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The American lawn: A product in search of a need

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A well-cared-for lawn in Annandale.

By Jim McGlone 

Americans “farm” 40 million acres of lawn. That’s an area the size of Ol’ Virginny (modern Virginia and West Virginia). Lawn is the largest “crop” in the state of Maryland. Fairfax County lawn farmers buy more nitrogen than farmers in any other county of the Commonwealth. How did the great American lawn become such a fixture in today’s society?

Lawn care—mowing, weeding, seeding, raking, fertilizing, edging, watering—takes a lot of time and money. Can you imagine the American middle-class homeowner, having achieved a 40-hour work week, a single-family detached home, and financial security, saying, “What I need is something to use most of my free time when the weather is nice and much of my disposable income to feel complete?” If they did, they already had golf, so why would they need a lawn? 

The fact that many successful businesses exist to provide lawn care to suburbanites suggests that lots of homeowners view lawn care as a chore and a burden, rather than a delight.

What is the origin of the suburban lawn? Many people think it goes back to the days when the minute men would muster on the village “green” to drill and shoot redcoats. Not so. Those village squares did not become “greens” until the latter part of the 19th century. Lawns first arose in 18th century landscaping around European palaces. They provided places to stroll and see and be seen; and good visibility and fields of fire when the local peasants visited to “talk” about income redistribution and land equity. 

American landscape planners like Fredrick Law Olmstead borrowed the lawn for large public landscapes like Central Park and the private landscapes of wealthy robber barons. With these large public and estate lawns came the birth of the lawn care industry. Lawns were originally cut by hand with a scythe, so some enterprising individuals adapted agricultural machinery to cut the finer blades of grass and gave birth to the lawn mower. 

The turf grasses imported from England and northern Europe (yes, all turf grasses, even Kentucky bluegrass is from Europe or Asia) did not do well in our climate, particularly summer, so some tried to improve those grasses and gave birth to the lawn seed industry.

The problem was that with lawns restricted to large public and estate spaces, the lawn care industry didn’t have much of a market. To make a go of it, the early lawn mower and seed manufacturers had to expand their market. Fortunately for them, the suburbs were starting to expand, and the Garden Clubs of America decided that suburban home gardens should be downsized versions of estate gardens. 

And so a beautiful friendship was formed. Together, the young lawn care industry and the Garden Clubs of America, with a little help from Madison Avenue, convinced suburban homeowners that the thing they needed to be complete was a lawn.

The modern American lawn really took root and grew in the new mass-produced subdivisions after World War II.  Levittown, the original post-war subdivision, was built on an old potato farm on Long Island. Grass was the cheapest way to cover the acres of potato field not covered by streets and houses; each home also got four fruit trees. The petroleum and chemical industries also developed and expanded during the war and now turned to providing the new suburban class with tools to grow green, weed-free lawns. 

Homeowners began throwing time, money, fertilizer, weed killer, seed and water at their lawns in a vain attempt to get their turf grass to be green and luxuriant all year long. Nobody told them that turf grass has an admirable life strategy of working hard and growing vigorously during the cool months of spring and fall and vacationing during the hot summer and cold winter months.  Who needed to play golf (or had the time to), when they had a fairway in their front yard?

What does a lawn do for you? It does smell great when it is freshly cut—if you ignore the fact that one of the chemicals in that scent is the active ingredient in rat poison. (No, smelling it won’t hurt you, just don’t eat the green clippings.) It is a great place to play or snooze in the sun, if you have time to play or snooze after pampering your lawn. It is a great habitat for Japanese beetles. Wait, what? Yes, one of the many grubs that feed on your grass roots are Japanese beetle larvae, who after munching on your grass roots emerge as adults and eat pretty much everything. 

The truth of the matter is that the chemically addicted, over-pampered modern American lawn is a biological desert and serves very little purpose in the suburban landscape other than to soothe the ego of the modern American lawn farmer. If you don’t believe me, think about some of the lawn care commercials you have seen—“you don’t want to be ‘that guy’ do you?” Fortunately, there is a better way to take care of your lawn.

Jim McGlone is an urban forest conservationist with the Virginia Department of Forestry.


Volunteers sought for Accotink Creek cleanups

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Friends of Accotink Creek hosted a cleanup at Lake Accotink April 6, as part of the annual Potomac Watershed Cleanup.

Who wants to take a walk along a local stream and find it full of plastic bottles, tires, shopping cars, and all sorts of junk?

Local residents who care about the environment and the quality of life in our community are encouraged to take part in springtime cleanup activities hosted by Friends of Accotink Creek. FAC is a volunteer group committed to protecting, promoting, and restoring the water quality, natural habitat, and ecological well-being of the Accotink watershed. 


