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Arlington County Board

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Be Heard: Neighborhood Town Hall Wednesday

Chat up your Arlington County Board members this Wednesday about any issues concerning you and your neighbors.

Concerned about water main repairs? Unhappy with an ongoing development in your neighborhood? Happy with something the police did in your area? Here’s a chance to be heard: The Arlington County Board is hosting a neighborhood town hall meeting from 6:46 – 9 p.m. this Wednesday, May 22. The town hall will be hosted at Harvey Hall Community Center, 850 S. Greenbrier Street. This is one of eight community meetings scheduled throughout Arlington in 2013. In addition to Wednesday night’s meeting, here is the schedule for the remainder of this year – all meetings and walks are from 6:46 – 9 p.m. June 26 – Neighborhood Town Walk. Meet at the County's Edison Center, 1800 N. Edison St. July 24 – Neighborhood Town Hall, Westover Branch Library, 1644…

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Arlington Board Approves $1.1B Budget, Property Tax Increase

Spending plan restores a number of cuts that had been proposed.

The Arlington County Board adopted a $1.1 billion budget on Saturday, rejecting a laundry list of proposed spending cuts and raising taxes on the average homeowner here by $277 each year. The spending plan sets aside $3 million to cope with the effects of federal sequestration and pumps $12.5 million into a fund that subsidizes and promotes the development of affordable housing. Another $3.4 million will cover pay increases for the county's 3,500 employees. [More: Arlington County Salary Database] The budget also increases the real estate tax rate by 3.5 cents per $100 of assessed value — a fraction of a penny higher than what County Manager Barbara Donnellan had originally proposed. That rate will cost the owner of a $525,000 home about $…

Monday, April 15, 2013

Tuckahoe Parents Take Case for Foreign Language Program to County Board

Parents ask county to grant Arlington Public Schools enough money to implement program.

A group of Tuckahoe Elementary parents who have organized in an attempt to bring foreign language instruction to their children's school have begun taking their case to the Arlington County Board. Eight Arlington elementary schools, including Tuckahoe, feed students into Swanson Middle School. Of those, Tuckahoe, Taylor and Arlington Science Focus do not have a Foreign Language in Elementary Schools, or FLES, program. The others do. Parents have pleaded with the Arlington School Board to fund the program at Tuckahoe — a $450,000 proposition — on the basis that their children are at a disadvantage when they get to middle school because their classmates have had more foreign language instruction. A large part of their argument centers on the…

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Arlington School Board Makes Case for Extra Tax Increase

Board wants to restore several positions Superintendent Pat Murphy has proposed eliminating.

The Arlington School Board wants to restore several positions Superintendent Pat Murphy has recommended eliminating, including gifted services teachers at the county's three high schools and some teen parenting positions. But the school board has built its budget assuming the Arlington County Board will approve an extra half-cent tax increase to fund those positions — and that's far from a sure thing. School officials made their case for the additional tax increase Wednesday night, putting pressure on the county to fund programs and positions that might otherwise be cut. The extra tax hike would generate a little more than $3 million annually. County Manager Barbara Donnellan's proposed $1.1 billion budget already includes a 3.2-cent tax …

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Studies Lead to Raises for 1,500-Plus County Employees

Arlington County has been studying compensation since July 2011.

Since mid-2011, Arlington County has conducted pay studies that have resulted in more than 1,500 of its employees receiving raises. The studies, which are not finished, are part of a broader effort to make the county government a competitive employer among neighboring jurisdictions and, in select cases, competitive with the private sector or federal government. Compensation is projected to account for about 56 percent of county operating expenses for the next fiscal year, which begins July 1. With budget discussions well under way, 46 jobs are on the table, about half of them vacant, along with salary increases for the remaining employees. Pay raises for county employees account for about $3.4 million in next year's proposed budget. County…

Arlington Leaders 'Rethinking' Artisphere

Cultural arts center has had its share of successes and failures, Arlington Economic Development Executive Director Terry Holzheimer said.

