FY 2018 Proposed Budget Comments

04/16/2017 7:59 pm

Please share any additional input you have related to this year's budget proposal?

I oppose efforts to reduce the hours or staff at the Glencarlyn Library. This library was donated to our community by a member of the community and is used regularly by children doing work or passing time after school, young children who attend programs during the day, and people like me - self-employed professionals who work at home who need Internet access when our home-office Internet goes down. I also use it FREQUENTLY to receive interlibrary loans, which I use for my work. It is an invaluable resource to our neighborhood and the community.

I would rather see you stop fanci-fying our parks with playground sets and just allow children to play on open lawns. You are spending tons of money using up open green space where children used to be able to run (e.g., near Glencarlyn).

04/14/2017 12:51 pm

During the February Board meeting, the County Board asked for suggestions for budget reductions in the County’s baseline budget, in lieu of a tax increase for Metro and Schools. Please share your thoughts and ideas.

The potential elimination of a public health nurse from the schools seems like a silly idea when APS is adding/building schools to accommodate the nearly exponential increase (and projected increases) in it's enrollment. The county will need more school nurses, not less.

04/14/2017 7:26 am

This year’s budget proposal includes a number of enhancements through realigned resources for public works, public safety, technology, and other areas of service delivery that are essential for maintaining our community’s quality of life. Do you have any feedback for the Board regarding these important service investments?

Quality of life in lures access to public services like library usage.
Do not cut funding for Glen Carolyn Library. It is used and needed.

The Manager has proposed a tax increase this year to support the growing pressures for Metro (WMATA) and Arlington Public Schools. What should the Board consider as they tackle the fiscal pressures related to Metro and Schools?

The Arlington Public Schools are fortunate to have a good tax base for support.
That support should be for the children of tax paying citizen residents of
Arlington County. If we eliminate the students who don't meet that criteria
There would be no over crowding issue and better services for the children.

During the February Board meeting, the County Board asked for suggestions for budget reductions in the County’s baseline budget, in lieu of a tax increase for Metro and Schools. Please share your thoughts and ideas.

Try to eliminate waste and inefficiency. Then stop services to nontax paying noncitizen
non residents. The savings should be significant.

Please share any additional input you have related to this year's budget proposal?

Randomly slashing services is not really making things better.
Internal reform is what's needed.

04/14/2017 6:45 am

Please share any additional input you have related to this year's budget proposal?

So you want to build a Kenmore High School for 1300, and at the same time cut hours at the first, and oldest, Arlington Library? Are you trying to kill the Glen Carlyn neighborhood?

04/13/2017 7:02 pm

Of the Manager’s top priorities (economic development; service delivery & open data; and strategic budget planning and fiscal sustainability), which of these initiatives are most important to you? What, if any, concerns or suggestions do you have for the County Board related to these budget proposals?

Budget planning and fiscal sustainability are best served by underlying analysis of lack of efficiencies across schools and County government. You cannot support service delivery and open data with current lack of technology resources.

This year’s budget proposal includes a number of enhancements through realigned resources for public works, public safety, technology, and other areas of service delivery that are essential for maintaining our community’s quality of life. Do you have any feedback for the Board regarding these important service investments?

County department IT initiatives lack proper planning and collaboration amount departments and State offices. Example - current permit system project did not involve many of the agencies that have work flows tied to permits. There are numerous consultants being employed who do not have vested interest in the long term outcomes that are very costly. There is a lack of County wide vision across agencies to support a system of communication among agencies that only an enterprise system or well integrated systems can bring to the workforce. Too many disconnected stand alone systems and not enough County staffed technology experts to support systems and improvement. Getting in bed with Microsoft 0365 has put work groups into constant state of technology upgrades and bugs that make it impossible to have a stable environment for the lines of business that rely on technology to accomplish their job. The workforce is seriously understaffed to deliver the high caliber of services that are expected with the fractured systems that don't speak to one another across service lines. To get my job done, I frequently use the citizen tools found online to get information that I should have access to in-house.

The Manager has proposed a tax increase this year to support the growing pressures for Metro (WMATA) and Arlington Public Schools. What should the Board consider as they tackle the fiscal pressures related to Metro and Schools?

Make schools cut some programming or use part of their reserves. Education is a priority, but excessive cost per student is unmanageable. I read on this site about iPads for grade school children. Lets get back to teaching foundational basics and find a balance for specialized curriculums later in life.

During the February Board meeting, the County Board asked for suggestions for budget reductions in the County’s baseline budget, in lieu of a tax increase for Metro and Schools. Please share your thoughts and ideas.

Find ways to combined some of school and County operations.
Close County print shop and have School's take the lead.
Decrease number of communication staff across the County. Lots of redundancy in that area that program managers are already responsible for. Stop participating in social media disease of our nation. Waste of time!

Please share any additional input you have related to this year's budget proposal?

Thank you for supporting existing workforce by approving additional staff for understaffed essential programs and salary increases that match.
Support systematic program audits of school and County offices to unveil waste through inefficient and mismanaged resources.

04/13/2017 2:40 pm

Of the Manager’s top priorities (economic development; service delivery & open data; and strategic budget planning and fiscal sustainability), which of these initiatives are most important to you? What, if any, concerns or suggestions do you have for the County Board related to these budget proposals?

Economic Development.

This year’s budget proposal includes a number of enhancements through realigned resources for public works, public safety, technology, and other areas of service delivery that are essential for maintaining our community’s quality of life. Do you have any feedback for the Board regarding these important service investments?

Everyone keeps talking about ConnectArlington, but it seems like a lot of money and I don't see what we are getting back.

The Manager has proposed a tax increase this year to support the growing pressures for Metro (WMATA) and Arlington Public Schools. What should the Board consider as they tackle the fiscal pressures related to Metro and Schools?

Both needs should be funded by increasing the tax rate by 2 cents. The Board cut the rate a few times several years ago, and it has required the county and schools to continue to cut services to keep to that reduced tax rate. I think it's time to stop looking to make more cuts and just fund the community needs -- it isn't going to be better next year or the year after. Arlington will still be well below the tax rates in neighboring jurisdictions and while some may complain about their tax bill, I don't hear them complain about the increased value when they sell their homes -- and we all know you can't have increased values without expecting your taxes to go up.

During the February Board meeting, the County Board asked for suggestions for budget reductions in the County’s baseline budget, in lieu of a tax increase for Metro and Schools. Please share your thoughts and ideas.

I thought the Manager's proposal was a sound plan and wouldn't cut further.

04/11/2017 2:07 pm

Of the Manager’s top priorities (economic development; service delivery & open data; and strategic budget planning and fiscal sustainability), which of these initiatives are most important to you? What, if any, concerns or suggestions do you have for the County Board related to these budget proposals?

I'm writing to urge the County Board to support and fully fund the Affordable Housing Investment Fund (AHIF).

04/10/2017 11:45 am

The Manager has proposed a tax increase this year to support the growing pressures for Metro (WMATA) and Arlington Public Schools. What should the Board consider as they tackle the fiscal pressures related to Metro and Schools?

I think a tax increase may be inevitable with the loss of government rentals caused by the BRAC process from the Federal Government. I do not believe we should lessen our community amenities and resources, especially for those with lower incomes.

Please share any additional input you have related to this year's budget proposal?