FAC has scheduled the following cleanup activities at various sites along Accotink Creek in the coming weeks, including several events on May 4 in the Annandale area:

April 13
9-11 a.m.—Fullerton Road bridge
12-2 p.m.—Franconia-Springfield Parkway bridge
3-5 p.m.—Telegraph Road bridge

April 20
9-11 a.m.—Fairfax Boulevard bridge
12-2 p.m.—Chain Bridge Road
3-5 p.m.—Old Lee Highway bridge

April 27
9-11 a.m.—Pickett Road bridge
12-2 p.m.—Barkley Drive bridge
3-5 p.m.—Woodburn Road bridge

May 4
9-11 a.m.—King Arthur Road bridge
12-2 p.m.—Little River Turnpike bridge
3-5 p.m.—Braddock Road bridge

If you want to participate, just show up or email FAC with questions. On May 18, FAC will host a thank-you gathering for volunteers, with refreshments and guided stream walks, at the Hidden Oaks Nature Center, 3-5 p.m.

Farewell to 'Darling,' the nature center snake

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Darling swallows a mouse.
An eastern rat snake that had lived at Hidden Oaks Nature Center in Annandale for 20 years has passed away. Naturalists don’t name exhibit animals—because they aren’t pets and shouldn’t be  humanized—but staff members referred to the snake as Darling.

He arrived in 1993, when a homeowner found some snake eggs in a mulch pile and gave them to Hidden Oaks, recalls Assistant Manager Suzanne Holland in a Fairfax County Park Authority blog post. Reptile eggs that are moved usually don’t survive, but this one did.

Young eastern rat snakes are aggressive, and Darling frequently bit caretakers. But these snakes are not venomous, and the bites were minor. As he matured, he got used to being handled and was often used in school programs. At the time of his death, he was nearly seven feet long.

Seven Corners Task Force urged to consider need for new schools

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Students head into Bailey's Elementary School.
Schools are “change agents” that can spur community revitalization and business investment, Dan Parris, Fairfax County Public Schools assistant superintendent for Cluster 3, told the Seven Corners Land Use and Transportation Task Force April 9.

Parris urged the task force to incorporate new school facilities into the revitalization plan for Seven Corners because the area is experiencing “vast growth in population” and existing schools are overcrowded.

According to Parris, FCPS has identified the need at least one and possibly two new elementary schools in the Bailey’s Crossroads/Seven Corners area—to provide seats for 898 elementary students over the next five years.

A major challenge, though, is finding the land for new schools. An earlier proposal to build a new elementary school on the grounds of Glasgow Middle School has been dropped, Parris said.

Both Bailey’s Elementary School and Glen Forest Elementary, the schools closest to the Seven Corners revitalization area, are severely overcrowded and don’t have any room to add more modular units or trailers.

Modular classrooms at Bailey's Elementary.
By 2017-18, Bailey’s will be 160 percent over capacity, and Glen Forest will be 128 percent over capacity, Parris said. Adjusting the boundaries won’t help, because the other schools in the area (such as Sleepy Hollow, Parklawn, Westlawn, and Columbia) will also be overcapacity in five years.

Glasgow Middle School is projected to be 119 percent over capacity, and Stuart High School will be 128 percent over capacity in five years.

Without any land readily available, Parris suggested several innovative solutions, such as retrofitting a commercial building as a school; providing a facility that combines a school with county uses; looking at new partnerships, such as a combined elementary/middle school model; and building a multistory school on a smaller lot.

Fitting a school onto a three-acre site, when most school sites are generally five acres, means “you need to go up rather than out,” Parris said.

Kevin Sneed, director of design and construction services at FCPS, described a hypothetical five-story urban model for an elementary school serving about 1,000 students that is being considered for Tysons. Common areas would be on the ground floor with classrooms on the upper floors. The plan would include an above-ground parking structure.

Another model designed by Sneed’s office is a three-story, 750-student elementary school on four acres that incorporates community uses, such as a shared school/public library, health clinic, social services, and community meeting rooms. This concept would work well in Seven Corners, which has a need for these kinds of services, he said.  

According to Parris a school in the Seven Corners area will need special programs, such as preschool education, to meet the needs of the local population. Sixty-five percent of the students at Bailey’s are eligible for free or reduced-prices lunches, and 62 percent are English language learners. At Glen Forest, those percentages are 74 and 66, respectively.

Whether the Willston Cultural Center could revert to its original purpose as a school is still very much up in the air. Parris indicated it’s not currently under consideration as the building is owned by Fairfax County, not FCPS.

At the next Seven Corners Task Force meeting, May 14, tentatively scheduled for 6:30 p.m. at the Mason Government Center, there will be an opportunity for public comment. All of the task force’s monthly meetings are open to the public, but the group only allows non-members to speak at every third meeting.

That meeting will include presentations on mixed-use development and the form-based zoning concept. The task force will also take a bus tour of Seven Corners in May. At the June 11 meeting, the group will begin to identify planning and urban design principles for Seven Corners, and on June 27, the group will have a “design charette,” an intensive, multi-hour session aimed at coming up with a land use and vision concept.

Task Force chair John Thillman said the work will likely continue for another year. He expects the task force will submit a final plan to the Fairfax County Planning Commission in spring 2014.

