Last night I attended my first School Board meeting ever. How do I find the words?
Pitiful.
These people are elected to direct education and educational funds in Fauquier County for those who decide to take advantage of the public education system for their children. Did I hear honest people with direct and honest intent? For the most part, no. Did I hear petty bickering and semi-indirect wise-cracks (mainly by one person) at others? Yep.
On to what happened. for this meeting which lasted around an hour.
First off, a committee (of what appeared to me to be Middle School Principals) discussed their desire to eliminate inter-scholastic middle school sports and replace them with intramural sports intended to encourage lack of competition (the argument being competition is not good at the 6th-8th grader age) and encourage more participation (the stats on the try-outs and team positions are lame, often 33% make the team). Is there plenty to talk about here? Sure is.
What else was talked about? Funding for High School athletics, specifically Freshman sports which have had declining participation.
What was practically not talked about? The elimination of funding for 21 teaching positions. Granted, Mr. Gorg (representative for the Center District) voiced his concerns that not one board member brought up the discussion of the impact of the loss on teaching positions, except the administrator who addressed his direct question of essentially 'what will happen?'. Note to the reader--this is in direct contrast to the exhaustive conversation on the funding, participation, and importance of after-school middle school sports, not to forget the funding of Freshman sports teams which was discussed at length as well.
As was mentioned by some concerned citizen after the meeting--those sitting on the board have known budget changes were coming for around 5 years. What have they done to prepare for it? Nothing. What are they doing now? Gnashing their teeth.
Pitiful.
Friday, April 20, 2012
Friday, April 13, 2012
Mountainside Montessori and the FCBOS
I had the privilege to attend my first Fauquier County Board of Supervisors (FCBOS) Meeting last night, 12 April 2012. For those interested, the meeting is typically held at the Warren Green building in Warrenton (10 Hotel Street) at 6:30 PM on the second Thursday of the month. Many things were discussed--the meeting let out at about 10 PM. The two major items which drew the public hearing were the forthcoming Mintbrook development in Bealeton and the Mountainside Montessori school in Marshall.
I may discuss Mintbrook in the future, but in summary, their requests for special exception were permitted, by a 3-2 vote, despite most people speaking against the matters of the flood plane issues and the lacking proffers from the developers. I wish to focus on the Mountainside Montessori school, which kept me up for several hours last night and hasn't been successfully chased out of my mind.
What is Mountainside Montessori? Well, from what I gathered from the public hearing last night, it is a private preschool which is growing into a primary/elementary school. The problem? It is a commercial business located in land zoned for Residential/Agricultural (RA) development/use. How the school got started there back in 2003 I'm a bit fuzzy on, but the fact of the matter is that some special exceptions were granted to the school to bring in students for preschool, then for the primary school. I do not wish to go into the many complicated details of which I do not fully understand.
The neighbors of the property came out in force, requesting that an extension to their special exception be denied--after all the school IS a private commercial business in the middle of a rural, residential neighborhood.
The parents and others associated with the small school came out in force as well, pleading for the exception to be granted so their children, students, and business could continue the work of education. All the while, the school leadership were promising that they only needed one more year to solidify and close out financing which would propel the school's desire to move to a commercially zoned area where they could experience unhindered growth. Side note on the funding: The USDA had promised the school 100% financing on their selected site, but then backed down to 80%. This means the school needs to scrounge to find the rest of the funds--and brings us to the claimed need for the extension of the recently expired special exception for continuing the work of private education in the location.
Now my position on this. I stood last night in front of the FCBOS and stated I had no knowledge of the previous happenings--only what I had heard there--and that my only interest was that of a resident of Fauquier County. I stated that to pull away the special exception (allow to expire) would be to break the trust of the businesses and residents of Fauquier County. Who can we trust, if we cannot trust our elected government officials? To pull away the previously promised support in such funding circumstances would be no better than reneging on the USDA's 100% financing promise. At the time I meant it in support of the school's desire to simply gather more time so they can move to a more proper location--and I still do.
Last night, my mind came back to the fact that the FCBOS has already reneged on promises. Which promises? The promises to the residents of Fauquier County that the property they were purchasing was zoned for Residential and Agricultural development. I sided with the school in my comments last night, but they need to leave. The county cannot attract or allow businesses under a certain premise and then when that premise changes--just kick them out. But along the same line, the county cannot go on breaking the promises made to generations past, present, and future by allowing special exceptions to the rules all willy-nilly. The FCBOS (albeit a previous board) had indeed created their own problems here.
Quite the situation, if you ask me. Both parties are in the right, in my opinion--although the school doesn't belong there. The FCBOS members each spoke at length of the school and their reluctance to approve the special exception. But they approved it--extending the exception for the primary school until June 30, 2013 allowing the school to finish out this and the next school year before being required to attempt another permit----or move.
