Falls Church News-Press 2-21-2019

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February 21 – 27, 2019

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. X XIX N o. 1

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

Inside This Week F.C. Council Mulls ‘Buy Local’ Impact

The City of Falls Church’s second quarter financial report for the general fund showed big jumps in revenues from sales and meals taxes with sales tax yields above projections by 9 percent. See News Briefs, page 9

City to Close on Fellows Tract Monday

The closing on the City of Falls Church acquisition of the Fellows Tract at 604 S. Oak Street is expected with a vote of the City Council this coming Monday.

F.C. School Board Adopts Noonan Plan; City Income to Beat Outlook Assessments Out This Week Add Up To 2.5% Growth

by Nicholas F. Benton

Falls Church News-Press

2011 to 2016, according to the study, an updated version of which was presented by Sturtevant to the Planners Tuesday. But it represents a rate slower than the rest of the region, and moreover, it comes as the number of households with children in the City has actually decreased by 5.3 percent in that same period. That time frame marked an 18.7 percent increase in the num-

The Falls Church School Board’s budget request to the City Council that was approved at its meeting Tuesday night was effectively unchanged from that recommended by Superintendent Peter Noonan last month, even though the City Assessor’s Office reported higher than expected assessments on City properties last week. The Noonan/School Board budget will not require any increase in the real estate tax rate. But, the higher than expected assessments will generate about $400,000 more than projected last November for the coming fiscal year, F.C. City Manager Wyatt Shields told the News-Press yesterday. The real estate assessments overall, which were released just before News-Press press time last Wednesday, are up almost a full percentage point higher than earlier projected, at a rate of growth of 3.35 percent. Many residents began receiving by mail the notification of their new assessments from Assessor Ryan Davis this week. Most of the increases in assessed values are the result of “market appreciation,” Shields told the News-Press, as compared to new construction in their the residential or commercial real estate sectors.

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See News Briefs, page 9

Mason High Boys Roll in Region Opener Getting — or rather, staying — hot at the right time, George Mason High School’s boys basketball team cruised past Wilson Memorial High School in the opening round of their regional tournament. See Sports, page 14

F.C. Teens Tackle H.S. Life in New Production

Two Falls Church students portray the complicated and surprisingly adult lives of modern high schoolers in their professional debuts for NextStop Theatre’s rendition of “The Wolves.” See page 17

REVIEWING DATA on the City’s fiscal health Tuesday, members of the Falls Church City Council watched a Powerpoint presentation. Shown here are (l. to r.) Letty Hardi, Ross Litkenhous, Mayor David Tarter and Vice Mayor Marybeth Connelly. (Photo: News-Press)

F.C. Demographic Bombshell: Households With Kids Down by Nicholas F. Benton

Falls Church News-Press

Index

Editorial................ 6 Letters..............6, 8 News & Notes.10–11 Comment...... 12–13 Sports................ 14 Business News.. 16

Calendar...... 18–19 Classified Ads.... 20 Comics, Sudoku & Crossword......... 21 Crime Report..... 22 Critter Corner..... 22

There is one truly shocking graph in the summary report of demographic trends in the City of Falls Church that had its latest review by the City’s Planning Commission at its meeting this Tuesday. It underscores the biggest new trend in the Little City, one which is not about to change given current policy trends. That is, while the 2.4 mil-

lion population in the Northern Virginia region, overall, is characterized by a continuing growth in numbers of children, and households with children, this is not true for Falls Church. This is according to Lisa Sturtevant, president of LSA in Alexandria, which has been commissioned by the City to do a comprehensive demographics study. Now, the number of children in the City has continued to grow, increasing by 17.4 percent from


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