User:  Pass:        Forgot Password? Username?   |   Register
Banner
localcommentary
A Penny for Your Thoughts: News of Greater Falls Church Print E-mail
By Penny Gross   
Wednesday, August 11 2010 10:11:23 PM

pennymug

A local radio station is running a series of commentaries this week about the so-called "competition" between Fairfax County, Virginia, and Montgomery County, Maryland. Apparently, the station is trying to determine which jurisdiction is "better" than the other.

It reminds me of another study, entitled "A Tale of Two Suburbs," released in 2007 by the Center for Survey Research at Stony Brook University in New York. The study compared Suffolk and Nassau Counties on Long Island with Fairfax County, and showed that taxation and housing costs were a greater concern on Long Island. However, there were stronger ties for people who live on Long Island, and they tended to be satisfied with their government services, even though those services were acknowledged to be better in Virginia. Schools received higher marks in Virginia, and our economic outlook was considered more vibrant than on Long Island.

It wouldn't surprise me if the radio reporter's research ultimately reaches the same conclusion. Life is pretty good in Fairfax County but, as in all things, there is room for improvement. Granted, Montgomery County has more agricultural land and open space in parks. It also is about 100 square miles larger than Fairfax, and is catching up with Fairfax in redevelopment of former farmland. Our respective household incomes are closely aligned, and Fairfax County schools usually rank a little ahead of those across the river. Unemployment is below the national average in both jurisdictions, although that status doesn't help much if you are out of a job. Despite protests to the contrary, when you add everything up - real estate taxes, personal property, state and local income tax, and business taxes - Fairfax County taxes are lower than Montgomery County's.

That revenue also provides the funding for local government services - schools, parks, libraries, police and fire, human services, public works, environment - those everyday items that figure so importantly in the overall quality of life. As noted above, there is room for improvement. Children need to be able to succeed in school. They need to read, to analyze, to think. They need encouragement and support from the entire community. Great things are happening in our schools, but too many children don't graduate, or need remediation before pursuing a college degree. We need more park playing fields, and more facilities for an increasingly diverse population. Library hours, reduced to help balance the county budget, need to be restored and expanded when funds are available. At almost five percent, Fairfax County's poverty rate is low, but that percentage translates to more than 50,000 people living pretty austere lives, with diminished opportunity for advancement or improvement. The environment needs more attention as stormwater issues and the amount of impervious surface becomes a greater and greater challenge to restoration of our local streams and the Chesapeake Bay.

It's probably human nature that comparisons tend to focus on the negative, rather than the positive. I still remember the comment of a Fairfax County teacher who spent about six weeks of her summer out of the area. In a private conversation, she noted that she was really looking forward to seeing how much better other places were, but when she finished her trip, she realized that the best place was right here. After all was said and done, she was mighty happy to be home in Fairfax County.

 


Penny Gross is the Mason District Supervisor in the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors. She may be e-mailed at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.


blog comments powered by Disqus
Last Updated on Wednesday, August 11 2010 10:16:08 PM
 

Follow the News-Press:

RSS feed-icon-14x14| Facebook facebook-icon| Twitter twitter-icon| E-Mail subscribe

Talk to Us!

envelopecolorThe Falls Church News-Press welcomes Letters to the Editor. Deadline for Letters is 5 p.m. Monday each week. Letters should be 350 words or less. All letters printed become property of the Falls Church News-Press and may be edited for clarity and length. Click here to send a Letter via our form or use one of the contact methods below.

Email

letters@fcnp.com

Mail or drop off

Letters to the Editor, c/o Falls Church News-Press, 450 West Broad St. #321, Falls Church, VA 22046

Please include full name, address and telephone number with your submission.
acacia
Trending FCNP
newscommentary

 


Senator Saslaw's Richmond Report

News image

We are now more than halfway through the session and I am extremely disappointed with what has passed the Senate. Last November, the voters of our Commonwealth elected 20 Democrats an...

Dick Saslaw | Tuesday, 21 February 2012

Our Man in Arlington

News image

Monday, President's Day, will pull double duty and mark the 50th anniversary of uber-astronaut John Glenn becoming the first man to orbit the Ea...

Charlie Clark | Wednesday, 15 February 2012

Kaye Kory's Richmond Report

News image

Pausing from the hectic legislative calendar to draft this report, I suppose we should not be surprised that our legislative agenda is filled with relentless attacks on women's reproductive health, on...

Kaye Kory | Wednesday, 15 February 2012

Save the Embryo, Starve the Infant?

The enormous, fabulously extreme, over-the-top disconnect between most Republicans, right-wingers and their Wall Street sponsors and matters of public health ...

Nicholas F. Benton | Wednesday, 15 February 2012

News image

Giving Hope to LGBT Orthodox Jews

When people think of anti-gay places, the gay Mecca of New York City does not often come to mind. However, Br...

Wayne Besen | Tuesday, 21 February 2012

News image

Sick Rick

Conservatives are beginning to call for Newt Gingrich's large, pasty, inflated head on a silver platter. The National Review Online is...

Wayne Besen | Wednesday, 15 February 2012