Fa lls Chur c h, V i r g i ni a • ww w. fc np. c om • Fr ee
January 4 - 10, 2024 Fou n d e d 1991 • V ol. XXXIII No. 47
The City of Falls Church’s Independent, Locally-Owned Newspaper of Record, Serving N. Virginia
F.C. Council Set Monday To Elect a New Mayor
RINGING IN 2024, F.C. STYLE
After a Decade of Tarter, Certain to Be a Woman by Nicholas F. Benton
Falls Church News-Press
The newly constituted Falls Church City Council will commence its business this coming Monday night with the election of a new mayor. With David Tarter now off the Council, choosing not to seek re-election in November to end an unprecedented and accomplished 10-year stint as mayor, Monday’s vote will be for someone new for the first time since 2013. Sources have told the NewsPress that only one thing is almost certain at this point, which is that the new mayor will be a woman. That is because as a result of last November’s election and the official swearing in of the newlyelected ones last month, fully six of the seven seats on the Council will be held by women. With the three women elected last November – current vice mayor Letty Hardi being re-elected to a third four-year term and newcomers Erin Flynn and Justine Underhill being elected for the first time – the Council now consists of those three plus Marybeth Connelly, Caroline Lian and Debbie Shantz-Hiscott. The lone member upholding the cause for the male species is veteran David Snyder, who has been on the Council since 1994. A City Council composed of six out of seven women! That is unprecedented in the City’s 75 year history, and such a lopsided majority for women is highly uncommon for any senior governing body of any jurisdiction in the entire U.S., it may safely be said. It is not lost on many
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AT MIDNIGHT SUNDAY, the Big Star droped along W. Broad St., ushering in 2024 while over 1,000 Little City residents enjoyed Watch Night festivities, including live entertainment on the main stage, amusement rides, and more. (Photo: Gary Mester)
Little City’s Many 2023 Accomplishments Cited
by Nicholas F. Benton
Falls Church News-Press
The picture of a proverbial “million and one” accomplishments is contained in the City of Falls Church’s 16-page 2023 Year in Review report issued last month and highlighted in a full page ad in the News-Press last week. It is centered on the current year-long celebration of the City’s 75th anniversary of being incorporated in 1948 as an independent city in Virginia’s nationally-unique jurisdictional system. There are only 41 of what are
known as “independent cities” in the U.S., and 38 of them are in Virginia. Such jurisdictions, as in Falls Church’s case, set their own tax rate and run their own school districts, and basically run their own show. As Falls Church’s 2023 Year in Review report shows, as an independent city, Falls Church has been doing a bang-up job in its 2.2 square miles for its roughly 15,000 citizens. Of the many accomplishments included in the report, ones highlighted in the NewsPress ad included a 89 percent
quality of life rating, meaning that 89 percent of those polled found the overall quality of life in Falls Church to be a major feature of its appeal, while $400,000 was saved in banking fees due to smart planning and investment policies, including AAA bond ratings. One hundred percent of uniformed police officers, sheriff deputies and dispatchers have been trained in crisis intervention, while the speed limit has been lowered to 20 miles per hour on most streets in the city and more than 80 city employ-
ees have been trained in live language and interpretation services to provide for a diverse population base. (A telling supplement to the report was the results of the report released last week by the Smart Assets financial advisory firm showing that Falls Church ranks first among all Virginia jurisdictions in income growth of its citizens in the last 10 years, led by a $360,152 growth in median home value “raw growth,” a number far out-
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