I have been visiting the GlenCarlin branch of the library weekly for some years now to meet with a student whom I help with her homework, and read together as a volunteer. I see that the library hours are to be cut because their circulation numbers are low. From the times I visit, I would observe that the library is a busy place, none the less. There are often children doing homework at the tables, mothers and children reading and visiting, and folks using the computers. Also I see kids from Kenmore Middle School who come for the library as a safe place. For a small savings, I think a lot people would lose a vital meeting place and resource in this community.
Please consider not making this cut.

04/08/2017 5:34 pm 

Fiscal sustainability, including more prudent cash management/utilization, a more robust and transparent policy governing how and why the funds in the fund balance may be accumulated and for what purposes these funds can be used, greater scrutiny of expenditures and expense control, and improved analysis of the negative impacts of increases in taxation on the commercial office vacancy rate, business creation and on rents for commercial residential (including CAFs) to determine the likely point of diminishing returns in raising the county's tax rate.

Please make the people of Arlington a greater priority, particularly those for whom an increased real estate tax rate represents true hardship. This group is larger than one might think.

I watched the video of the County Board’s tax-rate hearing on March 23, and I listened carefully to the retired federal employee who spoke. He's been living in Arlington since 1974. His pension does not rise annually to match the increases in his taxes. Using the manager's own number, the cumulative impact of these tax and fee increases, on average, within the past 5 years is over $1,600 a year. At a certain point, people may be house "rich" but they cannot afford to put food on the table plus afford their medicines, etc. At the end of their lives when they are most vulnerable (and moving away has become difficult), they are faced with some pretty stark choices.

If they defer the taxes, it could compromise their mortgage loans (yes, some seniors still have mortgages) or their ability to obtain a mortgage loan, should they need it. Paul Holland and his RETR working group have been studying this issue at length. One reason why there is no housing asset test for tax deferral is that oftentimes the house is a senior's main or only asset. If you compromise it, then you compromise the person's ability to get into a "good" assisted living or nursing home facility. (I put "good" in quotes because that's a relative term. Most of these facilities cannot be described as good with a straight face.) Sadly, these facilities do not want indigent patients who qualify immediately for a Medicaid bed. The reimbursement rate for Medicaid beds in the state of Virginia is embarrassingly low — these beds do not cover their own costs. So they have to have a hunk of change just to walk in the door so that they can go on Medicaid spend-down. I've been through this process several times with elderly relatives.

On Tues., March 28, I sat in a room full of mostly retired ladies — along with the county manager — facing the same situation as the federal retiree who spoke to the county board on March 23. We talk about this topic regularly at meetings because many are widowed (some never married). One of my tablemates on 3/28 was a retired veterinarian who had to retire early, moving to Arlington in +/–2000 to care for her dad (now 94) . Of the three of us sitting at my table, none of us plan to remain in Arlington once our main reason for being here (work, in my case) ceases. It's just too expensive. We don't have pensions. We have whatever we've managed to save, and that will be quickly eroded in this high-cost environment. But these ladies were too embarrassed to tell the county manager to his face that the tax-rate increase would be burdensome for them. And I find this reticence common in seniors. Some remain quiet out of embarrassment, others refuse any assistance with taxes due to long-held resistance to accepting what they view as "charity."

In addition to the elderly, there are also disabled residents who are living on a fixed income. Even if they are renters, increased taxes are passed on to tenants, including those living in committed "affordable" apartments. This is a fact that the manager acknowledged at the commissions budget work session on March 9, in answer to an attendee's question. He also acknowledged that the pass-through cost of taxes can drive up the office vacancy rate — but could offer no data or detailed analysis to determine what the impact of the 2-cent increase might be.

I also have had families with young children (both parents working) tell me that they are struggling to make ends meet. Their incomes do not increase at the same rate as the ongoing increase of taxes and fees in this county (in addition to rising food and other costs), and some of them are also trying to help elderly parents.

According to the American Community Survey (2015), there were almost 20,000 people (roughly 9%) in Arlington living BELOW the poverty line. If you include those living within 120% of the poverty line, the percentage of low-income residents climb even higher. When we raise taxes, these are the citizens who directly or indirectly bear the greatest burden. Real estate tax increases affect everyone, not just the ones who can afford to pay more.

This year’s budget proposal includes a number of enhancements through realigned resources for public works, public safety, technology, and other areas of service delivery that are essential for maintaining our community’s quality of life. Do you have any feedback for the Board regarding these important service investments?

The manager was capable of funding all recommended spending without raising the tax rate (with the exception of APS and Metro). I take no position on this spending but would ask that ALL spending (new or existing) be carefully scrutinized to ensure that ALL public funds are being used in the most efficient and effective manner to meet the board's and the manager's fiduciary responsibilities for handling other people's money.

For FY18, the effective advertised real estate tax-rate (assessment increase + 2-cent rate increase) is equivalent to a 4-cent hike in the real estate tax rate. Over the past decade, Arlington County homeowners, commercial property owners, and renters have been asked to shoulder ongoing increases in the tax and fee burden.

With a 2-cent increase, the average homeowner would see the tax and fee burden rise from $8,305 in calendar year (CY) 2016 to $8,613 in CY 2017—a 4% increase, or about $492—and will have absorbed a cumulative, 5-year increase of $1,613 in additional taxes and fees (CY 2013–CY 2017).
Commercial property owners (and the businesses that rent from them) face an even greater burden with the 12.5-cent transportation surcharge and (where applicable) BID assessment. See Washington Post tax burden chart at https://www.washingtonpost.com/apps/g/page/local/tax-bills-climb-with-home-values/874/

At a March 9 budget work session with the commissions, the manager agreed that real estate tax increases are passed through to commercial office tenants and that taxes are one driver of the county’s stubbornly high vacancy rate. However, he could point to no specific data or recent analysis predicting the impact of a 4-cent (or lesser) effective tax-rate increase on Arlington’s vacancy rate.

Likewise, in answer to another question on March 9, the manager also agreed that raising the real estate tax rate would increase the cost of housing for the county’s affordable housing community — even as the county is simultaneously subsidizing this cost. Increases in Arlington’s tax and fee burden makes housing less affordable for all Arlingtonians, and this burden disproportionately affects those living on lower and fixed incomes, including elderly and disabled residents.

Given the large amount of cash on hand, as outlined below, it would seem highly likely that the manager could (with Board concurrence) cover all new proposed spending by reallocating a small portion of these funds to cover limited-duration and nonrecurring expenditures in the general fund budget rather than raising the tax rate for FY2018.

Using cash already on hand, the manager’s proposed budget could be funded without any spending cuts or a tax-rate increase. I therefore urge the Board not to increase the tax rate and to ask the manager to identify expenditures that are appropriate for alternative cash funding and to trim any unnecessary spending, using public money efficiently and effectively to minimize the need for future tax increases (or spending cuts). Below the list of several sources of cash on hand, I have identified a few cost savings and efficiencies as well.

CASH ON HAND
• $191.2 million — Fund Balance. (See Exhibit 3, FY16 CAFR.) I am not asking the board to tap the county’s 5% operating reserve of $58 million or similar required reserves. There is a great deal of money in the fund balance beyond required reserves. Since FY09, the county has been carrying an unspent fund balance of at least $100 million. (See Exhibit 5, FY09–FY16 CAFRs.) Since FY06, the fund balance has generated a net positive surplus, even at the height of the real estate crash when revenues were $72 million less than expenditures.

