERRY SCHAFFER 703-402-9113

www.jimmcgarity.com jim.mcgarity@longandfoster.com

1-4PM! 4 bedrooms, 2 2full with Information based onlarge dataaddition supplied by MRIS and its member Association(s) of REALTORS, who are not responsible for its accuracy. Does not reflect all activity in the marketplace. January 1, 2011 – December 31, 2011.If you own a house that needs work and you don’t want to do 4Source: bedrooms, full baths, with large 1-4PM! addition offbaths, the back. Exterior and off the back. Exterior and interior Information contained in this freshly report is deemed reliable but not guaranteed, should be independently verified, and does not constitute an opinion of MRIS or Long & Foster Real Estate, Inc. ©2012 All rights reserved. any repairs to prepare it for the market, call me. addition off the back. Exterior and freshly painted, brand kitchen new painted, interior brand new windows, updated The last slow days of August will give way to the busier days of Fall I have the perfect buyer for your home. with granite counters and stainless steel interior freshly painted, brand new windows, updated kitchen with granite in just a few weeks. The housing market hummed through the early Follow us on: appliances, hardwood floors on the main and windows, updated with granite I have buyers looking for a fixer-upper or a tear-down. counters andkitchen stainless steel appliances, upper level. Light-filled large open addition and mid-summer months with properties continuing to come to the Your house will be sold strictly in ‘AS IS’ condition. and stainless appliances, hardwood floorssteel on the main for andeasy upper offcounters the back with sliding glass doors market at a steady pace. We expect to see the regular uptick in sales You don’t have to worry about inspections nor repairs. access to charming deck. 3 levels—Walkout hardwood on thelarge mainopen and upper level.floors Light-filled addition off in September and October. If you are thinking of buying or selling this basement. Move in Ready! level. Light-filled large openglass addition offfor easy the back with sliding doors the back with sliding glass doors for easy access to charming deck. 3 levels— accessWalkout to charming deck. 3 Move levels— basement. in Ready! Walkout basement. Move in Ready!

• Drastically reduced! $649,000 • House is a tear down or requires substantial renovation. • 12,000 sq. ft. lot by Glen Carlyn Park — 95 acres of forested area • Nature trails, dog park, playground & picnic space • House totally “as is” • Over $100,000 below appraisal • Part of lot is in RPA • MLS# AR8711741 see @sherryschaffer.com

T EN

“It was a pleasure and a success having you help us market and sell the Arlington condo... You told it to me like it was, gave me good advice on pricing and preparing for marketing the property, and kept your word...”

Beautiful, serene 20,409 SF deep, flat

Nottingham-Williamsburg-Yorktown. Plat available.

Beautiful 3 level home with stairs to potential fourth level on one of the prettiest streets in Arlington. Generous sized rooms for entertaining plus lower level party room. Fireplace in Living Room. Updated Kitchen. 3/4 Bedrooms – 3 ½ Baths. Hardwood floors throughout. Garage.

www.libbyross.com Libby.Ross@longandfoster.com

could be rehab or tear down for your

JOHN MENTIS 703-284-9457 202-549-0081 YourVALife is Changing — I Can$624,900 Help!® 4209www.JohnMentis.com S. 8th Street, Arlington, 22204 4209 S. 8th Street, Arlington, VA 22204 $624,900 4209 S. Expanded 8th Street,Cape Arlington, VA 22204 $624,900 OPEN SUNDAY Cod OPEN SUNDAY 1-4PM! Expanded Cape Cod 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths,Cod with large OPEN SUNDAY Expanded Cape

JIM McGARITY 703-522-0500 Office 703-283-7509 Cell

N. ARLINGTON

Picture This

“I SELL MORE BECAUSE I DO MORE”

Attention Builders!

511 North Jackson Street

www.johnplank.net Weichert Realtors

R FO

$2,600

Available August 16th after 1 pm

Associate Broker, DC, MD and VA BSBA Real Estate Investment & Construction

3816 37th Street, North, Arlington, VA 22207

Arlington Forest

Colonial with Large addition and Huge kitchen. 3 BR, 3 FULL BA, Fireplace in LR, Gas logs in kitchen/family room, tiered deck with gas grill, Pond, Garden…a lovely yard to entertain in. Main level bathroom, Jenn-Air Gas downdraft cook top, Microwave oven, Dishwasher, washer and dryer in basement, additional storage room under the kitchen 15 x 22 with walkout basement.

The Choice is Obvious.

Great Value. This lovely home in a soughtafter North Arlington neighborhood has it all! Built in 1999, the home features an open floor plan, spacious rooms, gourmet chef’s kitchen with adjoining family room, main level study, formal dining room, casual breakfast room, 5 bedrooms, 5½ baths, a large walk-out recreation room, lower level bedroom and full bath, and a two-car garage. Enjoy the professionally landscaped lot, parkland views, expansive deck, convenient location and great schools.

208 N. Galveston Street

15 August 13, 2015

LONG & FOSTER ARLINGTON LONG & FOSTER

14

Sun Gazette


August 13, 2015

16

Scenes from the 2015 Arlington County Fair

Nathan Tigney waves to his mom as the kids’ ATV ride passes her.

Youngsters hold on as the ever-popular Caterpillar roller coaster takes them around and around at the Arlington County Fair.

Mia Garcia has a ball on the Jeep ride.

Michael Milone enjoyed the carousel so much, he went back for a second ride.

Ellie Kerbs-Glyer gets acquainted with a mellow dairy cow named Shakira, one of the more rural apsects of Arlington’s 2015 County Fair.

The Racing Piglets are a perennial favorite, and this year brought racing goats, as well.

www.insidenova.com

PUBLISHER’S NOTICE

Sun Gazette

We are pledged to the letter and spirit of Virginia’s policy for achieving equal housing opportunity throughout the Commonwealth. We encourage and support advertising and marketing programs in which there are no barriers to obtaining housing because of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, elderliness, familial status or handicap. All real estate advertised herein is subject to Virginia’s fair housing law which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, elderliness, familial status or handicap or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” This newspaper will not knowingly accept advertising for real estate that violates the fair housing law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. For more information or to file a housing complaint call the Virginia Fair Housing Office at (804) 367-9753. Email: fairhousing@dpor.virginia.gov. Web site: www.fairhousing.vipnet.org

Homeless Continued from Page 1 residents of an adjoining condominium who had opposed the project. When open, the facility will provide 50 beds, plus space for overflow, and will offer an array of services. It will supplant the winter shelter that had been run for years by A-SPAN several blocks away. The new facility “will be the first of its kind in the D.C. area, and is more than just a shelter – it will allow us to offer all our services under one roof, year-round, like meals, medical services, shelter and job training and, most importantly, will help us to move someone from homelessness to

Jaliya Pleasant gives her pony a pat.

a home quickly,” Sibert said. A January 2015 count of homeless across the region, conducted by the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments (COG), found 239 in Arlington – both those living on the streets and those in shelters. The number was down 18 percent from a year before, the largest percentage decline among the nine jurisdictions taking part in the count. Since 2011, the COG count of homeless has seen a 48-percent decline in Arlington, compared to a 2.2-percent decrease regionwide. Arlington’s steep decline is “great news,” County Board Vice Chairman Walter Tejada said when the figures were released in the spring. Tejada, who serves as an honorary cochairman of the county’s 10-Year Plan to

PHOTOS BY DEB KOLT

End Homelessness, is among those who believe additional resources put into addressing the homeless issue are paying off. “You can see the results,” he said. Others, however, have wondered whether adding a full-time services center might not draw the homeless to Arlington from other jurisdictions. And the lengthy delay in getting the facility open has provided fodder for those critical of the county government’s spending. The public will have the chance to judge the facility for itself; Department of Human Services officials say an open house will be held, likely in late September. Upper levels of the seven-story, 1960sera building will be used by other agencies of the county government.

