Residents Sound Off on Funding,
Boundaries
Clear messages sent to RCC board.
By
Jason Hartke
February 15, 2006

Photo by
Jason Hartke/The Connection
Robert
E. Simon tells the Reston Community Center Board
to recognize the overwhelming community support
for the Reston Community Center.

Photo by
Jason Hartke/The Connection
Reston
Community Center Board members Mary Buff, Joe
Lombardo (chairman) and Kevin Deasy listen as
residents of the small tax district #5 voice
opinions about the RCC tax rate and other
issues.
|
|
|
As a blizzard came barreling
toward Reston Saturday, Feb. 11, more than 40 people took turns to speak
out about the Reston Community Center’s tax rate and boundaries at the
first of two public hearings on the subjects.
Despite so many people voicing opinions, two overriding messages were
repeated throughout the hearing, which drew about 120 people.
“I’ve never been at a public hearing when the results have been so
clear,” said Richard Stillson, a long-time Reston resident who was one
of the last speakers. “There are people who love the community center
and are willing to pay for it, and then there are others who do not live
in Reston and do not want to pay for it.”
RESTON RESIDENTS and civic leaders were nearly unanimous in their
support of maintaining the level of service and programming at the RCC.
Nor did these residents want control of the center to be relinquished
over to the county.
Joe Lombardo, RCC chairman, suggested in letters before the hearing that
the tax rate, currently 5.2 cents per $100 of assessed property value,
is too high and opened the door to the possibility of allowing the
county to take over the center in an effort to reduce residents’
taxes.
Repeatedly at the hearing, residents who live in Reston said no to such
a proposal.
Reston residents referred to the RCC, which has both a Hunters Woods and
Lake Anne location, as the “crown jewels of Reston” with
“wonderful” and “world-class” programming.
“This community needs more theaters, more swim lessons, more arts
programs, not less,” said Deborah Shprentz, a Reston resident. “We
urge you not to threaten the fiscal base of the community center and the
programs we enjoy here.” Shprentz’s comments were echoed in several
testimonies at the hearing, which lasted about 2 1/2 hours.
Robert E. Simon, founder of Reston, aimed his remarks at Lombardo,
arguing that Lombardo hadn’t adequately gauged the community’s
sentiment regarding the center. “It’s about time for Lombardo and
his supporters to abandon their snide, penny-pinching, nit-picking ways
and to afford themselves the opportunity to bask in the extraordinary
esteem that their centers [at Hunters Woods and at Lake Anne] have
earned over the years in this community,” said Simon, staring straight
at Lombardo.
BUT ANOTHER cohort at the hearing had an equally common message. Several
people at the hearing, who are non-Reston residents but are tax district
residents, said they opposed paying the tax and wanted out of the tax
district.
The RCC came into existence 27 years ago because a small tax district
was created to fund it. The district, called small tax district #5,
encompasses all of Reston and some neighborhoods outside of Reston,
including homes with Vienna, Oak Hill and Oakton addresses.
These residents admit that they don’t feel part of the Reston
community and see little reason why they pay for the RCC each year.
According to RCC board member Kevin Deasy, there are about 1,400
residential properties outside of the Reston Master Plan that pay RCC
taxes.
One upset non-Reston resident, but small tax district resident, was
David Saunders. Saunders has lived at a Vienna address in the tax
district for eight years. A few years ago, he noticed his family was
paying a higher tax rate than what the county issued.
“We were informed we paid a special tax to the Reston Community
Center, which shocked us,” he told the RCC Board Saturday. “We had
never heard of [the RCC] and have never felt to be part of the Reston
community.”
Saunders, like so many other residents living in the tax district but
outside of Reston at the hearing, urged the board to cut them out of the
tax district and make the boundaries specific to those who live in
Reston.
“We very strongly do not want to be included in this tax district
paying for a center that is located in someone else's community,” said
Saunders.
For the most part, Restonians at the hearing agreed. “For those who
live outside of Reston but still must pay taxes for the RCC, I think it
would be only fair to let them out of the small tax district. Then they
can keep their money and we can keep our community,” said Lillian
Christman, a Reston resident.
Residents of the tax district in the same situation as Saunders noted
that they do not get Reston television or Reston newspapers. For
example, Christopher Sterbenz, an Oakton resident, said he had yet to
receive the mailing that announced the public hearings as well as any
other mailings from the community center.
© 2006 Connection Newspapers. All Rights Reserved. |