Thus, over the last decade the county historically and consistently has taken in more money than it has spent. FY18 will likely continue this trend as the manager has presented a "balanced budget that continues the current level of service within existing tax rate” of $0.991 per $100 of assessed value.
• $77.7 million — APS reserves. APS has its own $77.7 million cash reserves (on top of county reserves), which are defined/described in the superintendent's FY18 proposed budget. The superintendent has set aside approximately $24 million in cash for "future budget years," $19 million of which is unallocated and presumably will be carried over into FY19.

• $157 million — Transportation Capital Fund. (See Exhibit X, FY16 CAFR.) The TCF is expected to generate another +/–$26 million in revenue in FY18. On March 9, the manager confirmed to me that at least some of the 1-cent proposed increase for Metro could alternately be funded by TCF dollars. When we know that borrowing costs are likely to rise, why would we want to float more new bonds than strictly necessary, particularly when we have so much unspent money in the TCF?

Surely out of a $1.24 billion budget, the county can find $14.8 million in limited-duration and nonrecurring expenditures that could be otherwise funded from cash already on hand. If it’s a choice between making cuts and finding expenditures that qualify for an alternative funding source(s), my guess is that the county’s departments will be able to provide a list of items that would qualify.

COST SAVINGS & EFFICIENCIES

FTEs — Save $266,000 annually by forgoing just 2 highly questionable additions to staff

Because salary and benefits consume roughly 80% of general fund expenditures, it is the most obvious place to look for ways to conserve resources.
The manager’s proposed budget recommends adding almost 50 new FTEs in FY18. This addition to staff seems particularly excessive in view of the fact that the county has added just 117 FTEs, total, over the last 9 years (FY09–FY17), or an average of 13 FTEs per year.

At any given time, the county has many vacant positions (over 160) advertised on its own website: https://www.arlingtonva.us/jobs

Some positions remain vacant for a long period of time, but this information is apparently missing from the budget discussions on adding new FTEs (full-time equivalent positions). And there is little or no supporting analysis contained in the budget to justify many of the requests for adding FTEs.

I strongly suggest that the manager and board members take a closer look at the proposed additions to staff. Upon my cursory review of just one request for additional FTEs, I found the following:

Example: Transportation Capital Fund — eliminate 2 transportation engineer FTEs at a savings of $266,000 annually

DES is asking for 4 additional FTEs that are assigned to the Transportation Capital Fund (FY18 budget web p. 844). Of those 4, 2 are requests for more engineers to serve the new Neighborhood Complete Streets Program, which at present is yet to be funded and has no projects. One position is to be assigned to the DES Transportation Engineering and Operations Bureau, the other to the DES Engineering Bureau.

Using the search term “transportation” on the county’s employment opportunities web page, I found 4 existing vacant DES positions for engineers — 2 positions for the Transportation Engineering and Operations Bureau and 2 for the Engineering Bureau. Two of the 4 vacant positions are listed as “continuous,” meaning that the county has a continuous need for these positions and cannot keep them filled.

Why would DES want to add 2 more transportation engineering FTEs when it clearly cannot fill its existing vacant transportation engineering slots? If those 4 existing, unfilled engineering slots were to be filled, would DES still truly need the 2 additional transportation engineering FTEs proposed in the FY2018 budget? Adding slots isn’t the same as adding bodies; empty slots don't accomplish any work.

The transportation capital performance measures (FY18 budget web p. 449) do not show a huge increase in the number of new projects. In fact, there are fewer new projects initiated both in FY2017 (15) and in FY2018 (20) than in FY2013 (21). Likewise, in FY2013, DES completed 18 projects; in FY2017 and in FY2018, DES will complete 11 and 20 projects, respectively.

DES appears to have completed more transportation capital projects more efficiently in FY2013 — when it had a smaller total workforce of 395.7 FTEs — than in recent years with a larger workforce. The current request would push DES’s total FTEs to 407 in FY2018. (See FY18 budget web p. 489 for FTE totals.) However, there is no breakdown in the budget showing the number of FTEs in DES’s Engineering Bureau and Transportation Engineering and Operations Bureau for this period, so precise bureau staffing levels between FY2013 and FY2018 are unknown.

What is known is that there has been a slowdown in transportation capital project completion over this period — the estimated backlog of 76 ongoing projects for FY2018 is roughly 57% higher than the backlog of ongoing projects (46) in FY2013 (web p. 449). And this increased backlog occurred despite cancellation of the Columbia Pike Streetcar project in Nov. 2014, which should have reduced the DES transportation capital workload significantly.

Increase Retirement System Employee Contributions 1% — a savings of up to $2 million

In FY2004, the “general” county employees’ (Group A’s) retirement plan contribution was reduced from 5% down to 4%. Reversing the 1% reduction in Group A contributions to the county's retirement system could reduce the employer’s/county’s contribution by as much as $2 million annually. It’s worth noting that the county’s contribution to the retirement system has grown from $24.5 million in FY07 to $54.5 million in FY2016 (web p. 94).

An increase in retirement system contributions takes no money away from employees; it simply redirects a small portion to fund their retirement. And a 5% employee contribution is the median percentage of employee contributions, according to NASRA, though that median has been climbing in recent years. [Please note that APS employees contribute 5% of covered pay and uniformed county employees contribute between 5.6% and 7.5% of covered pay toward their retirement.]

In the manager's “Balanced budget that continues the current level of service within existing tax rate,” he has found sufficient funds to provide a "merit-based compensation increases for eligible employees of approximately 3.25 percent."

This already-funded 3.25% merit-based raise in FY 18 follows a 1.75% increase added to the maximum of each grade/range in FY17. Also in FY17, the lowest base pay rate was increased from $13.13/hour to $14.50/hour for all permanent employees. Thus, most, if not all, Group A employees should have received sufficient salary increases in recent years to offset the redirected 1% of pay for retirement.

APS — Find additional efficiencies in telecommunications and printing

The APS Superintendent has identified potential cuts to his budget in case he should not get the additional money he has requested. I agree that the APS annual cost per student — that is again approaching $20,000 per child — is unsustainable given the ongoing increases in enrollment. Even with Arlington’s prodigious tax base, we simply cannot sustain the types of tax increases (even if we had more land on which to build schools) that would be necessary to continue spending at this level as enrollment continues to swell.

I compare the APS budget to a family’s budget. A family cannot afford to spend the same amount per child on 4 children that it may have spent on just 2. Income doesn’t rise to match the number of children in a family.

I have heard two promising suggestions on cost-savings that could be achieved through elimination of duplication. The first suggestion is for the school system and county to merge their individual phone systems into one. The second suggestion comes from the superintendent himself — he has proposed shuttering the APS print shop. Perhaps cost savings could be achieved by merging the county’s print shop with the one operated by APS? It seems like an idea worth considering.

Please share any additional input you have related to this year's budget proposal?

[NOTE: I send this letter to the county board and the manager via e-mail for public comment on 3/23/17, but I received no acknowledgement of its receipt. To ensure that my comments are considered, I have copied my remarks into this form and have added additional comments as applicable to answer the questions posed.] - Summary

As taxes and housing costs have increased, we have seen Arlington become, on average, wealthier and less diverse. This should be a big red flag to a community that prides itself on maintaining diversity and preaching inclusiveness. If Arlington continues jacking up the tax rates and assessments without considering the unintended consequences, Arlington will become a place where only the super wealthy and those qualifying for subsidies can remain.