Your voice in the community!


17

JC Advantage Sales Group with Re/Max Distinctive Real Estate

Mark Middendorf

Conor Sullivan was born in Washington, D.C. and raised Long and Foster Realtors in Arlington, VA where he currently resides with his wife and two young sons. Since he began practicing Real Estate in 2009, Conor has closed over 200 transactions totaling well over 100 JC Advantage Sales Group with million dollars in sales.Re/Max Conor Distinctive Real Estate SPECIALIZATION New Sales and BuyerSales RepreandConstruction, the Luxury JC Property Advantage sentation Group pride themselvesConor on unSullivan was born in Washington, D.C. and raised 1307 Dolley Madison Blvd, Mclean VA 22101 DESIGNATIONS, AFFILIATIONS AND AWARDS Arlington, VA where he currently resides with his wife paralleled client services and(c)responsiveness. innovative in marketRealtor, ABR,Using CDPE 703.442.0007 (o) 703.268.6380 Top Producer 2015, NVAR Multi-Million conor@jcadvantage.com two young sons. Since he began practicing Real Estate ing techniques, along with traditionallyWashingtonian proven strategies, theyand continDollar Producer2013 to present www.jcadvantage.com in 2009, over 200 transactions totaling ue to deliver for their sellers. As an Accredited Buyer’s Representative,Conor has closed With 26 years of full time real estate experience, I have well over 100 million dollars in sales. Conor and the JC Conor uses his experience and local knowledge to give his buyers an become one of the leaders in the real estate industry. I Advantage Sales Group pride themselves on unparalleled edge in our ul- tra competitive market. The guiding principle and ethihave built my reputation with, trust, loyalty and knowledge. client services and responsiveness. Using innovative marcal promise behind Conor and the JC Advantage’s business model is to keting techniques, along with traditionally proven strateintegral always place the clients best interests above all. gies, they continue toThere deliverare for many their sellers. As parts an Ac-of every real estate transacConor Sullivan was born in Washington, D.C. and raised in Arlington, VA where he currently resides with his wife and two young sons. Since he began practicing Real Estate in 2009, Conor has closed over 200 transactions totaling well over 100 million dollars in sales. Conor and the JC Advantage Sales Group pride themselves on unparalleled client services and responsiveness. Using innovative marketing techniques, along with traditionally proven strategies, they continue to deliver for their sellers. As an Accredited Buyer’s Representative, Conor uses his experience and local knowledge to give his buyers an edge in our ultra competitive market. The guiding principle and ethical promise behind Conor and the JC Advantage’s business model is to always place the clients best interests above all.

703-928-3915

August 13, 2015

CONOR SULLIVAN

CONOR SULLIVAN

tion. Everything from credited Buyer’s Representative, Conor uses his knowledge experience of the market conditions, pricing, financing options, strong and local knowledge to give his buyers an edge in our ul- negotiating skills, experSPECIALIZATION tra competitive market. The guiding principle and ethical tise in professional marketing and outstanding customer New Construction, Luxury Property Sales and Buyer Representation promise behind Conor and the JC Advantage’s business service. model is to always place the clients best interests above all.

DESIGNATIONS, AFFILIATIONS AND AWARDS My goals are to make your real estate transaction a smooth Realtor, ABR, CDPE Washingtonian Top Producer 2015, NVARSPECIALIZATION Multiprocess and to make you feel like you are my only client. New Construction, Luxury Property Sales and Buyer RepreMillion Dollar Producer 2013 to present sentation

Mark Middendorf

1307 Dolley Madison Blvd, Mclean 22101 AFFILIATIONS AND AWARDS 1307 Dolley Madison Blvd, Mclean VA 22101VA DESIGNATIONS, Realtor, ABR, CDPE 703.442.0007 (o) 703.268.6380 (c) 703.442.0007 (o) 703.268.6380 (c) Washingtonian Top Producer 2015, NVAR Multi-Million conor@jcadvantage.com conor@jcadvantage.com Mark.Middendorf@LNF.com Dollar Producer2013 to present www.jcadvantage.com www.jcadvantage.com

BILLY BUCK IS INTERVIEWING FOR LISTINGS • CALL 703-855-BUCK 000

50,

3 $2,

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9

,99

99

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COUNTRY CLUB HILLS ELEVATOR • 2007 custom colonial • 6 BR, 5 BA, 2 ½ BA • Approx. 7,200 Sq. Ft. • 4 gas fire places • 5 piece moldings • Coffered ceilings • Marble baths • 3 car garage • Movie theater room • Custom gourmet kitchen • Backs to parkland • High-end appliances HIGH VIEW PARK 2008 CUSTOM BUILT

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LYON VILLAGE NEW CONSTRUCTION • Walk to Clarendon & Courthouse • Orange line Metro • 5 BR, 4.5 BA • Approx. 5,000 sq. ft. • 4 levels w/top floor office & terrace • Covered front porch & 3 rear decks • High-end finishes & HE components • Viking & Sub Zero appliance package LYON VILLAGE 2 CAR GARAGE • 4 BR, 3 Full BA, +1/2 BA • Fresh paint & carpet • Steps to Metro • Updated kitchen • Granite counters • SS appliances • Wood burning fire place • Finished basement • Off-street parking • 2 car garage w/ finished office above

00

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2241 N. VERMONT ST. LEE HEIGHTS 3 BR, 2 FBA 3 LEVEL BRICK CAPE COD

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2035 FRANKLIN CLUSTER 5BR, 3FBA, 1HBA ATTACHED 2 CAR GARAGE FULLY UPDATED

Buck & Associates, Inc. Realtors • Billy Buck 703-528-2288 x21 • www.BuckRealtors.com • 703-855-2825

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• 3 car garage with finished studio above • 4 finished levels with au-pair suite • 6 BRs, 5 FBA, 1 HBA • 2 wood burn FP • Wet bar • SS appliances • Winter garden/sun room • Mudroom • Walk out basement • 2 laundry rooms

000

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August 13, 2015

18

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n Summer n Summer

baseball roundup. swim & dive action. For more sports, visit:

www.insidenova.com/sports/Arlington

A Repeat Dive Title for D. Hills

Teeing Off

Trendy Types of Awards Changing the Tradition How about T-shirts instead of individual trophies? Makes some sense.

