Covering Annandale, Bailey's Crossroads, Lincolnia, and Seven Corners in Fairfax County, Virginia

County officials are prioritizing development over community involvement

The huge Reston Crossing development was approved by the Board of Supervisors in June.

The following piece by Terry Maynard was originally published in the Reston 20/20 blog July 30.  While this piece focuses on Reston, it describes ongoing efforts by Fairfax County officials to facilitate redevelopment countywide by minimizing community involvement. We believe residents of Annandale and Mason District should be aware of these issues. 


Reston 20/20 describes itself as “an independent Reston citizens committee dedicated to sustaining Reston’s quality of life through excellence in community planning, zoning, and development.” [Note: We deleted a couple of  Reston-specific details from this post.]

A brief look at Fairfax County efforts to reduce residents’ participation in land use planning & approval decisions

As we pass through the pre-election doldrums of the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors, we should all understand that both the current and the prospective county board are in the process of reducing our involvement in critical land use decisions from community planning to project approval consideration. 

This drive to accelerate county land use decisions, in part by reducing public involvement, began with Board of Supervisors Chairman Sharon Bulova. The board’s frenzy for rapid, unfettered urban development goes back to at least 2012.  In a report on a February 2012 board retreat, the Washington Post noted:

“County officials outlined the need to rewrite the rules that govern land-use decisions, an effort backed by Bulova. She said that the current process, which allows for intense deliberation and wide public involvement, was better suited to the days when much of the county was farmland.

“Today, Bulova said, Fairfax is a more urban and densely populated suburb and requires a more flexible approach that encourages redevelopment, particularly in areas targeted for intense growth, but preserves public engagement.”

“Preserves public engagement” is what one calls lip service that meets the legally required minimum public involvement in land use decisions.

With that encouragement, the board proceeded “to rewrite the rules that govern land-use decisions.”  So far, the county has made the following changes:

Fairfax Forward – This planning initiative began shortly after the board’s retreat. The initiative aimed to correct what was viewed as a too-rigid parcel-specific development nominations process that only marginally involved the community. 

Yet, as the Annandale blog reported, “A staff report on Fairfax Forward issued in February [2013] ‘was disturbingly silent on several critical avenues of citizen and community involvement in reviewing land use proposals,’ states comments by the Providence District Council. “Without amended language to ensure full and meaningful community review, PDC fears that Fairfax Forward could be construed in a way that reduces, rather than expands, community involvement in charting Fairfax’s future.”

In 2016, county staff acknowledged “outstanding questions about community participation in the process,” but claimed the new system provided a “clearer process for citizen participation.” No changes to improve opportunities for community involvement were added.

“Minor modifications” – In its first step, the Department of Planning and Zoning developed a “streamlined” process for handling “minor” changes in zoning decisions that the board approved in 2017. From a resident’s perspective, there are several points that stand out:

  • There is no requirement that the county notify the community or even adjoining property owners about proposed zoning changes, only the district supervisor.
  • There is no Planning Commission review, much less a public hearing, on the proposed changes, only a staff review.

In the Reston Planned Residential Community [or any other PRC], the Board of Supervisors may approve, without a public hearing, proposed development changes, including dropping recreation uses to the minimum legally required, eliminating “ineffective or obsolete” technological or service proffers, and changing architectural design. (Why would a developer proffer “ineffective or obsolete” technology or services—and why would the county accept them?)

All these changes are not supposed to “materially affect” the proposed development, but, of course, there is no definition of “materially affect.”

In short, the community is cut out of any opportunity for contribution to – or even knowledge of – potentially important changes in a standing zoning decision concerning the development of a Reston property. Anything done without full public scrutiny is incredibly dangerous.

The 2016 Gartner Report – To bolster its Fairfax Forward initiative, the board engaged yet another consultant in 2015, the Gartner Group, to conduct “an independent review of current procedures and processes, effectiveness, and efficiencies to identify opportunities for improvement which can further customer service and improve operational execution.”

The “customers” are “land use development customers, from homeowners to large-scale developers.” There is little room for residents or communities, who comprise more than one million people and hundreds of thousands of homeowners, in the considerations of this report.

