This Week's Poll

Do you plan to attend Barack Obama's inauguration on Jan. 20?

No
Yes

You must be logged in to vote.

News By You

Behavioral Directions, LLC, an autism consulting f (Tuesday, December 30 2008)
0 Comments // 259 Reads
Behavioral Directions, LLC, an autism consulting f (Tuesday, December 30 2008)
0 Comments // 250 Reads
CCT with 2nd Flight Theatre Company is now solicit (Monday, December 22 2008)
0 Comments // 384 Reads
Santa will make one last appearance at Fuddruckers (Saturday, December 20 2008)
0 Comments // 467 Reads
Home > Top > Lawsuits put brakes on western high school

Lawsuits put brakes on western high school

Chances of a high school appearing on the Fields Farm in Purcellville anytime soon grew dimmer Oct. 10 as town and county continued legal action at the local and Supreme Court levels.

Circuit Court Judge Thomas D. Horne ruled Oct. 10 that the Town of Purcellville's lawsuit challenging the county's approval of a high school on its borders will go to trial in late January.

The judge heard the county's arguments that the lawsuit should be dismissed, and turned those arguments down.

In another front of the on-going legal battle between the county and the town over who decides what in the town's urban growth area, the Supreme Court of Virginia received the town's petition that it rehear arguments in other lawsuits.

The case in court Oct. 10 deals with the county Board of Supervisors' grant of a special exception, or land use approval, for the school to be built on land zoned for residential use. The county gave that approval over the strenuous objections of the town.

That lawsuit argues the county's approval of a high school on the Fields Farm doesn't comply with the Purcellville Urban Growth Area Management Plan, or PUGAMP.

It further argues that the traffic studies the county relied on in granting that approval were incomplete and flawed, and that the county is violating its own zoning ordinance by approving a school use on the property without complying with the PUGAMP.

The PUGAMP was developed and signed by elected leaders of both the town and county in 1995 as a way to share decision making on land use in the 3,100 acres surrounding the town that are slated to be annexed into the town at some point.

When the county went ahead in 2006 with plans to build a high school on the Fields Farm, in the urban growth area, the town turned to the courts. The county's plan violates PUGAMP in several ways, the town argued: it would serve the high school with on-site wells and waste water disposal, and it would not do enough to lessen the traffic impact of another 1,600 students and their teachers and staff commuting through Purcellville every weekday.

A recent Supreme Court decision ruled the county must get a Planning Commission permit before proceeding with construction of the school, but that it has to get that permit only from its own Planing Commission.

The town has asked the Supreme Court to revisit and clarify that decision, which appeared to lump planning and zoning into one category.

The current case, the town's challenge to the county's award of a special exception to the school project, is on the court's schedule for the week of Jan. 26, 2009.



Del.icio.us




I remember getting a letter from LCPS stating the school was projected to open in January 2009 - what the heck is all this? With all the problems this project has had from the onset, it looks like the County has been playing us (and these kids) as fools for years and has NEVER intended this project to proceed. The County's negligence is costing millions of dollars. Why are they doing this?

Posted by ValleyParent

Report Offensive Content

You must be logged in to post a comment.