My hope? That the school takes this extra life-line and gathers the funding they need and works on getting out the door at the current site at the same time. I'm not sure I have any confidence that the school well be able to gather their funding in the coming year AND complete construction on a new facility in time to be opened for the 2013-2014 school year. The FCBOS (and this resident as well) have made it clear that the next special permit which comes up is being shot down 0-5.
-TFCR
I may discuss Mintbrook in the future, but in summary, their requests for special exception were permitted, by a 3-2 vote, despite most people speaking against the matters of the flood plane issues and the lacking proffers from the developers. I wish to focus on the Mountainside Montessori school, which kept me up for several hours last night and hasn't been successfully chased out of my mind.
What is Mountainside Montessori? Well, from what I gathered from the public hearing last night, it is a private preschool which is growing into a primary/elementary school. The problem? It is a commercial business located in land zoned for Residential/Agricultural (RA) development/use. How the school got started there back in 2003 I'm a bit fuzzy on, but the fact of the matter is that some special exceptions were granted to the school to bring in students for preschool, then for the primary school. I do not wish to go into the many complicated details of which I do not fully understand.
The neighbors of the property came out in force, requesting that an extension to their special exception be denied--after all the school IS a private commercial business in the middle of a rural, residential neighborhood.
The parents and others associated with the small school came out in force as well, pleading for the exception to be granted so their children, students, and business could continue the work of education. All the while, the school leadership were promising that they only needed one more year to solidify and close out financing which would propel the school's desire to move to a commercially zoned area where they could experience unhindered growth. Side note on the funding: The USDA had promised the school 100% financing on their selected site, but then backed down to 80%. This means the school needs to scrounge to find the rest of the funds--and brings us to the claimed need for the extension of the recently expired special exception for continuing the work of private education in the location.
Now my position on this. I stood last night in front of the FCBOS and stated I had no knowledge of the previous happenings--only what I had heard there--and that my only interest was that of a resident of Fauquier County. I stated that to pull away the special exception (allow to expire) would be to break the trust of the businesses and residents of Fauquier County. Who can we trust, if we cannot trust our elected government officials? To pull away the previously promised support in such funding circumstances would be no better than reneging on the USDA's 100% financing promise. At the time I meant it in support of the school's desire to simply gather more time so they can move to a more proper location--and I still do.
Last night, my mind came back to the fact that the FCBOS has already reneged on promises. Which promises? The promises to the residents of Fauquier County that the property they were purchasing was zoned for Residential and Agricultural development. I sided with the school in my comments last night, but they need to leave. The county cannot attract or allow businesses under a certain premise and then when that premise changes--just kick them out. But along the same line, the county cannot go on breaking the promises made to generations past, present, and future by allowing special exceptions to the rules all willy-nilly. The FCBOS (albeit a previous board) had indeed created their own problems here.
Quite the situation, if you ask me. Both parties are in the right, in my opinion--although the school doesn't belong there. The FCBOS members each spoke at length of the school and their reluctance to approve the special exception. But they approved it--extending the exception for the primary school until June 30, 2013 allowing the school to finish out this and the next school year before being required to attempt another permit----or move.
My hope? That the school takes this extra life-line and gathers the funding they need and works on getting out the door at the current site at the same time. I'm not sure I have any confidence that the school well be able to gather their funding in the coming year AND complete construction on a new facility in time to be opened for the 2013-2014 school year. The FCBOS (and this resident as well) have made it clear that the next special permit which comes up is being shot down 0-5.
-TFCR
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Southern Fauquier Town Hall - 11 April 2012
I had the opportunity to finally attend the monthly town hall being put on by the Fauquier County Board of Supervisors (Mr. Stribling and Mr. Sherbyn specifically) this past Wednesday, April 11. Several people were in attendance and several people spoke for a few minutes. This included 1) Fauquier County Fire and Rescue, 2) Delegate Michael Webert, 3) Captain Meadows of the sheriff's dispatch center, and 4) Mr. Fisher, the commonwealth attorney for our area. One at a time now!
1) Fauquier County Fire and Rescue
The only name I was able to catch was Thomas Billington. He presented a 4 page summary of the report presented to the Fauquier County Board of Supervisors (FCBOS) about current volunteer staffing of EMS and Fire equipment, average response time for all the fire stations in the county (comes in at 10.3 minutes from call to first-on-the-scene), summary of the funding for personnel from the FCBOS, and a estimated projection of what the average response time would be given the new personnel.
A key note is that the FCBOS has approved an increase in funding to hire the 22 requested positions. The discussion briefly touched on how the fire chiefs hope to improve response time especially during the 4AM to 6AM window when most volunteers need to head off to work and prefer not to respond to calls (more and more employers are less tolerant of employees missing time at work for volunteer fire work).
