January 10 – 16, 2019
Fa lls Chur c h, V i r g i ni a • ww w. fc np. c om • Fr ee
Fou n d e d 1991 • Vol. XXVIII No. 47
Falls Church • Tysons Corner • Merrifield • McLean • North Arlington • Bailey’s Crossroads
Inside This Week Metro Mulls West F.C. Station Coordination
Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority Finance and Budget Committee members are slated to consider approving a solicitation to developers for commercial development at the West Falls Church Metro station site. See News Briefs, page 9
Mustang Girls Break Losing Skid, Crush Rapp
Proposed School Budget Would Allow Funding With No Tax Rate Increase
Superintendent Plan Retains Small Class Sizes, System Goals
by Nicholas F. Benton
Falls Church News-Press
George Mason High School’s girls basketball team snapped a four-game losing streak with an impressive 53-22 victory over Rappahannock County High School last Friday.
Congressional funding for a wall on the southwest border of the U.S. that most experts insist is unnecessary and a fabulous waste of money. At the press conference yesterday, Beyer called Trump’s wall idea “a fifth century wall that can be overcome by a ladder,” and he assailed Trump for not even mentioning federal employees in his nine-minute address to the nation
Falls Church City Schools Superintendent Peter Noonan made official to the School Board Tuesday night that his recommendation for the coming fiscal year budget is a restrained two percent growth, which if adopted by the board and later this spring by the Falls Church City Council would be the smallest growth increase for the City’s schools in years. His proposal for a $52,137,504 budget would keep the schools within parameters of expected revenue growth for the Falls Church city government overall in the coming fiscal year, and if adopted would mean that a new overall Cityschools budget could involve no real estate tax increase for citizens this coming year. Still, Noonan's recommended budget provides a “step,” according to the schools’ salary formula, an average of a 2.95 percent increase, and a one percent cost of living adjustment (COLA) for school teachers and other employees, and increases the average educational cost per student to $19,152 for the 2,680 students in the system due to, Noonan said, the policy commitment to maintain small class sizes. The School Board will begin its own deliberations on the budget with a work session next Tuesday night, aiming toward its formal budget adoption by Feb. 19, following a series of work sessions and public hearings. The board will be led this year by Erin Gill,
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See Sports, page 16
Dehghani-Tafti Begins Primary Run vs. Stamos Parisa Dehghani-Tafti, a Democratic candidate for Commonwealth’s Attorney covering Arlington County and the City of Falls Church, held her campaign kickoff event Monday. See News Briefs, page 9
From Caps to Showbiz, F.C.'s Johnson Does it All For lifelong Falls Church resident Wes Johnson, being one of “those guys” in showbiz allowed him to provide for his family, fulfill his soul’s yearnings and ride shotgun on the Capitals’ Stanley Cup run. See page 14
F.C. SCHOOL SUPERINTENDENT PETER NOONAN (left) presented his recommended budget for the coming fiscal year to the F.C. School Board Tuesday night. (Photo: News-Press)
Beyer Joins Colleagues on Hill To Denounce Fed Shutdown by Nicholas F. Benton
Falls Church News-Press
Index
Editorial................ 6 Letters..............6, 8 News & Notes.10–11 Comment...... 12–13 Business News.. 15 Sports................ 16
Calendar...... 18–19 Classified Ads.... 20 Comics, Sudoku & Crossword......... 21 Crime Report..... 22 Critter Corner..... 22
U.S. Rep. Donald S. Beyer Jr., who represents the 8th District of Virginia that includes the City of Falls Church, joined colleagues from other D.C.-area districts at a press conference on Capitol Hill yesterday to denounce the ongoing federal government shutdown for the damage it’s doing to 800,000 federal employees, including many in this region, who by this
Friday will suffer the loss of a full paycheck. He noted that thousands of government contract employees are also being affected. Beyer, a Falls Church businessman, is the sponsor of a bill to ensure full pay of all impacted employees retroactively, and was among the strongest critics of the move by President Donald Trump to impose the shutdown, now in its 19th day, in a desperate move to win almost $6 billion in