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Annandale community comes together for Holiday Tree Lighting Ceremony

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The Poe Carolers include teachers, food service staff, and student John Lopez (fourth from right).
Last night’s rain forced the Annandale Holiday Tree Lighting Ceremony indoors, but didn’t dampen anyone’s spirits. People watched from inside the Burke and Herbert Bank on Annandale Road as the tree in the Toll House Park was lit by remote control.

The Poe Middle School Carolers performed Christmas classics, featuring amazingly talented eighth-grade soloist John Lopez. Burke and Herbert provided refreshments, and AnnSandra contributed door prizes. The Tree Lighting is an annual event sponsored by the Annandale Chamber of Commerce.

Annik Fus, a fourth-grader at Belvedere Elementary School with Santa.


Annandale ranked fourth best city in Virginia by real estate co.

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An elevated view of John Marr Drive and Columbia Pike taken from the ferris wheel in the Kmart parking lot at the Annandale Carnival last June.
Annandale is listed as the fourth best city in Virginia by Movoto, an online real estate brokerage based in San Mateo, Calif. Centreville is number one, followed by Tysons Corner and McLean.

Annandale beat out the following cities rounding out the top 10: Oakton is number five, followed by Alexandria, Chantilly and Reston (tied for seventh place), Rose Hill in Fairfax County, and Suffolk (the only city on the list not in Northern Virginia).

“Annandale came in as the most diverse city in our top 10, with just 50.4 percent of the population being one ethnicity (as opposed to McLean, for example, which is 79.3 percent Caucasian),” Movoto states. “It also scored really well in its median home value—95 percent higher than the state average.”

“Outside of the numbers though, Annandale is the perfect place to, literally, get outside. Parks like the Mason District Park, the Annandale Community Park, Kendale Woods Park, and over 20 more, are scattered throughout the area,” it states.

According to Movoto, the city rankings are based on amenities, cost of living, crime, education, median household income, and diversity.

By amenities, the company considered such factors as the number of restaurants, shops, and “five-star hiking” opportunities per person, said Movoto spokesperson Travis Sawrie. The education score is based on the percentage of the population with a high school diploma.

Movoto also uses state-specific criteria. For example, the company looked at the number of “Southern restaurants” per capita in ranking the Virginia cities, using data from Yelp, because “Virginia is in the South,” Sawrie said. He didn’t seem to know that we have more restaurants from South Korea here than “the South.”

School board member Evans addresses concerns on office building school

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Mason School Board member Sandy Evans released the following Q & A about the use of an office building on Leesburg Pike in Seven Corners to relieve severe overcrowding at Bailey’s Elementary School. 

The school board approved a resolution Dec. 5 to acquire the building, using eminent domain if necessary, and retrofit it for use by students beginning next September. The Fairfax County Planning Commission also approved use of the building for a school Dec. 5. While many Bailey's parents and staff support the project, there is a great deal of opposition among residents of the nearby Sleepy Hollow Manor and Buffalo Hill communities.

Bailey’s Overcrowding Solution: Questions and Answers, by Sandy Evans

Bailey’s Elementary School for the Arts and Sciences has been dealing with severe overcrowding for many years now, and FCPS has been working on finding solutions. We currently have 1,331 students at Bailey’s, with a projected population of 1,593 by the 2017-2018 school year. We currently have 19 trailers at the school, and have had to take half of the school library for classroom space, an unprecedented situation.

We now believe we have found a solution for Bailey’s that will work, and we are moving forward to develop a plan. For some time, we looked for acreage anywhere near the Bailey’s Crossroads/Culmore area to support a traditional school structure, even hired an outside consultant to do a complete search, but there simply wasn’t appropriate land available. So we turned to the idea of an urban-style school, using previous commercial space.

FCPS has identified a building at 6245 Leesburg Pike that lends itself to such an urban model, and we are actively pursuing buying it. We hope to complete a purchase this month. This new style of course raises many questions in the minds of both Bailey’s parents and staff, as well as neighbors of the building, and I will try to answer as many of those as possible here.

Q. Will this be a Bailey’s-only solution or will it involve other surrounding schools?
This building is intended to solve the Bailey’s overcrowding problem. If we are successful in opening a new school at the site in the fall of 2014, as we are hoping, only Bailey’s students will be going to the new school.

Q. What about overcrowding at other schools in the area? Aren’t you looking at a second new school? 
We do have overcrowding at other schools, particularly Glen Forest ES, and FCPS currently sees the potential need for another school in Mason District down the road. Our aim is add another elementary school to the area within the next seven years. We are also looking at other solutions for overcrowding, such as additions to existing schools. This is based upon trends in the overall area, coupled with potential development associated with re-visioning in this part of the county.

The Capital Improvement Plan (CIP) serves as the vehicle to reflect enrollment trends and how those trends are to be addressed. We will continue to monitor, through the capital improvement process, future enrollment trends, potential redevelopment impact trends, and the approach to address capacity requirements.