Gartner’s final report is all about achieving Goal #3 of the county’s 2015 strategic economic development plan: “Improve the speed, consistency, and predictability of the Development Review Process.”

Nothing in the report considers the impact of the plans – whether community or specific development plans – on the communities in which the development is to occur. Moreover, the proposed processes pay only lip service to public participation, limiting them to state-mandated requirements and the minimal limits of political propriety.

zMOD Zoning Ordinance rewrite – And then came “zMod,” the county’s ongoing process to re-write the county’s zoning ordinances. The major assignment the Clarion Group is tackling is a complete rewrite of the county’s zoning ordinance, including streamlining processes, without making substantive changes in the ordinance. 

Clarion presented its first draft of the substance of the proposed rewrite on July 1, 2019. There are, in fact, substantive changes laid out in the draft’s summary covering accessory uses, electrical vehicle charging, and much more. On the other hand, there is no discussion of the process by which one legislates changes to that ordinance, including the role of public input. 

Among the changes permitted in PRCs, the zMOD draft permits new “live-work development” and “stacked townhouse” uses and excludes “community swim, tennis, and other recreational uses.” This raises questions about the future of Reston’s two golf courses and the county regional recreation center that is supposed to be built in Reston.

Certainly, there will be much more to come, and we doubt that much of it will be to Reston’s advantage or promote its residents’ involvement.

It is vital that all Reston residents understand the proposed PRC zoning ordinance changes and their implications for our community. There is much to be concerned about. More broadly, we need to understand what changes, if any, are on the docket for the process for developing, vetting, and approving PRC zoning changes.

It was only because of a huge community effort involving literally hundreds, even thousands, of Restonians, that we were able to postpone indefinitely consideration of the recent Reston PRC zoning ordinance amendment that would have allowed unconscionable increases in our population.

One encouraging sign is that activists from all over the county are now organizing. Citizens from all Fairfax County districts are becoming increasingly alarmed at the county’s rush to approve development everywhere with reduced citizen review.

The 2016 Gartner report raises huge concerns. It seems to be the blueprint designed for and by developers at the expense of true public input.

Any county effort to reduce community involvement in the zoning amendment process will only make it that much more difficult for us to stop truly bad county decisions that would undermine the goals and principles of our master planned community.

13 responses to “County officials are prioritizing development over community involvement

  1. Dare I say that I think this is a good thing? More often than not, "community involvement" means a handful of NIMBYs who oppose any efforts to allow apartments or condos, bike lanes, bus service, road diets or anything that has been proven to make places more livable for people rather than automobiles. Kudos to the county for trying to find a way to give people in the county options other than single family, auto-oriented sprawl.

  2. David, there is a reason more than 900 citizens turned out for a Reston meeting Oct 23, 2017 at South Lakes High School! Today the Reston situation is even worse. Our PLANNED community is gridlocked during rush hours, families and businesses are suffering and only a small portion of approved 'plans' have been built. The rush for FFX Co. to approve plans WITHOUT scrutiny has destroyed functioning environments. The Gartner report from 2015 was kept secret from the public. WHY? For the County to receive more tax revenue??? To what end if our communities do not serve us in even the most basic ways due to overcrowding? For sure, Reston is NOT more livable for people!!! PS: We have ALWAYS had lots of apts. and condos in Reston, paths for bikes, etc. but we are not urban. We are a suburb and want to stay an environmentally healthy suburb vs. a polluted, non-functioning urban stress-mess.

    1. The scrutiny has become prohibitive. Look at Mason, nothing gets built in this heated market and that affects us in many ways: quality of life, economics, safety, transportation, and on and on. Community involvement is necessary, but it should be facilitated by professionals that know what they are doing and not by a bunch of wannabes. Fairfax needs to find a balance of allowing the community to be involved without creating acrimony and scaring off development to other jurisdictions. NIMBYs don't like change regardless of the benefits.

