November 12 – 18, 2020
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FOU N D E D 1991 • V OL. X XX NO. 39
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F.C. Distillers Mulls City Exit Over Music Cut-Off Early Limit Hurts Business Already Stung By Virus
BY MATT DELANEY
FALLS CHURCH NEWS-PRESS
The live music that Falls Church Distillers has featured to complete the ambiance for its outdoor dining has been a nuisance to its neighbors, and that may be jeopardizing the distillery’s longterm commitment to the City of Falls Church. Michael Paluzzi, the owner of Falls Church Distillers, told the News-Press that live music is the biggest draw for his business. Before the coronavirus pandemic took off in the spring, he would regularly hold shows inside the distillery until midnight or 1 a.m. without a problem. Ever since the City relaxed its zoning rules to accommodate more outdoor dining during the pandemic, businesses like the dis-
tillery have brought their music outdoors as well. The choice to do so, however, hasn’t been unanimously enjoyed by nearby residents. “I would say at least 50 percent of the weekend nights” since re-opening in the early summer have had some kind of a police presence, Paluzzi said. He mentioned one specific situation where cops responded to a call and then camped out to listen to the music, until Paluzzi asked them to leave since they were making guests uncomfortable. “I can’t survive in this situation if it’s going to be maintained,” he added. City Manager Wyatt Shields told the News-Press that a bulk of the calls are coming from nearby apartment complexes in Pearson
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LIVE MUSIC has been a major draw for Falls Church Distillers over the past few months, which has moved outdoors due to Covid-19 concerns. However, residential neighbors in nearby apartment complexes haven’t taken to the adaptation as well. (P����: N���-P����)
Equity in F.C. Schools Brings Nuanced Approach to U.S. History BY MSTT DELANEY
FALLS CHURCH NEWS-PRESS
Curriculum adjustments that account for the minority experience in America has been a focus of history courses in Falls Church City schools, especially after a summer where students protested against racial injustice and ques-
tioned how they should remember the founding fathers. The school system’s mission to include those aspects alongside, rather than at the expense of, others already in its studies is how it tries to avoid the conflict felt in other areas of the country. The goal laid out last September, according to Falls Church City
schools Chief Academic Officer William Bates, was to develop a process for curriculum reframing in City schools as a component of the school system’s equity work. In other words, Bates said, Falls Church schools began asking how it could consider diverse perspectives when planning lessons and activities for students, with less
emphasis on making dramatic changes to the core materials they must teach as prescribed by the Virginia Department of Education. This directive took on new importance during a summer of nationwide protests that the City of Falls Church joined in. George Mason High School students organized one of the first marches
to take place in City limits following George Floyd’s killing by a police officer in Minneapolis. A simmering call to change the name of George Mason High, and then later Thomas Jefferson Elementary School, had turned to a boil as well, prodding the schools to contextualize these figures outside of their major accomplishments at the very least.
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See News Briefs, page 8
See Column, page 23
At its Tuesday meeting, the F.C. School Board heard a report on the successful reopening from Superintendent Dr. Peter Noonan about the start of Phase II reopening for the schools’ to inperson teaching following an initial opening for special education classrooms.
City of Falls Church developer and chair of the Falls Church Economic Development Authority won the Citizens for a Better City’s first-ever “Shoutout Award” for leading the EDA’s effort to distribute microgrants to Falls Church businesses that were suffering from the Covid-19 pandemic. See News & Notes, page 9
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.
INDEX
Editorial............................................... 6 Letters................................................. 6 Comment ................................ 7,12,13 News & Notes..................................... 9 Crime Report .................................... 12 Calendar ........................................... 14 Business News ................................. 15 Classified Ads ................................... 16 Comics, Sudoku & Crossword ......... 17 Critter Corner.................................... 18