Q. Where will the money come from for the second school?
We would need to include this in a future bond. The CIP, which the School Board approves annually, will need to reflect this by early 2015. It should be noted that there are five other regions of the county in which student growth is projected to be more severe than this region, which the board will need to consider as they move forward with the CIP.

Q. Should Sleepy Hollow Elementary School parents near the new school anticipate that their kids will eventually be redistricted to the new school? 
At this time there are no considerations to move students from Sleepy Hollow ES into the new school. Sleepy Hollow is not projected to have an overcrowding problem in the next several years, so there is no need to reassign students from that school. When the second new school is eventually constructed, there is certainly the possibility that a regional elementary boundary study would be conducted.

Q. How much traffic will the new school bring to that area? What routes will buses take and at what time of day? Will any of the access roads or traffic lights in the area be changed?
We are currently reviewing the school bus transportation routes, traffic patterns, and possible bell schedules. We should have recommendations in the spring.

Q. Will there be a playground outside when the new school opens? When can we expect to see one?
The outdoor play area is subjected to a different approval process than the building. It is our intent to begin that process in March. We believe that the determination of the types and location of the outdoor spaces will need to be conducted in a collaborative manner among the school staff, the parents, and the adjoining property owners. If the approval process does not experience any delays, it could be possible to begin construction in the late fall of 2014.

Q. What about indoor gymnasium space? Where will the children get exercise during the day?
The architects will work to design internal activity spaces to meet requirements for physical education. As the planning develops over the next few weeks, we will be able to provide more clarity to this question.

Q. Will FCPS be trying to cut through cul‐de‐sacs to get to the new building?
No, FCPS has no desire to cut through cul‐de‐sacs.

Q. Will there be enough parking spaces at the new site for teachers and parents?
There are currently 280 parking spots at the building—more than twice the amount that currently exists at Bailey’s (110). It is our intention to construct the outdoor play area within a portion of the parking area which would result in a parking space count approximately equal to Bailey’s.

Q. Some people are upset at the idea of putting a school in a five‐story commercial space. What reassurance can you give students, families, and neighbors about the appropriateness of this building as a school for elementary school children?
The architects selected for this project recently opened a high school in Atlanta in an existing office building and have experience in this type of building conversion. There is sufficient space within the building to support the FCPS educational specifications—essentially the requisite quantity and sized learning and supplemental spaces to support the full program of studies.

In addition to the standard spaces each elementary school receives, it is our intention to supplement the educational program with unique features associated with the Bailey’s science and art focus as well as an expanded focus upon the use of technology. There is little question that the school will be considered a true 21st century learning environment.

Volunteers decorate veterans' homes

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Jessica Sutherland got a nice surprise Saturday morning. A team of over 50 volunteers showed up at her house on Dodson Drive in Annandale to do yard work, including mulching and bulb planting, and put up holiday decorations.

The volunteers were with the Decorate a Vet program, which was started in 2010 by Jeff Jones, the owner of Classic Stonescaping + Gardens, because many military veterans and service members can’t take care of basic household chores. The group organizes teams to do outdoor work, like cleaning gutters, and makes homes safer for wounded veterans by installing accessibility features like wheelchair ramps.

 
Sutherland plans to keep the decorations up until February, when her husband, a lieutenant colonel in the Air Force, comes home. He’s been deployed in Afghanistan since April 1. They have two children at Columbia Elementary School.

Earlier in the week, Decorate a Vet sent a professional landscaping team from Classic Stonescaping + Gardens to her house to install stepping stones and a retaining wall.

Decorate a Vet volunteers were planning to take care of seven houses last weekend and three next weekend. Local homes are nominated by individuals or American Legion Post 130 in Falls Church.

Winter grips Annandale in icy fingers

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Winter weather has finally arrived in Annandale, with sleet, freezing rain, and snow, making for some headaches on Monday, Dec. 9, including traffic tie-ups, downed trees, a power outage in the Columbia Pines area, and a large sink hole on Hummer Road near Pleasant Way, caused by a water main break. A car got stuck in the sink hole at about 7 a.m.; fortunately no one was injured.

The video (above) on the ice storm was taken by Bob Kovacs of Annandale Arts.

More snow is on the way. The National Weather Service is predicting an accumulation of 3 to 6 inches, starting at around daybreak on Tuesday, Dec. 10.

Fairfax County public schools and FCPS offices will be closed on Dec. 10. All school activities are canceled. Santa’s Ride, which was expected to cruise by Belvedere Elementary School, is cancelled, too.

New Anthony's Restaurant expected to open in April

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The new Anthony’s Restaurant on Annandale Road in Falls Church is expected to open in April 2014, said General Manager Pete Zoutis. Work on the interior should start by the end of December. 

The restaurant will be in the new Westlawn Shopping Center being developed by Bill Page Honda. The shopping center will also have a BB&T Bank and Walgreens. Other spaces have not been leased yet.

