The schools in Miller's magisterial district are bursting at the seams. So in July 2008, the Loudoun School Board signed a $20 million contract to purchase 99 acres on Lenah Road near several hundred existing homes (later negotiating the price down to $18 million) for two new voter-approved schools. The developer promised to provide roads and utilities. All that was needed to start building was approval by the County Board.
But even before the county staff could finish its report on the Lenah property, Miller declared the process "broken" and initiated his own unprecedented school-site search. Three months later, Miller and Realtor Kathy Worek, daughter of Del. Chuck Caputo, D-Fairfax, came up with a plan for Loudoun to buy the undeveloped 190-acre Lambert property on Bull Run Post Office Road for the low, low price of $14 million. The county could then sell a 30-acre parcel to Worek's client for $2 million for a privately built sports complex and Olympic swimming facility.
Alas, the "deal" was too good to be true.
Reality check No. 1: School officials said that using the sparsely settled Lambert site would add at least two years to the already late construction process and cost taxpayers another $16 million, thus making it more expensive than Lenah in the long run.
Reality check No. 2: Lenah was already in compliance with the county's Comprehensive Plan. Lambert contains wetlands and is not zoned for recreational use.
Reality check No. 3: At a Sept. 10, 2008, public hearing, Worek told planning commissioners that she and Miller negotiated a purchase price for the Lambert property. However, neither is empowered to negotiate for school sites. That's a school board prerogative.
Reality check No. 4: The low-density Lambert property can't accommodate two schools, much less three schools, a soccerplex, and a swimming facility.
Nevertheless, on Oct. 21, 2008, on a motion by Miller, Loudoun supervisors killed the purchase of the Lenah property, delaying construction of an already two-year-delayed middle school one more year and setting the high school back a year as well.
If Miller can't even manage his own district's school overcrowding (let alone do the job, in which he was originally elected), then why should the residents of the 86th district elect a carpetbagger to represent them, then consider leaving for another job a year later.
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