Lubbock, Texas, Superintendent Karen Garza selected FCPS superintendent

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Garza

Karen Garza, the superintendent of the Lubbock, Texas, school system, is the “preferred candidate” to be the next superintendent of Fairfax County Public Schools, “pending final negotiations for employment and a successful site visit,”  the school board announced April 10. Garza would succeed Jack Dale, who is retiring, effective July 1.

The school board selected Garza unanimously on April 6. A news release says the board believes she will bring “enormous energy, humility, intellect, and enthusiasm to the task of leading FCPS.” The release also calls her “a strategic planner, a systems thinker, a stellar manager, and a highly effective communicator.”

The Lubbock Independent School Districtserves approximately 30,000 students, way less than FCPS, which has 181,500. Before Garza was appointed superintendent there in 2009, she was chief academic officer of the Houston Independent School District, where she was responsible for instruction and facilities for more than 200,000 students.


“Dr. Garza comes to Fairfax County with impressive credentials and skills to lead FCPS in a time of incredible challenges and opportunities,” said FCPS School Board chair Ilryong Moon. “She comes to us with a deep commitment to openness and engagement and is eager to work collaboratively in the best interests of all students.”

“I am humbled and very thankful to the board and the whole FCPS community for this wonderful opportunity,” said Garza. FCPS “has a long tradition of excellence and has consistently been one of the premier school systems in the country. I look forward to continuing that tradition and working very closely with the board and the other division stakeholders to achieve even greater success for the students of FCPS.”

The search for a new superintendent was nearly a yearlong process facilitated by the Hazard, Young, Attea and Associates search firm and included recommendations from stakeholder committee made up of parents, residents, students, and staff members. The search consultants interviewed 19 candidates and presented nine of them to the school board. Unlike the process in other jurisdictions, the names of the finalists were not released to the public.

Board members will conduct a site visit to the Lubbock school system, and if all goes well, will begin contract negotiations. A formal appointment is expected to take place by the end of April.

Garza started her career in education as an elementary classroom teacher in 1986 in Yoakum, Texas, and served in a variety of administrative roles in Katy and Corpus Christi, Texas. She has a doctorate degree in educational leadership from the University of Texas and a bachelor’s degree and master’s degree from the University of Houston.

As superintendent in Lubbock, FCPS states, “she has distinguished herself by reducing the achievement gap, increasing graduation rates, emphasizing increased academic rigor, improving the financial health of the district, engaging parents and community members, creating a vision for the school district through the leadership of the board, and emphasizing community and family engagement efforts aimed at supporting all children in the classroom.”

Behind the Annandale newsstand: Is it a junkyard or a 'shop'?

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Yard behind the newsstand as it looked on April 6.

During the Annandale Cleanup on Saturday morning, Cyra Doty and her fellow volunteers were disgusted by a huge pile of junk behind Anna ’N Dales Newsstand and Advance Electronics on 7025 Columbia Pike.What appears to be trash, though, is apparently part of a small engine repair business.

Doty calls the junkyard a major health concern and actually saw a huge raccoon, or possibly a fox, living in the mess on Saturday. Also of concern is the type of businesses that might be operating in the newsstand, as a member of the Fairfax County Sheriff’s Community Labor Force who was helping with the Annandale Cleanup was told he could be “taken care of inside” for $40.

Doty had actually complained about the junkyard to Fairfax County code compliance officials and Mason Supervisor Penny Gross about 10 months ago and followed up several times since then. Code compliance staff told Doty that the property owners have been given a chance to clean up the property.

A mountain of old lawnmowers.

The Department of Code Compliance issued a notice of violation to the previous property owner of 7025 Columbia Pike last month, said county spokesperson Brian Worthy. “There are several small structures that have been added on back that are not included on the approved site plan for this property,” he said. However, now that the property was recently sold, he said the department “will issue an updated notice of violation to the new owner.”

The Annandale Cleanup volunteers also found a drain in the pavement behind the Goodwill store that appeared to be a grease pit for waste from the Juke Box Diner (7039 Columbia Pike). If that is the case, the waste will eventually drain into theChesapeake Bay watershed. Worthy said the Fairfax County Health Department will investigate.

When the Annandale Blog showed up at the lot behind Anna ’N Dales Newsstand on Tuesday, we found huge piles of old lawnmowers, bicycles, and scooters—and George Guida, the proprietor of George’s Small Engine Repair.

The scooter and bicycle section of George Guida's shop.
Guida, a resident of Falls Church, said he’s been operating his business there for about three years. “This is a shop, not a junkyard,” he said. He charges $70 for a lawnmower tune-up and $60 for first-time customers. He also repairs and sells chainsaws, weed eaters, snow blowers, and whatever similar machines he finds.

Guida said the place used to be a lot messier, but a truckload of junk and two tents were removed about a month ago after a county code inspector told him to clean up. Guida said his former partner, who has left the area, used to go dumpster diving to find building materials which were piled up all over the yard.

According to Guida, the owners will let him stay—although it’s uncertain whether his rent, currently $300 a month, will be increased. “We’re going to stay here forever,” he said. 