The original Anthony’s opened on Broad Street in Falls Church in 1972. It closed in June to make way for a new development, disappointing its many loyal customers, who were later thrilled to learn of its pending rebirth.


There’s another Anthony’s in Manassas, also managed by Zoutis. The menu features traditional Italian, Greek, and American fare, including pizza, pasta, stuffed grape leaves, burgers, and gyros. The new place might have some additional items on the menu, said Zoutis.

Renovation, expansion under way at Monticello apartments in Falls Church

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Big changes are under way at the Monticello apartment complex in Falls Church. A hundred new units are being added, a new club house is under construction, and existing units are being renovated. The rents are going up, too.

The Monticello has about 736 one and two-bedroom garden apartments. It’s located behind Loehmann’s Plaza and the Thomas Jefferson Library on Arlington Boulevard.

The 8,000-square foot clubhouse is scheduled to open this spring, says construction manager Kevin Aiken of Virginia Management Inc. It will have a fitness center, bathhouse for the new pool,  club room with a fireplace for movies and social gatherings, management and leasing offices, and an outdoor grilling area. The new pool, with swimming lanes and a children’s pool, is expected to open on Memorial Day weekend.


The new club house.
About 60 of the new units will be no-bedroom studio apartments, ranging in size from 400 to 600 square feet. Rents for those units haven’t been finalized but will probably be about $1,100 a month, said Aiken.

The Monticello is adding efficiency units because, “we wanted to increase the options available on the property,” said Aiken. “Based on conversations with prospective tenants, people want more affordable and diverse units.”

Another 40 of the new apartments will be three-bedroom units, with rents starting at $2,200.

Other than the clubhouse, there won’t be any additional buildings on the property. All of the new units are being carved out of space in existing buildings currently used for laundry rooms and storage. The buildings will still have laundry rooms, but they will be smaller.

Rents for one-bedroom apartments are currently $1,160. After renovation, they will start at $1,345. Two-bedroom-unit rents will increase from the current rate of $1,545 to $1,640 to $1,690, depending on size.

The renovation includes new kitchen layouts with new cabinets and appliances, refinished floors, upgraded HVAC systems with new fan coil conductors, and new finishes in the bathrooms. The lobby areas in each building are being refurbished, too. Current renters are being temporarily relocated to vacant apartments during the work.

About a quarter of the existing units have been renovated already. All of the units are expected to be completed by fall 2015.

Most tenants are staying and will move into renovated units, Aiken said. Virginia Management is paying their moving costs if they stay on the property. If they leave Monticello, he said, the company will help them find another apartment they can afford elsewhere. The company manages six other apartment complexes in the area, including Southern Towers on Seminary Road.

In a major policy change, tenants will be allowed to have dogs, Aiken said. Currently, only cats and other small animals are allowed.

Children who live at the Monticello attend Westlawn Elementary School, Luther Jackson Middle School, and Falls Church High School.

Neighbors oppose use of office building as Bailey's Elementary School annex

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The office building at 6245 Leesburg Pike as seen from Hazelton Street.
The Bailey’s Elementary School community—parents and school employees—generally support Fairfax County Public Schools’ plan to convert an office building on Leesburg Pike into a Bailey’s annex to relieve severe overcrowding, but people who live near the building are mobilizing against it.

Residents of the Sleepy Hollow Manor and Buffalo Hill communities are unhappy that they weren’t informed about the project until it was already far along in the planning process and have raised objections about traffic and safety problems.

On Dec. 5, the Fairfax County School Board approved a resolution to acquire the five-story building at 6245 Leesburg Pike—using eminent domain if necessary—and retrofit it in time for students in grades 3-5 to start attending classes there in September 2014.  The Fairfax County Planning Commission approved a measure allowing the building to be used as a school.

Bailey’s has nearly 300 more students than it was designed for. Mason School Board member Sandy Evans explained the rationale for using the office building to relieve overcrowding in a Q and A document. She told residents she will set up a meeting to address their concerns.

Sleepy Hollow Manor resident Debbie Ratliff complained that only about 30 people—on her cul de sac on Shadeland Drive and on Buffalo Ridge Road—received notices about the Dec. 4 Planning Commission hearing. The letters weren’t delivered by certified mail as required, so some people thought they were junk mail and didn’t open them.

“We weren’t part of the process,” Ratliff complained. She said the project will benefit students who attend Bailey’s magnet programs and don’t even live in the Bailey’s attendance zone. “This is literally in our backyard,” yet neither Evans nor Mason Supervisor Penny Gross “communicated with us. A lot of us feel insulted.”

Ratliff believes putting children into the building without making any alterations to the grounds will be unsafe. FCPS plans to seek approval to put up a playground and other exterior improvements, but that process will take much longer.

That delay means it could take two years before a fence could be put up to prevent children from running into the street, she said. Meanwhile there is heavy traffic and speeding on Route 7. Last year there was a car crash fatality on Castle Road and an armed robbery at a post office across the street in the Seven Corners Shopping Center last year. “It’s a mess; it’s dangerous,” she said.