The Artisphere is having something of an identity crisis. Originally conceived as a cultural arts center, county leaders concede that things haven't exactly worked out as planned. The facility didn't bring enough people in to support a bar and restaurant, providing space for area businesses to have a residency didn't work, and it costs the county more than $1 million a year just to keep the doors open. "We're rethinking it now," Arlington Economic Development Director Terry Holzheimer told Patch. "There's not sufficient funding to create a world-class cultural center." But that doesn't mean arts won't be a part of the Artisphere's future. [More: Artisphere: What Does Success Look Like?] The facility opened in October 2010 under the …

Janet

8:47 am on Wednesday, April 3, 2013

I concur with Libby Garvey's excellent suggestion that the Artisphere could become a community center for Rosslyn.   more ›

Artisphere: What Does Success Look Like?

Arlington Economic Director Terry Holzheimer: Scope of project needs to be scaled down and its purpose broadened.

So, what should the Artisphere be? It's the conversation that perhaps started two-and-a-half years late — and it started Tuesday with a few big questions. What does success look like for Rosslyn's cultural arts center? Should the public facility be limited to the arts? Elected officials began wondering aloud as to what the county's end game should be for the Artisphere on Tuesday after Arlington County Board member Libby Garvey questioned increasing the county's subsidy to a struggling facility while cuts are being proposed to social safety net programs. [More: Arlington Leaders 'Rethinking' Artisphere] Arlington Economic Development Director Terry Holzheimer said one thing it won't be is the Strathmore of Rosslyn. "That isn't possible. It…

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Tejada: Arlington Will Continue To Inspect, Train Child-Care Providers

Chairman announced the change to next year's proposed budget Tuesday night.

Arlington Board Chairman Walter Tejada announced Tuesday night that the county will continue to inspect child-care facilities and train child-care providers. Tejada made the announcement at the beginning of a budget work session on the county's social safety net programs. “The Board is committed to maintaining Arlington’s inspections of childcare facilities and training for providers,” Tejada said, reading from a prepared statement. “Although most localities in Virginia rely on the State alone to conduct inspections of childcare facilities, Arlington has, for more than 40 years, provided an extra layer of inspections and training for providers – and the Board is committed to continuing both of those elements.” Arlington's local child-care …

Friday, March 29, 2013

Tax Increases: Arlington Residents Divided on How Big Hike Should Be

Residents speak out about tax increases, fee increases for transit service for the disabled and elderly.

Only a fraction of people showed up at the Arlington County Board public hearing on its proposed tax rate Thursday night compared to a similar hearing earlier this week on budget priorities that drew hundreds. But those who did could easily be divided into three camps: One group that would like to see the county board raise taxes by 5 percent, the most it legally can this year; one group that would prefer to see the tax rate go up commensurate with inflation; and a third group that simply doesn't want fares to increase for a county program that provides transit services for the elderly and disabled. The county board has given itself the authority to raise taxes by as much as 5 cents per $100 assessed value, which translates to about $356 …

A.B.

5:44 pm on Saturday, March 30, 2013

Nothing written about the excellent points the fiscal responsibility activists made at this meeting. Why not?   more ›

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Streetcar Supporter: I Was Skeptical At First

Arlington residents left a heated town hall on the planned Columbia Pike streetcar with mixed reactions Wednesday night.

Arlington residents left a heated town hall on the planned Columbia Pike streetcar with mixed reactions Wednesday night. The Arlington County Board and county staff took questions from anyone who had them about the proposed $250 million streetcar project that would connect Columbia Pike and Bailey's Crossroads. Time constraints forced some to leave without being able to ask their question. They were told to fill out a comment sheet, which prompted an angry outburst just before 9 p.m. [More: Columbia Pike Streetcar Town Hall Gets Heated] “I am very pleased staff and board members invested time and energy into the meeting,” said Dan Dixon, a member of Arlingtonians for Sensible Transit, which opposes the project. "Unfortunately, the setup …

Janet

9:17 pm on Thursday, March 28, 2013

The persons who pointed out those in the audience who who would be allowed to ask questions work in the County Manager's Office.   more ›

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