  3. The most important aspect of this is that the Gartner Report was written with only industry insiders consulted. No other stakeholders were included in the process. While making the developers dreams come true is admirable it leaves out those of us silly taxpaying citizens who care about the infrastructure we will be left paying for and with staff making decision on our behalf. All while there are STILL 2 million square feet of empty office space in Fairfax County. The reason many of these public hearings are not well attended is because the Supervisor has been meeting with the developers for a year or two prior to it becoming known to the public until the clearing starts. Most of us work and can't make these meetings late into the night. Now the strategic planning process is the beginning of the sales process to convince us all we had input to all of this. I'm all for streamlining process but not for giving away our quality of life because the public wasn't properly engaged.

    1. Case in point of community failing to make the appropriate decisions and providing bad input. When metro was being build Gerry Connolly put taking the metro to Skyline to a vote in Mason. At the time the residents did not want DC blacks to invade their sacred Mason. So at the hands of bigots, Mason lost out and all we are left with is vacant big box stores, uptick in traffic, section 8 housing, deluxe homeless shelters, vacant lots and stores and an area in decline because Mason is not on a network of good mass transit.

    2. I never heard of that, and it doesn't make much sense as Mason has a lot of black people. Do you have a link?

    3. I think the comment from Anon 6:44 might be completely made up. The planning for the Metro line that would have possibly gone by or near Skyline was decided by the late '60s. The last Metro map to include a possible Skyline/Columbia Pike line dates from 1967. (There were two dead end tunnels built leading south near the Pentagon Metro station toward Columbia Pike.) The choice of location for the Blue and Orange lines was ultimately dictated mostly by cost so they ended up being built on either old railroad/streetcar right-of-way or next to the I-66 corridor.
      The Skyline Metro speculation persisted enough into the early '70s that the Charles E. Smith Companies built "Skyline City" and what still represents 5 of the 25 tallest buildings in Virginia. They had much better luck with their "Crystal City" project. That has a Metro station.
      Gerry Connolly and his tenure in local government came much later. While he did overlap as Chairman of the Board of Supervisors with the beginning of the Columbia Pike streetcar line proposal, that fell apart more recently because of the exit of Arlington County support, a lack of feasibility and no funds being approved to move it forward.
      If you want to look into racism and zoning/land decisions, look up the decision-making behind the placement of Dulles Airport or further back, the choice by Falls Church to reduce the boundaries of its city limits by 30% and remove what was once heavily black "South Falls Church".

    4. Nope its true go back and do research in the 70's Mason blocked bringing the metro. It is true there are black folks here, but we are fortunately a more tolerant county than we were 40 years ago. There is actually a tunnel opening that has been shuttered that would have taken metro down Columbia Pike. If you challenge Connolly on this as I have he will tell you that it was democratic decision. And I say that is not democratic that is just plain dumb.

  4. I applaud this. I am tired of a bunch of antigrowth NIMBYs blocking progress and development. It’s time to expedite progressive development, not stymie it.

    1. The real NIMBYs are the planners and developers who rake in the money from overcrowding our county but don't have to live with the effects of it BECAUSE THIS IS NOT *THEIR* BACKYARD. They don't give a crap about the long-term effects.

      BTW: I am not anti-growth. I do, however, prefer smart growth that will not overwhelm our schools, our environment, our health and our wallets.

    2. I think people should be far more engaged on these issues. If there was a true master plan that was approved by citizens it would matter. As it is they change the comprehensive plan line by line leading to disjointed and "unplanned" communities. If they were building places people wanted to live the County wouldn't have to worry about its tax base. And the people should be telling the developers what THEY want in their communities, not what makes the developers the richest. I'm for scraping the "get to yes" mantra for "hell no — get it right" mantra.

  5. I don’t want “Progressive development.”

    I miss the pocket forest in Bailey’s Crossroads I used to camp in. Now it’s a CVS…there’s a Rite-Aide a few steps away; and an existing CVS a mile away. An oasis of nature has been replaced by unnecessary asphalt and concrete.

    I also miss the abandoned Safari Lounge where I had many great times, though an unsolved murder took place there several years ago. Now it’s a demolished foundation in a fenced-off dump that marks the true gateway to Mason District and Fairfax County.

    I want the bazaar proposed for the vacant former Toys R Us to be approved and supported, rather than blocked by close-minded Supervisor Gross. Instead, the building stands vacant, an open invitation to looters and squatters.

    Fairfax County epitomizes the phrase “government of the privileged, by the privileged, for the privileged.”

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