Final Reston Comprehensive Plan Proposal Begins To Take Shape: Alcorn

Final Reston Comprehensive Plan Proposal Begins To Take Shape: Alcorn

RESTON, VA — Hunter Mill District Supervisor Walter Alcorn hosted a town hall meeting Thursday night at the North County Governmental Center to solicit public input and answer questions about the Reston Comprehensive Plan Amendment.

The meeting was the last chance for the public to provide in-person feedback before the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors consider the plan amendment during a public hearing scheduled for Sept. 12, at 3:30 p.m., at the county government center.

“This has been a really a long, long slog to get to this point,” Alcorn said, to the approximately 20 people who showed up for the meeting. “I think we’re getting pretty close to having something that that makes sense for everybody.”

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Alcorn kicked off the process to update the county’s planning guidance that covers development in Reston at his first board meeting on Jan. 24, 2020.

What followed was more than three years of discussion and debate between residents and county staff, including 58 official meetings of a 31-member task force that delivered a 162-page draft amendment for public review.

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The document covered a number of topic areas, including planning principles, heritage resources, transportation, public facilities, land use, affordable housing, parks, environmental stewardship, public art and economic development. In addition, the task force added chapters about community health and equity, which are not currently included in the Fairfax County plan.

“If it weren’t for the Reston Comprehensive Plan Task Force, I don’t think the county would be actively exploring countywide policy plan amendments on equity and community health, but we are,” Alcorn told Patch after Thursday’s meeting.

In May, the Fairfax County Department of Planning and Development released the staff report for the proposed Reston Comprehensive Plan. The report called for extending the existing residential densities at Reston’s three Village Centers — Hunters Woods, South Lakes, and North Point — while keeping higher, mixed-use density around the Reston Transit Station Areas.

Thursday’s town hall came a week after the Fairfax County Planning Commission voted to recommend approval of the plan amendment, with the following additions to the latest version of the plan submitted by county staff on July 13:

Speakers on Thursday offered a number of suggestions for the comprehensive plan, including:

Alcorn told attendees on Thursday night that anyone who wished to provide additional feedback before the Sept. 12 public hearing should do so as soon as possible. He expects county staff to put together a “fresh” plan proposal, incorporating public feedback and the planning commission’s recommendations.

“What I want to do is then identify any additional changes at that point and then publish that on the Hunter Mill District webpage, so that folks can look at it and you can see exactly what is up for proposal at the public hearing on Sept. 12,” he said.

Members of the public can submit written testimony by emailing: [email protected]. More information about other ways to submit comments, including how to sign up to speak on Sept. 12, can be found online.

In addition to the Reston Comprehensive Plan Amendment proposal, the Hunter Mill District also has 10 amendments up for consideration as part of the county’s Site-Specific Plan Amendment process. Some of the nominations concern proposed development in the Reston Transit Station Areas, which include the Herndon, Reston Town Center, and Wiehle-Reston East Metro Stations.

At the July 25 board of supervisors meeting, the board approved Alcorn’s proposal to move Reston’s SSPA nominations from Tier 3 to Tier 1 of the board’s work program.

“While the ultimate outcome of each of these SSPA nominations is still to be determined, there are common themes across the nominations in Reston that would greatly benefit from staff research and analysis that has not yet started,” Alcorn said in his proposal.

This change in status allows county staff to examine the nominations and prepare them for the public review process, which will begin after the board votes on the proposed plan amendment.

“This way, the overall plan will be in place, and then there’ll be a process to consider those 10 nominations,” Alcorn said Thursday.


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