Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Update:
The Board of Zoning Appeals will be holding a public hearing on April 29th at 9 am to discuss the application to allow this build to continue.
Materials related to the appeals application can be found here:
https://plus.fairfaxcounty.gov/CitizenAccess/Cap/CapDetail.aspx?Module=Zoning&TabName=Zoning&capID1=REC26&capID2=00000&capID3=0053H&agencyCode=FFX
Can the public speak at the hearing? I’d like to support the appellant.
You don't have standing.
That wasn’t the question. I don’t know if the BZA appeal incorporates public or neighbor comment given that zoning variances often incorporate community input. I don’t know if the appeals here are closed records since this isn’t court.
You absolutely can speak!
There is information on the Fairfax BZA website:
https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/planning-development/board-zoning-appeals/speaker-signup
Just make sure to be mindful of the speaker registration deadlines for the meeting. Any and all - for and against - should utilize their right to comment publicly!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Update:
The Board of Zoning Appeals will be holding a public hearing on April 29th at 9 am to discuss the application to allow this build to continue.
Materials related to the appeals application can be found here:
https://plus.fairfaxcounty.gov/CitizenAccess/Cap/CapDetail.aspx?Module=Zoning&TabName=Zoning&capID1=REC26&capID2=00000&capID3=0053H&agencyCode=FFX
Can the public speak at the hearing? I’d like to support the appellant.
You don't have standing.
That wasn’t the question. I don’t know if the BZA appeal incorporates public or neighbor comment given that zoning variances often incorporate community input. I don’t know if the appeals here are closed records since this isn’t court.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Update:
The Board of Zoning Appeals will be holding a public hearing on April 29th at 9 am to discuss the application to allow this build to continue.
Materials related to the appeals application can be found here:
https://plus.fairfaxcounty.gov/CitizenAccess/Cap/CapDetail.aspx?Module=Zoning&TabName=Zoning&capID1=REC26&capID2=00000&capID3=0053H&agencyCode=FFX
Can the public speak at the hearing? I’d like to support the appellant.
You don't have standing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Update:
The Board of Zoning Appeals will be holding a public hearing on April 29th at 9 am to discuss the application to allow this build to continue.
Materials related to the appeals application can be found here:
https://plus.fairfaxcounty.gov/CitizenAccess/Cap/CapDetail.aspx?Module=Zoning&TabName=Zoning&capID1=REC26&capID2=00000&capID3=0053H&agencyCode=FFX
Can the public speak at the hearing? I’d like to support the appellant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Greenbrier is a dump anyway.
Just stop. It isn’t shiny and new, sure. But it is a neighborhood of mostly late 60s and early 70s homes. They are in different levels of renovation. Some haven’t had a lot done, others are completely redone inside and out. It is a family friendly and diverse neighborhood with 2 elementary schools, a middle school and a high school within walking distance (most within neighborhood boundaries). The library is around the corner. There is a shopping center we can easily walk to. I just picked up the latest mailer from the big neighborhood realtor, and houses are selling from the mid $700s to about $900k. That isn’t low class. You have to have decent money to buy a home these days.
$700k/large number of adult owners is not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Greenbrier is a dump anyway.
Just stop. It isn’t shiny and new, sure. But it is a neighborhood of mostly late 60s and early 70s homes. They are in different levels of renovation. Some haven’t had a lot done, others are completely redone inside and out. It is a family friendly and diverse neighborhood with 2 elementary schools, a middle school and a high school within walking distance (most within neighborhood boundaries). The library is around the corner. There is a shopping center we can easily walk to. I just picked up the latest mailer from the big neighborhood realtor, and houses are selling from the mid $700s to about $900k. That isn’t low class. You have to have decent money to buy a home these days.
The median single family home in FFX County is over a million. Greenbrier homes are well below average for this area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Update:
The Board of Zoning Appeals will be holding a public hearing on April 29th at 9 am to discuss the application to allow this build to continue.