Dave Facinoli

Arlington Forest Finishes in Third A Staff Report

girls; T.J. Hutchinson, Quinn Cooper Wood ingirls senior boys. Above: Hunter SimTop: Jennifer Laredo of Arlington Forest dives in the senior compeition. n and Nick Shiker in junior boys; Kathleen In Division 1, Overlee finished PHOTOS BY DEBwith KOLT mons of Donaldson Runs performs in the senior boys event at divisionals. Love and Evie Marceca in intermediate a 1-4 record. At the divisional meet for girls; Peter Fleckenstein in intermediate Overlee, Michayla Eisenberg won freshboys; and Zoe Lunn, Jack Witherell and man girls with a 85.3 total and Annika Conor Fitzpatrick in senior boys. Creedon won intermediate girls (135.6). Arlington Forest had four divers place Second was Laine Stoker in intermesecond at divisionals. Ava Simalowicz did diate girls. Third were Matthew Kress in so in junior girls, Justin Clark in interme- junior boys, Lara Sunter in intermediate diate boys, Cleo Potter in senior girls and girls and Jacob Kreider in senior boys. Noah Kennedy in senior boys. Other top swimmers for Overlee were Other top divers for Arlington For- Abbey Shumsky, Isabella Eisenberg and est this summer were Charlotte Weir, Micki Birnett in freshman girls; Peter Caleigh Sleeth and Addison Hans in Kress, Kyle Bennett and Logan Gundfreshman girls; David Alves in fresh- lach in freshman boys; Sophia Bailey in man boys; Zi Rattlelman, Atti Rattle- junior girls; Owen Fang in junior boys; man, Ella Wyman, Zoe Cachion, Shea Hannah Karlin, Emily Hay and Isabella Messman and Kaitlin McGwier in junior Lee in senior girls; and Adam Schifsky girls; Henry Alves in junior boys; Anna- and Thomas Hassett in senior boys. beth Stokley, Christine Siegal and Eleanor Heil in intermediate girls; Sam Alves and Patrick Kerley in intermediate boys; Jennifer Laredo in senior girls; and Neil Murray, Zephren Collinson and Gaelyn

That’s what a lot of summertime baseball leagues have been distributing to players in recent years, after a team wins a Babe Ruth Tournament or some other competition. What a good idea. T-shirts, with the name of the specific championship printed on the shirts (either front or back, maybe both), can be proudly worn by team members and coaches for a long time. They probably mean more, and have much more significance, than a cold medal or plastic trophy. Plus, people love to wear T-shirts with inscriptions. They often generate conversations and can be worn as a reason to be proud and show off. Other summer leagues are beginning to follow suit, as swimming and girls softball squads have received shirts instead of trophies. A small individual trophy is placed on a shelf or stuck away hidden inside a box, attic or closet, then forgotten. They can’t be worn anywhere, and why would anyone carry around a trophy to show others? Ever watch the reaction of a team member when given one of those small individual team trophies? They take a quick peak, then quickly set it aside, shove it inside a pocket or hand it to a parent or family member. There is no real joy or interest. In contrast, watch what happens when T-shirts are distributed to a group of kids or teenagers. The excitement is instantaneous as smiles light their faces. Then they almost all immediately begin wearing the shirts, reading the inscriptions, posing and deciding how well they fit [or not]. Team photos are often taken in those shirts, with coaches wearing them as well. T-shirts have become more popular. Individual trophies tend to all look the same. Yet every T-shirt can have a different look, with the many color options, types of logos and the way the words are arranged. Could it be that high school leagues may begin awarding championship Tshirts, replacing traditional trophies? That seems to be the trend.

Find daily updates on the Web at www.insidenova.com. Stay in touch through Twitter (@sungazettespts) and Facebook (sungazettenews).

www.insidenova.com

For the second straight summer, the Dominion Hills diving team of the Northern Virginia Swimming League finished the season as a division champion. This summer, Dominion Hills tied for first in Division 6 with Fairfax with a DIVING 4-1 record. In head-to-head competition, Dominion Hills nipped Fairfax, 33-31. In 2014, Dominion Hills won Division 8 with a 4-0 mark, continuing a successful run. The year before, the team tied for second with a 3-2 record in Division 8. This summer, Dominion Hills’ other victories were over Sleepy Hollow Recreation, 39-31, Hunt Valley, 36-35, and Strafford, 43-27. Its loss was against Camelot. There were many top swimmers for Dominion Hills, including Ellie Joyce, Ellie Potts, Riley Shelton, Irina Bakke, Clara McAllister and Kate McCreary in the freshman girls age division; Luke DeBenigno, Max Jolley and Ryan Johanek in freshman boys; Lexi Dangel, Grace Dennis, Rachel Mulvaney and Katie Dietrichs in junior girls; Luke Dangel and Austin Bannach in junior boys; Elizabeth Sicoli in intermediate girls; Max Merger in intermediate boys; Flora Hepp in senior girls; and Stephen Ray and Matt Ellis in senior boys. At the Division 6 divisional championships, Luke Dangel won his age division with a 97.45 point total. Second were Joyce, Luke DiBenigno and Lexi Dangel. Jolley was third. Dominion Hills had the highest finish in a division of the four Arlington diving teams in the NVSL. n In Division 2, Arlington Forest finished third with a 3-1-1 record and Donaldson Run was 0-5. At the divisional meet, hosted by Arlington Forest, Donaldson Run had three individual winners in Emma Web in freshman girls with a 71.6 point total, Ellie Simmons in junior girls (109.8) and Hunter Simmons in senior boys (213.65). Other top divers for Donaldson Run this summer were Elizabeth Shiker and Rachel Conley in freshman girls; Hank Holley and Kenny Judson in freshman boys; Sophia Papademetriou in junior

August 13, 2015

Sports

See More on the Web

19

Sun Gazette


August 13, 2015

20

Overlee Hosts Its Annual Summertime Synchronized Show

Overlee Pool in North Arlington held its annual synchronized swim show last month at the pool with many in attendance to watch. The show was not a competitive event; rather, it was a performance for the community. From top left: The Overlee team poses on deck while holding flowers following its performance during the show. Swimmer Lula Tankersley has her hair and makeup done by Maripili O’Connell. Courtney Gistaro, an assistant coach, gives a solo performance. Kayla Anderson, Isabel Mondshine and Olivia Buell pose with colored roses in their teeth on the Overlee pool deck. Three swimmers perform an under-water routine with their legs out of the water. A group of seven swimmers pose as they surface from under the water. PHOTOS BY CHARLES BUELL

College Roundup DICKT: Washington-Lee High School graduate Ryan Dickt batted .289 as a junior catcher for the University of Virginia at Wise Division II baseball team during the spring. Dickt played in 37 games. He had 26 hits, including five home runs and three doubles. Dickt drove in 19 runs and scored as many. He stole three bases in four attempts. RYAN

www.insidenova.com

NICK MORABITO: Bishop O’Connell

Sun Gazette

High School graduate Nick Morabito finished his senior baseball season at Division II Lincoln Memorial University in Tennessee as an all-conference honorable-mention player. Morabito batted .370 in 42 games, with seven home runs and 24 RBI. In addition, the 6-foot, 195-pound utility player had 40 hits, scored 21 runs and had seven doubles. On the mound, Morabito had a 3-2 record with a 5.17 earned run average in 311/3 innings. He struck out 20 batters. For his career, Morabito hit .309 with 89 RBI with 12 home runs and 25 doubles for the Railsplitters. He had 133 hits and scored 67 runs.