We all know that the law of diminishing returns exists. And we will reach a point where we have hit diminishing marginal returns in raising the tax rate — if we are not already there. It works similarly to budget cuts — which often end up costing more in the long term than the money being “saved” in the short term. Careful thought supported by proper review and analysis can improve the outcomes of the difficult decisions you face.

I thank board members and the manager in advance for your kind attention and for your hard work on the budget for fiscal year 2018.
Sincerely,

Suzanne Smith Sundburg
5300 8th Road North
Arlington, Virginia

Cc: County Manager Mark Schwartz
Assistant County Manager Bryna Helfer
DMF Director Stephen Agostini
ACCF President Stefanie Pryor
ACCF Executive Committee Chair Jesse Boeding
Arlington Sun Gazette Editor Scott McCaffrey
ARLnow.com Editor Scott Brodbeck

04/07/2017 10:22 am

The Manager has proposed a tax increase this year to support the growing pressures for Metro (WMATA) and Arlington Public Schools. What should the Board consider as they tackle the fiscal pressures related to Metro and Schools?

Hello. I am writing to express my support for increased funding for Arlington Public Schools through a one-cent tax increase in the county. The quality of our schools is the most valuable asset in our county. It is because of school quality that people want to live in Arlington.

Thank you.

Sincerely,

Jennifer Mason

04/07/2017 7:41 am

Of the Manager’s top priorities (economic development; service delivery & open data; and strategic budget planning and fiscal sustainability), which of these initiatives are most important to you? What, if any, concerns or suggestions do you have for the County Board related to these budget proposals?

None of these is something not to do. Some aspects of each are much more urgent than some aspects of others. There's been some neglect of economic development in the decades past, a serene confidence that good tenants would come to Arlington commercial and we could just stand back and watch it happen and extract some other desirable projects from developers as it went on. With the Silver Line and Alexandria poaching actively for Blue Line sites, that's over.

The Manager has proposed a tax increase this year to support the growing pressures for Metro (WMATA) and Arlington Public Schools. What should the Board consider as they tackle the fiscal pressures related to Metro and Schools?

WMATA needs to get control of its work force and of its union contracts. It probably won't, unless the jurisdictions clearly demonstrate that they won't provide more money unless they do. Governor McAuliffe and Representative Comstock are going in the right directions here, and we should back their initiatives to get the incentives right for the Metro work force.
When we do establish a dedicated funding source for Metro, we should consider tolling the road network - all of it, Lee Highway, Columbia Pike, Glebe, etc etc because drivers are the second most benefited group (after Metro riders themselves) from the availability of the Metro network.

During the February Board meeting, the County Board asked for suggestions for budget reductions in the County’s baseline budget, in lieu of a tax increase for Metro and Schools. Please share your thoughts and ideas.

Get rid of the Green Bins. They cost a lot of money, which clearly indicates that a lot of resources go into maintaining this third stream of trash collection: and that money goes to trucks and gasoline, for the purpose of taking yard waste somewhere and spreading it over the landscape. It is very hard to imagine that the level of resources going into this is justified by environmental benefit.

04/06/2017 8:35 pm

Of the Manager’s top priorities (economic development; service delivery & open data; and strategic budget planning and fiscal sustainability), which of these initiatives are most important to you? What, if any, concerns or suggestions do you have for the County Board related to these budget proposals?

This discussion gets into minutia which does not address the fundamental budgeting problem of the County. 

This is fine, if the overall County staffing and resource usage were "lean and mean". There needs to be an indication that operating costs have been reduced, rather than continued, year after year, increases in staff and resources. As a former manager of the US Postal Service and District Manager in Northern Virginia in the 1990s we were able to reduce operating costs even with huge growth, particularly in Loudon county, through process improvements and overall day to day management of operating resources.

Fine, but finance them if you wish, through usage of excess cash reserves and efficiencies in "cutting the fat"

During the February Board meeting, the County Board asked for suggestions for budget reductions in the County’s baseline budget, in lieu of a tax increase for Metro and Schools. Please share your thoughts and ideas.

It is ridiculous to ask the public to manage what our county managers should be managing. That is what they are paid for.

Please share any additional input you have related to this year's budget proposal?

If I were in charge I would target a 5% reduction in operating expenses and use the excess cash to pay for Metro and the schools.

04/06/2017 3:54 pm

Of the Manager’s top priorities (economic development; service delivery & open data; and strategic budget planning and fiscal sustainability), which of these initiatives are most important to you? What, if any, concerns or suggestions do you have for the County Board related to these budget proposals?

Economic development is the most important to me. I would also like to see better coordination between the County and APS especially with respect to sites for future schools.

This year’s budget proposal includes a number of enhancements through realigned resources for public works, public safety, technology, and other areas of service delivery that are essential for maintaining our community’s quality of life. Do you have any feedback for the Board regarding these important service investments?

I think investment in our community is important but would rather see better prioritization of projects.

The Manager has proposed a tax increase this year to support the growing pressures for Metro (WMATA) and Arlington Public Schools. What should the Board consider as they tackle the fiscal pressures related to Metro and Schools?

I support the 2 cents proprosed tax increase. I really don't like the idea of tying the tax increase to those two important budgetary items but would rather think of the budget as a whole.

During the February Board meeting, the County Board asked for suggestions for budget reductions in the County’s baseline budget, in lieu of a tax increase for Metro and Schools. Please share your thoughts and ideas.

I do not support many of the reductions proprosed especially with respect to schools (which would share roughly half the decrease).

04/06/2017 11:44 am

Of the Manager’s top priorities (economic development; service delivery & open data; and strategic budget planning and fiscal sustainability), which of these initiatives are most important to you? What, if any, concerns or suggestions do you have for the County Board related to these budget proposals?

Please do not reduce the hours of the Glencarlyn branch of the Public Library system. There are many of us in the neighborhood that use this Library. Most of us can walk to it. Thank you for your consideration of this request.

04/06/2017 6:25 am

Of the Manager’s top priorities (economic development; service delivery & open data; and strategic budget planning and fiscal sustainability), which of these initiatives are most important to you? What, if any, concerns or suggestions do you have for the County Board related to these budget proposals?

Sustainability. The raise in taxes is unsustainable. You need to maintain the stuff you have - DPR as a great example - is incapable of maintaining a bathroom in January or a baseball field in Feb. However, they seem to have all the budget they need to destroy open green space (once gone, never comes back) and build extravagant new things. Bluemont field debacle is an excellent example if maintained properly, you wouldn't need a new field. You can't afford to keep the bathrooms open at Bluemont park but can put up a $120k fence . Bluemont field already flooded, it is not even complete.

Stop giving money to affordable housing. It is destroying middle ground between N/S Arlington.

Get rid of the fiber optic idea. Build a classroom instead or invest in better curricula.

With all the problems the county has, our tax money is not addressing them. Until you can justify a constant raise in taxes, when him values drop, and the county has a surplus, you need you to pause.

04/05/2017 11:26 pm

Of the Manager’s top priorities (economic development; service delivery & open data; and strategic budget planning and fiscal sustainability), which of these initiatives are most important to you? What, if any, concerns or suggestions do you have for the County Board related to these budget proposals?

