Face-Off Over a High School

Face-Off Over a High School 

Purcellville Lawsuit Challenges County on Location

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Purcellville Mayor Robert W. Lazaro Jr. said last week's municipal elections showed that voters support the town's lawsuit against Loudoun County involving a proposed high school, and he predicted that the issue likely will be resolved by the Virginia Supreme Court.

Town and county officials are slated to meet tomorrow to continue efforts to negotiate an out-of-court settlement of the lawsuit, which centers on the location of Woodgrove High School. But Lazaro, who won reelection Tuesday, said he doubts an agreement will materialize before the dispute is taken up by the state's highest court next month, unless the county has substantively changed its position.

“Maybe the county had an attitude adjustment since Tuesday,” said Lazaro, who garnered 62 percent of the vote. “The political elite lost. The people said, 'We support the Town Council's position to put the town first.' ”



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Last-Minute Campaigning

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Although many voters in Loudoun's incorporated towns didn't show up to the polls Tuesday, Purcellville was the exception. Here, voters make their way inside Emerick Elementary School to cast a ballot. (Meghan Louttit)

Last-Minute Campaigning

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Purcellville Mayor Robert W. Lazaro Jr. makes his way to the poll on Tuesday. (Meghan Louttit)

Last-Minute Campaigning

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Purcellville mayoral candidate Karl R. Phillips speaks with voters Tuesday outside Purcellville's only polling place. (Meghan Louttit)

Last-Minute Campaigning

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Freshly cut grass dots this reelection sign for incumbent Purcellville Mayor Bob W. Lazaro. The heated contest between incumbent Lazaro and challenger Karl Phillips is what drew many Purcellville voters to the polls on Tuesday. (Scott Den Herder)

Last-Minute Campaigning

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A table for Leesburg Mayor Kristen C. Umstattd set up so she could campaign for Town Council candidates she supports was unstaffed Tuesday afternoon outside the polling place at Loudoun County High School. Umstattd ran unopposed for her fourth term. (Scott Den Herder)

Last-Minute Campaigning

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Purcellville mayoral candidate Karl Phillips, visible in the background, gets in some last-minute campaigning outside of Emerick Elementary on Tuesday. (Meghan Louttit)

Last-Minute Campaigning

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Karl Phillips, a candidate for Purcellville mayor, stands outside Emerick Elementary on Tuesday to talk to voters as they head to the polls. (Meghan Louttit)

Last-Minute Campaigning

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Charlie Douglas, left, and Jane Simpson help voters on Tuesday at Emerick Elementary School in Purcellville. (Meghan Louttit)

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The C.S. Monroe Technology Center was one of 11 polling places in Leesburg. (Meghan Louttit)

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Lazaro said the election amounted to a referendum on the town's handling of the school issue. Voters also elected to the council newcomer Joan S. Lehr and incumbents Christopher J. Walker III and Gregory Wagner, all of whom agree with Lazaro on the issue. Mayoral challenger Karl Phillips, along with his unsuccessful slate of council candidates, had promised to drop the lawsuit against the county.

Precinct-by-Precinct Breakdown

The 35 percent voter turnout in Purcellville was much higher than the overall turnout of 13 percent in the Loudoun towns holding elections Tuesday. In Leesburg, where four Town Council candidates were running for three seats and Mayor Kristen C. Umstattd was unopposed, only 8 percent of voters showed up at the polls.

“I know there was quite a bit of campaigning, but there wasn't really one pressing issue” in the Leesburg election as there was in Purcellville, said Loudoun election supervisor Jennifer Roberts.

Lazaro has long criticized the county's proposal to build western Loudoun's next high school just outside the town borders at Fields Farm. He and others contend that it would worsen traffic in the area, and he has repeatedly said the property is a “lousy” location for a school that is unlikely to serve a majority of teenagers living in Purcellville.

Most important, the site's critics have argued, the plan to build the school violates a land-use agreement between the town and county. County officials disagree, which is the dispute currently making its way through the courts.

Town officials, including Lazaro, have said in recent months that they might be willing to accept the school if the county met certain town demands. Purcellville is planning the construction of a new sewage system, and town officials want it to connect to the school. In addition, they have asked for some road improvements.

County Supervisor James Burton (I-Blue Ridge) said the county has accepted 95 percent of the town's conditions.

“I think [Lazaro believes] that because of the election, we are obliged to give them everything they've asked for,” he said. “Well, that's not the way negotiation works.”

Burton added that he remained optimistic an out-of-court settlement could be reached.

County officials say they have pushed their case for the school in part because of the urgency of the need to relieve student crowding. If the project is finalized, construction could begin by the summer and the school could open its doors by 2010, school district officials said.

Lazaro last week also criticized Loudoun Board of Supervisors Chairman Scott K. York (I), who has been an ally of Lazaro's in the past. He accused York of being “hypocritical” for pushing for the Fields Farm location after earlier saying he opposed it.

York acknowledged that he did not relish the idea of building a school at Field Farms, and said his ideal solution would be for the school district to find a new location. But school officials have not identified any acceptable alternatives, and York said Fields Farm provides the best way get the badly needed school built as soon as possible.

Tagged: politics

Comments:

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Typical doublespeak from the County. They have had ample opportunity to pick other locations and refused to consider them. They have no one but themselves to blame for this mess.

Posted by LoudounModerate (anonymous) on May 10, 2008 at 8:48 a.m. (Suggest removal)

LCPS Administrators have failed to identify a single Plan B alternative nor any detailed plans for interim measures to manage crowding until a new school finally opens. Some have suggested this has always been the County's legal strategy - go to great lengths to ensure the situation becomes so desperate the Judge will necessarily rule in their favor and citizens will accept. For parents like me, the strategy is compelling, pretty soon we'll be willing to take almost anything just to get a school.

Posted by stinger (anonymous) on May 11, 2008 at 10:31 p.m. (Suggest removal)

LM.....why? When WE OWN the property outside of Purcellville OUTRIGHT? Why, in dire times of budget restraints are we looking to purchase yet another property when we own this one???
Lazaro "scared" the voters(the ones that bothered to vote)with grand fabrications of house crowdings around the school...
The current Town is sitting on the legal costs associated with fighting the County. There is quite a bit of documentation (endorsed and confirmed by the LCSB)that shows this High School will actually remove busses from Purcellville. The CIP costs that have risen under this administration were never addressed by Lazaro's crew. The people of Purcellville had an opportunity to put a fiscally conservative ally in office on May 6. They (the ones that bothered to vote)failed by a mere 350 votes to do that. They will now reap what they sewed.But it's their bill to pay....not ours.

Posted by honchonumberone (anonymous) on May 12, 2008 at 12:40 p.m. (Suggest removal)

sowed. My bad.

Posted by honchonumberone (anonymous) on May 12, 2008 at 12:41 p.m. (Suggest removal)

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