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Virginias
800-pound gorilla
Fairfax County has it all: great schools, stores and
location. Plus, some of the worst traffic and tax problems
anywhere
Related
story:
An interview with George Masons
Alan Merten
by
David Hubler
for Virginia Business
July 2003
If
developers have their way, a 60-acre tract of land not
far from the glitzy Tysons II shopping mall will cement
Fairfax Countys position as the business epicenter
of both Virginia and metropolitan Washington, D.C. Nine
steel and glass towers would be erected. One would shoot
up 350 feet, taller than any building in the Old Dominion
or the District of Columbia, where building height is
limited by law. If the mixed-use project is built, the
controversial Tysons Corner Urban Center would symbolize
the good and bad of Virginias richest and most
densely populated county.
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FAIRFAX
COUNTY
FACTS AT A GLANCE
Population:
1 million
Median
household income: $90,437 (2003 estimate)
Work
force: 532,000
Education
levels: 56.2 percent have bachelor's degrees
or higher
Unemployment
rate: 2.4%
Major
employers: U.S. Government, Freddie Mac, General
Dynamics, Gannett, Nextel Communications, Capital
One Financial Corp., NVR
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Indeed,
Fairfax has become an 800-pound gorilla. Once a verdant
pastureland that in the 1950s led Virginia in dairy
production, the county has morphed into Virginias
economic powerhouse and its poster child for high technology.
The county has added 10,000 companies and 200,000 jobs
since 1990. Today, with a population at just over 1
million, Fairfax is Virginias biggest county,
more populous than seven states. One in seven Virginians
calls Fairfax home. At tax-time 2002, residents contributed
a whopping 26.4 percent of Richmonds income tax
revenue.
Dubbed
the best-managed county in the U.S. by Governing magazine,
Fairfax leads in many areas. It boasts the states
highest median household income as high as $90,000
by some estimates placing it among the top three
counties in the U.S. It has the biggest work force
532,000 in both Virginia and the Washington,
D.C., area. With more than 165,000 students, Fairfax
is the 10th largest school system in the country and
consistently ranks among the nations best. Newsweek
magazines recent list of the nations top
public secondary schools included all 23 Fairfax high
schools.
But
Fairfaxs remarkable size and successes
and Virginias anachronistic tax structure
could prove the countys undoing. Fairfax has become
synonymous with high taxes and traffic congestion. A
proposed half-penny sales tax increase to raise money
for highway and public transportation improvements was
rejected by voters last November. The 1990s high-tech
boom is gone, leaving commercial vacancy rates hovering
at 20 percent among the highest in the D.C. area.
Taxes are another issue and property assessments are
up. A lopsided state treasury returns to Fairfax only
19 cents for every tax dollar the county sends to Richmond.
And, while excellent, the countys public schools
have become overcrowded.
Fairfax
Board of Supervisors Chairman Katherine K. Hanley says
because the state controls about 90 percent of all taxing
sources, the major challenge for the county is to find
ways to diversify its revenue base away from just property
taxes. Our budget is now almost 60 percent based
on real estate revenue, and about 80 percent of that
is residential, she says. By law, we must
assess at fair market value. The countys
very hot residential real estate market over the past
few years has sent home values and homeowners
tax bills soaring.
To
understand Fairfaxs conundrum, consider Tysons
Corner, the countys de facto downtown and site
of the planned Urban Center project. A rural crossroads
as late as the 1960s, Tysons Corner is now Virginias
largest office market and one of the leading business
centers in the nation. Its 22.4 million square feet
of office space and 2.1 million square feet of retail
space put it among the top five markets in the U.S.
larger than Baltimore, Pittsburgh, Miami, Kansas
City, or St. Louis, among other major cities. It is
also a major shopping destination with high-end department
stores such as Neiman Marcus and Saks Fifth Avenue drawing
customers from the entire D.C. area and miles downstate.
Therein
lies the problem. Tysons Corner is such a draw that
it lures in 100,000 workers and 55,000 shoppers every
weekday. The Urban Center would only add more
a factor that persuaded the county planning commission
to recommend rejection of the plan in late May. Linda
Smyth, the county planning commissioner whose jurisdiction
includes Tysons Corner, says the negative vote came
because the developer, Lerner Enterprises in Tysons
Corner, didnt address the commissions biggest
problem with the project. They did not have a
very firm commitment to an effective, binding traffic
demand management program, she says. Both sides
are attempting to work out a compromise and eventually
gain county approval.
One
possible solution to crowded roads is moving along at
a snails pace the $3.3 billion extension
of Metro rail service from the East Falls Church station
to Dulles International Airport with three stops at
Tysons Corner. Fifty percent of the Metro extension
funding is to come from the federal government with
the state and local jurisdictions splitting the other
half. William Lecos, president and CEO of the Fairfax
County Chamber of Commerce, says the single biggest
priority for Fairfax is to get the full transportation
infrastructure that it needs to grow in a mixed-use,
smart way. And that wont happen without
mass transit, he says. This is not a pie-in-the-sky
type vision anymore. They have everything but the money.
The failure of the sales tax referendum last November
could mean that the rail extension will be completed
in about two decades rather than 2010.
New
bridges are another sore point. For years, area commuters
have been urging construction of a new bridge across
the Potomac River and a limited access highway, the
Techway, linking Marylands I-270 corridor
and Route 7, which runs through Tysons Corner into neighboring
Loudoun County. The Northern Virginia Transportation
Alliance calls the 35-mile gap between the American
Legion Bridge and the Point of Rocks Bridge the regions
single greatest transportation deficiency. The
lack of bridges outside the Capital Beltway forces tens
of thousands of area residents to make lengthy round-about
trips which, over the course of a year, waste millions
of hours of time, says Bob Chase, who heads the
nongovernmental group.