George Guida with his invention: a combination bicycle/lawnmower.

Fairfax County provides funds for road projects

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The Fairfax County Board of Supervisors greenlighted several road projects in the Annandale/Mason area, including improvements addressing pedestrian issues on Route 50 and congestion on Route 236 at Interstate-395, Beauregard Street, and Cherokee Avenue.

At its April 9meeting, the board reallocated $11.2 million in existing funds to complete more than 12 transportation projects countywide. The funds became available when two other completed projects—the Burke VRE parking garage and the Route 29/Gallows road intersection project in Merrifield—came in under budget.

That freed up approximately $6.8 million for 11 pedestrian improvements along Route 50 between Jaguar Trail in Falls Church and Olin Drive in Seven Corners.

The county reallocated $500,000 to improve signage on the I-395 southbound off-ramp to Route 236 westbound. This project, aimed at addressing increased traffic at the Mark Center, will let drivers know they can use Quantrell Avenue to access Beauregard Street, Lincolnia Road, and the Landmark shopping plaza.  

Another $700,000 million has been reallocated to build an exclusive northbound right turn lane from Cherokee Avenue onto Route 236. Both this project and the improved I-395 signage are part of the Mark Center spot improvements.

Plans drawn up for Annandale 'skate spot'

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The plan proposed by the county.
Fairfax County officials have drawn up preliminary plans for a “skate spot” at the old basketball court  between the Annandale Fire Station and the Annandale Christian Community for Action building on Columbia Pike. All that’s needed now to make it happen is the money.

Implementing the plan would cost about $110,000, said David Bowden, director of the Fairfax County Park Authority’s Planning and Development Division. The land is owned by the county, not the Park Authority, so the approval and implementation process would be a lot shorter. He said it could be done in five to six months.

The old basketball court.
“We have a plot that works,” said Mason Supervisor Penny Gross. “I think it’s possible. It will take a little while.” Gross said she is working with the county’s bond counsel to see if it would be possible to use some of the money left over from the 1998 Annandale revitalization bond. In addition, she said, “We would love to have donations from the community.”

The design produced by Bowden’s office is based on partially replacing the existing asphalt court/parking area with a concrete pad and installing precast features on it, Bowden said. The plan also includes an accessible walkway to the skate park area. “If we can treat the replacement of the existing asphalt with the concrete pad as a maintenance activity, we may be able to save some of the design and permitting costs in the cost estimate,” he said.

Although there had been discussions about a larger park, the plans call for just a small skate spot on the area now occupied by an old basketball court. The adjacent grassy area behind the fire station is owned by the Annandale Volunteer Fire Department and would not be included in this plan.

The idea for a skate park arose over a year ago, when David Starr, the owner of Beanetics, came up with the idea for using that vacant lot for something useful to benefit the Annandale community. Since then, other local residents and business owners embraced the idea. Last fall, Gross hosted a “skate event” in the fire station parking lot to gauge potential interest in a skate plaza.  

Mixed-use redevelopment plan proposed for Landmark Mall

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The area outlined in blue would be redeveloped.

Before Landmark Mall was transformed into a two-level enclosed shopping mall in 1990, it was an open-air shopping center. It could revert to that structure again, if the City of Alexandria approves a plan submitted by the Howard Hughes Corp. April 11 to redevelop the central portion of Landmark Mall between the existing Sears and Macy’s stores.

Under the Hughes proposal, the central section would be demolished and replaced with a mixed-use complex with 250,000 to 300,000 square feet of retail and restaurants, 350 to 400 apartments, a traditional street grid, sidewalks, trees, and open space.


In a presentation to the public on the mall redevelopment proposal April 8, staff from the Alexandria Planning and Zoning Department said the mall project should fit in with the city’s plan for the Landmark/Van Dorn Corridor. The vision and goals for that plan include the following:

  • Landmark Mall should serve regional, local, and neighborhood needs.
  • Transit ridership should increase.
  • There should be more cultural and public art facilities.
  • The area should have pedestrian-friendly activity centers.
  • There should be interconnected open space.

The plan also recommends a new bridge over Duke Street (Route 236), an urban street grid, several new transit lines, and a transit center.

Among the issues raised by local residents at the public meeting: the need to provide affordable housing, the impact of increased population on local schools, and a request to emphasize local businesses rather than national chains.

An outdoor classroom will enhance learning at Belvedere Elementary School

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Stepping stones wind through Belvedere's new outdoor classroom.

Students, teachers, parents, and the community celebrated the completion of an outdoor classroom at Belvedere Elementary School April 12. The school’s courtyard has been transformed into a plaza with tables and chairs surrounded by trees and plantings.  

“Our goal is to extend academic learning to the outdoors,” said Principal Cecelia Vanderhye. The outdoor area is big enough to accommodate a whole class, allowing teachers to incorporate nature into lessons on science, math, English, and everything else. During the opening ceremony, children were fascinated by the appearance of a surprise visitor—a baby snake.

Principal Vanderhye speaks at the opening ceremony.