OCONNELL

SOFTBALL

GRADUATES:

A number of Bishop O’Connell High School alumnae softball enjoyed productive college softball seasons during the spring. Among them: n University of Missouri women’s softball pitcher Tori Finucane was a secondteam Southeastern Conference selection for her performance during the spring. The sophomore right-hander compiled a 21-8 record with a 2.02 earned run average. In 155 innings, Finucane struck out 140. She had eight complete games and two saves in 41 appearances. n Mary Burk was a sophomore for the Georgia Gwinnett College NAIA team during the spring, batting .302 in 51 games. Burk had 49 hits, including 10 doubles and six triples, and drove in 39 runs and scored 28. Burk helped the Grizzlies win the national championship of the Association of Independent Institutions. n Sophie Giaquinto finished her career this spring for Cornell University by batting .258 in 25 games. She hit two home runs and drove in 14 runs. For her career, Giaquinto batted .257, with six home runs, nine doubles and 45

RBI. She had 58 hits and scored 23 runs. n Hayley Metcalf batted .344 in 24 games during her freshman season for the University of Pennsylvania. Metcalf had 11 hits, scored 12 runs and was a perfect 5 for 5 on stolen bases. n Jillian Ferraro played in 20 games with seven hits during her sophomore season for the University of North Carolina. Ferraro had two doubles and she homered once and drove in six runs. MARSHALL: Yorktown High School graduate Jake Marshall played in five games during the spring for the Potomac State College baseball team in West Virginia. The freshman outfielder drove in two runs and had five at-bats. JAKE

ARLINGTON ULTIMATE FRISBEE PLAYERS MAKE COLLEGE CONTRIBUTION:

The Youth Ultimate League of Arlington was well represented at the recent U.S. Ultimate College Division I Championships, as a number of players from the Arlington program played in the competition. Players were Michelle DeRieux, Alli-

son Hahn and Alika Johnston from the University of Virginia; Xavier Maxstadt and Grayson Sanner from the University of North Carolina-Wilmington; Jay Boyle from the University of Pittsburgh; Maddie Priess from Carleton College; and Will Xu from the University of Maryland. Making the all-freshmen Ultimate team from the Arlington program were Sanner and Hahn from the Atlantic Region; Fred Wolf from the Ohio Valley; and Chance Cochran from the Southeast. Those making all-region were Maxstadt, Cody Johnston, Zachary Norrbom, Claudia Dimick, Lillian Goldstein, Alika Johnston, JoJo Emerson and Sanner. NATHAN HUGHES: Arlington resident

Nathan Hughes was one of eight members of the Worcester Polytechnic Institute men’s swimming and diving team to earn College Swimming Coaches Association of America Scholar All-Academic status. Hughes was a middle-distance swimmer for Worcester and a graduate of Jefferson High School.


SEXUAL ASSAULT: n On Aug. 1 at 11:26 p.m., a 25-yearold woman was grabbed from behind and pushed to the ground while she was walking in the 4300 block of Pershing Drive. The suspect touched the victim inappropriately, and the victim bit one of his hands, police said. The suspect is described as an Hispanic male, 5’ to 5’3�, with black hair and a mustache.

ABDUCTION: n On July 31 at 8:45 p.m., a woman was running on the W&OD Regional Trail near the 300 block of South Harrison Street when a man approached her from behind and threw her to the ground. The victim screamed, and the suspect fled. The suspect is described as an Hispanic male, in his 20s, 5’6�, 140 pounds. n On Aug. 2 between 2:45 a.m. and 4:03 a.m., a woman described by police as intoxicated entered an Uber ride-share vehicle in the 900 block of South Randolph Street. The vehicle apparently was not the one the woman had selected, but the driver consented to give her a ride, police said. The driver then allegedly assaulted the woman when she was unable to pay the fare. The woman fled to the home of a friend. ROBBERY: n On July 28 at 4:30 p.m., an individual concealed several fragrance bottles in a

backpack and attempted to leave a store in the 1100 block of South Hayes Street, police said. When confronted by two employees, the suspect produced what was believed to be pepper spray and threatened to use it. He then fled on a bicycle. The suspect is a black male, 5’10�. n On Aug. 1 at 2 a.m., a 21-year-old man sustained injuries when he was allegedly robbed by a group of five or six individuals in the 1400 block of North Fillmore Street. Cash was taken. The suspects are described as black males, in their early 20s. n On Aug. 4 at 11:45 a.m., a woman was riding on a bike trail in the 2600 block of South Four Mile Run Drive when an individual attempted to take her bag. The effort was unsuccessful, and the suspect fled. The suspect is described as an Hispanic male, in his 40s, 5’6�, 200 pounds. BURGLARY: n On July 27 at 4:20 a.m., a home in the 3800 block of 14th Street South was burglarized. Cash, vehicle keys and a laptop computer were taken. The suspects are described as black males, about 30 years old. n Sometime between July 31 at 6 p.m. and Aug. 3 at 11:30 a.m., two locked rooms in a parking garage in the 1200 block of North Highland Street were burglarized. Tools and the security-camera system were taken. ATTEMPTED BURGLARY:

n Sometime between July 30 at 9:30 p.m. and July 31 at 10 a.m., there was an attempt to break into a jewelry shop in the 1100 block of South Hayes Street. Entry was not gained, but a glass display case was broken.

POLICE SEEK HELP IDENTIFYING RAPE SUSPECT: n The Arlington County Police Department’s Special Victims Unit is asking for the public’s assistance in identifying and locating a suspect involved in the attempted rape and abduction of a woman on July 25. According to police, the suspect forced the victim into the bushes in the 1900 block of 15th Street North at about 1:20 a.m. The suspect attempted to grab at the 25 year-old female victim’s pants before she was able to fight him off. The suspect then fled the scene on foot. The victim was able to flag down a passing motorist, who called 911. The suspect is described as a white Hispanic male, 5’6� to 5’8� tall, weighing 150175 pounds with an athletic build. Anyone with information about the case is asked to contact Detective Robert Icolari by phone at (703) 228-4240 or by e-mail at ricolari@arlingtonva.us. Information can be reported anonymously to Crime Solvers at (866) 411-8477. MORE THAN HALF OF POLICE COMPLETE CRISIS TRAINING: n More than half of Arlington’s police officers have completed training and

legals

Classifieds

I, Jack J Goehring, ,,, &HUWLÀHG $UERULVW KDYH DEVROXWHO\ no connection or association with "Jack-the-Ripper &HUWLÀHG $UERULVWV LLC� Jack Inquiries: Goehring, Forever *UHHQ &HUWLÀHG $UERULVW ,QF 7/16, 7/23, 7/30, 8/6, 8/13 & 8/20/15

RFP #05FY16 for Construction Manager At Risk for Stratford Middle School Addition and Renovation, due prior to 2:00 PM, August 26, 2015. Details available at www. apsva.us/Page/2782 or 703-2286126 and on the Virginia Business Opportunities website www.eva.virginia.gov Ad #8506

8/13/15

JRW Blow Dry Mosaic LLC, trading as CBDB Mosaic, 2985 District Ave., Apt. 165, Fairfax, VA 22031-1547. The above establishment is applying to the VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL (ABC) for a Day Spa license to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages.