But
the bridge and road plan has been stalled as opposing
groups fight over its merits, its location and its cost,
which has skyrocketed to a projected $700 million
if it were built today. Chances of its construction
anytime soon are indeed slim. The Virginia Department
of Transportations new six-year program allocates
$400,000 for a Techway study, but only $9.9 million
for 12 already approved projects for all of Northern
Virginia.
Yet
simply paving more roads wont do much to solve
the problems confronting Fairfax or the planned Urban
Center. The issues are much more complex. The county
for years has locked itself in with a low-density approach
and has not done much strategic planning to build mixed-used
projects that are less dependent on automobiles. One
irony of the Urban Center project, for example, is that
it actually offers higher density occupancy and use
than what has been the norm in Fairfax.
Even
so, the Coalition for Smarter Growth, a regional grouping
of 40 organizations working to fight sprawl and promote
mass transportation, has reservations about the Urban
Center, fearing that it will jack up car traffic. Executive
Director Stewart Schwartz says most so-called New
Urbanist planners believe Tysons Corner actually
has to become more dense, with buildings built closer
to the street, a better grid of streets, and be more
pedestrian friendly to actually reduce traffic congestion.
The Urban Center design favors cars over pedestrians,
he says, and just building more roads wont help.
One
advocate of more radical measures is Ed Risse, a regional
planner who lived in Fairfax County for more than 20
years. He says Fairfaxs problem is not too many
people, its just too many people in the wrong
place. There is a myth, he says, that
you can live wherever you want, work wherever you want,
seek your services wherever you want and somebody can
build a road system or a school system or a library
system or anything else that can provide for the needs
of those people. [But] it is not one place, it is a
number of places and each one of them has to be planned
as a balanced community. Risse believes Fairfax
could adequately house double its current population
of one million if it were developed as balanced communities,
all with jobs, housing, services and other amenities.
But they have scattered [residents] across the
county in an unsustainable pattern, he says.
As
it is, Fairfax is projected to add another 200,000 residents
over the next 20 years and they are bound to stress
more than just the countys road system. Fairfax
County has gotten too large. If it has a problem, its
that its too large, says Supervisor Stuart
Mendelsohn (R), a critic of the countys growth,
whose district includes portions of Tysons Corner. Underlying
Mendelsohns complaint is a financial dilemma:
population growth does not mean proportional increases
in county coffers and more schools and services.
Draconian
measures are already being proposed to prop up revenues.
A new Fairfax guideline would require residential builders
to give the county $7,500 for each school-age child
whose family moves into a new development. The idea
is to get builders to contain family-style units and
keep school enrollment manageable, and thus not break
the county budget. The city of Falls Church, which sits
in the midst of Fairfax County, is doing the county
one better. It plans to levy a $15,000 per child fee
on one developer if his 80-unit condo complex exceeds
the limit of eight schoolchildren.
Better
than half of Fairfaxs budget goes to education
and Superintendent of Schools Daniel Domenech has no
apologies. A high-quality school system is what
attracts people to Fairfax County. That is why businesses
come to Fairfax. Thats why we are such a vital
part of the economy here. He insists that the
system has done much to cut costs. Other county officials
say theyve been hit with surprises, such as the
extra expenses of homeland security. However, the Fairfax
County Taxpayers Alliance, an anti-tax watchdog group,
blames the expanding county work force for needlessly
pushing up real estate taxes by almost $1,000 per family
over the past four years, the largest rise in the 22
years. Theyve never had more money,
says FCTA President Arthur Purves.
Like
all counties in Virginia, Fairfaxs taxing authority
is severely circumscribed. Sen. Richard Saslaw, (D),
minority leader in the state Senate and a longtime county
resident, believes the states tax structure is
antiquated and that counties should have the same tax
powers as Virginias cities. Theres
no reason why Alexandria should be able to put a 50
cent tax on tobacco products and Fairfax County cannot,
he argues.
Fairfax
remains the fiscal engine that powers the state. Seven
Fairfax County-based companies made Fortune magazines
list of the largest companies in America this year,
led by Freddie Mac, the mortgage-financing corporation.
Others are defense contractor General Dynamics; Capital
One Financial, a financial services corporation; telecom
Nextel Communications and media giant Gannett. The lone
newcomer to the list was homebuilder NVR, which a Virginia
Business survey found to have one of the best financial
performances in the state (page 28). In April, information
technology giant Unisys announced that it was consolidating
its Global Public Sector headquarters in Fairfax, adding
900 new jobs over the next three years.
While
Fairfax County has had a net job growth of 22,000 over
the last two years, according to the FCEDA, commercial
real estate remains in the doldrums following the collapse
of the telecommunications and Internet sectors. The
trend lately is for companies to move closer to the
district in places such as Arlington, Alexandria or
Bethesda, Md. Commercial vacancy rates are in the low
20 percent range very high for Fairfax. Bill
Rucker, senior vice president of leasing for West*Group,
puts the overall vacancy rate in the Tysons Corner area
at 16 percent. But if you consider space thats
available for sublease, that number goes up to ... about
23 percent, he says.
The
next hurdle will be fall elections. Local business interests,
developers and politicians are now choosing sides for
a complete slate of state legislators, a new school
board and a new board of supervisors. About the only
thing most residents can agree on is that, no matter
who wins, very few major problems will be solved anytime
soon. After all, an 800-pound gorilla and a growing
one at that doesnt move too quickly.
Return
to Virginia Business - July 2003
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