"Corey
A. Stewart hammered developers in a debate with Sharon E. Pandak on
Wednesday night at the the McCoart Administration Center, saying
developers should pay for just about everything.
"Pandak told the
crowd of about 150 that there was no 'money fairy.'
"The
two are candidates for the at-large seat on the Prince William Board of
County Supervisors and traded opinions on transportation, land use and
development.
"Stewart,
the Republican candidate who represents the Occoquan district on the
board, said the reason he wants to be chairman is to 'Try and do
something to slow down residential growth to improve our transit
systems, our transportation systems, reduce our commute times.'
"Stewart's answer
is to get more money from developers to pay for open space,
transportation, schools and police.
" 'We
are over-planned, we have somewhere between 30 and 40 thousand units
already in the pipeline ready to go,' the 38-year-old Stewart said of
coming development in the county.
"Developers
build the houses that need services and developers should pay proffers
to offset the adverse effects their development has on the community.
He has called on the board to raise the proffers developers pay by
$9,000 per house.
" 'If developers do
not pay for development, you do,' said Stewart, who was elected to the
board in 2003.
"Pandak,
who served in the Prince William County Attorney's Office for 25 years
and as county attorney for 15 years until she retired in 2004, said
government was more complicated.
"It takes more than
asking developers for additional proffers, said Pandak, a Democrat.
" 'You simply
cannot
go out and say, "We'll charge the developers," ' the 58-year-old Pandak
said.
"The
county should follow the comprehensive plan, zoning and rezoning laws
and the capital improvements plan while it works with developers to get
the best for the county, Pandak said.
" 'It
may be something different that the developer can do to address those
issues,' Pandak said. 'To say, "OK, let's charge the developers
additional $9,000" doesn't truly measure impact,' Pandak said.
"The candidates
were asked if they would ever consent to development in the rural
crescent.
"Stewart said
absolutely not.
" 'Do
you really want to see Springfield extended all the way across Prince
William County to the Stafford County line, the Fauquier County Line to
Loudoun?' he asked.
"That's what would
happen without the rural crescent, he said.
"Pandak
reminded the audience that as county attorney she helped write the laws
that established the Rural Crescent, which encompasses 80,000 acres
stretching from Quantico Marine Corps base to Loudoun County. Zoning in
the Rural Crescent allows for 10-acre parcels. It was created in the
1998 comprehensive plan.
"Transportation
can be improved by controlling residential growth and Stewart said he
would do just about anything to slow growth.
"'Controlling
residential growth is not a partisan issue,' Stewart said.
" 'This
affects all of us whether we're Republicans, Democrats, socialists or
communists. It doesn't matter. And I frankly would work with any of
those parties to try and solve this problem,' Stewart said.
"He said high
density development belongs around mass transit nodes in Tysons Corner,
the District of Columbia and the Pentagon.
" 'It does not
belong in Prince William County,' he said.
"Pandak said she
would collar the state to get more money for transportation.
" 'We can't expect
to deal with all these issues locally,' she said.
" 'We can't expect
to deal with the Stafford traffic that comes up the [Interstate] 95
corridor,' she said.
"Pandak said the
county has to get the state and federal governments involved to fix
local traffic problems.
" 'We've got to
yank
their chains and say, "This has got to change," ' Pandak said.
"County surveys
show that residents want more open space and the candidates were asked
how they would get more open space.
"Pandak said the
board should put a $25 million open space referendum on the agenda for
next year to buy 'precious open space.'
"Stewart said he
would look to the developers to pay for open space through the proffer
system."
"Pandak pointed out
that proffers are voluntary and the county can only get proffers when
developers are seeking rezoning."