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From YouTube: Board Wrap-Up: February 2020
Description
ATV's monthly conversation with Arlington County Board members on the major issues discussed at February's Board meeting.
1. Manager presents his Proposed FY 21 Budget, Board advertises CY 2020 tax rate
2. Board accepts $200,000 for Childcare Scholarships
3. Board sets March public hearings on Crystal City PDSP
4. Board approves space in Arlington Mill Community Center for jobs service
5. Board Approves Neighborhood Conservation park renovation contract
6. Board Members talking to the community about Missing Middle, Housing Arlington
A
Hello
I'm
Kara
Donnell,
and
this
is
County
Board
wrap
up
each
month.
We
take
a
deep
dive
into
some
of
the
key
actions.
The
board's
taken
actions
that
impact
you,
your
family
and
our
community
with
us
today,
as
always
as
County
Board,
Chair,
Libby,
Garvey
and
joining
her
is
met
board
member
Mattie
Franti
thanks
for
being
here.
It
is
budget
season.
C
C
No
tax
rate
increase
and
I
think
we'll
talk
about
that
a
little
bit
what
that
means,
because
this
budget
just
basically
sticks
to
the
basics,
basics.
We
are
starting
to
see
which
we'll
talk
about
a
little
uptick
in
revenue
because
of
you
know,
amazon
coming
and
then
commercial
vacancy
rate
is
going
down,
which
is
great
thing,
so
we've
got
a
little
more
money,
but
the
manager
really
is
taking
it
very
seriously
and
in
fact
the
growth
in
this
budget
is
under
3%,
which
is
unusual.
C
Usually,
if
you
just
kind
of
keep
doing
the
same
thing,
you
know
change
anything
you
grow
at
least
3%,
so
he's
cut
that
despite
the
fact
that
we've
gotten
sort
of
an
increase
in
revenue
and
could
be
doing
more
I
think
it's
an
innovative
budget
I
think
it's
really
as
I
say,
sticks
to
basics,
though,
which
is
exactly
what
it
should
do,
and
so
we're
embarked
on
a
whole
lot
of
work.
There
gonna
be
lots
and
lots
of
work
sessions,
I
think
and
once
some
of
the
basic
most
important
things
are
stormwater
management.
C
We
all
had
that
Kamiya
that
terrible
storm
in
July
8th.
Clearly,
we've
got
to
do
something
different
with
our
infrastructure.
Education
is
a
big
I,
suspect
schools
are
they're,
presenting
their
budget,
I
think
it's
tomorrow
and
I
suspect.
There's
gonna
be
a
gap
that
we
have
to
work
through
and
so
they're
always
gonna
be
some
tough
choices
to
make,
but
all
in
all,
I
just
I
think
it's
a
really
good
budget.
C
B
Well,
you
touched
on
sort
of
the
big
frame
that
that
we
have
for
this,
which
is
that
there's
not
the
tax
rate
is
gonna
stay.
The
same
I
think
it's
just
worth
underscoring
a
little
bit
that
this
is
the
start
of
the
process
and
I
got
a
call.
Yesterday,
frantically
saying:
oh
I
want
this
specific
line.
Item
increased
and
I
said:
ok,
let's
this
is
the
managers
proposal
and
that's
right
exactly.
C
B
You
did
touch
on
a
couple
of
the
things
that
I
think
are
going
to
be
a
big
part
of
our
discussion.
Schools
and
housing
are
going
to
be
two
pieces
that
we're
going
to
try
and
try
and
fit
here.
I
think
it's
important
to
to
note
that
it
is.
This
is
about
the
basics.
It's
also
investing,
but
doing
so
in
a
fiscally
responsible
way.
We
have
to
be
mindful
that,
even
as
the
rate
stays
the
same
and
is
lower
than
other
jurisdictions
in
Northern
Virginia,
still
the
increase
in
the
value
of
people's
property
is
gonna.
C
C
Of
housing
can
people
afford
to
actually
live
here?
I
was
pleased
that
I
can
burr
of
the
things
that
the
manager
did.
That
I
think
are
pretty
innovative.
One
of
them,
which
is,
let's
eliminate
library,
fines
which
is
really
interesting
and
they're
doing
that
in
a
number
of
cities,
and
that's
part
of
our
equity
initiative,
which
is
also
very
important
we
found
out,
is
the
people
who
are
you
know
kind
of
burden
the
most
by
library,
file
and
fines
are
your
poor
folks
and
kids.
C
C
If
you've
got
an
outstanding
book,
you
don't
get
given
another
one
until
you
bring
back
the
one
that
you
got,
you
know.
So
that's
a
way
of
doing
that
and
most
places
have
found
its
really
working
very
well
and
meeting
their
objectives.
So
we'll
have
some
you
know
so
metrics
to
measure
with,
but
I
think
that's
really
exciting
and
innovative,
but
it
just
it
just
kind
of
makes
sense.
There's
something
we
just
do
things,
because
we've
done
them
for
200
years.
You
know,
so
let's
try
a
different
way.