Ratliff said the attorney hired by FCPS to oversee the acquisition, John McGranahan Jr., of Hunton & Williams, promised residents that their children would never go to the office building school. “That is insulting,” said Ratliff. “If it’s not good enough for my kid, it’s not good for any kid.” Besides, he can’t make that promise; FCPS is likely to carry out a boundary adjustment study within the next few years.

At a meeting at Bailey’s Nov. 26, Gross told the audience that the office building will become “a permanent elementary school for all of us,” Ratliff said. “Now it’s being spun as a Bailey’s-only solution. It’s insulting for anyone to tell us it’s not going to be our neighborhood school.” Children in Ratliff’s neighborhood currently go to Sleepy Hollow Elementary School.

Richard Chesterton, vice president of the Buffalo Hill Citizens Association, urged the Planning Commission to reject the proposal, also citing the lack of notification and traffic concerns, as well as the lack of pedestrian access and insufficient screening between the building and the neighborhood. In addition, he said the site is only three and a-half acres, which is one-third of the minimum size recommend for an elementary school by the Virginia Department of Education.

“At some future date, this school is expected to cease being an auxiliary school for Bailey’s Elementary and may well become our local elementary school,” Chesterton said. “To meet its long-term purpose, we want a well-designed school with adequate grounds that is not the product of crisis management.”

He also said the community has been misled. Fairfax County voters approved a school bond in November that included $20.8 million for what was supposed to be construction of a new school building in the Bailey’s Crossroads area. Now those funds are being diverted for the acquisition and retrofit of an existing building.

Mary Chesteron raised additional problems associated with introducing school bus traffic to an already congested area during the morning rush hour. In addition, she said, many parents will drive their children to the school.

The office building was occupied by Fairfax County health and human services offices until summer 2012 when they moved to the Heritage complex in Annandale. Critics of the school project say many of the clients who came to those offices took public buses. 

The Fairfax County Department of Transportation issued a memorandum on the school proposal citing “substantial issues” regarding the inadequacy of access to the site from the Route 7 service road, including the need for school buses to make sharp turns. FCDOT also urged FCPS to coordinate with the Seven Corners Land Use and Transportation Task Force, which is developing recommendations to improve transportation throughout the area.

Ernie Wells, a resident of Sleepy Hollow Manor who has a son that spent six years at Bailey’s, said he understands the need to address overcrowding at the school but is concerned about the possibility of cutting through roads in her neighborhood to provide vehicular and pedestrian access to the building.

He said the lack of information provided to people who live near the site “was a fundamental error and misjudgment on the part of FCPS” and “added to a sense of mistrust.”

Regarding the overcrowding at Baileys, FCPS has “kicked the can down the road” so many times, it’s gotten to the point where it’s become a crisis, meaning “the threshold for acceptable solutions is lowered,” Wells said. And that doesn’t bode well for a well-thought-out solution for addressing overcrowding at Glasgow Middle School and Stuart High School.

FCPS officials share plans for office building school design

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A rear view of the office building to be transformed into a school.

Fairfax County Public Schools officials shared some of their thinking about how the annex to Bailey’s Elementary School, in an office building at 6245 Leesburg Pike, might look and function at a meeting with parents Dec. 12. The new building will serve about 400 students in grades 3-5, beginning in fall 2014.

School Board member Sandy Evans said she hopes FCPS will be able to take ownership of the building by the end of the year and that the school system will be able to purchase it rather than have to acquire it through eminent domain.

Although none of this has been finalized, FCPS Cluster 3Assistant Superintendent Douglas Tyson presented a conceptual overview of the current thinking on the school design. The center of the L-shaped building will be used for common spaces, while classrooms will be at the ends, he said.  

The cafeteria would be on two levels and would have small tables, giving it more of a café feel than an institutional dining hall. The library/media center would have digital resources, as well as books, to meet the needs of all Bailey’s students, many of whom don’t  have computers at home.

The classrooms and other facilities in the new building will meet the size and other specifications for any FCPS school, Tyson said. To ensure security, there won’t be any classrooms on the first floor. The architectural firm, Cooper Carry, would bring in acoustical engineers to address noise levels in the building.

Bailey’s Principal Marie Lemon said the building will provide all of the services required for Bailey’s status as a magnet school for the arts and sciences, such as a TV production studio and spaces for music, dance, and other physical activity.

Tyson emphasized that the new building will be part of Bailey’s Elementary, not a separate school, and that Lemon will be the only principal. He also said the two buildings could be called something like the east and west campus of Bailey’s but he hopes the community will come up with a more creative idea for naming the buildings.

Lots of issues need to be worked out, he said, including the possibility of staggered start times to make it easier for parents with children at both buildings, the configuration of the kiss and ride area for parents dropping off their children, and whether there would be a shuttle between the two campuses.   

