Public Comments for 01/19/2024 Counties Cities and Towns - Subcommittee #1
HB5 - Town of Leesburg Parking Authority; created.
No Comments Available
HB54 - Falls Church, City of; amending charter, qualifications of members of boards and commissions.
No Comments Available
HB208 - Comprehensive plan; locality may consider adopting a healthy communities strategy.
Last Name: Campblin Organization: Virginia NAACP Locality: Fairfax

I support HB208 This bill will give localities an opportunity to use commonsense planning techniques and growth management policies, to develop safer and healthier neighbourhoods, and business/commercial spaces. In addition, it’s sets a guide for productive public engagement.

Last Name: Giannakouros Organization: Virginia Progressives Locality: Harrisonburg

To be effective, this bill needs to be amended to encourage transitioning away from decorative mowed turf lawns, phasing out aesthetic nuisance ordinances, assisting people aging in place in Low Income and Disadvantaged Communities to adapt to ecological landscape norms and firewalling government assistance for healthy community practices away from government enforcement powers so residents will not fear trying healthy community practices. Tall grass and weed ordinances are a significant and deeply unpopular barrier to healthy communities. Their origins are bound up with exclusionary zoning, innovated by J. C. Nichols at the turn of the 20th century and developed to shore up de facto segregation thereafter. They function to exclude by adding cost and by subjecting target residents to accusations based on aesthetics that are stigmatizing and difficult to defend against. The experience of Harrisonburg suggests that the good intentions of this bill will not get far if the chilling effects of lawn ordinances are left in place. The Harrisonburg parcel dataset contains 13,435 records. 1,403 parcels have been targeted by tall grass and weed (TGW) complaints. 1,038 have iNaturalist records, 461, about 3.4% of parcels receive the stormwater utility credit. The iNaturalist and tall grass and weed parcels have 82 items in common, about 5.8% of TGW parcels, leaving nearly 2,441 parcels with natural areas that might benefit from the stormwater utility credit and its tall grass and weed exemption. Of these, only 86, about 3.5% of parcels, participate in the stormwater utility credit: 3.3% of tall grass and weed parcels, and 3.6% of iNaturalist parcels. Note that TGW targets are almost twice as likely to participate in the non-city ecological program. After winning an 2013 MLK street renaming, Harrisonburg's historic African American neighborhood proposed a community greenspace project with mentoring for individuals with barriers to employment much like examples described on pp. 35-36 of the EPA's _Climate Pollution Reduction Grants Program: Implementation Grants General Competition _ which also offers "Update building and zoning codes" on p. 9. While the project ran, community health improved, as proxied by a plummeting incarceration rate. The unfunded project ended in part because of fear of the city's lawn ordinance. Harrisonburg's tall grass and weed enforcement has fluctuated over time, but is lower than other localities. Those localities might have higher participation in eco-friendly city programs, but that would be surprising. In the 2023 November election, among the lowest turnout of its kind in Harrisonburg, and in the bottom 10% in Virginia, 186 people who had voted were asked how they would feel about repealing the enabling legislation that allowed the Assistant City Attorney to ban natural landscapes. 16 opposed repeal. A portion of those were concerned about "the silent majority." A portion expressed sentiments similar to those of people who removed trees because they feared they wouldn't be able to rake leaves to meet expectations of a tidy yard as they aged. Such people lit up at the suggestion of a program like the American Climate Corps employing youth to help care for the neighborhood. Content analysis of a facebook post by WHSV TV asking about No Mow May with 39 respondents had 4 opponents, 2 of whom disapproved of being different. More at http://BuildingBetterCommunities.org

Last Name: Patwardhan Locality: Fairfax County

I SUPPORT HB208, 281, 634, and 644. Gas-powered leaf blowers are an environmental scourge and I'm thankful that a bill has been written to allow localities to restrict them. I wish the Commonwealth of Virginia could just ban them outright. I wholeheartedly support repurposing office buildings to serve as childcare centers.

