Falls Church News-Press 12-24-09

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December 24 - 30, 2009

Falls Church, Vi r g i n i a • w w w . fc n p . c o m • Free

Founded 1991 • Vo l . XI X N o . 43

Falls Church • Tysons Corner • Merrifield • McLean • North Arlington • Bailey’s Crossroads

Inside This Week Moran Cleared In Investigation

The Office of Congressional Ethics closed its investigation into Virginia Rep. Jim Moran’s relationship to the lobbying firm PMA group advising against any further investigation by the House.

Kaine’s Plan to Address $4 Billion State Shortfall to Slam Localities Schools, Tax

SNOW WHITE

See News Briefs, page 7

Collections to

F.C. Teen Starts ‘Treats for Troops’

Feel Big Pinch

Falls Church’s Lisa Confrancesco made it her mission to bring U.S. soldiers a little slice of home this holiday season.

by Nicholas F. Benton

Falls Church News-Press

See page 17

By Monday afternoon, the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT), responsible for clearing all roads in the region outside of Falls Church and Arlington, still had 7,000 miles of mostly secondary roads to clear, Mester reported. Another storm is due to hit the area with a “wintry mix” Thursday night and rain on Friday. While temperatures will rise to the 40s, the rain will “create new chal-

The grim parameters of Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine’s annual budget message in Richmond last week confirm that localities like the City of Falls Church, Arlington and Fairfax County will be much harder hit with funding shortfalls, as bad as they were already projected to be, than previously thought. “The difficulties of the worst economy in a generation,” Kaine said, adding, “These are the toughest national economic conditions since the 1930s,” that have created “an unprecedented challenge.” State support for local education and core tax collection services will be among the many severe cutbacks proposed to address a $4 billion state revenue shortfall, Kaine announced. That level of cuts comes on top of $7 billion previously trimmed from the state’s $37.5 billion budget, and leaves the state miserably short on such things as Medicaid reimbursements and waivers for persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities, for day support, for the elderly, disabled and Alzheimer’s victims. Federal stimulus dollars that helped mitigate the shortfall last year to the tune of $4 billion will not be available in the coming year. Fairfax County’s Board Chair Sharon Bulova, in her year-end report issued prior to Kaine’s message, said, “We continue to be very much affected by a severe breakdown in our economy.” She noted that the primary source of the county’s revenue, the value of

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Maureen Dowd: Blunder on The Mountain

Flying over the waves of snowcovered mountains that make Afghanistan a natural fortress and a sinkhole for empires, it’s impossible not to think of Osama bin Laden’s escaping as one of the greatest bungled opportunities in history. See page 13

Award-Winning ‘Police, Adjective’

A young Romanian cop is assigned to follow a 16-year-old boy suspected of smoking and perhaps supplying marijuana. If he arrests this boy, it will mean a term of eight to 16 years. See page 22

THE BIGGEST SNOWSTORM ever to hit the region in December dumped 18.5 inches on the City of Falls Church last weekend, creating scenes everywhere like the one here at the bridge over the stream at Cavalier Trail Park taken by local resident Michele Brooks. (Photo: Michele Brooks)

Snow Brings Team Effort to Dig Out by Nicholas F. Benton

Falls Church News-Press

Index

Editorial..................2 Letters................2, 6 Community News & Notes..............10-11 Comment........12-15 Business News & Notes...................16 Sports.............18-19 Calendar.........20-21 Roger Ebert....22-24

Restaurant Spotlight ............................26 Comics, Sodoku & Crossword...........29 Classified Ads......30 Business & Services Directory..............31 Critter Corner.......32 Business Listing..33 City Focus......34-35

The biggest storm on record to hit the Washington, D.C. region and the Northeastern U.S. corridor in the month of December, leaving 120,000 without power and over 3,000 vehicles stranded on Virginia roadways, dumped nearly 20 inches, and in the wake of severe budgetary constraints and cuts, called forth team efforts to open roads, rescue motorists and clean up. Schools in the region remained

closed this entire week, and the federal government was shut down through Tuesday. The snow fell constantly for 36 hours from Friday night to Sunday morning, adding to the frustration of public works crews trying to keep roads open with only the usual salt drops. In the City of Falls Church, according to Assistant City Manager Cindy Mester, sand had to be used to provide traction on major emergency routes because the salt didn’t work.


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