Economic development is good to bring more businesses and jobs to Arlington

This year’s budget proposal includes a number of enhancements through realigned resources for public works, public safety, technology, and other areas of service delivery that are essential for maintaining our community’s quality of life. Do you have any feedback for the Board regarding these important service investments?

Make sure the police can do their jobs to keep crime low

The Manager has proposed a tax increase this year to support the growing pressures for Metro (WMATA) and Arlington Public Schools. What should the Board consider as they tackle the fiscal pressures related to Metro and Schools?

Property taxes are already too high in Arlington. Please don't raise taxes again. Over the last 16 years between the tax assessments and tax increases, I am now paying 400% more than I was in 2000. In 2000, the taxes on my single family home were about $2500 and now I am paying over $10,000. That is an increase of about 25% per year. It is way too much.

During the February Board meeting, the County Board asked for suggestions for budget reductions in the County’s baseline budget, in lieu of a tax increase for Metro and Schools. Please share your thoughts and ideas.

Cut the spending on affordable housing. It is just making our County and schools too overcrowded.

Please share any additional input you have related to this year's budget proposal?

Keep the tax rate the same. Just on the assessment alone, there is enough of an increase in the dollar amount of property tax paid.

04/05/2017 6:44 pm

Please share any additional input you have related to this year's budget proposal?

ARLINGTON COUNTY TENNIS ASSOCIATION
COMMENTS ON ARLINGTON COUNTY MANAGER’S
PROPOSED BUDGET FOR FISCAL YEAR 2018

The Arlington County Tennis Association (“ACTA”) appreciates having the opportunity to comment online concerning the Arlington County Manager’s Proposed Budget for Fiscal Year 2018 (the “FY 2018 Proposed Budget”). Directed by volunteers, ACTA promotes playing tennis in Arlington County among several hundred players of various ages and abilities. To learn more about ACTA’s activities, we encourage you to visit the organization’s website: http://www.actatennis.org.
On March 30, 2017, ACTA commented orally on the FY 2018 Proposed Budget at a public hearing before the Arlington County Board. The following comments amplify ACTA’s oral comments.
Perspectives Informing Our Comments
Usage and Demand. Arlington County’s limited and dwindling number of public tennis courts are heavily used. Users include official tennis-playing organizations such as ACTA, various groups that play ad hoc, and individuals who periodically “drop in” to play tennis. Besides ACTA and the United States Tennis Association, other organizations that promote tennis in Arlington include the Glebe Ladies Tennis Club (https://sites.google.com/site/glebeltc/home), Arlington County’s own 55+ Program, and various Meetup Groups like Arlington Fun Tennis (https://www.meetup.com/Arlington-Fun-Tennis/). Through these organizations’ collective efforts, thousands of Arlington residents annually play tennis, many of them regularly. During peak playing hours (primarily weeknights and weekends), players often must wait, sometimes for a long time, to secure a court.
In order to help manage demand for its inadequate number of public tennis courts, Arlington County some years ago initiated a system for reserving courts at hourly rates. That court reservation system remains in place.
Current Conditions. Many courts require extensive repairs. Some courts’ surfaces have become so extensively cracked that players imperil their personal safety trying to use them.
Results of Recent Survey. In February 2017, ACTA conducted its annual on-site survey of Arlington County’s public tennis courts. The survey found that 36 of the County’s approximately 83 courts require extensive resurfacing. Some courts have so seriously deteriorated that ACTA no longer can rationalize using them for competitive league play. With fewer well maintained courts available, fewer Arlington citizens are able to participate in a healthy activity.
Intersection with CIP. The County’s Capital Improvement Program (“CIP”) for 2016-2026 appropriates funds for the Design phase of updating some County parks including their tennis courts. ACTA looks forward to working with the County including its Department of Parks and Recreation (“DPR”) on designing long-term, enduring improvements of those particular venues and hopefully others.
Topics These Comments Cover
These comments cover two interrelated subjects: First, ongoing maintenance of tennis courts through the County’s Operating Budget and, second, capital improvements of tennis courts through both the “pay as you go” (“PAYG”) component of the Operating Budget and the CIP.
Ongoing Maintenance
ACTA requests that the FY 2018 Proposed Budget reallocate sufficient funding to bring ongoing maintenance of tennis courts closer to DPR’s objectives. Some of the County Manager’s proposed cuts to the Budget could be redeployed to achieve this important objective.
The FY 2018 Proposed Budget describes statistically what tennis players know anecdotally: the County’s continuing maintenance of its tennis courts is not keeping pace with the courts’ usage, wear and tear. According to the FY 2018 Proposed Budget, DPR has established a goal of repainting, maintaining, and resealing tennis and basketball courts at the rate of 27 courts during each 5-year cycle. In each of FY 2017 and FY 2018, however, DPR estimates that it will succeed in so treating only 15 courts. Additionally, DPR estimates that in each of those fiscal years, two courts must be closed on account of disrepair or unsafe playing surfaces. See FY 2018 Proposed Budget, Web Page 674.
With respect to such routine maintenance, the FY 2018 Proposed Budget also observes as follows: (Web Page 675): “According to United States Tennis Association (USTA) and associated paint and asphalt manufacturers, tennis and basketball courts with moderate use should be on a 5-to-8-year maintenance cycle to ensure consistent, smooth, and safe playing conditions with no cracks, water pooling, or paint bubbling.”
DPR notwithstanding its best efforts and constrained by limited funding is not meeting those standards. ACTA requests that the Proposed Budget reallocate sufficient funding in order to meet the goal of repainting, etc. at least 27 courts during each 5-year cycle and to prevent closing any additional courts on account of unsafe or dangerous playing conditions.
We also suggest that were the County to appropriate more funds to reconstruct more tennis courts from their foundations up, courts may not have to be “routinely” maintained as frequently. Enhancing capital improvements could help DPR better meet its goal of 27 courts every five years. For example, in recent years the County provided funding to reconstruct from their foundations the tennis courts at two parks, Virginia Highlands Park and Towers Park. The results have pleased Arlington’s tennis-playing community, and the generally excellent playing conditions at those venues have endured. See also comments below under “Capital Improvements”.
Capital Improvements
The FY 2018 Proposed Budget (Page 351) provides the FY 2018 Project List in the Parks Maintenance Capital Program. The list includes projects funded by both the proceeds of bonds and PAYG funding.
PAYG. With respect to PAYG funding, ACTA requests that some funds be reallocated to enhance capital improvements of tennis courts. ACTA is willing to work with DPR in identifying capital improvements that could be made during FY 2018 using PAYG funds.
CIP. With respect to the CIP, ACTA urges that the CIP in its next cycle fund the Construction phase of improvements to tennis courts the Design phase of which the current CIP funds. Included on the aforementioned FY 2018 Project List, these design-phase projects include replacing the tennis courts of Bluemont Park, Marcey Road Park, and TJ Park. Actual construction of those capital improvements should be scheduled for the earlier possible fiscal year.
ACTA also urges that Arlington County accelerate forward from 2023 the Design and Construction phases of the anticipated renovation of Quincy Park. One of Arlington County’s most popular tennis venues, Quincy Park’s six courts are heavily used. During peak hours, players typically have to wait, sometimes lengthily, to secure a court. In updating Quincy Park, the County seriously should consider increasing beyond six the number of tennis courts there.
Anticipated Subsequent Comments. ACTA appreciates that the County Board currently is focusing on the FY 2018 Proposed Budget. ACTA thus anticipates commenting more specifically and extensively on capital improvements of tennis courts upon then submitting to the County recommendations for the next cycle of the CIP.
Appreciation for Constructive Dialogue
ACTA appreciates the constructive dialogue that has been initiated with DPR about the County’s tennis facilities. We look forward to continuing that dialogue, initiating similarly constructive dialogue with the County Board, and working collaboratively toward ACTA’s singular objective of better maintaining and improving Arlington County’s public tennis facilities.
Respectfully submitted,

G. Richard Gold, President
Arlington County Tennis Association

04/05/2017 3:12 pm

Of the Manager’s top priorities (economic development; service delivery & open data; and strategic budget planning and fiscal sustainability), which of these initiatives are most important to you? What, if any, concerns or suggestions do you have for the County Board related to these budget proposals?

