December 31, 2020 – January 6, 2021
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. 46
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Canceled Watch Night Ends 2020 With a Whimper No Celebration Means No Remembrance for Barb Cram
BY MATT DELANEY
FALLS CHURCH NEWS-PRESS
A Barb Cram-sized hole will be especially felt as the annual Watch Night New Year’s Eve celebration was called off due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. Cram, who was somewhat of a volunteer folk hero in the City before she died in June, was the maven behind the free event each year. But one of Watch Night’s staple organizers, Keith Thurston, announced they would not go through with their year-end festivities in mid-December. “The annual Watch Night Falls Church celebration will not occur this year in deference to our frontline health care workers, who are risking all, and asking us to not create a super-spreader Covid-19 event,” Thurston wrote. “With an occasion such as our public New Year’s Eve celebration, with no entry gates it is very difficult to have a limited event, and reduced attendance, as much as we would have liked that. This will be the first time in the event’s 22-year history that it will not be taking place for Falls Church residents and regional neighbors to join in the fun. According to Shaun Van Steyn, another event volunteer
and member of Falls Church Arts, this was something that was predicted as far back as the spring. Van Steyn said that in his private conversations with Cram, she knew her worsening health was terminal well in advance. Still, the two talked about the news of the rapidly spreading coronavirus in February — not even two months after the previous Watch Night had been pulled off — and decided that they would be in wait-and-see mode about how to handle the celebration. When Cram did pass, Van Steyn said that Falls Church Arts had already decided that their involvement would be too much to handle at that time. Considering that so many people come from all over the Northern Virginia area to attend the event, it was deemed too big of a legal risk for all the organizers involved. “We could’ve put it on, but supposing we did do it, and then we get a whole bunch of people getting [sick], then they’re going to sue the City or Falls Church Arts. Someone will get sued; we’re in America,” Van Steyn said. The volunteers never seriously considered doing the event virtu-
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THERE WON’T BE THE PARTY DOWNTOWN like there has been during Watch Nights in years past, such as this scene that rang in 2019. The lack of a celebration is another reminder of the absence of chief organizer Barb Cram, who died in June. (P����: J. M������ W�����)
Webb Talks F.C. Career, Name Change in Final Interview BY MATT DELANEY
FALLS CHURCH NEWS-PRESS
School Board member Lawrence Webb’s surprise announcement that he would be resigning from his position a month ago has prompted a farewell tour of sorts in the News-
Press pages, including a Guest Commentary penned by him a few weeks back. But Webb, who moved from Arlington to the City of Falls Church in 2005 and has been in public office for 12 of his 15 years here, has been a part of some major decisions.
From helping get the City’s local election season changed to the fall during his lone City Council term to being a prominent voice on the recent decision to change the names of George Mason High School and
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George Mason High band teacher Mary Jo West was selected for the Fulbright Teachers for Global Classrooms this year because of the worldly, sophisticated program that she has built through technical rigor and a family spirit she has cultivated among her pupils. See Story, page 8
B�� Y���� W��� I�������� CBC “S������� A����” 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
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There is one week left — with a deadline of Jan. 7, 2021 — to order a “Legacy Grove Brick” for installation at the new high school. The bricks in the current George Mason High School Pathway will be moved to the Legacy Grove. See Community News & Notes, page 10
INDEX
Editorial............................................... 6 Letters................................................. 6 Comment ................................ 7,12,13 News & Notes............................. 10,11 Calendar ........................................... 14 Business News ................................. 15 Classified Ads ................................... 16 Comics, Sudoku & Crossword ......... 17 Crime Report .................................... 18 Critter Corner.................................... 18