One area is designated as a “decomposition garden,” where students will be able to observe what happens to natural and man-made objects, like a shoe or a CD, when they’re left outside exposed to the elements. There will also be a rock garden and butterfly garden.

Developing the outdoor classroom “was a whole community effort,” said Vanderhye. Families and community members spent many weekends working on the project.

She singled out several people for special recognition, including Teacher Stacey Evers, who had the vision for an outdoor classroom and convinced an architect friend to design it, and parent Tara Rethorne, who spearheaded the whole project and coordinated the fundraising.

There are engraved bricks embedded in the plaza that parents, alumni, staff, and others purchased for $85 to $115 each. Some students contributed allowance money to help their classes purchase a brick. The school also sold mini-bricks that can be used as paperweights.

The project cost $14,000, and the Belvedere community contributed over $10,000. Bob’s Discount Furniture donated $1,500, and other contributions came from the Huntington Learning Center of Fairfax, Dominion Foundation, Sislers Stone, Classic Stonescaping & Gardens, and Earth Sangha

Mason District Little League begins season

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Dozens of hopeful young baseball players, along with their parents and coaches, gathered at Mason District Park Saturday morning for a ceremony marking the opening day of the Mason District Little League. Following a parade of teams, Rep. Jim Moran, Mason Supervisor Penny Gross, and Mason school board member Sandy Evans offered welcoming remarks.

The Blue Jays
The Annandale Blog is a proud sponsor of the AA Division Team, the Blue Jays. Their first game will be Tuesday, April 16. Go Blue Jays! There are more photos from MDLL opening day on the Annandale,VA  Blog Facebook page.

Treasure Trove shop celebrates 50 years in Annandale

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The Treasure Trove is celebrating its 50th anniversary next weekend with a storewide sale, giveaways, and prize drawings.

The consignment/thrift shop, 7010 Columbia Pike in the Annandale Shopping Center, is one of three volunteer-run shops that benefit Inova Fairfax Hospital. Last year, the Treasure Trove raised nearly $300,000 for the hospital, said manager Jodi Shannon, one of two paid staff members. About 60 volunteers work at the store, and Shannon said she could use twice that many. If you’re interested, fill out an application at the store.

 
As part of the anniversary, customers are asked to submit photos and stories about “amazing merchandise” purchased at the store. Shannon hopes to identify the “top 50 finds” to celebrate 50 years in business. There’s a box in the store to submit stories—which could be something like a designer handbag bought at a bargain-basement price, a dress that has garnered lots of compliments, or a vintage item that completes a collection.

Everyone who submits a story about something special purchased at the Treasure Trove will be entered into a drawing for a $50 gift certificate. The drawing will take place April 18.

 
One thing that’s unique about the Treasure Trove is how nicely everything is displayed. “We don’t believe a thrift store has to be dirty or disorganized,” Shannon said. “It should be fun to shop. We go to great lengths to show how items can be used in the home.” Merchandise includes furniture, tableware, books, dolls, jewelry, clothes, shoes, tchotchkes, home decor pieces, and collectibles.

Items can be donated or consigned. People who consign items receive half the sales proceeds when it is sold. “Sometimes people donate things because Inova saved a loved one’s life,” Shannon said. “They appreciate what Inova did for them, and it’s a way to pay them back.”


“It’s such a thrill to see the quality of the merchandise people donate or consign,” Shannon said. “It’s not uncommon for us to get very valuable things.” Among the unique items for sale within the last week or so: a beautiful 10-carat white gold necklace with aquamarines, a selection of Lenox and Waterford pieces, a hand-painted Japanase screen, a 19th century vase, a hand-painted oil lamp that has been converted to an electric lamp (in photo above), an antique Burmese temple hanging, and a collection of kimonos.

One thing she hears from customers “a dozen times a day” is that they had their eye one something the last time they were there and now it’s gone. “If you like something, if you want it, do not hesitate,” she advises.

The Treasure Trove is open Monday-Saturday 10 a.m.-5 p.m. and Sunday noon-5 p.m.  Consignments are by appointment only, 703/256-7715. Donations can be brought any time the store is open.

Fairfax, Arlington counties still committed to Columbia Pike streetcar line

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Fairfax County and Arlington County officials reaffirmed their support for the Columbia Pike Streetcar project even though the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) has not included the project in its Small Starts program for fiscal year 2014.

“The Columbia Pike Streetcar Project is vitally important to the economic revitalization of Columbia Pike and the Skyline/Bailey’s Crossroads area of Fairfax County, which has long desired connection to a rail transit network,” said Fairfax County Supervisor Penny Gross (Mason District) in a joint statement issued by the two jurisdictions April 15.


“Although I am disappointed that our joint application for Small Starts funding was not approved this year, Gross said, “I am confident that the strong community and business support for the project and the long collaborative partnership between Fairfax and Arlington counties will merit federal funding in the future.”

“Arlington, in partnership with Fairfax County, is committed to building a modern streetcar line along Columbia Pike as the best long-term transit investment,” said Arlington County Board Chairman J. Walter Tejada. He said Arlington will continue to explore a range of funding options.