The outdoor play space also needs to be figured out, he said, and that will be done with people who live near the building. “We want to make sure it’s going to be in the best interests of the children at Bailey’s and we also want to be a good neighbor,” he said.

Charges to the grounds require a lengthier planning and approval process, which won’t be completed before school starts next fall. “There is plenty of space out there for outdoor recreation,” Tyson said.

When asked if  there will be improvements at the existing Bailey’s building, Tyson said, “We have every intention of making some improvements here, as well,” but no decisions have been made on that. He also said there will need to be more space for the School-Age Child Care program, but doesn’t know if it will be at the old or new building.

Regarding the possibility of a boundary change, Evans said, “this is a Bailey’s solution” and there won’t be any changes for next year. She said a boundary study is a lengthy process that would take more than a year.

A tab on Bailey’s website will provide updates on the building project, as well as a form for parents to submit questions. Evans addressed some issues in a FAQ document.

Brian Butler, the principal of Mason Crest Elementary School, which opened in fall 2012, shared some insights on the process of developing a new school. Butler was hired after the school was already designed and built, but he was responsible for ordering the furniture, technology, and other equipment. A “new school committee” with representatives from many FCPS departments was very helpful, he said.

Mason Crest drew students from four elementary schools, and Butler reached out to parents months before the school opened. Incoming students were invited to vote on a new playground design, school colors, and a mascot.

Rock Rockenbach, the Parent Teacher Organization president at Mason Crest, said he, like many other parents,“wasn’t happy about having to leave a school we loved”—Woodburn, in his case—but the FCPS boundary study and school construction process was expertly done. “As scary as change can be and as difficult as it is to move to a new school, you can have a lot of faith that FCPS will handle this well,” he advised the Bailey’s parents.

Security breach affects drug data for Bailey's Health Center patients

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A security breach as led to the unauthorized disclosure of confidential personal information for 1,499 clients at the Bailey’s Health Center, the Fairfax County Health Department reported, Dec. 13.

The patient information that was improperly accessed included patients’ names, addresses, social security numbers, and pharmacy identification numbers; the names and dosages of their medications; payment information; the names and addresses of prescribers.


The Bailey’s Center, 6196 Arlington Blvd. in Seven Corners, is one of three centers in the Fairfax County Community Health Care Network, a partnership of physicians, health care professionals, and the county that provides primary health services to low-income people.

A Dec. 11 letter to Bailey’s Health Center patients from Fairfax County Director of Health Gloria Addo-Ayensu says the breach was discovered Oct. 24.

The county contracts with Molina Healthcare Inc. to manage the Bailey’s Health Center, and Molina subcontracts with Health Business Systems Inc. (HBS) to maintain a pharmacy database and provide prescription services. On Oct. 18, the letter states, HBS notified Molina that “a computer file containing pharmaceutical records on 1,499 patients was inadvertently left on an unsecured computer server and accessed by three separate entities on four occasions” between Sept. 9 and Oct. 3. “The breach was discovered through a routine forensic audit performed by HBS.”

The Health Department has advised affected clients to take precautions, such as setting up fraud alerts and taking advantage of a free credit monitoring service.

Make an ornament with Annandale craft artisans

Water main break in Columbia Pines

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There was a water main break Sunday, Dec. 15, at about 9 p.m., on Murray Lane near the intersection with Bruce Lane in the Columbia Pines neighborhood in Annandale. It was captured it on video by Bob Kovacs, who has produced a lot of material for the Annandale Arts You Tube channel and happens to live close to the break.

Kovacs discovered the water main break when the water was shut off and it flowed out of his house, which is a bit higher up than neighboring houses, causing a siphoning effect. After being shut off briefly, water was restored, but was dirty looking coming out of the tap, he said. Residents probably won’t have clean water until the break is fixed and the pipes are flushed.

Winter warblers: One of the more annoying aspects of the holiday season

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We hope the owners of this home on Murray Lane, Annandale, like carolers.
By Robert Schwaninger

There is something you should consider each year before you put up your Christmas lights. A holiday-lit house attracts carolers. Just like a porch light in summer brings annoying moths and window-beating June bugs, lights on trees in winter will attract small flash mobs of carolers who will descend upon your front lawn and begin bellowing at your door.

These events always happen at the worst times. You’ve just changed clothes and are now sitting around in your most comfortable outfit, complete with holes in the backside and stains on the front, and these muffler-coated, do-gooders begin their harassment. They can see your shadow through the curtain and the flash of the television so they know you’re in there. 

This situation is not too different from a hostage situation. In fact, sometimes the leader of the carolers is actually carrying a bullhorn. But the carolers’ job is to get you off your butt and come to the door. They will then try to get you to open the door because they are dressed for 10-degree weather and it’s fun to watch you turn blue while they do a third chorus of “Deck The Halls.”  Their gift to you is bad harmony and a nice case of pneumonia.

 And in exchange for this interruption in your nightly downtime, you get to give them money.  This is because many caroling groups are collecting for some cause. You have no idea what the cause is and for all you know you just gave them a couple of bucks to save the Bolivian snotbird, or to have Donald Trump’s hair declared a historical landmark. But however it looks or sounds in its rosiest of settings, this is a shakedown.

