TONIGHT – Community Town Hall – Thursday, June 2, 6:30 PM

COMMUNITY TOWN HALL
Help Protect the Health of the Occoquan Reservoir

TONIGHT – Thursday, June 2
Jenkins Elementary School

4060 Prince William Parkway, Woodbridge, 22192
6:30 PM Doors Open
7:00 PM Presentations

From the Outer Beltway to the Occoquan Reservoir, and from Prince William Forest Park to Manassas National Battlefield, proposed land use changes threaten our public drinking water supply and quality of life for all.

Speakers

Welcome – Kim Hosen, Prince William Conservation Alliance

Deshundra Jefferson, Montclair resident and smart growth advocate
Racial inequities in land use.

Julie Bolthouse, Piedmont Environmental Council
Costly Outer Beltway benefits developers, not local communities

Bill McDow, Belmont Bay HOA
Managing stormwater runoff and impacts to Resource Preservation Areas.

Kyle Hart, National Parks Conservation Association
Potential impacts to the Occoquan Reservoir watershed and national parks

Elizabeth Ward, Green Risks
Development in the Rural Crescent will raise the cost of public water for residents

Frank Washington, Coalition to Protect Thoroughfare
Many threats are facing Prince William. Within them, division is our greatest enemy.

Learn the facts – Get engaged – Make a difference
Sponsored by the Prince William Conservation Alliance
www.pwconserve.org … 703.490.5200

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Don’t miss the video of the April 28 Town Hall!

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In Prince William, true land-use planning has been sidelined by a development free-for-all 

Letter to the Editor – Prince William Times
Unpredictability and instability are sweeping through Prince William rural crescent, an area on the county’s western side without public sewer and characterized by picturesque forests, fields, and national parks. From massive rezonings that would put data centers next to national parks and state forests to comprehensive plan changes that extend public sewer to rural areas and replan agricultural land for vaguely defined industrial uses, it seems county leaders are no longer engaging in an authentic planning process and have instead handed over the future of the rural crescent to developers.

These decisions are jeopardizing our clean drinking water and inducing costly sprawl. Worse, they are raising fears and forcing rural residents to face a choice: sell a home they love or risk the value of their property as industrial development goes up around them.

An authentic planning process engages residents and stakeholders with varying interests in the formation of long-range visions, goals, policies and strategies that guide future development. Community plans are informed by analysis, studies and community engagement in various forms. Following these plans ensures that development benefits all residents in an equitable manner, that infrastructure is planned and budgeted for, and that residents have some sense of what the future development of their community will look like.

At this point, the county planning process seems to be in the hands of the developers, while community concerns about impacts are treated as irrelevant, and any studies, if they’re even being done, are being ignored. This approach will leave families stuck living next to incompatible industrial uses, saddle taxpayers with the costs of extending infrastructure and services and inflict devastating impacts upon the community assets such as the Manassas Battlefield National Park and the Occoquan Reservoir, which supplies drinking water for over half the population of Prince William County.

Prince William Board of Supervisors, it is not too late to take back the reins and create a plan that the public can endorse.
Kim Hosen, Prince William Conservation Alliance

Julie Bolthouse, Piedmont Environmental Council

Max Hokit, American Battlefield Trust

William Sellers, Journey Through Hallowed Ground

Kyle Hart, National Park Conservation Alliance

Nancy Vehrs, Prince William Wildflower Society

Ann Bennett, Sierra Club Great Falls Group

LETTER: In Prince William, true land-use planning has been sidelined by a development free-for-all | Opinion | princewilliamtimes.com

 

“UNLESS someone like you cares a whole awful lot,

Nothing is going to get better. 

It’s not.”   The Lorax