The bulk of the proposed five-mile streetcar line would be in Arlington, with a small section near the Skyline Center in the Mason District of Fairfax County.

The Fairfax County Board of Supervisors endorsed the project in July. Arlington and Fairfax counties applied for Small Starts funding in September. The program provides up to $75 million for projects with a total price tag of less than $250 million. The rest of the money would come from state and local funds.

NOVA Annandale hosts Green Festival

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Everyone’s invited to the Green Festival at the Annandale campus of Northern Virginia Community College, Saturday, April 20, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. This free, family-oriented event focuses on environmental issues and sustainability. Parking is free, too.

Activities include interactive and educational exhibits, children’s entertainment (Billy B, the “Recycling Pirates” puppet show by the Goodlife Theater), wildlife shows (“Reptiles Alive!”), Leesburg Animal Park Petting Zoo, movies (“The Lorax”  and “Last Call at the Oasis”), face painting, tree giveaways, rain barrel kits, a climbing wall, the Scrap Exchange, food venders, and more.

The festival will in the plaza in front of the Godwin Building, 8333 Little River Turnpike, Annandale. At 1 p.m., a LEED Certified Award will be presented in recognition of the sustainability features in NOVAs new Student Services building.

Join the Culmore Cleanup this Saturday

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Culmore Cleanup volunteers at last year's event.

Local residents are encouraged to join the 2013 Spring Culmore Cleanup Saturday, 9 a.m.-noon.

This semi-annual event has been going on for more than 10 years. It’s a huge collaborative effort that brings together teams from many organizations and companies, as well as individual volunteers, who not only pick up trash and other debris around Bailey’s Crossroads and Seven Corners, but educate the public about the importance of keeping communities litter-free and instilling civic pride.  

Volunteers should check in at the Woodrow Wilson Library, 6101 Knollwood Drive, Falls Church, to pick up trash bags, t-shirts, and gloves—and enjoy coffee and light refreshments before heading off to work.  


Following the cleanup, a free lunch will be served at the library, with entrees donated by Pollo Campero, desserts from City Diner, and water and orange juice from the Coca-Cola Co. Additional sponsors of the Culmore Cleanup include the Dar Al-Hijrah Islamic Center, the Euro-Market Mobil, Radley Acura, the Rotary Club of Bailey’s Crossroads, and Safeway.

The day also includes presentations from the Hidden Oaks Nature Center, Coca-Cola, the Fairfax County Health Departments Division of Environmental Health, and the Baileys Crossroads Volunteer Fire Department.

More regulations sought for donation boxes cluttering Annandale

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A Planet Aid donation box on the edge of the bowling alley parking lot on Markham Street in central Annandale.
The easiest way to recycle old, damaged or out-of-style clothes is to toss them into one of the dozens of clothing donation boxes all over Annandale. You’ll be keeping them out of landfills, and in some cases, helping raise money for charities.

The trouble is, the boxes can become eyesores if not maintained properly and often become magnets for trash. “These boxes are popping up like crazy all over the place,” said Penny Gross, who represents the Mason District on the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors. “It’s getting to be a blight on the community.”

Gross, along with Supervisor Jeff McKay of the Lee District, wants the board to refer the donation drop box issue to the  county executive “for review and recommendation for a zoning ordinance change.” Gross later explained she wants the county executive to work with staff of the Planning and Zoning Department to see if the language in the ordinance “needs to be tightened up or if the boxes should be banned outright.”

 
In a letter to Board Chair Sharon Bulova, Gross said the boxes are “attracting unwanted furniture, trash, construction debris, and, in one case I observed personally, a porcelain toilet.” Gross said, “it’s time to consider amending the zoning ordinance to rid our community of what are little more than decorated dumpsters, attracting rodents and other pests and eliciting complaints from constituents and customers.”

Under the current ordinance, Gross said, “there are very specific site locations that may or may not be appropriate for these boxes.” There has to be a connection with the type of business they are next to, for example. A box next to a clothing or shoe store might be appropriate, she said, but “it’s hard to make that connection with a gas station.”

If you think tossing the clothes your children have outgrown into one of these boxes means they will be given to disadvantaged children in the community, that’s generally not how it works.


The box labeled “Recycling Center” in front of Heidi’s Nails across from the Annandale Giant parking lot (in photo above) collects goods for the B-Thrifty store in Woodbridge. But most other boxes in Annandale seem to be operated by large third-party contractors, and the clothing is reprocessed by the growing textile recycling industry which sells it in bulk overseas or to companies that use it for home insulation, car upholstery, carpet padding, or other products.

A staff member at Global Clothing Recyclers described the Manassas-based company, as a for-profit enterprise that sells most of the items it collects abroad.

Boxes identified as “Military Support Center” next to Anna ’N Dale’s Newsstand on Columbia Pike and “Disabled American Veterans” in the Giant parking lot have the same phone number, which goes to the World Trade Co. in Woodbridge. A man who answered the phone declined to give any information other than to say it’s a transportation company that is contracted by several organizations to service the donation boxes. The company did have a textile recycling contract with the Prince William County government in 2009.