 The real threat comes if you don’t have any small bills. First, they ain’t making change and they don’t take credit cards, so what happens if your wallet has only tens and twenties in it? You’re stuck and have to give them at least ten bucks. Since they didn’t expect such generosity, they act very pleased and to show their appreciation, they are going to sing more carols, just for you. By the time they’re done, you’re colder than Ted Williams’ head.

Since the thing that caroling most resembles is a kind of telemarketing, which also occurs at the worst times of day, I’ve devised a plan of action. I have contacted the Federal Trade Commission to see if we can come up with a new prohibition like the “do not call” list. This would be the “do not carol” list to protect unwitting homeowners from a phalanx of trespassing holiday hollerers. 

Violators of the “do not carol” list would be forced to watch every Christmas movie on the Hallmark Channel, which is roughly akin to eating a five-pound bag of sugar and a gallon of maple syrup. They would then be rounded up and together the group would have to sing “Little Drummer Boy” 100 times in a row. That’s about ten thousand “rumpas” and another twenty thousand “pums.” There isn’t enough aspirin in the world to take away that headache.

 Until our nation’s lawmakers help out, there is little you can do to protect yourself, short of putting up an eight-foot-tall menorah on your lawn. And even that might not work. Some of these marauding merrymakers know the “Dreidel Song,” which is only matched in lousy use of repetitive lyrics by “Hey Jude.” 

So, like every other obligatory holiday horror, maybe there is no escape.  But remember, it all starts with hanging Christmas lights outside your house. Maybe burning Santa in effigy would do the trick.

Seven Corners transportation alternatives proposed for further study

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Route 7 in Seven Corners on a weekday afternoon.

The consultant working with the Seven Corners Land Use and Transportation Task Force has developed six alternatives for rerouting traffic through the heavily congested Route7/Route 50/Wilson Boulevard interchange and has narrowed them down to four options for further study.

Zachary Horowitz of Kittleson & Associates presented the alternatives to the task force Dec. 17. He said the goal is to move traffic through Seven Corners more efficiently by reducing congestion and making the area more accessible to pedestrians and bicyclists. 


The options developed by Kittleson are based on the preliminary land use concepts discussed by the task force, the results of the transportation design charette held by the task force in August, feedback from the public, and input from Fairfax County Office of Community Revitalization staff.

Kittleson evaluated the six options according to a list of criteria, such as whether they improve mobility, align with the Seven Corners task force’s ideas for land use, and impact on neighborhoods. As a result, three of the options were considered not viable.

Kittleson recommended the remaining options for further study:
  • Alternative #2: Split diamond with couplet on Route 7—A new route parallel to Route 7 between South Street and just west of Patrick Henry Drive would allow for one-way traffic on both roads. Roosevelt Boulevard would be extended to Sleepy Hollow Road. Wilson Boulevard would be terminated in a cul-de-sac before reaching the Seven Corners intersection. There would be two new overpasses on Route 50. Several smaller roads would be added to create a local grid network. (More details and maps are available online.)
  • Alternative #4: Two half-diamond interchanges—A ring would be created around the Seven Corners interchange, and Roosevelt Boulevard would be connected to Sleepy Hollow. Two ramp terminals would provide additional overcrossings on Route 50, and there would be a third new overcrossing. Some Route 7/Route 50 traffic would be diverted away from the Seven Corners interchange, and the interchange would become the intersection of Route 7, Wilson Boulevard, and Sleepy Hollow Road.
  • Alternative #6: Jug handle configuration—The Seven Corners interchange would become the intersection of Route 7 and Wilson Boulevard/Sleepy Hollow Road with a new road cutting through the Buffalo Hill neighborhood. Access to andfrom routes 50 and 7 would primarily be via right turns at at-grade ramps outside of the interchange area. Hillwood Avenue would connect to local streets and westbound Route 50 via South Street.
The task force asked Kittleson to also consider Alternative #5. It would connect Wilson Boulevard with Sleepy Hollow Road and a network of streets. It's the least costly option, said task force co-chair John Thillman, and “it’s the only one that doesn’t knock down a lot of buildings and cut through shopping centers and neighborhoods.”

Thillman suggested the final plan will likely be a hybrid combining elements from more than one option. He likes the idea of connecting Roosevelt Boulevard with Route 50, but doesn’t think a proposal to cut through neighborhoods will have much of a chance. “I don’t want to come up with a plan that will never get built,” he said.

Armed robbery in Seven Corners

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The Fairfax County Police Department reports an armed robbery occurred on the 6100 block of Greenwood Drive in Seven Corners at 9:25 p.m. on Dec. 15. A man and woman were walking when two suspects approached them. One suspect displayed a handgun and demanded property. Both suspects took property from the couple and fled. There were no injuries.

