Falls Church News-Press Oct 23

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ogies, the emphasis is going to have to be on something other than defense,” he said. Between 2002 and 2006, government defense contracts grew at a 10 percent annual rate in Northern Virginia, and although that growth rate slowed to three percent in the last two years, McClain said, it is still the primary driver of the regional economy. He said that there is no indication from either major presidential candidate yet about their “outsourcing philosophy,” not-

This Monday, the Falls Church City Council is expected to approve a preliminary “memorandum of understanding” that will lead to the location of a new BJ’s Wholesale Club warehouse store in the City, construction of which could begin by next summer. The project involves an innovative deal, including a tax revenue-sharing agreement with the new owners of the 8.4-acre site on Wilson Boulevard, until recently a Noland Oil property adjacent the small Wilson Shopping Center. The prospective deal, tentatively struck last Friday, is being hailed as a bonanza that could add up to $1 million in annual tax revenue from an 87,800square foot store, and is the result of a dogged effort by City of Falls Church officials to find a “highest and best use” for the light industrial-zoned location. Led by Rick Goff in the City’s Economic Development Office, the City jumped when it learned the property, the largest remaining single non-residential lot in the City’s 2.2 square miles, had been acquired by the JBG Rosenfeld Retail Company last February. City officials became particularly alarmed when they learned JBG intended to lease the property for 20 years to Car Max, a car dealership. The revenue yield from such retail uses is among the lowest per acre at $49,000 annually, compared to the $1 million that the new BJ’s could bring. Goff and other City officials entered into intense discussions with JBG officials, who are rep-

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George C. Marshall High School hosted a “Buddy Boogie” last Friday as part of the school’s Best Buddies program, a club that meets every Wednesday to foster friendships between general education students and those with intellectual disabilities. Big names in attendance were Miss Universe, Dayana Mendoza, and Miss Teen USA, Stevi Perry, along with celebrity trainers Kristina Bakardjiev and Scott “Silk” Manning, who led the students in aerobic-style dances. For the full story and more photos, see page 8. (Photo: News-Press)

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Index

One of the region’s foremost economic forecasters warned Tuesday that Northern Virginia may be “behind the curve” in planning its next economic driver, once the defense contracts buoyed by the war in Iraq expire and the war winds down. John McClain, senior fellow at George Mason University’s Center for Regional Analysis, said that “tunnel vision” by some of the area’s leading defense contractors may be preventing them from innovating

at a pace rivaling other areas of the country. He made his comments to the monthly luncheon of the Falls Church Chamber of Commerce. McClain said that leaders of government, industry and academia need to “put their heads together” to plan for what will sustain growth in Northern Virginia once the war in Iraq ends, or in the event that a new administration in Washington, D.C. might deemphasize the role of outsourcing government functions. “Whether it be energy, or biomedical, or green technol-


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