February 13 — 19, 2020
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. XXIX No. 52
Falls Church • Tysons Corner • Merrifield • McLean • North Arlington • Bailey’s Crossroads
Real Estate Assessments Make Biggest Jump in 5 Years 3.89% Boost Will Be Folded Into F.C.’s New Annual Budget
by Nicholas F. Benton
Falls Church News-Press
The City of Falls Church released its overview of real estate assessments as of Jan. 1, 2020 Tuesday, and for the 10th straight year, the overall value is well above three percent, this time at a solid 3.89 percent, the biggest jump in five years.
According to the City in a press release issued Tuesday, the total taxable assessed value for all properties in the city, as of Jan. 1, 2020, is $4,450,079,500 ($4.45 billion), a 3.89 percent increase from Jan. 1, 2019. New construction (valued at $47.6 million) accounts for 28.57 percent of the increase in assessed value in the City, and market
appreciation accounts for the remainder. City Manager Wyatt Shields, in comments to the News-Press yesterday, said, “For the 10th straight year, rising assessments here have enjoyed new construction as a significant component, the result of both business and homeowners investing in the City.”
The jump of 3.89 percent was significantly above the 3.35 percent jump of a year ago as the entire region has enjoyed the socalled Amazon Effect based on the anticipation of a major second campus location for Amazon in south Arlington. Released last month, Arlington County’s overall real estate assessment growth has been 4.6 percent, and the City of Alexandria’s, announced earlier this week, is at 4.25 percent. Fairfax County, which grew in
real estate assessed values by 2.36 percent a year ago, has not yet released its data for 2020 assessments. In the case of Falls Church, the consistent interest in the City as a destination for major large-scale mixed use projects has been a huge factor in its revenue growth, leading to a cumulative growth in assessed values of over 20 percent since 2015.
Continued on Page 5
Mary Riley Styles Library’s Big Makeover Set to Begin by Nicholas F. Benton
Falls Church News-Press
In front of a standing-roomonly audience Monday night, by a 5-2 vote, the Falls Church City Council gave its final approval to a $11 million expansion and renovation of the Mary Riley Styles Public Library. The vote culminated a more than three-year delay since City voters approved a bond referendum for the project by a 2-to-1 margin in 2016. City Council chambers were packed with library supporters and they were not disappointed with the final vote. In the only change from the preliminary OK given two weeks ago, Councilman Dan Sze put his support behind the project, turn-
ing a 4-3 vote into 5-2. In the end, only the two youngest members of the Council and professed frequent library users with their school-aged children, Letty Hardi and Ross Litkenhous, stood by their “no” votes on grounds of wider fiscal issues. Now, the library will be open just through this coming weekend before closing down for a twoyear renovation effort. Within three weeks, a temporary home for the library will be opening the first week of March at the temporary classroom trailers at Thomas Jefferson Elementary School. According to Lionel Millard, the City’s project manager for the effort, library staff had
Continued on Page 4
A CAPACITY HOUSE at the Falls Church City Council chambers were there mostly as a show of support for a final vote to move ahead with the renovation and expansion of the Mary Riley Styles Public Library Monday night. (Photo: News-Press)
Inside This Week Suspect Arrested in 2019 Fatal Hit-&-Run on Rt. 50
House Fire on S. Oak St. Sends 1 to Hospital
William Monroe Edges Mustangs, 53-52
See News Briefs, page 9
See News Briefs, page 9
See Sports, page 16
A 30-year-old Fredericksburg man has been arrested and charged with felony hit-andrun in connection with a crash that killed a 93-year-old Falls Church man on Arlington Blvd. in 2019, Fairfax County Police reported this week.
An intense one-alarm house fire on S. Oak St. in the City of Falls Church just before noon on Monday sent one person to the hospital and caused an estimated $150,000 in significant damage to nearly half the home.
Down one with seven seconds left, the George Mason High School Mustangs couldn’t get a shot off at the end of the game, losing, 53-52, to William Monroe last Friday.
Index
Editorial........................................................ 6 Letters.......................................................... 6 News & Notes.....................................10–11 Comment........................................7,12–13 Business News..........................................15 Sports........................................................16 Calendar.............................................18–19 Classified Ads............................................20 Comics, Sudoku & Crossword..................21 Crime Report.............................................22 Critter Corner.............................................22