Hudgins,
RCC Board Support Boundary Changes
Non-Reston residents may soon be out of
Small Tax District 5.
By
Jason Hartke
March 8, 2006
For
hundreds of non-Reston residents disgruntled about paying taxes each
year to support the Reston Community Center, an end may soon be in
sight. Efforts to redraw the borders for Small Tax District 5,
which funds the RCC, made large strides recently when Supervisor Cathy
Hudgins (D-Hunter Mill) and RCC’s Board of Governors moved to shrink
the borders. At a Fairfax County Board of Supervisors meeting on
Feb. 27, Hudgins issued a motion, which was subsequently passed by the
board, to direct county staff to prepare a proposed ordinance change to
redraw the tax district boundaries. The change includes options to
contract the borders to contain properties in the Hunter Mill district
or an even greater reduction that would align the district’s borders
to the Reston Master Plan. The proposed ordinance will be
advertised on March 13. A public hearing will be held March 27 at the
Fairfax County Government Center. Barring any unforeseen issues, the
board is expected to make a decision on the boundaries after the
hearing, said Hudgins.
THE TAX DISTRICT’S current borders include small portions of the
Dranesville and Sully districts. Supervisors of those districts, Joan
DuBois (R-Dranesville) and Michael Frey (D-Sully), support a change that
eliminates their constituents from Small Tax District 5. “A very
high percentage of people who live outside of Reston feel they don’t
belong in the district,” said Hudgins, explaining why she made the
motion. Hudgins made her motion a week before the RCC board
planned to recommend a border change based on the comments they heard at
two public hearings last month. Hudgins explained that she had to
act quickly to incorporate any proposed change into the fiscal year 2007
budget, which begins July 1. “I would have waited until I had heard
from [the RCC board], but we’re in our [2007] budget cycle now,”
said Hudgins. Tax district residents currently pay 5.2 cents per
$100 assessed property value, in addition to their county property
taxes. The Small Tax District 5, which was originally drawn in
1975, encompasses all of Reston and about 1,400 properties outside of
Reston, including homes with Vienna, Herndon and Oakton addresses. About
300 Reston homes are outside of the tax district.
REDRAWING THE BORDERS gained momentum last month when the RCC held its
public hearings to gauge community attitudes on RCC funding. The
group of taxpayers who live outside of Reston came out in force in
opposition of the tax. They said they wanted out of the tax district.
Reston residents generally said they wanted to keep local control of the
community center and were willing to pay for it. In response to
the hearings, the RCC board, which met Monday, March 6, voted
unanimously to remove Vienna, Oakton and Oak Hill/Herndon neighborhoods
from the tax district. The resolution is being sent to Hudgins for
consideration. Residents of non-Reston neighborhoods who attended
the March 6 meeting applauded RCC’s action.
“Well, this is good news,” said Penny Prime, who lives in Vienna but
within the tax district. “We’re already thinking about the
money we’re going to save,” said Marion C. Davis, a Vienna resident
who has long paid taxes to support RCC.
A BOUNDARY CHANGE that would remove Vienna, Oakton and Oak Hill/Herndon
residents has interesting ramifications for the composition of the
board. With borders that exclude non-Reston residents, three RCC board
members — Kevin Deasy, George Lawton and Peter von zur Muehlen, who
all live outside of Reston — would be forced to resign from the board
at the end of the year. But, they said they support that scenario
because it is what non-Reston residents in the tax district want.
“Every honest politician should be able to forfeit his position when
things turn out right,” said Von zur Muehlen. Since last October
when the three non-Reston residents were elected, they have aligned with
fiscal conservatives Mary Buff and the board’s Chair Joe Lombardo,
forming a majority voting block on the nine-member RCC board.
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