March 5 - 11, 2015
Falls Church, Virginia • w w w . fc n p . c o m • Free
Founded 1991 • Vol. XXV No. 2
Falls Church • Tysons Corner • Merrifield • McLean • North Arlington • Bailey’s Crossroads
Inside This Week ‘Black Hat Bandits’ Hit F.C. Bank Monday
The FBI says Monday’s armed robbery of Falls Church’s Wells Fargo Bank is the work of the Black Hat Bandits. The duo is wanted in connection with seven other bank heists in Virginia and Maryland so far this year. See News Briefs, page 9
Spring Real Estate Special Edition Inside
The News-Press’ special real estate edition is inside today’s issue with features on Falls Church’s new assessments, home renovations, the lightwood building trend and more.
Unanimous F.C. School Board OKs Teacher Competitiveness Budget 5.3% Hike Seeks to Up Salaries Closer To Arlington Levels by Nicholas F. Benton
Falls Church News-Press
puted the proposal from the standpoint of realistic alternatives, and thus were in large degree feeling unwilling to expend the political capital to even entertain a bold new idea. Still, the latest iteration of the Mason Row project is ever bigger and more impressive, library or not. The City Council’s plan is to act on the special exceptions and zoning changes needed to win general approval of the plan by
By a unanimous 7-0 vote, the Falls Church School Board Tuesday night formally adopted its Fiscal Year 2016 budget that calls for a 5.3 percent increase in its request for a transfer from the City, nearly identical to the numbers they mulled a week ago. The budget is for $46,718,400 including a transfer of $38,693,900. The biggest component of the increase is in teacher salary hikes, based on a four-year schedule to bring them to a competitive level with the City’s neighboring Arlington County. Everyone on board, including Superintendent Dr. Toni Jones, concurred that keeping to the schedule is key to both attracting and retaining quality teachers. Structural increases and a more modest enrollment growth this school year account for the rest of the increase. Included in the 86-page budget document (that can be viewed in its entirety on the School Board’s website) are graphs which show that the City schools’ salary structures are behind Arlington in every single category, including by as much as $21,205 and $16,936 in comparable categories. The School Board’s support for its budget was buoyed by the results of a poll that was assembled and circulated beginning two weeks ago. It wound up attracting 997 respondents, and among the questions answered, 730 of them (80.43 percent) said that they chose Falls Church as their home because of its school system (respondents were invited to check
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See pull-out, pages RE1 - RE12
David Brooks: Leaving & Cleaving
So much of life is about leavetaking: moving from home to college, from love to love, from city to city and from life stage to life stage. See page 12
Press Pass with Jesse Cook
Jesse Cook is just starting the East Coast leg of his tour supporting his concert special “Live at Bathhurst Street Theatre,” which is currently airing on the Public Broadcasting Service. See page 21
AT A RECENT WORK SESSION, members of the Falls Church School Board hammered out the parameters of its latest budget and the request for a fund transfer from the City government. Their final budget, calling for a 5.3 percent increase over last year, is now headed to City Manager Wyatt Shields, who will make his budget recommendation to the City Council this coming Monday night. (Photo: News-Press)
New Library Plan at Mason Row Gets Tepid 1st Review by Nicholas F. Benton
Falls Church News-Press
Index Editorial..................6 Letters................6, 8 News & Notes.10-11 Comment........12-15 Calendar.........16-17 Food & Dining ......18
Sports .................19 Press Pass..........21 Classified Ads .....24 Comics, Sudoku & Crossword...........25 Critter Corner.......26
At a joint Falls Church City Hall work session combining the minds of the City Council, Planning Commission and Economic Development Authority (EDA), the Spectrum LLC developers of the 4.3-acre proposed Mason Row mixed use project at the corner of N. West and W. Broad Streets saw their latest attempt to serve the interests of the City by providing 25,000 square feet of brand new
office space to sell the City a new public library fall short of cause for great delight. In fact, the 18 or so citizenleaders who listened to the details of the latest plan tonight and then offered their impressions were singularly underwhelmed by the notion. This came despite the fact most of them acknowledged that the current plan to spend $8 million on a renovation of the existing Mary Riley Styles Library location was also inadequate. Many had simply not yet com-