C
Another
one
that
I
was
really
pleased
to
see
was
that
the
managers
putting
in
some
traffic
control
officers.
So
these
won't
be.
You
know
you
know
policemen
with
guns
and
they
can
write
tickets
and
things
like
that
sworn
officers,
but
it'll
be
a
step
up
from
you
know
what
to
cup
meter.
Maids
people
just
check-in
the
track,
but
just
checking
like
scooters
like
if
they're
not
supposed
to
be
sidewalks
but
on
the
street,
they
can
go
after
yeah.
C
They
can
do
deal
with
that
and
they
also
can
deal
with
people
like
trucks
parking
in
the
bike
lanes.
There
are
a
lot
of
things
like
that,
and
we
hear
more
and
more
as
become
more
down.
It's
all
really
about
enforcement,
and
once
people
know
you're
gonna
enforce
it,
then
they
start
to
behave
a
little
better
and
I.
Think
just
everybody
behaving
a
little
better.
Being
more
thoughtful
of
everybody
would
be
true.
C
B
C
B
C
C
B
And
I
think
these
innovative
positions,
in
addition
to
the
basics
that
we've
covered
are
you
know
we'll
have
a
big
discussion.
We
always
do.
We
get
hundreds
and
hundreds
of
emails
and
there'll
be
a
bunch
of
work
sessions
over
the
next
four
weeks
or
five
weeks,
but
we
all
this
leads
up
to
a
hearing
on
March,
31st
and
then,
which
is
on
the
budget
as
a
whole
and
then
a
tax
rate
hearing
on
April,
2nd
but
I
kind
of
think
of
it
as
all
the
things
we
want
to
do.
B
C
It's
hard,
you
know
at
one
point
and
I
think
I
might
want
at
some
point
get
back
to
this.
There
were
a
few
years
where
we
did
on
the
tax
rate
hearing
and
the
budget
hearings
kind
of
simultaneously,
because
this
way
we
have
everybody
comes
to
us,
as
you
saying
they
want
this,
and
this
and
this
and
this
and
that's
great
everybody-
wants
things
which
I
get
they're
all
good
valuable
things
are
almost
all
of
them
and
then
you
get
to
the
the
tax
rate
and
everybody
wants
their
taxes
cut.
So
there's!
No.
C
Where
is
the
balance
and
I
really
like
the
people
that
want
things
to
hear
from
the
people
who
are
really
hurting
because
of
the
tax
rate,
because
this
really
does
for
a
lot
of
people?
It's
not
a
big
$375
is
not
a
big
deal
a
year,
but
for
some
people
it
really
is.
It
really
is,
and
you
need
to
you
need
to
hear
about
that.
One
of
the
other
innovations
I
wanted
to
just
touch
on
that
we're
trying
it's
pilot
is
the.
C
Is
these
flood
alarms,
because,
with
that
flood
that
we
had
on
July
8th
I
mean
was
a
miracle?
No
one
was
killed
and
I
really
am
pleased
that
Aaron
Miller,
our
emergency
managers
really
kind
of
been
looking
at.
What
can
we
do
and
one
of
the
things
simple,
they're
not
expensive,
but
in
certain
areas
get
flood
alarms.
So
if
there's
a
flood
it
it
will
set
off
and
wake
people
up.
C
C
C
B
A
B
B
C
If
you're,
if
you're
interested
in
some
issues,
you
can
find
the
one
you're
interested
in
you
can
come
and
sit
in
the
room
with
us.
If
you
want,
you
can
watch
it
online
while
we're
talking,
you
can
come
back
at
night
and
say:
oh,
let
me
check
out
what
happened
and
it's
there
for
viewing
any
interesting.
A
C
We
do
and
it's
through
the
Community
Foundation,
so
the
Arlington
punic
Community
Foundation
set
up
an
initiative
trying
to
get
scholarships
to
I.
Think
it's
a
thousand
children
from
low-income
families
to
see
that
they
have
high
quality
childcare
here
in
Arlington,
as
anyone
with
children
watching
this
will
know
if
you
are
trying
to
find
childcare.
This
is
like
the
most
expensive
place
for
childcare
in
the
entire
region
and
stressful
finding
it.
C
B
And
this
there's
we've
seen
so
much
in
terms
of
accessibility
for
childcare
across
the
county,
additional
slots
coming
in
and
there's
been
graduate,
but
there's
also
affordability
exactly,
and
that
is
really
what
this
grant
starts
down
the
road
to
do,
and
we
recognize
through
it
that
we
need
we're
going
to
need
private
funding
in
addition
to
the
county
working
on
this
issue.
But
the
Nestle
found
a
Nestle
company
contributed
through
the
Arlington
Community
Foundation.
As
you
mentioned,
the
thousand
children
we're
just
starting
on
that
on
that
road,
but
I
do
think.
B
You
and
Katie
speak
really
compellingly
about
how
this
is
a
key
component
of
just
how
real
the
American
dream
is
for
for
families-
and
this
is
it
goes
across
incomes
and
across
the
county.