Grand Cru Premium Wines LLC, trading as Grand Cru Wine Bar and Bistro, 4301 Wilson Blvd, Arlington, Arlington County, Virginia 22203-1867. The above establishment is applying to the VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL (ABC) for a Wine & Beer On and Off Premises; Mixed Beverages On Premises license to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages.

Jennifer Weiss, Sole Member

Richard Troy Thorpe, Owner

NOTE: Objections to the issuance of this license must be submitted to ABC no later than 30 days from the publishing date of the first of two required newspaper legal notices. Objections should be registered at www.abc.virginia.gov or 800-552-3200. 8/13 & 8/20/15

Note: Objections to the issuance of this license must be submitted to ABC no later than 30 days from the publishing date of the first of two required newspaper legal notices. Objections should be registered at www.abc.virginia.gov or 800-552-3200 8/13 & 8/21/15

Twisted Vines Bistro, LLC, trading as Twisted Vines Bistro & Bottleshop, 2803 Columbia Pike, Arlington, VA 22204. The above establishment is applying to the VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL (ABC) for a Wine and Beer on & Off Premises, Mixed Beverages Restaurant license to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages. Anthony Richard Wagner Managing Member NOTE: Objections to the issuance of this license must be submitted to ABC no later than 30 days from the publishing date of the first of two required newspaper legal notices. Objections should be registered at www.abc.virginia.gov or 800-552-3200. Ad #9228

8/13 & 8/20/15

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received certification as part of the Crisis Intervention Team, or CIT. According to police, CIT training helps law enforcement responding to an incident work safely and communicate effectively with people exhibiting signs of mental illness. “The goal is to get those who might otherwise be arrested – or worse – the help they need, rather than a trip to jail,� police officials said in a statement. Fourteen Arlington officers earned CIT qualification this spring, bringing the total number of officers trained to 101 – totaling 54 percent of police operations personnel. More than 90 percent of dispatchers in the County’s Emergency Communications Center are now CIT-certified, officials said. The week-long training, launched in Arlington in 2008 and funded by the state government, is one of 33 such programs in Virginia. CIT-trained officers are available to respond around the clock, and can be recognized by a special pin on uniforms. Cpl. Jonathan Stanley, one of the first in Arlington to complete the training, was named the county’s 2015 CIT Officer of the Year in April. He credits the sessions with giving him a fresh approach to people in crisis, coming off more as a neighbor than an authority figure. “Showing compassion goes a long way,� Stanley said. Other local agencies trained by the county program include the Sheriff’s Office, CIA security, Airports Authority and Pentagon police, and county magistrates.

August 13, 2015

Police Beat

21

Sun Gazette


August 13, 2015

22

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Carpet Stretching 24 / 7 emergenCy water damage Upholstery & rug Cleaning 35 years exp Including the white House

703-978-2270

www.acclaimedrestorations.com

North’s Custom Masonry

20%

WITH OFF TH AD! IS

• Patios • Walkways • Fire Pits • Fireplaces • Paver Driveways

Masonry Walls • Columns Stone Work on your house Honest & Dependable Service Satisfaction Guaranteed • Lic./Ins. •

540-533-8092

cleaning

12 Years Experience Residential & Commercial

2QFH ‡ :HHNO\ %L :HHNO\ ‡ 0RQWKO\

“LA CASA� HOUSE CLEANING

Call Patricia 571-315-1350 PERSONALIZED SERVICE

patriciaarancibia11@hotmail.com

*UHDW 5HIHUHQFHV )UHH (VWLPDWHV

Sparkling House Cleaning Houses • Apartments • Move-In/Out Weekly • Bi-weekly • Monthly Residential & Commerical • Lic, Bonded & Ins Great References • Free Estimates Call Maria for rates & info

703-517-2422

www.insidenova.com

5 Rooms $137

untertop

brick & block

Sun Gazette


August 13, 2015

24

homeimprovement cLeaning IAL!

SPEC

OFF 25%First

hauLing

fLooring

Perfect Maid

Cleaning Service

ning!

Clea

Quality service at fair prices with great references and excellent work. Satisfaction Guaranteed! Free Estimates

Chevy Chase Floor Waxing Service Cleaning • Polishing • Buffing • Waxing

All Types of floors using a quality, durable paste wax. No liquid waxes that build up then, require expensive sanding to remove. All work done by hand using exclusive residential equipment. 30 years experience. Knowledgeable workmanship by working owners assures quality.

703-356-4459

Celeste’s Cleaning

10 3rd% OFF Vis it

Single Family Homes Townhomes • Condos

Top to Bottom! • Move-Out/Move-In Great Prices & Warranty on All Jobs!

Great References • Licensed, Bonded & Insured

703-732-8831

Bill’s

Handyman Service

Carpentry • Masonry Painting • Plumbing • Roofing Foundation Repair • Waterproofing Tile • Landscaping & Grading • Downed Tree & Branch Removal • Ext Wood Repair Reasonable Rates

Satisfaction Guarantee!

CRJ ConCRete Driveways • siDewalks Patios • slabs

703-944-5181

www.heroshomes.com

edwin@heroshomes.com

Handyman S& S Services

Insured & Licensed • crjconcrete@aol.com

Interior • Exterior Painting •Drywall • Plumbing • Electrical •Tree Trimming & Services • Mulching •Landscaping • Land Clearing & much more!

contracting/ construction

540-683-0470 • Licensed & Insured

571-221-2785

Professional custom build design

Kitchens • Baths • Finished Basements • Decks • Patios 703-964-7397

info@cimaconstruction.net www.cimaconstruction.net

All Major Credit Cards Accepted

My HandyMan Plumbing • Carpentry • Electrical Drywall • Painting • Roofing Power Washing

703-200-3122

Reliable, Licensed & Insured No Job Too Small!