Materials related to the appeals application can be found here:
https://plus.fairfaxcounty.gov/CitizenAccess/Cap/CapDetail.aspx?Module=Zoning&TabName=Zoning&capID1=REC26&capID2=00000&capID3=0053H&agencyCode=FFX
Can the public speak at the hearing? I’d like to support the appellant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Greenbrier is a dump anyway.
Just stop. It isn’t shiny and new, sure. But it is a neighborhood of mostly late 60s and early 70s homes. They are in different levels of renovation. Some haven’t had a lot done, others are completely redone inside and out. It is a family friendly and diverse neighborhood with 2 elementary schools, a middle school and a high school within walking distance (most within neighborhood boundaries). The library is around the corner. There is a shopping center we can easily walk to. I just picked up the latest mailer from the big neighborhood realtor, and houses are selling from the mid $700s to about $900k. That isn’t low class. You have to have decent money to buy a home these days.
Anonymous wrote:Update:
The Board of Zoning Appeals will be holding a public hearing on April 29th at 9 am to discuss the application to allow this build to continue.
Materials related to the appeals application can be found here:
https://plus.fairfaxcounty.gov/CitizenAccess/Cap/CapDetail.aspx?Module=Zoning&TabName=Zoning&capID1=REC26&capID2=00000&capID3=0053H&agencyCode=FFX
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Greenbrier is a dump anyway.
Just stop. It isn’t shiny and new, sure. But it is a neighborhood of mostly late 60s and early 70s homes. They are in different levels of renovation. Some haven’t had a lot done, others are completely redone inside and out. It is a family friendly and diverse neighborhood with 2 elementary schools, a middle school and a high school within walking distance (most within neighborhood boundaries). The library is around the corner. There is a shopping center we can easily walk to. I just picked up the latest mailer from the big neighborhood realtor, and houses are selling from the mid $700s to about $900k. That isn’t low class. You have to have decent money to buy a home these days.
Anonymous wrote:Greenbrier is a dump anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop Work Order Issued to Children Building Igloo Without Permit
JANUARY 28, 2026 POSTED IN LOCAL NEWS
TAKOMA PARK, MD – A group of local children building an igloo were issued an immediate stop work order Tuesday after Montgomery County officials responded to anonymous online complaints that the igloo violated multiple development standards, none of which the children had read or could legally understand.
According to the county, the unpermitted structure – constructed by two children in their front yard – failed to comply with Takoma Park’s Tree Protection Plan, Montgomery County’s Accessory Igloo Unit (AIU) regulations, and many other building codes.
“We support creativity, winter play, and childhood joy,” said a county spokesperson, standing in front of the half-finished igloo with a clipboard. “But once snow is stacked vertically, it becomes a structure. And once it becomes a structure, it becomes our business.”
Takoma Park officials noted that the igloo was located within 50 feet of a tree, potentially threatening its critical root zone with snow compaction. The children were instructed to submit a revised site plan showing the igloo relocated to another area, preferably somewhere not in Takoma Park.
Further complicating matters, the igloo’s height became a major issue. Under current regulations, any igloo over three feet tall must include a structural engineering stamp certifying that the snow load will not collapse during “anticipated warming events, emotional meltdowns, or sibling conflict.”
“At no point did these children provide a stamped drawing from a licensed architect or engineer,” said one county inspector. “One of them said, ‘We’re just trying to have some fun.’ I’m sorry, Billy, but there’s nothing fun about structural deficiencies.”
Stormwater management was also a significant concern. Officials warned that eventual igloo melt could result in uncontrolled runoff, sending water downslope in an unapproved manner.
“Where does the water go when this melts?” asked an official. “Into the watershed? Onto a sidewalk? Into the unplowed streets where it will create even more ice for us to add to the backlog?”
When reached for comment, the children were unavailable, having abandoned the project and gone inside to play on their phones. County code enforcement officials, however, confirmed the matter had been escalated to the Department of Housing after it was discovered the igloo did not comply with recently enacted rent control laws, nor had the children cleared a 3 foot wide path through the snow leading to the entrance by Tuesday’s deadline.
It sounds like you need to start your own thread.
+1 not even remotely funny satire like the onion. Kinda dull.