Comments on Proposed Arlington County Budget

The County Board should demonstrate fiscal restraint in these uncertain and transitional times and pause to consider preserving diversity of living standards in Arlington County. With rising real estate assessments, which will provide additional revenues, the County Board should resist any inclination to raise property tax rates and exercise extraordinary caution when spending the hard earned money of Arlington County residents. At the very least, any tax rate increase should not exceed one cent, and any increase should be rolled back automatically.

AFFORDABLE HOUSING

No priority would be more adversely affected by an increase in the property tax rate than affordable housing. A tax rate increase would undoubtedly broaden the universe of residents needing and qualifying for housing assistance. A tax rate increase contributes significantly to the spiral of rising tax rates contributing to rising housing costs, contributing to increased demand for affordable housing, contributing to pushing household incomes below what is needed to afford housing in Arlington, contributing to an increase in those qualifying for the affordable housing program, contributing to the need for more resources for this program and calls for higher taxes. Those on the lowest end of the economic spectrum are hit the hardest and many more are forced onto public assistance…or they leave the County for more affordable locations. This loss of diversity clearly hurts Arlington County.

RETIRED AND ELDERLY

The economically challenged residents of Arlington County are not the only ones affected by this affordability spiral. Those who have retired or are retiring soon, and want to continue to live in homes they have built lives around, now face new and perhaps surprising challenges. Now, their incomes are fixed and their savings are primed to be drawn down. Perhaps, they are still paying off the “parent plus” portion of college student loans for their children. Their property values are rising, assessments aggressively increase, general cost of living naturally rises (more and faster in this area), healthcare costs are increasing, and now the County Board is considering raising property tax rates. These citizens, who perhaps thought they had planned well and would be able to stay in their beloved home into their old age, now find themselves on an uncomfortable ledge. Some were already on the edge. Before they find themselves in irretrievable trouble, they are likely to move out of Arlington County. These are people with life experience, demonstrated talents, a desire to volunteer and continue to contribute, and knowledge and experience to offer. Losing the elderly and retired would be an unfortunate loss in diversity for our County.

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

When making county policy, the Board should consider that having homeowners improve their property is a good thing for the Arlington County. Aggressive assessments and property tax hikes either discourage or actually prohibit needed property improvements. So do new regulations that would come into play when, for example, a crumbling porch is replaced. Perhaps allowing amortization of property improvements, distinguishing needed (safety, environmental) improvements and cosmetic upgrades, carefully considering new regulations, keeping assessments in check as much as possible, would all help keep property values from rising too rapidly and contributing to the downward economic spiral discussed above. Keeping property taxes as low as possible is a necessary element to both keeping assessments in check and encouraging home improvement.

YOUNG, SINGLE, NEWLY MARRIED AND VIBRANT

It surely is desirable to have the young, newly employed, and perhaps newly married choose Arlington County as a great place to live, work, and begin to raise families. Their salaries are not extremely high but likely will grow, saving for the long-term is just beginning, purchasing a new home is now under consideration, expertly evaluating and comparing school options (including value for tax dollars) is a touchstone for this demographic, and becoming active in local issues is a decided possibility. The more county policy pushes tax rates and property assessments higher, the less likely it will be for this demographic to settle in Arlington County. The County becomes less diverse.

THE MIDDLE CLASS

Property tax rate increases are the most onerous to the middle class citizens. At the lower end of that spectrum, residents are on the edge between barely able to pay the tax burden and yet not qualified for any public assistance or services. At the upper end of the spectrum, they see themselves as only able to advance their standard of living by moving out of the county, and they have the means to choose and relocate relatively easily. Those in the exact middle are torn as to whether the careful balance of their family resources will be overtaken by the economic spiral of rising property values and higher tax rates, both often contributing to the spiral discussed above. This is a very important demographic to consider and preserve when making tax hike decisions. They are the backbone of a sustainable economic model. Otherwise, Arlington County becomes a county of the very rich taking care of the very poor…with a thin, hollowed out, and disappearing middle.

RESERVES

Arlington County maintains several large and growing pools of separated monies, or “reserves”. The largest of these are the Transportation Capital Fund (TCF) and Arlington County Schools (APS). These reserves seem to be building up rapidly, but how they are spent and under what criteria are very obscure, perhaps purposely so. The “reserves” appear to exceed that which is necessary for Arlington County to maintain its AAA rating. These “reserves” should be tapped for needs outlined in the proposed budget BEFORE any consideration of permanent property tax increases. Particularly with respect to METRO, reserves should be tapped to meet METRO needs pending decisions on a dedicated source of funding. Furthermore, County budget proposals should include a clear explanation of county “reserves”, how they are fed and rate of growth, the specific criteria that guides expenditures, any flexibility as to how potential expenditures are made, specific descriptions of potential expenditures, and outcomes with respect to actual expenditures from these “reserves”.

SCHOOLS

Arlington County has excellent schools that serve to attract residents to the county. However, the per capita expenditure per student is the highest in the region. The metropolitan region is filled with schools of high reputation, equal to that of Arlington County, and yet with lower per capita costs. APS also has large and growing reserves. These opportunities and disparities need to be further evaluated before any permanent rise in property tax rates.

PROGRAM EXPANSIONS AND NEW IDEAS

Arlington County residents and their elected representatives can and have proffered good, perhaps even excellent, suggestions regarding potential new programs as well as how to improve and/or expand services. The County Manager and the staff who execute programs generally have very good reputations for being good stewards of taxpayer’s money. This reputation should be guarded and continually disciplined. The County is not spending its own money; it is spending the hard-earned money of its residents. Permanently raising property tax rates has wide-spread ramifications and should only be done in the face of absolutely necessary expenditure requirements. Otherwise, the County should live within its means just as Arlington families must do, and borrow sparingly. Arlington County should strive to preserve economic diversity, as well as cultural diversity. I do not see anything in the proposed budget that warrants a permanent increase in the property tax rate. Everything should be done to realign and reprioritize current expenditures in order to incorporate new suggested expenditures that are deemed necessary. Fiscal discipline is the foundational trait in preserving both economic and cultural diversity, as well as high standards of living and quality of life.