contracting/ construction Brick Flagstone Concrete Pavers Stamped Concrete

DESIGN

FREE ESTIMATES

:DWHUSURRÀQJ Drainage Control Lot Clearing Grading Residential/ Commerical

Chimneys Retaining Walls Pool Decks Fireplace Footing/Slabs

Proudly Serving Fairfax County since 1988

6PDOO /DUJH 5HSDLUV 2ZQHU 6XSHUYLVHG %DNHUZRRGVEXLOG#DRO FRP

Baker & Woods Construction 703-350-9133 www.insidenova.com

eLectricaL

Sun Gazette

D.E. Armour Company Licensed and Insured Russ Armour Master Electrician 8380 Greensboro Dr. Unit 409 McLean, VA 221202 Phone: 703-981-9877 Fax: 703-448-3778 russarmour@msn.com

Immediate Response Honest, Reliable,& Punctual Basements Very Low Prices Furniture appliances

703-403-7700

constr debris

NORTH'S HOME IMPROVEMENT

&

SERVICES

Quality Work Guaranteed

George Paz Painting & Home Improvement Handy Service Painting • Carpentry Drywall • General Work 20 Years Experience 703-926-8721 Cell georgepaz87@hotmail.com

Alfredo's Construction Company, Inc. • Concrete Driveways • Patio's • Sidewalks • Stone • Brick

•-Remodels Remodels - Finishing basements • Finishing Basements • Additions •

VA: 703-698-0060 MD: 301-316-1603

FREE ESTIMATES

www.alfredosconstructioncompany.com

Kitchen & Bath Remodels • Flooring & Tile • Painting • Deck, Porch & Patio Additions

Fully licensed and Insured Fully licensed and insured.

Honest and dependable Honest and Dependable

540-533-8092

, LLC

Custom Audio/Visual Room • Complete Kitchen & Bath Remodeling • Finish Carpentry • Custom Decks General Painting • General Handyman Services Francisco Rojo Licensed & Insured 571-213-0850 571-235-8304 bolimex101@gmail.com www.bolimexconstruction.com References available. Call for Free Estimate.

Honey Do List getting Longer? Call the talented professionals in the Sun Gazette Classifieds for help!

Paint and Stain LLC Since 1997 Home Improvement • Licensed Contractor • Interior and Exterior Painting • Custom Painting • Drywall • Carpentry • Bathroom Remodeling • Carpet & Hardwood Installation • Deck Cleaning/Construction/Repair/Sealing • Granite Installation • Plumbing • Decks

Excellent References • Free Estimates Licensed, Insured, and Bonded Serving DC, VA, & MD • Angies’ List Member

Cell phone: 571 243-9417 www.paintandstains.com

Kozan ConstruCiton Custom Remodeling & Additions

Kitchen, Bath & Basement Tile Installation Over 20 Years Experience Call for a Free Estimate:

703.731.1056

Website: Kozan.co Email: kozanconstruction@gmail.com

home improvement

CONCRETE & MASONRY Driveways Patios Walkways Stoops/Porches Steps

Junk

home improvement

o Interior & Exterior Painting o Carpentry o Decks o Basement Refinishing o Stain o Fences o Power Wash o Kitchens o Bathrooms o Ceramic Tile o Electrical o Plumbing o Gardens o And Much More! Free Estimates • Since 1992 • Lic & Ins

Phone: 703-437-3822 • Cell: 703-795-5621

AAA+ Hauling

General Carpentry Repairs • Drywall Tile • Door & Window Installations Int & Ext Painting • Concrete & Stonework • Baths Basements • Additions • Total Remodeling Floor Heating Installations Insured/Licensed • Free Estimates/Excellent References

703-989-9946 • 703-242-5107 davidparedes26@yahoo.com www.homeimprovementnova.com

D&B Hauling And Moving

References • Licensed & Insured

IIIII FIVE STAR HANDYMAN

Free Estimates

Light & Heavy Hauling Trash Removal • Yard Clean-Up Raking & Mowing!

Garages

703-863-2150

• Driveways • exposeD aggregate • patios • Footings • slabs • stampeD ConCrete • siDewalks

We do it all!

Call Bob 703-338-0734 or 703-250-3486

handyman

concrete

30 Years experieince

No Job Too Small, Too Large!

Licensed • Bonded • Insured No Pick-up Labor used Family Owned & Operated

571-235-4295

home improvement

10% OFF Limit $300

VA Class A License #2705019491

handyman

Moore Handyman No Job Too Small

Free Estimates All Types of Handyman Services

202-359-6490

Residential & Commercial Remodeling

CONTRACTORS, INC.

703.444.1226

Build it the right way with R&J!

Residential & Commercial Remodeling Since 1979 Custom Additions • Basements 2nd Story Additions • Kitchens & Baths Garages & Carports Sunrooms • Replacement Windows Licensed • Bonded •Insured Free Estimates • References

703.444.1226

www.northern-virginia-remodeling.com


homeimprovement

25

plumbing

poolS

KB HOME IMPROVEMENT For all your Home Improvement needs!

Interior

• Painting • Plumbing • Rotton Wood Repair Window Sealing & Trim Repair • Drywall Repairs • Remodeling • Cabniet Refinishing • Waterproofing of French Drain Sub Pumps • Garbage Disposals • All Masonry • Brick Retaining Wall Repairs

Baths, Kitchens, Additions and all Interior Modifications Exterior Decks, Patios, Siding, and Roofing

Setting a Standard in Home renovationS & new ConStruCtion SolutionS

703-327-1100

703-777-7586

•

703-508-9853 • 703-207-9771 25 Years Experience • Licensed & Insured

WWW.HOMEELEMENT.COM

moving & Storage

Jake Martin

Master Plumber/Owner

August 13, 2015

home improvement

home improvement

Licensed & Insured • Family Owned & Operated

Service Plumbing • Water Services • Gas Repairs/ Logs • Sewage/Sump Pumps Repairs • Well Pump Water Heaters •Water Softening & Conditioning

Syd’s Plumbing & Repairs No Job Too Small! Sewer and Water Repair and Replacement Bathroom Remodeling & All Your Plumbing Needs

Transform Your ouTdoor space WiTh innovaTive design We offer state of the art pool & outdoor living space design for any budget. • Patios, Decks, Grills & More • Decades of Experience • Complete Pool & Fountain Services

540-316-6111 • 844-9AQUATIC

preSSure waShing

Moore Pressure Washing

Decks & Houses Free Estimates

703-627-3574 painting

202-359-6490

roofing

HudsOn ROOFing COmpany Over 30 Years Experience We Take Pride in Our Craftsmanship

10% OFF

Roof Repair Valid With Coupon

ROOFing • siding $ WindOWs • gutteRs 175 OFF Any Complete Roof Repairs • New Roofs • Tear-Offs New Roof Shingle Roofs • Flat Roofs • Cedar Shakes Storm Damage • Roof Inspections • Insurance Claims Over 12,000 No Job Too Small • Owner Supervised Satisfied Valid W/Coupon

BAKER & WOODS PAINTING QUALITY PAINTING WORKMANSHIP

‡ ‡ ‡ ‡

Interior Painting Drywall Staining/Sealing Reasonable Pricing

‡ ‡ ‡ ‡

Exterior Painting Carpentry Power Washing Good Prep Quality

Proudly Serving Fairfax County since 1988

703-350-9133

Carlos Painting, inC.

t abou er Askr Wints! l ou ecia Sp •Interior & Exterior •Drywall •Textured Ceiling •Plaster Repair •Deck Sealing •Water Damage •Pressure Washing •Wall Paper Removal •Crown/Chair Molding •Rotton Wood •Window Seals •References •Trim Repair •Guaranteed

Special Price for Empty Houses!