Tammy Sproule, a spokesperson for Planet Aid, which has 2,000 boxes in the United States, including about half a dozen in Annandale, said some of the donated winter coats and blankets are passed along to shelters in local communities, but the vast majority of the items are bundled, baled, and shipped across the globe, mostly to Africa. According to Sproule, Planet Aid doesn’t pay landowners anything for letting the company have boxes on their property.

Firefighters burn down Annandale house for training purposes

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Residents of the Columbia Pines and Broyhill Crest neighborhoods in Annandale were startled by what looked like a raging out-of-control fire engulfing a house on Murray Lane yesterday. It was actually deliberately set by Fairfax County firefighters for training purposeswith the homeowners permission, of course. He is planning to tear down the house and build a new one. Annandale Arts videographer Bob Kovacs, who happens to live nearby, captured the fire on video:





The owner of the house, Farid Naimi, said he heard about the house donation program from a friend who had previously done it. Naimi bought the house in November and never lived in it, so watching it burn wasn’t as emotional as it might have been. He plans to start construction on a 5,000-square foot house on the property next month.

What's left of the house after the training session.

Stop killing your lawn

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This is the second piece in a three-part series on lawns by urban forest conservationist Jim McGlone. The first piece, published April 9, explored the forces at play in the popularization of the “great American lawn.”



An Annandale homeowner probably put a lot of effort into this lawn.
What’s killing your lawn? Chances are, you are. Before you get defensive, I asked what’s killing your lawn, not your grass. What’s the difference you ask? Grass is only one member of the community that is your lawn.

Besides the grass, there is soil and all the things that live in it. Yes, there are some soil bacteria and fungi that are bad for your grass, but most of them are benign and some are beneficial.  Keeping the soil microbes that make up the biggest part of your lawn community healthy is the best way to keep your grass healthy.

What do the bacteria and fungi in the soil do for your lawn? One thing they do is to cycle nutrients; they break down dead plants and release nitrogen, phosphorus, and other nutrients to the grass.


Soil bacteria and fungi are also constantly at war with one another, producing chemicals that kill other bacteria and fungi. If you have ever been given an antibiotic that ended with  “. . . mycin,” it was based on a compound made by soil bacteria. Some fungi hunt nematodes. Just having a lot of soil microbes, particularly those that live on dead plants, takes up space and crowd out the microbes that make grass sick.

Soil microbes also help build good soil structure. Good soil is made up of clumps that soil scientists call peds. When soil has good structure, it has the paradoxical quality of being well drained and holding moisture. This happens because the relatively big pores between peds allow water to drain from the soil, but very small pores within the peds hold moisture.

This is important because when the big pores empty of water, they fill with air so all the oxygen breathing plants and animals in the soil have something to breath. Yes, I said plants breathe oxygen. You see, after plants, including the grass in your lawn, make food from the sun and carbon dioxide, they do the same thing with it that we do. They burn it in the presence of oxygen to power their metabolism.

One thing that scientists have found is that good, healthy, diverse, well-balanced communities resist invasion. This holds true for forests, coral reefs, and lawns. Most lawn “weeds”  have a competitive advantage over grass in poor soils. Dandelions have long tap routes to reach deep water that grass can’t, so they do better in soils that don’t hold moisture. Clover is a pea relative that hosts nitrogen-fixing bacteria in roots, so it does better in nutrient-poor soils.

So let’s review: If you keep your lawn healthy by taking care of the soil microbes, your grass will get the nutrients, water, and oxygen it needs to be strong, healthy, and out-compete weeds.  Your grass will also be protected from many of the pests and disease that might plague it.

Why haven’t you heard about this from people in the lawn care profession? They tell you to spread fertilizer, water, and aerate to keep your grass healthy. But how did turf grass get fertilized, watered, and aerated when it was a wild plant just over 300 years ago? Microbes. The problem is that there is no money in microbes, but the academics that study soils and turf will tell you soil microbes are your friends.

How do you take care of your soil friends? Work less on lawn care. “Cut it high and let it lie” is a catchy expression to remember to set your lawn mower high and leave the clippings on the lawn.  Those clippings have just the right amount nutrients to regrow the grass that has been cut.

Now, the tricky part. You know those leaves the trees lose in the fall? Leave them on the lawn.  Don’t rake them or run over them with your lawn mower. Those leaves have three pounds of slow-release nitrogen per 1,000 square feet—exactly what some grass-care companies have said your grass needs. What’s more, those grass clippings and leaves have carbon, which most commercial fertilizer doesn’t.

Contrary to what the ads tell you, fertilizer does not “feed” your grass or other plants. The whole point of plants being green is that they make their own food, so plant “food” doesn’t have carbon in it. But soil microbes need to eat carbon compounds to get the energy they need to live their lives.

