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Fairfax County

Monday, March 11, 2013

Fairfax County Budget Work Starts Tuesday

Tax hike, no employee raises are some of the issues supervisors will tackle in committee meeting for Fiscal Year 2014 spending plan

The Fairfax County Board of Supervisors will begin to dig into the meat of the Fiscal Year 2014 budget during its first budget committee meeting Tuesday afternoon. Supervisors will gather at 1 p.m. Tuesday in conference rooms 9 and 10 at Fairfax County Government Center to begin hammering out the details of County Executive Ed Long’s $7 billion advertised budget, which features no raises for employees and a slightly higher tax rate. The committee is also expected to go over the $2.5 billion Fairfax County Public Schools budget for fiscal 2014. School Board members requested $95 million from supervisors, a 5.5-percent increase in transfer, for a total of $1.78 billion. But Long was only able to give schools a 2 percent increase in transfer…

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Volunteers Needed to Represent Mount Vernon District

Supervisor Hyland seeks volunteers to serve on Fairfax County boards.

Mount Vernon District Supervisor Gerry Hyland is seeking volunteers to serve on a variety of Fairfax County boards, authorities, and commissions, including the Child Care Advisory Council,  Commission for Women, Human Services Council and more. If none of the current openings currently appeal to you, you may submit a resume and your general areas of interest, and you will be contacted if opportunities do arise. To be considered, please send your resumé to mtvernon@fairfaxcounty.gov with "BAC" in the subject line.

T Ailshire

5:04 pm on Thursday, March 7, 2013

Where can one find a list of ALL the vacancies (other than "and more"), and focus/requirements of each?   more ›

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Red Light Cameras Could Return to Fairfax County

Supervisors directed staff Tuesday to examine costs and benefits of a launching another red light camera program, which reduced violations by 45 percent during its first run a decade ago.

Though they've been gone for more than half a decade, red light cameras could return to Fairfax County. The county's board of supervisors asked staff Tuesday to study how much it would cost to bring back camera enforcement for select red lights in the county, and where cameras could be effective. The former red light camera program, implemented at 10 intersections from 2002 to June 2005, was successful, but costly:During the program’s run, the county lost more than $1.3 million. That figure, Supervisor Michael Frey (R-Sully), should indicate this isn't a move to generate more revenue, but instead, make roads safer.  “That’s the point,” he said. “Raising revenue isn’t.” Frey’s renewed interest in the program was sparked following the …

Martin Tillett

11:51 am on Wednesday, March 6, 2013

As stated in the article, the County lost revenue once people became conditioned to the presence of the cameras and the number of citations decreased. Given budget considerations and the past history, this seems to be a potential waste of money. Try driving in MD where speed cameras are stationed at every road in front of a school and in other locations in addition to the red light cameras. While…   more ›

Average Fairfax County Tax Bill Could Jump $262

Supervisors advertise a higher real estate tax of $1.095 per $100 of assessed value, a 2-cent increase from the current rate but not as high as one supervisor hoped.

The Fairfax County Board of Supervisors has set the FY 2014 budget’s advertised real estate tax rate at $1.095 per $100 of assessed value, a 2-cent increase from the current rate of $1.075. Supervisors approved the rate in a 9-1 vote Tuesday after killing an amendment from Supervisor Gerry Hyland (D-Mount Vernon) to raise it another 1.5 cents to $1.11 per $100 of assessed value. Hyland’s proposal would have hiked the average resident’s taxes $332, but was shot down in a 8-2 vote against the amendment. Once the Board sets an advertised tax rate, it can’t legally adopt one any higher. Hyland argued that with the unknown effects of sequestration on the horizon, the Board should advertise a rate that would give it room to adjust to cuts and …

Friday, March 1, 2013

Fairfax County to Police Illegal Signs, Fine Offenders

Prison inmates will remove signs Tuesday through Friday beginning later this year.

Fairfax County now has the authority to clean up illegal signs placed on roadway medians thanks to an agreement with the Virginia Department of Transportation. This week, the Board of Supervisors approved an agreement that has been in the works for months allowing the county to clear signs from public rights-of-way and issue fines to residents who post them. The program, which supervisors signed off on in an 8-2 vote, will cost the county $150,000. Non-violent prisoners on the Sheriff’s Office Community Labor Force will perform cleanup duties four days a week, Tuesday through Friday, starting later this year. Putting up signs on any state road is illegal, including advertisements and – especially – political signs, which all but took over …

Comment_arrow

Gordon Blvd

9:42 pm on Monday, March 4, 2013

Nope. I'm saying FULL DISCLOSURE looks a hella-lot better at the end of the day. Looks a lot less scummy as well, specially when we are talking about ppl sneaking around trashing our streets, neighborhoods, county, and NOT picking up behind themselves   more ›

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Questions on Fairfax County Budget? Join Thursday's Online Q&A

County Executive Ed Long will chat with residents on proposed $7 billion Fiscal Year 2014 county budget.