The first suspect was described as a black male, in his 20s, about 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighing 150 pounds. The second suspect was described as a black male, in his 20s, about 5 feet 6 inches tall, and weighing 130 pounds.

A police spokesperson declined to specify what items were stolen. He said police use the term “property” to describe anything other than cash.

Anyone with information is encouraged to contact Crime Solvers, 866-411-TIPS/8477, text “TIP187” plus your message to CRIMES/274637, or call Fairfax County Police, 703-691-2131.


Car fire in Columbia Pines

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First a water main break Dec. 15, then a car fire the next day—it’s been an eventful week in the Columbia Pines neighborhood in Annandale. The car fire, on Bruce Lane, was captured on video by Mary Ellen Dawley, who saw the smoke and started running. She happens to be the wife of Annandale Blog videographer Bob Kovacs. He did some editing on the brief clip and uploaded it to his Annandale Arts You Tube channel.

Local robotics teams heading to state tournament

Immigrant students sue for right to pay in-state college tuition

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NOVA student Giancarla Rojas Mendoza and Tim Freilich of the Legal Aid Justice Center.
Giancarla Rojas Mendoza, 18, worked really hard as a student at Falls Church High School and planned to attend George Mason University, majoring in economics and political science. But when she learned she would have to pay the out-of-state tuition rate, “that was really painful,” she says. Her parents had brought her from Bolivia to Virginia when she was a child, and because she is undocumented, the Commonwealth of Virginia determined she is ineligible for the in-state rate.

Rojas Mendoza is one of several plaintiffs in a lawsuit seeking to reverse that policy. The suit was filed Dec. 17 by the Legal Aid Justice Center in Arlington Circuit Court on behalf of seven graduates of Virginia high schools who have been granted Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) status by the federal government.

Their objective is help the thousands of Virginia students in similar circumstances who want to pursue higher education and professional careers, but for whom the out-of-state tuition rate would be a huge financial burden.

The lawsuit asks the court to overrule a policy of the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia (SCHEV)—implemented at the direction of Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli—that requires DACA students to pay the out-of-state tuition rate at state colleges and universities.

Under the federal DACA policy, announced in June 2012, youths who were brought to the United States before they turned 16, are attending or graduated from high school, are under age 31, and have not been convicted of a crime can apply for “deferred action.” If their application is approved, they can apply for a work permit, Social Security benefits, and a driver’s license—without fear of being deported—and can renew their “deferred action” status  indefinitely.

The lawsuit charges that DACA students should be considered Virginia residents and thus eligible for the in-state tuition rate at state colleges and universities.

“This case is about Virginia high school graduates wanting to continue their education here in Virginia,” said Tim Freilich, legal director of the Legal Aid Justice Center’s Immigrant Advocacy Program, at a news conference at the center’s offices in Seven Corners Dec. 17.

“Virginia should be helping these students realize their dreams, not putting unnecessary obstacles in their path,” Freilich said. “We invested in these students; we want them to be productive members of society.” If students know they’ll be able to attend college at the in-state rate, that will give them a huge incentive to study hard in high school—and encourage them look forward to a professional career and a brighter future.

“We’re just asking the court to take a look at existing Virginia law,” added Legal Aid Justice Center attorney Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg. “We think the court will agree that under existing law, these students should be eligible for in-state tuition benefits, just like their other Virginia classmates.”

The complaint seeks declaratory relief allowing all DACA students in Virginia to be eligible for the in-state rate under current law. That will benefit students right away, as they register for the next semester.

Meanwhile, the center is planning to ask the the incoming McAuliffe administration to take executive action to make it clear that students with DACA status are eligible for in-state tuition and will also seek action in the General Assembly. Del. Kaye Kory of Annandale and Del. Alfonso Lopez of Arlington/Bailey’s Crossroads are planning to introduce legislation to address this issue.

If elected officials want to make this change happen, they can do it right away, Freilich said. They don’t have to wait for a ruling in the center’s lawsuit.

As of September 2013, 9,000 Virginia youths applied for DACA status, and 7,000 of them have been approved.

Rojas Mendoza said she knows of about 20 other former classmates at Falls Church who were undocumented, but very few of them had the opportunity to go college.

Even though the cost of out-of-state tuition is a huge obstacle, she refused to give up her dream of college. She is a sophomore at Northern Virginia Community College (NOVA), taking 15 credits, which is costing $6,000. The out-of-state rate is $322 per credit hour at NOVA, compared to an in-state rate of $143.

Rojas Mendoza has gotten scholarship money, and her parents are paying the rest, which is challenging for them. Her father works in building maintenance, and her mother is a chef in a bakery. She doesn't know how she will be able to transfer to GMU, as its out-of-state rate is about $30,000 a year.

“I’m not asking for money from the government. I just want an opportunity to go to college. I want to stay here and help my community,” she said.

Lube Villarroel Orellana, a 2013 graduate of Annandale High School, is in a similar situation. She is attending NOVA part time, with hopes of eventually transferring to a four-year college and majoring in international relations.