703-256-1214 • 571-233-7667 carlosfpainting@yahoo.com

We now accept credit cards

VA Class A License #2705019491

Customers

VA Class A Lic #2705-028844A

2)) Exterior Painting Valid w/coupon

WE DO

ROOFS AND JUST

Interior & Exterior Painting for 23 20 Years

ROOFS

703-476-0834

Very Reasonable Prices

• FLAT ROOFS • SHINGLES • REPAIRS

Licensed & Insured • Free Estimates

0EZTTFZ 1BJOUJOH --$

Your Local Experts for..

20 Year Warranty On All New Roofs No Deposits • Pay Us When You’re Satisfied With Our Work

-JDFOTFE *OTVSFE

703-597-6163 • AngelOchoa1103@yahoo.com

Interior/Exterior • Drywall • Wood Replacement Power Washing • Deck Staining • Sidewalks Concrete Patios • Driveways

Guaranteed Work • Lic. & Ins. • Ref. • Free Estimates

odysseypaintingllc@gmail.com • Tel: 703-586-7136

painting

703-615-8727 hudsonroofingco@aol.com

Martin Thibault

OCHOA’s Painting Inc. 10+ Years Exp. • Drywall • Power Washing • Int. & Ext. Painting • Crown Moulding • Finished Basements • Reground • Install Carpet/Flooring • Sanding Flooring • Bathroom Remodeling • Deteriorated Wood Repl.

Free Estimates

2YHU 6DWLVĂ€HG Customers

1R -RE WR 6PDOO RU /DUJH ‡ 2ZQHU 6XSHUYLVHG ‡ 5HVLGHQWLDO &RPPHUFLDO Bakerwoodsbuild@aol.com

2YHU <HDUV ([SHULHQFH Licensed & Insured

FREE ESTIMATES

paving

703-254-6599

www.rooffixed.com windowS Chesapeake Potomac Window Cleaning Co.

Home Painting & Decorating

RN PAVING

Residential & Commercial • Interior & Exterior • Flooring • Power Washing • Carpentry • Concrete • Drywall • Deck Repair • Roofing/Siding • Kitchen Cabinetry • Fan Repair • Wallpaper Removal • Cleaning & Home Organizing

Driveways • Parking Lots • Seal Coating Line Striping • Curb Painting

Family owned & operated since 1987

Power Washing - No Damage, Low Pressure,

703-490-5365 571-620-9724

See us on the web! www.atlanticroofing.org

703-356-4459 Licensed • Bonded • Insured Knowledgeable workmanship by working owners assures quality.

Call George Anytime! 703.901.6603

RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL Free Estimates • Licensed

703-685-3635

Window Cleaning - Inside & Outside, By Hand, Residental Specialist, Ask us about our window sash rope, broken glass & screen repair services Soft Brushing by Hand, Removes Dirt

No Hidden Fees• No Low Price Gimmicks No Windows That Don’t Stay Open Afterwards

30 years experience • Family Owned/Operated • No Pick-Up Labor

www.insidenova.com

ATLANTIC ROOFING

Sun Gazette


26

BACK TO CLASS

August 13, 2015

© StatePoint Media ACROSS 1. Bewildered or confounded 6. Cul de ____ 9. Rum cake 13. Church bell sounds 14. Anger 15. Give a green light 16. Dogma 17. ___ Aviv 18. Cancer sign? 19. *Higher education result 21. *L in LMC 23. “Yakety ____” 24. W.’s adviser 25. Tube in old TV 28. *Classroom pests 30. Catching sight of something 35. “Jack and the Beanstalk” instrument 37. ____ Scotia 39. Ownership document 40. Sixth month of civil year 41. *Classroom ball 43. It’s a long story 44. Fat or wax 46. Kindred 47. Resembling wings 48. Destiny 50. Volcano in Sicily 52. Japanese capital 53. *You work with it in shop class 55. *Where most of American History occurred 57. *Difference between public and private school 61. *“____ and (#34 Down)” 64. Saw logs 65. Like arctic air

67. *Digital text 69. *He’s in the class play 70. *Driver’s Ed classroom 71. Kitchen appliance 72. “The ____ Not Taken” 73. Lamb’s mother 74. Iron Mike

DOWN 1. Pertinent 2. Got ready to drive 3. Healthy 4. Lament for the dead 5. Stellar 6. Place or location 7. “We ___ the World” 8. *Usually in orchestra but not

marching band 9. Foggy view? 10. *____ mater 11. Uncouth one 12. Wrong 15. As good as it can be 20. Augmenting 22. “____ Got the World on a String” 24. Canceled 25. *Marker’s predecessor 26. *r in a math formula, pl. 27. Golf bunkers 29. Kind of soda pop 31. Leaning Tower city 32. *The “boot” in Geography class 33. Aquarium scum 34. *”(#61 Across) and ____” 36. “____ and proper” 38. Not much 42. Boredom 45. More dewy 49. Also 51. Declare with confidence 54. Chilled 56. Cornered 57. Nicholas II of Russia, e.g. 58. To a remarkable degree, British 59. I, to a Greek 60. Walked on 61. Greek muse’s strings 62. A long, long time 63. Not happening 66. Crow sound 68. Boy toy

55+ News TRAVELERS HEAD TO LUCKETTS FAIR:

Arlington County 55+ Travel hosts a trip to the Lucketts Fair on Sunday, Aug. 16. The cost is $12. For information, call (703) 228-4748.

The difference between normal forgetfulness and memory impairment will be explored on Thursday, Aug. 20 at 10 a.m. at Walter Reed Senior Center. For information, call (703) 228-0955.

MANAGING SODIUM INTAKE IS TOPIC OF DISCUSSION: Tools to manage so-

SUMMER SALADS TAKE CENTER STAGE IN PRESENTATION: Creative

dium intake is the topic of discussion on Tuesday, Aug. 18 at 11 a.m. at LangstonBrown Senior Center. For information, call (703) 228-6300. TRAVELERS HEAD TO EXHIBITION ON IMPRESSIONISM: Arlington County

55+ Travel hosts a trip to view the “Discovering the Impressionists” exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art on Tuesday, Aug. 18. The cost is $23. For information, call (703) 228-4748. DEMONSTRATION FOCUSES ON VEIN HEALTH: A demonstration on keep-

www.insidenova.com

ing leg veins healthy will be offered on Wednesday, Aug. 19 at 11 a.m. at Walter Reed Senior Center. For information, call (703) 228-0955.

