Re-defining
How To Count for Density
Reston Association Board to take public
position on the density cap issue.
Mirza Kurspahic - February 8, 2007
Hudgins
Addresses RA Board
Supervisor
Catherine Hudgins (D-Hunter Mill), the chair of
Transportation Planning Board on the Council of
Governments, told the Reston Association board
at its Jan. 25 meeting that transportation
issues are not exclusive to housing issues. She
commended Reston's plan for providing a vibrant
community. "Reston was planned as an
employment center, not just a bedroom,"
said Hudgins.
She said she expected the Wiehle Avenue
transit-oriented development to take shape soon.
Hudgins expects that the Fairfax County Board of
Supervisors will look at the development in the
next six-to-eight weeks.
The RA board also approved that the Asian
Festival and the Thai Tennis Association
tournament take place on the weekend of July
20-21. The board then voted to request the
Fairfax County Board of Supervisors to, among
other things, develop public awareness of the
causes and impacts of climate change to gain a
broader approval for strategic reductions in
carbon dioxide emissions.
There will be two meetings to consider the
Reston PRC Ordinance. Supervisor Catherine
Hudgins will hold a meeting on Saturday, Feb.
10, at 10 a.m. at Reston Community Center at
Hunters Woods.
The Reston Association Board of Directors will
hold a special meeting on Monday, Feb. 12, at 7
p.m. at the RA Headquarters, 1930 Isaac Newton
Square. The Board expects to take a public
position on the PRC Ordinance at the meeting. |
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The
Reston Association Board of Directors will hold a special meeting
Monday, Feb. 12 to take a public position on Reston's density cap issue.
As the meeting approaches, the issue has become less about the density
cap, and more about the language in the Planned Residential Community
(PRC) Ordinance.
In December of 2006, the RA Planning and Zoning Committee narrowly
endorsed Fairfax County's recommendations that the factors to determine
the population be changed to better reflect today's residential
communities. For example, the county would no longer count a detached
house as a place where 3.5 people live, but a place where three people
reside. In doing so, the county ensures that more people could move to
Reston without changing the density cap of 13 people per acre.
"I support the way the county is going, but strongly recommend we
don't just end it with quick fixes," said Joe Stowers at the RA
Board meeting on Jan. 25. Stowers said the issue is that the PRC
ordinance should be reviewed, not whether Reston will raise its density
cap. He recommended a task force be formed to review the language of the
ordinance. Stowers noted a review of the ordinance was conducted three
previous times in the planned community. "We can deal with the
impact if we change the ordinance," he said.
RA Director Bill Keefe agreed with Stowers. "It's not a density
issue, it's a procedural issue," he said. Keefe asked that the RA
Board and staff come up with a correct title for the discussion of the
issue prior to the Feb. 12 meeting.
IN A LETTER to Supervisor Catherine Hudgins (D-Hunter Mill), the
Alliance of Reston Clusters and Homeowners (ARCH) reflected Stowers'
view and expressed concern that changing the population factors would
not solve the issue. "We view possible changes to the PRC's
dwelling occupancy factors as but one of a matrix of emerging and
interrelated factors that will affect our community and its quality of
life," read the letter, signed on behalf of the ARCH Board of
Directors by President Frank Pfeilmeier. "We do not think changing
the PRC Ordinance dwelling occupancy factors should be considered
without also considering what is needed to address, and fund, the
concomitant impact this and other converging developments in and around
Reston will have on our existing infrastructure and services,"
continued the Jan. 26 letter.
The group applauded Hudgins' appointment of a committee considering the
development issues near metro transit station areas in Reston and
Herndon, but proposed she go further. ARCH proposed creating a land use
task force to tackle the PRC Ordinance, modeled on the group working on
Tysons Corner's land use issues. The letter concluded: "We
emphasize that if necessary infrastructure and service improvements are
identified, and adequate and reliable funding for such improvements and
services is made available, increased density may well enhance
Reston."
Reston resident Terry Maynard warned of the consequences of raising the
cap, or lowering the factors to allow more population to fit under the
current cap. "[Raising the cap] will seriously deteriorate the
quality of life in Reston," said Maynard at the RA meeting. An
increase in violent crime, traffic congestion and public service costs
were all potential realities if the cap is raised, said Maynard, who
conducted his own study of the affects of raising the cap. He
recommended that the RA Board oppose any changes in the cap, and oppose
changing the factors. If the board does approve changing the factors
under county's recommendations, Maynard recommended lowering the density
cap from 13 to 11 people per acre, so that the community can brace for
the population increase.
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