Do you have questions about Fairfax County’s FY2014 proposed budget? Your chance to get answers from County Executive Ed Long is coming Thursday morning. Long will host an hour-long chat starting at 9:30 a.m. Thursday to discuss his proposed $7 billion budget, which he unveiled for officials and the public Tuesday. The advertised package includes a 2-cent increase in the real estate tax rate from $1.075 per $100 of assessed value to $1.095. The increase is projected to raise nearly $42 million in count revenue. But when coupled with increases in real estate assessments, the proposed rate would cost the average county household about $262 more in real estate taxes. The budget also reduces funding for parks and libraries, and allots the …

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Fairfax County Budget Proposal Raises Taxes, Cuts Services

No employee pay increases in Fiscal Year 2014 spending plan, which would increase average household taxes by $262 and give Fairfax County Public Schools $62 million less than officials asked for.

Fairfax County Executive Ed Long unveiled Tuesday his $7 billion FY2014 budget proposal, a plan that raises real estate taxes and cuts funds to parks and libraries, among other services. Long’s advertised budget includes a 2-cent increase in the real estate tax rate from $1.075 per $100 of assessed value to $1.095. The increase is projected to raise nearly $42 million in count revenue. But when coupled with increases in real estate assessments, the proposed rate would cost the average county household about $262 more in real estate taxes. Revenue projections are generally flat for the coming year, showing a slight decrease in growth from 2.79 percent in FY2013 to 2.77 percent in FY2014. With sequestration around the corner, Long said the …

JoeB90

6:35 pm on Wednesday, February 27, 2013

So at the end of the day we have a net decrease of one county employee under this budget. Wow, we're really cutting to the bone!   more ›

Monday, February 25, 2013

Fairfax County to Unveil FY2014 Budget Tuesday

The county faces a $169 million shortfall.

Fairfax County Executive Ed Long will unveil the county’s proposed Fiscal Year 2014 budget this Tuesday. The county faces budget shortfalls of $169 million and $274 million in fiscal years 2014 and 2015, respectively. In order to better prepare for the future, he says, Long will present a multi-year budget plan for FY2014-2015 during the Board of Supervisors regularly scheduled Feb. 26 meeting. Those shortfalls are based on keeping the tax rate unchanged while also increasing the transfer to Fairfax County Public Schools. Fairfax County School Board officials intend to ask for an increase of 5.5 percent – or $92.4 million – for a total transfer of $1.77 billion. During a joint meeting of the two boards in November 2012, Long included an …

Friday, February 22, 2013

Fairfax County to Register Chronically Homeless

It's part of the county's plan to end homelessness by 2018.

Fairfax County will be abuzz next week when volunteers spread across the area to gather data on the county's homeless population. They will gather individual histories, names and will take photographs, as part of the county's 10-year plan to eradicate homelessness.  "We want to put 150 of the county's homeless in housing in the next three years," said Sherry Eddlekamp, the South County corridor volunteer captain. "We don't want the homeless population to think that we are locating them to let the police or authorities know where they are, and I know that's a big concern for them."  Eddlekamp will direct more than 50 volunteers in the endeavor. "The purpose is to get our homeless off the streets and get them the help that they need," she …

State of the County: Fairfax's Future Is Development

In annual address, Board of Supervisors Chairman Sharon Bulova warns sequestration could impact revenues, is making business owners delay decisions.

Revitalization and development will drive Fairfax County's economy in 2013 and beyond, Board of Supervisors Chairman Sharon Bulova said in her annual state of the county address Wednesday. Talking to members of the media Wednesday morning, Bulova said massive development projects in Tysons, Merrifield and Springfield will create "bright days and years ahead" — but the threat of sequestration was also making business owners hesitant to commit to a relocation or expansion in the county.  “Fairfax County’s future is in development,” Bulova said in her statement. “Aging commercial centers near mass transit, like Tysons, present especially valuable opportunities for attractive, transit-oriented mixed-use revitalization.” The county is hoping …

cmvoorhees

5:24 pm on Friday, February 22, 2013

Even though the. Virginia Assembly authorized Fairfax County to adopt zoning laws that redevelopers have to pay for transportion infrastructure needed to move traffic in and around the redevelopment over 20 years ago, the Board of Supervisors did nothing. Imagine if every redevelopment over the past 20 years paid for transportation infrastructure, Fairfax County could have reaped $40 million or …   more ›

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