Sun Gazette

FORUM LOOKS AT FUTURE OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING: Affordable housing in

Arlington will be the topic of discussion on Wednesday, Aug. 19 at 6:30 p.m. at Arlington Mill Senior Center. For information, call (703) 228-7369. WORKSHOP LOOKS AT DIFFERENCE BETWEEN TYPES OF FORGETTING:

summer salads will be the topic of discussion on Thursday, Aug. 20 at 1 p.m. at Walter Reed Senior Center. For information, call (703) 228-5722. TRAVELERS TREK TO LURAY CAVERNS:

Arlington County 55+ Travel hosts a trip to Luray Caverns and the Car and Car-

riage Caravan Museum on Friday, Aug. 21. The cost is $28. For information, call (703) 228-4748. COMEDY CLUBBERS TO MEET: The

comedy club at Aurora Hills Senior Center will meet on Friday, Aug. 21 at 10:30 a.m. For information, call (703) 228-5722. LEE WALKERS HEAD TO MARYLAND:

The Lee Walkers of Lee Senior Center will walk along the Little Falls Trail in Maryland on Friday, Aug. 21 at 10 a.m. The cost is $4 for transportation. For information, call (703) 228-0555.

Dreaming of a New Job but Don’t Want the World to Know? Lucky for me, www.jobs.insidenova.com lets me explore anonymously so I can get matched to my dream job without anyone finding out.

Try Real-Time Job MatchingTM and get hired fast on

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Arlington history Items taken from the archives of the Northern Virginia Sun. For information on local history, see the Web site at www. arlingtonhistoricalsociety.org. August 14, 1944: n A state commission is studying whether to expand Virginia’s public education system from 11 grades to 12. August 12, 1949: n The Arlington County ambulance now has a two-way radio. n Arlington Hospital is reporting a shortage of emergency-room nurses. n School Board members are considering starting high school and junior high at 9 a.m. in the coming year. The current start time is 9:30 a.m. n Lyon Village residents are seeking the donation of a piano for their new community house. n Because of the summer heat, the Sun had to pack its press in ice to get the last two issues out. August 14, 1963: n Democrats who control the General Assembly are expected to retain the prohibition on holding a presidential primary next year. n A crowd of 35,000 is expected to watch the Redskins take on the Chicago Bears tonight, in a benefit game for the Shriners. n This headline sums up a letter-writer’s view on the current scene: “It’s All JFK’s Fault.” August 15, 1970: n Arlington’s delegation to the General Assembly has sent a letter to Gov. Holton, opposing forced busing of local students. n The Virginia Federation of Republican Women plans to revoke the charter of the Arlington Republican Women’s Club, unless the club renounces its plan to endorse U.S. Sen. Harry Byrd Jr., an independent, for re-election. n The Arlington Chamber of Commerce will host a breakfast for the county’s new teachers. n Gov. Holton’s youth advisory panel has proposed legalizing marijuana. n State parks are seeing record crowds. August 14-15, 1984: n The FAA says it will crack down on pilots who deviate from the Potomac River approach to National Airport, but some local residents are dubious. n To comply with a U.S. Supreme Court ruling, the Arlington Jaycee Women will merge with the Arlington Jaycees.

CROSSWORD SOLUTION


27 August 13, 2015

I N T E R N A T I O N A L

www.insidenova.com

FI N E P RO P E RTI E S

Sun Gazette


August 13, 2015

28

Arlington S.

Bedroom Envy!

JUST LISTED

DAVE LLOYD & ASSOCIATES

$669,900

Exceptionally spacious All brick Colonial located in the heat of Arlington’s Douglas Park/ Nauck neighborhood. Enjoy 3,600 base square of space, 7 bedrooms plus guest suite, 4 full baths, attractive hardwoods, oversized windows, fireplace, kitchen with breakfast bar opening to dining room, multiple separate entrances for flexible living arrangements and a daylight finished lower level. All conveniently located just minutes to Shirlington Village, dog park, bike rail, the vibrant Columbia Pike corridor and easy access to 395 for handy commuting.

N SU M N E P OP 1-4

Arlington S.

703-593-3204

q

WWW.DAVELLOYD.NET

2643 Walter Reed Drive S. #D

q

DAVIDLLOYD@REALTOR.COM

Rent vs. Own

WEICHERT®

Rent a little high? You might be surprised at what you can afford to own. For more info about home ownership programs designed for the budget-minded, stop by and visit with us.

Luxury CoLLeCtion

$315,000

Charming and delightful, updated and remodeled 2 BR/1 BA condo in the convenient enclave of The Arlington. Living room with cozy fireplace, updated granite kitchen with adjoining dining area, hardwood floors, in unit washer/dryer, and balcony for outdoor enjoyment. Convenient location just steps to community pool and tennis and around the corner from the W&OD bike trail, parks, and the vibrant Village at Shirlington offering a myriad of shopping, dining, and entertainment options. Location also offers easy access to Old Town, DC and major transportation arteries.

JUST LISTED

3519 19th Street S.

q

Lovely Courtyard Setting!

N SU M N E P OP 1-4

Matthew (Matt) Mills

Stop throwing your money away!

Senior Lender/Gold Services Manager Weichert Financial • NMLS: 984926

C: 202-494-7433

mmills@weichertfinancial.com

3637 HARRISON ST N

$1,729,000

3316 GEORGE MASON DR N

Subject to qualified buyers. Mortgage produce and rates subject to change. Weichert Financial Services Company NMLS #2731 (www.nmlsconsumeraccess.com). Mortgage Access Corp. d/b/a Weichert Financial Services, Executive Offices, 225 Littleton Rd, Morris Plains NJ 07950.

$1,399,900

Please contact us to visit these properties

5131 11TH RD S

$2,300 1121 ARLINGTON BLVD #203

$149,900 812 ARLINGTON MILL DR #7-201 $205,000 491 ARMISTEAD ST N #302

$145,000 2852 CHERRY ST

5014 COLUMBIA PIKE #1

$1,295 3701 CONN AVE NW #920

$255,000 2852 CHERRY ST

$389,900 12633 HOLKEIN DR

3600 GLEBE RD #526W

$349,900 3400 MILITARY RD

$699,900 2099 POWELLS LANDING CIR

$2,120 3600 GLEBE RD #328W

$547,000 909 RANDOLPH ST S

Get your Real Estate license now!

www.insidenova.com

Our next evening class starts Monday, August 17th @ 6 p.m.

Sun Gazette

(meets Monday and Wednesday eves).

Enroll today!

$1,675 4804 CHESTERFIELD RD S

$699,900

$579,500 2181 JAMIESON AVE #1402

$439,900

$700,000 3000 SPOUT RUN PKWY #D401 $317,500 1719 TROY ST #8-399

$359,000

Industry-leading training, both in class and online

Great Market; Great Support For more information contact

Denyse “Nia” Bagley 703-525-0812 nbagley@weichertrealtors.net

Equal Opportunity Employer. We will not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, a disability or familial status.

Weichert® Arlington

4701 Old Dominion Drive • 703-527-3300


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