SUMMARY VIEWS

1. Economic, as well as cultural, diversity should be preserved by keeping real estate assessments and property tax rates as low as possible
2. No increase in property tax rates during this budget cycle is justified, but certainly no more than one cent (with an automatic sunset).
3. Reserves should be clearly identified and evaluated in detail in one place in the budget. This will make it possible for residents to understand how these reserves are fed, their rate of growth, the criteria for expenditure, the flexibility for expenditure, and the possible funding available from these reserve sources.
4. METRO requirements should be paid for out of current reserves, pending a regional decision on a dedicated source of funding.
5. Further evaluation of Arlington Public Schools needs to occur with respect to student per capita spending, as well as capital spending and other costs, before any permanent increase in the property tax rate is considered. There needs to be more transparency and accountability with respect to reserves.
6. Budget priorities need to be evaluated and adjusted within current resources
7. The alignment of priorities at this time (from highest to lowest) should be safety and security, fiscal discipline, public assistance safety net, education, infrastructure, natural resources, other programs

This year’s budget proposal includes a number of enhancements through realigned resources for public works, public safety, technology, and other areas of service delivery that are essential for maintaining our community’s quality of life. Do you have any feedback for the Board regarding these important service investments?

They should be incorporated in the budget with no further property tax rate hikes. Public safety and security is highest priority.

The Manager has proposed a tax increase this year to support the growing pressures for Metro (WMATA) and Arlington Public Schools. What should the Board consider as they tackle the fiscal pressures related to Metro and Schools?

Any METRO needs should be funded out of transportation reserves until a decision is made on a dedicated source of funding.

During the February Board meeting, the County Board asked for suggestions for budget reductions in the County’s baseline budget, in lieu of a tax increase for Metro and Schools. Please share your thoughts and ideas.

See above comments. Permanent property tax rate increases have wide-ranging consequences that contribute to undermining economic and cultural diversity. Budget reductions and proposals should fit within current/expected resources without tax increases.

Please share any additional input you have related to this year's budget proposal?

The very lowest priority should be plowing trails after snow storms in County parks for bikers. Snow generally melts quickly; natural setting of parks should be preserved; number of bikers/walkers in parks during snowstorms does not make plowing cost effective.

04/05/2017 12:25 pm

Of the Manager’s top priorities (economic development; service delivery & open data; and strategic budget planning and fiscal sustainability), which of these initiatives are most important to you? What, if any, concerns or suggestions do you have for the County Board related to these budget proposals?

Fiscal sustainability. We cannot continue to spend at our current pace.

04/04/2017 8:01 pm

Of the Manager’s top priorities (economic development; service delivery & open data; and strategic budget planning and fiscal sustainability), which of these initiatives are most important to you? What, if any, concerns or suggestions do you have for the County Board related to these budget proposals?

Another bill of fraud waste and abuse. 3% property tax increase. You have lost your mind. Arn't taxes high enough?

This year’s budget proposal includes a number of enhancements through realigned resources for public works, public safety, technology, and other areas of service delivery that are essential for maintaining our community’s quality of life. Do you have any feedback for the Board regarding these important service investments?

How is this reducing the taxes?

The Manager has proposed a tax increase this year to support the growing pressures for Metro (WMATA) and Arlington Public Schools. What should the Board consider as they tackle the fiscal pressures related to Metro and Schools?

NO TAX INCREASE! Stop million dollar bus stops. Stop wasting our money. The school gets 900Million already.

During the February Board meeting, the County Board asked for suggestions for budget reductions in the County’s baseline budget, in lieu of a tax increase for Metro and Schools. Please share your thoughts and ideas.

Stop building million dollar bus stops and stop being the highest taxed city in VA.

04/04/2017 11:06 am

During the February Board meeting, the County Board asked for suggestions for budget reductions in the County’s baseline budget, in lieu of a tax increase for Metro and Schools. Please share your thoughts and ideas.

The County Manager's list of budget reductions includes a cut in the AIRE program and notes that additional information about the impact of the cut will be provided to the County Board at a later date. Where is this information located? I can' find it on the County website. This is important information so people can understand what this cut means to ongoing programs or to the County's ability to meet the Community Energy Plan goals. Please post this information on the website!

04/03/2017 3:26 pm

Of the Manager’s top priorities (economic development; service delivery & open data; and strategic budget planning and fiscal sustainability), which of these initiatives are most important to you? What, if any, concerns or suggestions do you have for the County Board related to these budget proposals?

Strategic budget planning and fiscal sustainability.
According to the Arlington Community Facilities Study Report, Arlington is forecasting a population increase in the next 25 years in the range of 30% (over 60,000 new residents). The County government needs to analyze and explain clearly for residents what that would mean for County finances and government, including schools, as well as for trees, wildlife, quality of life, climate change, traffic, noise, exhaust, air pollution, and the environment generally. The staffing process for every significant County decision should include a financial impact statement showing the costs and expected benefits of the decision. Where the environment is affected (e.g., trees are being destroyed), there should be an environmental impact statement, too, even if the County does not have the legal ability to prevent the environmental loss. These impact statements would be an important part of documenting the impact of the County's decisions on our financial situation and on the environment so that all of us can see the cumulative effects.

Please share any additional input you have related to this year's budget proposal?

