n LOUDOUN
VOL. 9, NO. 50
4 | n LEESBURG
8 | n EDUCATION
13 | n PUBLIC NOTICES
Community-Supported News. Free to all.
27
OCTOBER 24, 2024
Supervisors Move to Develop Energy Infrastructure Regulations BY HANNA PAMPALONI
hpampaloni@loudounnow.org
As the Planning Commission gets to work on revising Comprehensive Plan and Zoning Ordinance amendments for data centers, county supervisors are considering another set of amendments that would seek to regulate power infrastructure. The Board of Supervisors’ Transportation and Land Use Committee last week heard a presentation from the county staff and Kimley-Horn consultants on the state of energy infrastructure in Loudoun and recommendations on how to best manage it going forward. Two recent transmission line projects – one in eastern Loudoun and one in western Loudoun - have brought the county’s and the region’s power grid to the forefront of public dialogue with many residents raising concern about the broader community impacts association with the data center industry’s increasing demand. During an Oct. 17 meeting, Kimley-Horn Consultant Michael DeNichilo told the committee Loudoun has approximately 37 miles of 500 kilovolt lines, 125 miles of 230 kV lines and 2 miles of underground ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE continues on page 38
Norman K. Styer/Loudoun Now
Supervisor Laura Tekrony (D-Little River) and former Blue Ridge District Supervisor Tony Buffington were among the first take out canoes during Monday’s grand opening celebration for Reservoir Park.
‘An Oasis’: Reservoir Park Opens to the Public BY NORMAN K. STYER nstyer@loudounnow.org
After a decade of planning and community collaboration, Loudoun Water and NOVA Parks on Monday celebrated the opening of Reservoir Park, a 600acre natural area that offers residents greater access to the county’s largest lake and seeks to promote awareness of water quality protections.
The main entrance to the 600acre park is located on the southeast side of Beaverdam Reservoir, at 22211 Water Vista Dr. in Ashburn. Loudoun Water owns and maintains the 300-acre reservoir as a source of drinking water for Loudoun County residents. NOVA Parks will run the park operations. The park includes a welcome center, a crew facility, a boat rental facility, picnic pavilions, trails, waterfront board-
walks, a bridge, a restroom building and educational exhibits. Built in the early 1970s, the reservoir served as the primary water source for the City of Fairfax for four decades. With the city getting more of its water from Fairfax Water and the Potomac River, Loudoun Water acquired the reservoir and water RESERVOIR PARK continues on page 38
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