RCA Election To Be Held This Weekend
A new crop of community activists hopes
to breathe new life into the struggling organization.
by
Brian McNeill - Reston Connection - July 7, 2004
Almost 37 years since the
Reston Citizens Association was created, a new group of community
activists is seeking to resurrect the struggling organization, which has
been plagued over the last few years by low membership and dwindling
responsibilities. The RCA elections will be held this
weekend at the Reston Festival at Reston Town Center.
The new group of RCA candidates is led by Mike Corrigan, a former Lake
Anne representative of Reston Association's Board of Directors.
Corrigan, who is seeking the RCA president seat, is running alongside
eight other candidates from across Reston. Two RCA board slots are
already filled with incumbents Jim Traylor and Arthur Hill, whose terms
have not yet expired. None of the seats up for election this weekend are
being contested.
After the election, RCA's 13-member board will have 11 members, a fuller
slate than the four or five board members who were active over the last
year.
President: Mike Corrigan
A Reston resident for more than 30 years, Corrigan has served as both a
Reston Association director and vice president of the board. He formed
and chaired the RA Transportation Advisory Committee and was board
liaison to the RA Facilities and Environmental Advisory Committees.
Corrigan would like to use RCA as a community forum to address issues
such as sprawl, transit oriented growth, assimilation of the immigrant
community and maintaining a range of housing opportunities. Above
all, Corrigan wants RCA to spearhead an effort to investigate the issue
of Reston's governance. Reston, which is not an incorporated town, lacks
true government. Corrigan believes it could benefit the community and be
ultimately cheaper if Reston changed its governance structure.
Hunters Woods: Jan Bradshaw
Bradshaw served on the Reston Community Center's Board of Governors for
six years as vice chair, secretary and chair of almost every committee.
Since 1991, she has served on her condo committee, where she was
involved in a $2.2 million facade project. She is now her neighborhood's
representative to ARCH, a new community organization. She said she
would like RCA to become the voice of the Reston community on issues
such as Reston's governance and the project to expand Metrorail to
Wiehle Avenue. Also, Bradshaw would like Reston to have a better
collaborative relationship with the Town of Herndon.
Hunters Woods: Latetia Combs
A former member of Reston Interfaith's Board of Directors, Combs has
been a community volunteer for much of the more than 20 years she has
lived in Reston. She is a former director of the Reston Triathalon and
also was a member of the development team for the apartments at North
Point. Combs said she would like RCA to again become the forum for
major issues facing the community. Also, she said in her candidate
filing statement that she wants RCA to be restored in a general sense to
its previous prominence.
North Point: Eric Kessel
Kessel, an attorney, has been a Reston resident since 2001. He has
practiced law in Fairfax County since 1999. He said his goal is to help
revitalize RCA as the voice and the conscience of the Reston community.
He would like RCA to once again be seen as an independent forum where
residents can address community concerns.
South Lakes: Robert Haley
Haley, an attorney, has lived in Reston since 1987. He previously worked
at Telenet Communications and Sprint in Reston. He is a former U.S Air
Force officer and a Vietnam veteran. He sees RCA as a body that
can help maintain Reston's quality of life. Among the issues he would
like RCA to address are: enhancing traffic considerations, working with
regional planning, Reston business issues, Reston governance and the
protection of Reston's natural environment.
Lake Anne: John Fay
Fay grew up and went to school in Reston, having lived in the
community for 27 years. For the last four years, he has served on RCA's
Board of Directors and has worked on the Reston Festival. He has helped
maintain the web sites for both RCA and the Reston Festival. Fay
would like RCA to help the community solve transportation problems,
ensure good educational opportunities for children, and continue being a
place where citizens can have a voice in community affairs.
At Large: Debra Steppel
Steppel has been a Reston resident since 1998 and has been an active
community volunteer ever since. In 2001, she received the Martha Pennino
Service Award and was a Reston Relay for Life team captain this year.
She is also a current member of Reston Chorale and its vice president of
corporate development. As an RCA board member, Steppel would work
to give Reston a greater voice in regional planning issues, address
issues related to Metrorail expansion and protect Reston's founding
ideals. She also supports investigating alternative forms of governance.
At Large: Mark Terry
A government consultant, this is Terry's first foray into elected
community service since graduate school, when he served on his
university's graduate student association as president. Terry said
the idea of reinvigorating the struggling RCA is appealing to him. He
hopes to use his position as an advocate for Reston's interests to local
and state government officials. Also, he wants RCA to increase
discussion and debate on the Dulles Rail Project, Reston governance and
regional planning issues.
At Large: Marion Stillson
Growing up in England, Stillson said she first heard about Reston in a
town planning course. Now, having been a Reston resident for 30 years,
Stillson wants to again serve the community. She is a former member of
the Reston Community Center's Board of Governors. Stillson said
Reston is governed well by Reston Association and the RCC Board of
Governors, but they are limited by their specific mandates. The
community needs RCA to tackle a broad range of issues from a broad
perspective, she said. She would like RCA to address issues such as
transportation, education, public safety and planning and zoning.
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