Reston Spring

Reston Spring
Reston Spring

Friday, March 30, 2018

CPR calls for postponement of meeting with Supervisor Hudgins to discuss County comments on RA & CPR Reston plan amendment proposals


Today the Coalition for a Planned Reston (CPR) sent a letter to Supervisor Hudgins (see below) saying that it would be best to postpone its scheduled meeting with her and County staff on Monday, April 2, to discuss the County's last minute response to CPR's and RA's proposed Reston plan amendments.   

The County staff commentary highlights that it is the County's "practice" not to amend plans within five years of their approval, although it has done so with Tysons and other county areas in the recent past.  The County staff states that it "cannot support changes to land use, density or intensity recommendations in the Reston Master Plan for the Transit Station Areas until after 2019 and for 
Reston's neighborhoods and village centers until after 2020."

By that time, the County's approval of development proposals under the current plan would cause irrevocable damage to Reston as a planned community and create local crises in transportation, education, parks and recreation, and the environment.  In fact, County data shows that more than 22,000 high-density commercial dwelling units are approved or planned in Reston areas zoned Planned Residential Community (PRC), not counting thousands of affordable housing units and related "bonus" market rate units.  This also does not count a comparable number of housing units in the non-PRC parts of the Reston transit station areas (TSAs), especially around Wiehle and Town Center South. 

All told, the new development permitted by the current Reston plan could triple Reston’s population in the coming years and decades.  All of this population burden would be added with little County planning or oversight and grossly inadequate funding resources for the necessary supporting infrastructure.

“The scope of this high-density development is totally inconsistent with any sense of Reston as a planned community,” said Terry Maynard, a member of the CPR leadership.  “It ignores the quality of life values that are the foundation of Bob Simon’s vision and Reston’s planning principles detailed in its plan.” 

CPR's letter to Supervisor Hudgins highlights that a meeting on Monday would not meet the terms reached in the meeting with her in February, in particular, to have small groups on both sides meet to discuss the specifics of the County's commentary and follow-up with a joint meeting with Supervisor Hudgins.  Moreover, CPR told Supervisor Hudgins and County staff it needed to meet with the community to discuss its response before meeting with County staff and her.  CPR requested that the meeting be postponed until the Reston community and County staff have had an opportunity to review the County's response in detail.


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