I have requested the full 26-page report from Mr. Billington and hope to have another post here soon to break down their request. I also hope to hold their feet to the fire and show actuals vs. the projected response times after the proposed staffing levels have been achieved.
2) Delegate Michael Webert
Delegate Webert stopped by and gave his ear for the whole meeting (there was a chance that if the meeting ran long that he would have to drop out to support a conference call--that didn't occur), speaking only in summary of his on-going work for a few minutes.
He focused on a few items going into the budget including funding for schools and funding for a (from what I understood) new Virginia state-level grant program to support growing businesses. Mr. Webert was especially excited for the prospects this presents for the local agriculture initiatives.
3) Captain Meadows
Captain Meadows spoke for a few minutes about his call and dispatch center. He runs the 911 hotlines as well as the 540-347-3300 non-emergency line for the county. From what I gathered from his talk:
4) Mr. Fisher
Attorney Fisher spoke for a few minutes about his budget situation and how he has been able to creatively find ways for more funding. He is looking to bring down to the local-level the collection of over-due fines which previously has occurred at the state-level.
He mentioned that part of this move was because that the state would:
I commend Mr. Fisher and his office for the creative findings.
Well, that is all. I hope to have some future posts going into some more detail about these items where possible. The next FCBOS Town Hall is the second Wednesday in May (the 9th) in Catlett (location forthcoming once I clarify with some people).
-TFCR
1) Fauquier County Fire and Rescue
The only name I was able to catch was Thomas Billington. He presented a 4 page summary of the report presented to the Fauquier County Board of Supervisors (FCBOS) about current volunteer staffing of EMS and Fire equipment, average response time for all the fire stations in the county (comes in at 10.3 minutes from call to first-on-the-scene), summary of the funding for personnel from the FCBOS, and a estimated projection of what the average response time would be given the new personnel.
A key note is that the FCBOS has approved an increase in funding to hire the 22 requested positions. The discussion briefly touched on how the fire chiefs hope to improve response time especially during the 4AM to 6AM window when most volunteers need to head off to work and prefer not to respond to calls (more and more employers are less tolerant of employees missing time at work for volunteer fire work).
I have requested the full 26-page report from Mr. Billington and hope to have another post here soon to break down their request. I also hope to hold their feet to the fire and show actuals vs. the projected response times after the proposed staffing levels have been achieved.
2) Delegate Michael Webert
Delegate Webert stopped by and gave his ear for the whole meeting (there was a chance that if the meeting ran long that he would have to drop out to support a conference call--that didn't occur), speaking only in summary of his on-going work for a few minutes.
He focused on a few items going into the budget including funding for schools and funding for a (from what I understood) new Virginia state-level grant program to support growing businesses. Mr. Webert was especially excited for the prospects this presents for the local agriculture initiatives.
3) Captain Meadows
Captain Meadows spoke for a few minutes about his call and dispatch center. He runs the 911 hotlines as well as the 540-347-3300 non-emergency line for the county. From what I gathered from his talk:
- he has currently 19 employees,
- he has elevated funding to bring this up to 24 full time employees,
- there are 6 call terminals which can be staffed at any given point in time
- last year there were 157,000 calls. That is an average of 18 calls per hour all year long.
- This number (if I recall properly) has increased by 300%+ over the past 12 years while staffing has only increased 18%.
- This increase was attributed mainly to cell phone service and (per his example) of receiving 25-30 calls for an accident on I-66 rather than the pre-2000 era of 1 or 2 calls.
- The past 2 years he has had employee turn-over of 25% and 28% (approximately 5 people per year)
- I had to grill Captain Meadows to get him to answer some questions about this turn-over rate, which he seemed reluctant or possibly annoyed to be answering. I am unsure of the reasons for this.
- It costs about $52,000 to train a new employee
- It takes about 9 months to get a new employee up to full-capability
- Since it felt like pulling teeth, I decided not to pursue what the average employment length was for his department
- He claimed (I hope I'm not reading too far into his words) that this turn-over rate was caused because of the stress associated with the work and with the long hours, poor scheduling circumstances (someone always has to be there, even if the scheduled person gets sick), and the need to request vacation 30 days in advance.
4) Mr. Fisher
Attorney Fisher spoke for a few minutes about his budget situation and how he has been able to creatively find ways for more funding. He is looking to bring down to the local-level the collection of over-due fines which previously has occurred at the state-level.
He mentioned that part of this move was because that the state would:
- automatically write-off and not even attempt to collect 2/3rds of the fines/fees
- take a fee off of any fines actually collected
I commend Mr. Fisher and his office for the creative findings.
Well, that is all. I hope to have some future posts going into some more detail about these items where possible. The next FCBOS Town Hall is the second Wednesday in May (the 9th) in Catlett (location forthcoming once I clarify with some people).
-TFCR
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