| BRM: Paving, Lawsuits, And Only The Lawyers Win [bullrunmountain] | May 26, 2007 17:00 |
A handful of Bull Run Mountain residents, angry over a tax increase (among other things) used to pay for road paving, will be suing the Prince William County, according to this WaPo story.
A group of disgruntled property owners is moving to sue the county after it raised their taxes to help pay for last summer's $1.5 million paving operation on the community's roads. The project coated 7.4 miles of steep, badly eroded gravel roads with a tar-and-chip surface designed to reduce maintenance costs and improve safety.
As a resident of "Upper Bull Run", I can say that the paving increased the value of my home and eased any concerns we have about resale value. When we came out to see our house for the first time, we actually hit a hole so big and hard enough that we broke the radio in my wife's car. We've seen thousands of dollars of grading and fill washed away in a single thunderstorm. I've had to go to the bottom and drive friends up the mountain or out of a hole because of the sad state of the roads prior to the paving.
Snow-removal this winter went off like clockwork with the smooth, even and well-edged paved roads, something we've never had. Lacking guard rails on Sumney Drive or a Red Dawn-inspired survivalist SUV bristling with antennae monster truck, we appreciate that. We live in 2007, in Northern Virginia; our daily winter commute shouldn't be a flirt with a serious car crash.
Me pro-paving? Yep.
Me pro-taxes? Especially general-purpose gone-to-Richmond taxes? Nope.
A time-limited tax for a specific and seriously needed purpose? Sometimes it has to be done.
Acting as a community instead of every-man-for-himself? Priceless.
And in the end, only the lawyers win:
In the meantime, Cranshaw and Blatter have circulated a letter to some 200 property owners on the lower portion of the mountain stating their case and requesting donations to help pay for the services of the international law firm they've hired, Reed Smith. They've spent more than $12,000 in attorney's fees, and their attorney, Sally Gillette, has warned that they can expect $75,000 to $100,000 in litigation costs if the dispute continues.
$75,000-100,000.
Assuming the county has to spend something on par with that to defend against this nonsense, I'd like to thank Cranshaw, et al, for chewing up thousands of taxpayer dollars and allowing the fine folks at Reed Smith to have a new Mercedes or two for Christmas gifts. Jolly good show! The rest of Prince William County's taxpayers salute you!
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