She is using scholarship money to help pay the out-of-state tuition costs at NOVA, but she’s also depleting her family’s savings, which is a hardship as her father is an unemployed carpenter and her mother is a nanny. She can only attend school part time, and that means it will take her much longer to graduate.

Now 18, Villarroel Orellana came to the Unites States from Bolivia when she was 5 years old and has never gone back there. “I know more about Virginia than Bolivia,” she said. If the policy on DACA students changes, she hopes her older brothers will have an opportunity to graduate from college, too.

The other plaintiffs in the lawsuit are Blanca Correa, 22, and German Ivan Soto Navez, 21, both from Harrisonburg; Miriam Garcia Aleman, 19, of Albemarle County; Ramiro Vazquez Morales, 20, of Charlottesville; and Stefany Viruez Guzman, 19, of Arlington. All were brought to the United States as children and are now attending community college at the out-of-state rate.

Volunteers donate, wrap gifts for seniors

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The gift-wrapping party at the Annandale Fire Station.

Hundreds of volunteers took part in the seventh annual Be a Santa to a Senior program, sponsored by the Annandale office of Home Instead Senior Care.

They donated, collected, sorted, and wrapped nearly 2,000 gifts for lower-income senior residents of assisted living facilities that might otherwise not be remembered during the holidays.


Patricia Laura (left) and daughter Kimberly of Annandale.
The main event of Be a Santa to a Senior was the gift-wrapping party Dec. 17 at the social hall in the Annandale Fire Station on Columbia Pike. At least 100 people wrapped presents in bright holiday paper, as Elvis Tribute artist Lionel Ward sang and chatted with them. Chick-fil-Aand Magill’s Famous Pizza and Buffet donated food.

Lionel Ward as Evis with Lucy Reynolds, asixth-grader at Ravensworth Elementary School.
The gifts are being distributed to 560 residents of several senior living facilities in Northern Virginia, including Sleepy Hollow Manor and Lincolnia Senior Residences in Mason District.   

Most of the seniors had put simple items on their wish lists, like blankets, toiletries, DVDs, slippers, bathrobes, and puzzles. But volunteers also accommodated more challenging requests, including a book from the U.S. Patent Office and a CD player.

Extreme holiday decorations light up Annandale skies

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3912 Lincolnshire Street. This picture doesn't do the display justice, as not everything is lit up at once.
Holiday lights go a long way toward brightening up the cold, dark December evenings. Then there’s the Las Vegas-like display at 3912 Lincolnshire Street in Annandale that is probably visible from space.

Lights and Christmas figures cover the entire property. There’s a parade of reindeer on the roof and the trees are all lit up, too. All in all, there are 71,288 lights, says homeowner Tony Ruth, with some of them flashing to the beat of Christmas music.

Another view of Tony Ruth's house.
The house was dark for the past three years, leading some nearby residents to think the show was over. But Ruth was just taking a break—he had three surgeries and his mother passed away in 2011—but the lights are back this year, bigger and better than ever.

The over-the-top decorations are a long-time family tradition, says Ruth, who grew up in the house. His mother, a teacher at Poe Middle School for some 20 years, started the light displays in the 1980s, with a little more added every year.

The sides of the house are decorated, too.

Tony Ruth, meanwhile went to college and got married but stayed in the area and helped put up the lights. He moved back to 3912 Lincolnshire in the late 1990s and took the displays to a whole new level, adding more and more lights and figures.

“I got crazy in 2000,” he says. He put in controllers in 2003 and music in 2006. He estimates the display added about $200 to his December electric bill before he started switching to more efficient LED lights a few years ago.

There are several groupings that appear in the same place every year, including a nativity scene, choir, Santa’s workshop, and a children’s fantasy scene with gingerbread people and toys. New elements for 2013 include a fourth arch on the side of the house with reindeer and snowflakes and a couple of does on the other side of the house.

“We really like Christmas,” Ruth says when asked why he puts so much effort into the decorations. “I enjoy the folks coming by to see the show with their children.” There are regulars who come every year. Visitors are encouraged to look at, but not enter the backyard, where there are jumping reindeer, dancing trees, and falling snowflakes.

It takes a couple of months to put it all up, he says. During the off season, the decorations are stored in the basement, attic, and several storage sheds in the backyard.

Ruth says he’s never had any complaints from his neighbors, which is fortunate, as the show is very bright and loud. For a while, the people who lived directly across the street got a little competitive with their own extreme decorations, but they moved away several years ago.
3909 Lincolnshire Street also has gone all out with Christmas decorating.

There’s another family a few houses up the street at 3909 Lincolnshire that puts up some pretty extensive light displays that are getting bigger every year. Oscar Sejas, originally from Bolivia, says the idea for putting up all the lights came from his mother-in-law, Eduarda Vargas, a native of Peru who also lives there. Huge Christmas light displays are popular in those countries, he says. “It makes us happy when people come by to see the lights.”  
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