Arlington bills itself as a world-class, sustainable community. Its Urban Forest Master Plan, adopted in 2004, states:
Arlington County will strive to have a sustainable urban forest that contributes to the livability of our urban community. Our trees are recognized as part of our green infrastructure that provides economic and environmental benefits. The current trend of tree canopy loss will be slowed and efforts made to reverse this trend through best practices in tree planting, preservation, and maintenance while fostering a sense of stewardship among residents.
Page 3.
To implement this vision, the Master Plan provided 42 recommendations. The very first recommendation, with a short-term target (1-2 years), was:
1) Determine the best methodology for refining our GIS analysis of the tree canopy. The most appropriate imagery should also be determined. New higher resolution satellite imagery is becoming increasingly available for analysis of tree canopy coverage.
Page 14.
Other recommendations included:
16) Proactively share our data, standards, regulations and policies with other stewards of our urban forest such as property owners and the development community.
Page 19.
25) Continue to monitor tree health, forest structure and the occurrence of invasives in Parks and naturally forested areas throughout the County.
26) Begin to inventory trees in parks, natural areas and other public facilities.
Page 23.
31) Ensure that best management practices (BMPs) are used when providing tree maintenance in critical areas such as riparian stream buffers.
32) Use the street tree inventory to determine conflicts with the built environment (sidewalks and tree grates) and prioritize their mitigation.
33) Update the GIS street tree inventory with tree maintenance and removal data.
34) Continue to systematically review potential tree hazards using the tree inventory. Consider the development of a Tree Risk Management Plan.
35) Using the tree inventory, develop a realistic plan for a five year pruning cycle of the trees in the street ROW.
36) Create a GIS mapping program for invasives to track progress and assist with management.
Pages 24-25.
We have not accomplished the goals we set for ourselves twelve years ago.
For example:
-- Arlington has some GIS data, but we don’t have near what the Master Plan said we would have. For example:
-- The latest tree canopy GIS data is from 2011 – five years ago - and the data did not even come from Arlington County; it came from the University of Vermont with funds from Casey Trees. (See Casey Trees study in 2011(PDF, 850KB) and next links below.)
-- We do not have a GIS street tree inventory with tree maintenance and removal data.
-- If we don’t have good, up-to-date, public GIS databases then we are not going to be able to track what’s happening to our trees and we won’t be able to preserve and grow our tree canopy as the 2004 Master Plan committed us to do. The consequences of such negligence are clear:
-- Contrary to the 2004 Master Plan vision statement which said that the trend of tree canopy loss will be slowed and efforts made to reverse this trend, the data shows that our tree canopy actually decreased from 43% in 2008 to 40% in 2011.
https://arlingtonva.s3.dualstack.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/13/2013/09/Tree-canopy-analysis-2011-36-36.pdf
https://arlingtonva.s3.amazonaws.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/13/2015/02/Loss-Gain-Large.pdf
So we’re not meeting our own promises, and we are not doing as well as, for example, Washington, DC, New York City and Palo Alto, California:
http://opendata.dc.gov/datasets?q=Tree
https://www.nycgovparks.org/trees
http://canopy.org/tree-info/trees-in-palo-alto/
http://199.33.32.49/OpenGisData/
We bill ourselves as a world-class community. We need to step it up so we actually do what we say we’re going to do. That means we need to make sure County government is organized so there is a unified focus on preserving and growing our urban forest, as opposed to the current situation in which uncoordinated decision-making among County departments and with Arlington Public Schools is killing trees. If necessary we need to put more resources into the County departments that work these issues.
This would include:
* Stronger enforcement of laws and regulations that affect mature trees, wildlife habitat, water and waste management on building sites, etc. This will require more resources and people in, e.g., the building inspection department. From what I’ve seen in recent months, teardowns and building projects are going on in residential areas without adequate attention from the County. A number of projects do not even post building and other permits.
* More resources and staff in the County's urban forestry office in the Department of Parks and Recreation. It appears that this office is understaffed and under resourced if we expect it to fulfill its assigned tasks.
* Provide resources and direction necessary so the County can finally implement the 2004 Urban Forest Master Plan, including the GIS tree database.
* Provide more funds and resources for conservation land acquisition (e.g., to protect wildlife habitats).
* Set up a process whereby property owners can receive property tax breaks when they reduce the value of their property by donating conservation easements to organizations like, e.g., the Northern Virginia Conservation Trust (https://www.nvct.org). This could create incentives for current property owners - even those who haven't started to consider selling their homes: For example, a lot owner who donated a conservation easement to protect mature trees on his/her lot could receive years of property tax breaks while still living in his/her home. My understanding is that Arlington does not have such a procedure in place, although Fairfax County does.
* Put more people and resources into creating and publicizing a better visualisation for residents and County Government of what a 30% population increase over the next 25 years (as contemplated by the GLUP) would mean for trees, wildlife, quality of life, climate change, traffic, noise, exhaust, air pollution, the environment generally, and County finances and government.
The point is: The County puts out a lot of words about how great we are at protecting tree canopy and the environment but we’re not walking the walk. Let’s do it.
Bill Roos

04/02/2017 8:06 pm

The Manager has proposed a tax increase this year to support the growing pressures for Metro (WMATA) and Arlington Public Schools. What should the Board consider as they tackle the fiscal pressures related to Metro and Schools?

I do not believe that closing the $13 million budget gap for Arlington Public Schools should be accomplished with a one-cent tax increase.

I suggest the School Board look for additional savings to close its gap, and that if a gap still exists, the County Board consider deferring other low-priority spending items to fill the school budget gap.

Raising taxes at this time is not in the interest of Arlington's residents.

During the February Board meeting, the County Board asked for suggestions for budget reductions in the County’s baseline budget, in lieu of a tax increase for Metro and Schools. Please share your thoughts and ideas.

I agree that the County Board should reduce its budget request instead of increasing taxes.

04/02/2017 5:47 pm

Please share any additional input you have related to this year's budget proposal?

Chairman Jay Fisette and County Board Members
Arlington County Board
2100 Clarendon Blvd., Suite 301
Arlington, VA 22201

Dear Chairman Fisette and County Board Members:

I welcome this opportunity to comment on the Manager’s proposed Fiscal Year 2018 budget. In particular I urge the County Board to support increasing the base funding of the Arlington Initiative to Rethink Energy (AIRE) and Community Energy Plan implementation, funding Metro to the extent proposed by the Manager, and supporting efforts by the Solid Waste Bureau to pursue the County’s Zero Waste initiative.

In this the 10th anniversary of the AIRE program I think we can agree that it has been successful in beginning to address energy efficiency and conservation issues in the county. As an active volunteer with ACE and the Sierra Club, I have heard how AIRE's rebate program to residents who make energy efficiency improvements on their homes has generated a lot of applications from people who have upgraded their HVAC systems, installed new insulation, and made other changes to decrease the energy that they use. AIRE also played a primary role in the solar co-op that has motivated many homeowners to install solar panels on their homes (I am one of them--I probably wouldn't have taken the plunge if not for the co-op).

I know that AIRE is also playing an important role in encouraging energy efficient design of new county buildings and schools. For example, I was very pleased to hear of the opening a few years ago of Discovery Elementary, the county's first zero-energy school.

Because the federal government under our new president has decided to roll back the advances made by the previous administration in energy efficiency, it is vitally important for DC neighbors like Arlington to take the lead and show how localities care about these issues and can save money while also protecting the environment. Please support AIRE and all environmental programs that are led by the county.

Sincerely,

Jennifer Abel

04/02/2017 10:12 am

Year after year, the budget increases and real estate taxes rise to meet the budget increases. The county must control its spending policies just as the residents of the county control their spending in order to pay their bills without taking living about their means with loans (county bonds, etc.) . I retired three years ago and Social Security helps pay the real estate taxes (now about a stunning $7500 for my one level house). Social Security increases do not keep pace with Arlington County tax increases and corresponding assessment increases. You will be forcing out retirees who have lived their entire lives In Arlington and prevent younger people and families from moving into Arlington. Your social programs are focused on "affordable housing" but that does not include the aforementioned groups who have an income and cannot obtain any reduced tax benefits from Arlington. You are losing the true "middle class". Please consider balancing the budget - and not more real estate and assessment hikes!

This year’s budget proposal includes a number of enhancements through realigned resources for public works, public safety, technology, and other areas of service delivery that are essential for maintaining our community’s quality of life. Do you have any feedback for the Board regarding these important service investments?

Public works and public safety benefit all in the county (but let's do a better job on the roads!). But there are many services that should be reviewed for cost cutting or at least no increases. I recall a couple of years ago I needed a permit from zoning and arrived on Wednesday only to find out the offices closed on Wednesday afternoon and everyone was rushing out talking about lunch, shopping, going home early, etc. If this practice is still ongoing, and if practices in other offices it should be eliminated. I expect that a couple of positions could be eliminated simply by ensuing the staff worked a full work week, as do the residents who pay the taxes. I strongly suggest no expansion in the county staff and where practical, no more new hires and reduce staff through attrition. (And please don't threaten the citizens with slow services, library closures or reduced hours, etc.)

The Manager has proposed a tax increase this year to support the growing pressures for Metro (WMATA) and Arlington Public Schools. What should the Board consider as they tackle the fiscal pressures related to Metro and Schools?

Metro - continuing management failures. I don't know what to say or offer.
Schools - costing more than many colleges. Costs out of control. School Board accountability and County Manager actually providing oversight. Schools are very important but schools with far less money do extremely well including schools with immigrants. Arlington County residents vote yes for every school bond yet even with that, it is insufficient.

- Enact a balanced budget or at least towards one.
- Oversight over "new" projects - do we really need them.
- Manage large county staff through attrition.

Arlington County is a wonderful place to live and I am fortunate to live here all these years. I just hope I can continue to live here.