HB410 - Virginia Beach, City of; amending charter, transition of city council.
Last Name: Allen Locality: Virginia Beach

Good morning Delegates Askew and Convirs-Fowler, I am writing supporting the decision to Codify the 10-1 Election System. It is important for all citizens to have free and fair Elections. It is also imperative that citizens have the opportunity to elect the candidate of their choice. Our districts must be drawn so that the citizens can choose their representatives and not drawn so that Elected officials are able to choose voters of their choice. We must have elections where, "We the People " actually have representation if we are going to be a Great Nation! We thank you for your support. Georgia F. Allen Virginia Beach, Virginia District 95 Askew - 410 support codify Convirs-kelly - 415 support increase board members Convirs-Kelly - 416 support codify

Last Name: Swindell Locality: Virginia Beach

Members of the Committee, Thank you for taking the time to read my remarks in support of HB 410 and HB416. I could use all 3500 characters to describe each watershed moment related to this issue. Instead I’ll simply state that passing these measures aligns the Virginia Beach charter with existing state law (HB 2198, 2021 Session) and the 2021 Holloway decision in US District Court. Failure to comply will cost the City of Virginia Beach more time and more money without a resolution, resources the Virginia Beach City Council has already wasted by conducting a lengthy public input survey. Even worse, further delay could open the city back up to litigation and cancel elections in 2024. The citizens of Virginia Beach deserve better. Please support these bills to amend the charter so Virginia Beach can comply with the law and move forward. I’d also be remiss if I did not thank Delegates Askew and Convirs-Fowler for being patrons on these bills. You both rock.

HB415 - Virginia Beach, City of; amending charter, expansion of board of equalization.
Last Name: Allen Locality: Virginia Beach

Good morning Delegates Askew and Convirs-Fowler, I am writing supporting the decision to Codify the 10-1 Election System. It is important for all citizens to have free and fair Elections. It is also imperative that citizens have the opportunity to elect the candidate of their choice. Our districts must be drawn so that the citizens can choose their representatives and not drawn so that Elected officials are able to choose voters of their choice. We must have elections where, "We the People " actually have representation if we are going to be a Great Nation! We thank you for your support. Georgia F. Allen Virginia Beach, Virginia District 95 Askew - 410 support codify Convirs-kelly - 415 support increase board members Convirs-Kelly - 416 support codify

HB416 - Virginia Beach, City of; amending charter, transition of city council.
Last Name: Sullivan Locality: Virginia Beach

I ask you to suppoty this bill. Virginia Beach is not only under a Federal Court Order, but the city's own research partner, the Weldon Cooper Center revealed that over 80% of VB voters support the 10 - 1 voting system. Del. Convris-Fowler has been the leader on this issue since offering HB2198 in 2021. As HB 410 was filed simultaneously with HB 416, HB410 should be folded into HB 416.

Last Name: Allen Locality: Virginia Beach

Good morning Delegates Askew and Convirs-Fowler, I am writing supporting the decision to Codify the 10-1 Election System. It is important for all citizens to have free and fair Elections. It is also imperative that citizens have the opportunity to elect the candidate of their choice. Our districts must be drawn so that the citizens can choose their representatives and not drawn so that Elected officials are able to choose voters of their choice. We must have elections where, "We the People " actually have representation if we are going to be a Great Nation! We thank you for your support. Georgia F. Allen Virginia Beach, Virginia District 95 Askew - 410 support codify Convirs-kelly - 415 support increase board members Convirs-Kelly - 416 support codify

Last Name: Swindell Locality: Virginia Beach

Members of the Committee, Thank you for taking the time to read my remarks in support of HB 410 and HB416. I could use all 3500 characters to describe each watershed moment related to this issue. Instead I’ll simply state that passing these measures aligns the Virginia Beach charter with existing state law (HB 2198, 2021 Session) and the 2021 Holloway decision in US District Court. Failure to comply will cost the City of Virginia Beach more time and more money without a resolution, resources the Virginia Beach City Council has already wasted by conducting a lengthy public input survey. Even worse, further delay could open the city back up to litigation and cancel elections in 2024. The citizens of Virginia Beach deserve better. Please support these bills to amend the charter so Virginia Beach can comply with the law and move forward. I’d also be remiss if I did not thank Delegates Askew and Convirs-Fowler for being patrons on these bills. You both rock.

End of Comments