December 13 — 19, 2018
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. 43
Falls Church • Tysons Corner • Merrifield • McLean • North Arlington • Bailey’s Crossroads
Inside This Week City Reacts To Planned Bike Trail Changes Changes to the City of Falls Church section of the Washington & Old Dominion trail are coming by late 2020 and local cyclists and pedestrians see pros and cons in the upcoming improvements. See page 4
Northside Social Adds New Parking
After six months with only a lone accessible parking space, Northside Social announced it has acquired 10 new general parking spots — the first for the popular restaurant — from Park Towers Condominiums.
New F.C. Budget Guidance Calls For No Tax Rate Hike for FY2020 City Council Vote Kicks Off New Budget Cycle
by Nicholas F. Benton
Falls Church News-Press
But as Noonan pointed out Tuesday, added School system costs estimated at $300,000 for health insurance premium increases, a costof-living increase of one percent for 500 employees at $400,000, a step salary increase at $800,000 and increased substitute teacher compensation at $50,000 adds up to $1,550,000, or more than a million dollars above what the Council “guidance” appears to propose.
Following on last week’s joint Falls Church City Council and School Board work session to mull early projections for the coming fiscal year budget, the Council met this Monday and formally adopted its “guidance” for the coming annual budget cycle. Not surprisingly, it called for no tax rate increase, to be achieved by constraining new spending to the two percent revenue growth that is projected. As reported earlier, the tax rate will not be impacted going forward by the cost of constructing a new high school and renovating City Hall and the library. The heavy yields anticipated from the dense economic development of 10.3 acres at the Haycock and W. Broad intersection (location of the current George Mason High School) is the reason for that. But holding the operating budgets of the school and City to a low growth projected for revenues in the Fiscal Year 2020 time frame will present the biggest challenge for the school system, as Superintendent Peter Noonan spelled out to the School Board this Tuesday night (see separate story). The two-percent growth projection comes as three major new mixed-use projects moving forward in the City — the West End, Founders Row and Broad at Washington projects — will not yet be generating significant revenue.
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See page 5
The Holiday Season's Hottest New Toys
With Christmas fast approaching and some local Santa Clauses having yet to leap into action, the News-Press is providing a crash course in this season’s hot items for the slackers out there. See page 17
Mason Girls Earn 1st Win of Season
Victory was tasted at last by George Mason High School’s girls basketball team, when it ended its season-long skid by defeating John Paul the Great Catholic High School Tuesday. See Sports, page 20
MEMBERS OF THE FALLS CHURCH School Board are shown with Superintendent Peter Noonan (far right) at their meeting Tuesday to mull new City Council budget "guidance." (Photo: News-Press)
Noonan to F.C. School Board: Our Costs Outstrip 'Guidance' by Nicholas F. Benton
Falls Church News-Press
Index
Editorial................ 6 Letters..............6, 8 News & Notes.12–13 Comment...... 14–15 Business News.. 19 Sports................ 20
Calendar...... 26–27 Classified Ads.... 28 Comics, Sudoku & Crossword......... 29 Critter Corner..... 30
Upon learning of the official budget guidance for the coming fiscal year approved by the Falls Church City Council Monday night, Falls Church City Public Schools Superintendent Peter Noonan counseled the School Board Tuesday night that minimal school needs for the coming year are already in excess of that guidance number.
The Council voted 6-0 to call for constraining the new budget to the anticipated organic revenue growth expected at two percent, or an added $1.7 million. With a big chunk of that modest increase going to WMATA ($400,000), health insurance cost hikes ($200,000) and City employee compensation ($200,000) having to split the remainder between the City operating and School budgets would leave only $450,000 in other new expenses for each.