Now, I’m not going to tell you that just switching to mulching your grass clippings and leaves is going to turn your lawn into a green, weed-free fairway; you also need patience. It takes time to rebuild the microbe population after years of abuse. It takes even longer to rebuild soil structure after it’s been lost.

Giving the lawn a one-inch blanket of compost is a good way to start weaning it off chemicals.  You may have to do this for a few years as the soil recovers. Compost not only provides the nutrients the grass needs and the carbon the microbes need, it also contains the microbes themselves.

The Virginia Cooperative Extension Service has several publications to help you change to a simpler, cheaper, and better way to care for your lawn that is also better for the environment—on how to compost, grass cycling, and leafcycling. There are also a few commercial organic lawn-care companies out there that will do it for you.

Of course you could also do better for the environment and solve many of your lawn-care headaches by giving up on grass altogether.

Jim McGlone is an urban forest conservationist with the Virginia Department of Forestry.

Restoration of Wakefield Run in Annandale to start this summer

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Wakefield Run [Photo by Friends of Accotink Creek]
A project to restore Wakefield Run, a tributary of Accotink Creek in Annandale, is expected to start this summer.

Wakefield Run begins near Heritage Drive behind Braddock Elementary School, goes under the beltway, and flows into Accotink Creek in Wakefield Park. The stream receives heavy runoff from the beltway which is causing severe erosion, reports Friends of Accotink Creek (FAC). The restoration project is aimed at arresting erosion and stabilizing the stream bed west of the beltway.

The stream had been previously known as an “unnamed tributary” and was unofficially designated Wakefield Run after a public naming competition last year.

According to FAC, key features of the project include a plunge pool at the beltway culvert outlet, the use of rocks to redirect the channel flow, stone reinforcements to protect vulnerable banks, replacement of a pedestrian bridge, step pools, and crossings for Dominion Power vehicles and mountain bikes. Forty trees will need to be removed.

“Part of the project will require reworking the culvert outfall modifications poorly done during the I-495 express lanes construction, causing some taxpayer exasperation,” FAC states.

The total cost is $440,000, or roughly $400-$500 per linear foot. Seed funding came from the $75,000 the Fairfax County Park Authority received in compensation for the taking of land in Wakefield Park for the I-495 express lanes project. 

Additional funding came from the Fairfax County Department of Public Works and Environmental Services ($300,000) and Dominion Power ($35,000). The Fairfax County Park Foundation will solicit additional contributions from Fluor-Lane, the I-495 express lanes contractor, and Washington Gas, which will benefit from the project because the gas line crossing Wakefield Run will be better protected, saving potential repair costs, FAC states.

The timetable calls for permits to be received and ground broken by June. Construction should take place from July through October, with replanting in October. The project is expected to be completed in November.

According to FAC, fish habitat will improve after the project is completed, and the population of invertebrates living on the bottom of the stream bed is also expected to increase.

Fairfax County students build houses

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7005 Spingville Court
A brand-new house that will come on the market in Springfield soon for $824,500 is way more than just a house. About three-quarters of it was built by students from several Fairfax County high schools as part of a course on construction technology.

One of those students is Bryan Jefferson, a senior at Annandale High School, who spends the last two class blocks every other day working on the framework, drywall, cabinets, and other things. While most people have the perception that courses in construction are just for students planning to go into the trades rather than college, that’s an outdated idea. Jefferson will be attending Georgetown University next year and plans to go into real estate development or business administration.

Students in the Career and Technical Education (CTE) program “are a cross-section of all students in FCPS,” says Beth Downey, CTE coordinator. “We have many students who are interested in a particular trade or want to learn more about an industry before attending college to pursue a professional degree.”


In the past 42 years, FCPS students have helped build 20 houses and several commercial facilities for the Fairfax County Park Authority. Sixteen of the houses are in McLean, one is in Fairfax, and the rest are in the Spring Village development in Springfield on land owned by FCPS. The program is self-sufficient; the money raised by selling one house is used to construct another one.

The newest house, at 7005 Springville Court, is almost finished. The sale is being managed by the Integrity Real Estate Group, and an open house is planned for May 21, 3:30-5:30 p.m.  

It has six bedrooms, four bathrooms, two walk-in closets in the master bedroom, a large kitchen, a Jacuzzi in the master bath, hardwood floors, and a full basement with a door to the backyard. 

On a tour through the house, William Roberts, a senior at Hayfield Secondary School, pointed out some of the special features designed to make it accessible to people with disabilities, such as extra wide hallways, a bedroom on the first floor, and a shaft that can be used for an elevator.

The residential construction program is a joint venture of CTE and the Foundation for Applied Technical Education (FATE). The program not only teaches construction skills; students also develop teamwork, problem-solving, and leadership skills that will serve them well in any future career, said Chad Maclin, executive director of FATE and manager of the Trade and Industrial Education Program at FCPS.

“We’re teaching them how to work with contractors and how to evaluate the needs of the community,” Maclin said. And they learn the value of high-quality work. “You get paid to it right the first time. You don’t get paid to do shoddy work,” he said.
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