Falls Church News-Press 12-7-2023

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December 7 - 13, 2023

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. XXXIII No. 43

The City of Falls Church’s Independent, Locally-Owned Newspaper of Record, Serving N. Virginia

F.C. Council & School Board Get Positive Fiscal News

‘TIS THE SEASON INDEED

Annual Budget Season Kick Off at Joint Meeting Monday by Nicholas F. Benton

Falls Church News-Press

As the seven members each of the Falls Church City Council and the FCCPS School Board came together for their annual early December joint meeting as a prelude to the coming year’s budget cycle, this year the news of The Little City’s remarkable economic success dominated the discussions. In summary, the intense economic growth the city is now enjoying, with construction of large scale projects well underway in numerous locations inside the city’s 2.2 square miles, has brought the forecast of its tax revenue generation far ahead of its regional rivals. For example, while Falls Church is expected to enjoy a whopping 5.9 percent growth in tax revenues, the City of Alexandria is expected to come in a far more modest 2.4 percent growth, and Fairfax County at at an even slower 1.7 percent. Three major projects currently under construction in Falls Church are combining to offer an estimated $2.1 million in net tax revenue in the coming year, and that’s $2.1 million that residential home owners will not have to pay. The new construction includes the massive 10-acre West Falls complex inclusive of a medical building, advertising itself with big signs along Route 7 that will be completed by next spring, a hotel due next summer,

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FUTURE THEATER STARS who provided holiday cheer at the annual telethon of the Creative Cauldron at its stage Monday night helped boost fundraising for the Cauldron to over $27,000, it has been reported. The Cauldron’s fundraising drive is to enable a move into new digs in the Insight project now under construction at Broad and Washington. (News-Press Photo: Brian Reach)

F.C. Schools’ & Employees’ Tentative Accord

by Nicholas F. Benton

Falls Church News-Press

It was in the context of unofficial reports that the Falls Church City Public Schools, through their School Board, and the system’s employee bargaining organization reached a tentative agreement, subject to ratification by a vote of the employees, in their first ever collective bargaining negotiation. While the parameters of all that will not be made public until the entire process has worked its way through, probably not

until mid-January at the earliest, the mood around the schools was upbeat as the School Board and Superintendent Dr. Peter Noonan met with the F.C. City Council Monday to share its needs for the upcoming Fiscal Year 2025 that begins next summer. In a world where the competition for quality teachers and staff at all levels is particularly acute, the fact that employees and management of the Falls Church system, which is the largest employer in Falls Church, occurred at all, but

moreover that the prospect of a happy outcome exists, helped create a constructive context for this week’s joint meeting. At this coming Monday’s City Council meeting, the Council will take the input from this last Monday’s joint meeting to present the Schools and all the divisions of the City’s operations and set them all against the coming year’s tax revenue projections also presented last week (see story elsewhere this edition) and from that heady stew announce “guidance” for all concerning how much they

can be expected to get and therefore to ask for. While this is just the start of a budget process that won’t conclude until next May, coming out of the gate it is doubtful that the Schools can expect to get the 8.6 percent ($4.3 million) increase that Noonan concluded Monday the Schools will need for the coming year. The components of the sought after increase break down to $600,000 for expected enrollment growth (it is expected that

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