October 1 – 7, 2020
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 • V OL. X XX NO. 33
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F.C. ‘Supermajority’ Law May Stall Downtown Plan All 5 Council Members Need To Back Parking Sale
BY NICHOLAS F. BENTON
FALLS CHURCH NEWS-PRESS
The need for an elusive “supermajority” of the Falls Church City Council members support for the sale of Cityowned land has thrown a huge monkey wrench into the approval process for the Broad and Washington project in the City’s downtown area. The F.C. City’s attorney Carol McKoskrie presented her formal opinion to a Council subcommittee Wednesday, saying that existing state law stipulates that when it comes to the sale of public property, an authorizing vote by the governing body of any jurisdiction requires not a simple majority vote, but a “supermajority” of 75 percent of the seats on the governing body.
For the F.C. City Council that would require five votes, which is the total number of Council members now deliberating on the issue of a land sale to the developers of the Whole Foods proposal. One Council member, Ross Litkenhous, has recused himself on grounds of a potential conflict of interest, and a second one, Daniel X. Sze, died in July. This law puts the Insight Property Group in a bind, with its current plan to advance a three-plus acre project at the intersection of Broad and Washington Streets in the center of the Little City that would feature a 45,200 square foot Whole Foods Market. That’s because the plan at
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A SOLID TURNOUT was witnessed for Insight Property Group’s walking tour of the proposed Broad and Washington project site. (P����: N���-P����)
Affordable Housing Dominates F.C. City’s Special Election Season BY NICHOLAS F. BENTON
FALLS CHURCH NEWS-PRESS
Who would have thought that the need for expanding affordable housing would be the Number 1 issue in this fall’s Falls Church City Council special election? The Little City, long known for its deference to well-to-do single family homes, is now having its
political conversation dominated by concerns for lower income families and the rapid evaporation of housing options for them. The volume of that issue began being raised on the F.C. City Council, led by Council member Letty Hardi, in the last year. But with the special election this fall to fill the seat vacated by the death of Dan Sze, the
three vying candidates have all been focused on the need for more affordable housing. As of 4 p.m. Wednesday, still over a month out from the Nov. 3 national election day, a whopping 24 percent of registered voters in the City of Falls Church have already cast their votes by showing up at City Hall to vote in person, or by mailing in their ballots.
Out of concern for the Covid19 pandemic and out of concern for the importance of the presidential election between Donald Trump and Joe Biden, plus new laws out of Richmond this year that allow for “no excuse” absentee voting for the first time account for the heavy advance turnout, a trend true not only throughout Virginia, but also all across the
U.S. Here, the ballots, including those already cast, include the local race to fill a vacant seat on the Falls Church City Council. Three candidates qualified for the ballot last month to fill a vacancy for a single year caused by the death of Councilman Dan Sze in July. Debbie Hiscott, Joshua Sharif Shokoor and Simone Pass Tucker
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While survey respondents will likely be checking a box “Yes” or “No” on whether they support renaming George Mason High and Thomas Jefferson Elementary, their answers will also reveal how they truly feel about the men responsible for founding the United States. See Story, page 4
W�OD T���� R������� T���� O� N�� S����������� D�� T� V���� The 1.5 mile section of the Washington & Old Dominion Railroad Trail (W&OD) that runs through the City of Falls Church is well on its way to adding dedicated cycling and pedestrian lanes by next summer, and is seen as all the more crucial given how the novel coronavirus is transmitted. See Story, page 19
G���� E����� T���������: W��� H������� �� P��� O��? It’s been over 20 years since the concept of “peak oil” was put forth in Scientific American. When the idea that the world’s oil supply might soon hit a peak was first developed, the world consumed about 63 million barrels of oil per day. See Column, page 23
INDEX
Editorial............................................... 6 Letters........................................... 6,19 Comment ................................ 7,15,16 News & Notes............................. 10,11 Crime Report .................................... 16 Calendar ........................................... 18 Business News ................................. 19 Classified Ads ................................... 20 Comics, Sudoku & Crossword ......... 21 Critter Corner.................................... 22