There's
a
basic
middle-class.
Can
you
afford
to
to
raise
a
family
and
the
cost
of
child
care?
There
is
not
an
insignificant
number
of
parents
who
stay
home
because
the
relative
working
is
only
just
a
sliver
better
than
than
the
cost
of
child
care.
B
So
thrilled
about
this
and
really
the
work
that
Katie
crystal
is
lead,
has
been
great,
but
the
whole
board
moved
before
I
joined
and
now
we're
continuing
that
work
and
we
need
to
pull
more
and
more
people
in
to
this
affordability
challenge,
because
it's
relevant
to
those
who
are
in
the
middle
class
and
working
to
get
there.
So.
C
I
sue
our
Department
of
Human
Services,
so
they
manage
it.
This
is
really
a
partner,
multi
level
partnership
and
it's
great
that
the
the
so
there's
the
shared
prosperity
initiative
that
the
Community
Foundation
is
doing
and
they
are
hoping
for
a
lot
of
corporate
donations
and
we're
really
pleased
esli
is
the
first
they
stepped
up
from
eighty
two.
A
C
Two
hundred
thousand
dollars-
and
that's
great-
but
you
know
we
want
other
folks
to
step
up
too
because,
frankly,
more
and
more
as
companies
come
here
for
our
innovation
economy
and
the
talent
we
have
in
our
workforce.
A
lot
of
that
talent
have
families
have
kids
and
a
lot
of
that
talent.
You
got
to
see
if
you
decide
that
one
parent
can't
afford
to
were
either
mentioning
they
have
to
stay
home.
That's
50
percent
of
the
workforce
not
available
to
them.
C
So
it's
really
in
all
of
the
corporation's
interest
here,
it's
in
all
of
our
interests
to
be
providing
low-cost,
affordable,
yeah
quality,
child
care.
So
that's
great
we're
hoping
more
will
step
up.
We're
really
pleased
that
they
did
that
and
you
do
have
to
be,
for
this
particular
scholarship
that
the
Community
Foundation
is
doing
and
we're
running
through
Department
Human
Services.
You
have
to
be
at
or
below
30%
of
the
ami
here
the
average
mean
median
income
in
Arlington,
so
it's
not
for
everybody
and
they
have
to
meet
certain
requirements
and
we're
just
trying.
C
C
A
B
So
in
the
past,
we've
done
phase
development
site
plans.
This
is
just
a
an
innovation,
a
tweak
really
on
that.
That
is
taking
three
properties
that
are
really
related
in
terms
of
neighborhood,
but
they're
not
directly
contiguous.
We
put
them
together
so
that
that
we
could
evaluate
the
density
and
the
development
in
the
area
as
a
whole
in
a
unified
approach
and
I
think
this
is
we're
seeing
a
lot
of
changes
in
Crystal
City,
but
we're
also
engaging
the
community
in
that
discussion.
B
We
want
to
evaluate
things
thoroughly
and
have
a
the
correct
amount
of
process,
but
we
don't
want
to
get
so
bogged
down
in
process
that
the
sort
of
the
the
extremes,
the
over
process,
that
some
times
we
worry
about
with
respect
to
the
Arlington
way
gone,
amok
happen
and
so
I
think
this
is
a
great
approach
and
we've
started
on
it
and
staffs
going
to
bring
expertise
to
a
good
good
way.
For
just.
C
So
I
think
we
will
get
some
more
benefits
out
of
it
and
they
will
come
faster.
It's
I
think
it's
gonna
be
a
lot
better
way
to
do
it
I'm
really
pleased
our
staff
came
up
with
again,
as
you
said,
it's
tweaking
and
not
a
huge
difference,
but
it's
amazing
how
hard
it
can
be
sometimes
to
come
up
with
just
oh.
Why.
A
C
B
A
B
So
this
is
a
that
seek
has
been
it's
an
arlington
institution.
It
was
a
response
to
so
many
of
the
challenges
that
we
saw
with
respect
to
day,
laborers
and
really
part
of
what
arlington
being
inclusive
and
recognizing
the
humanity
of
all
residents
and
all
who
need
help.
And
so
we
had
a
site
which
is
right
down
there
near
the
weenie
beanie
that
Carrington.
B
That
provided
a
place
where
we
could
help
with
employment,
and
now
we
have
a
facility
at
Arlington
mill
that
can
provide
services
and
were
better
LinkedIn
and
Andres
towbar
who
has
worked
on.
This,
has
done
such
service
for
our
community
for
a
long
time
and
he
has,
and
his
organization
have
really
been
linked
in
with
employers.
So
they're
still
going
to
be
those
benefits,
it's
just
going
to
be
done
in
a
more
streamlined
way,
we're
actually
45.
46
percent
of
those
using
these
services
are
in
that
community,
so
they'll
be
closer.
B
A
C
This
is
going
to
see
how
the
program
keeps
changing
when
I
just
started
in
2001.
There's
a
150
I
mean
I.
Remember
this
because
it's
my
neighborhood
they're
just
so
me.
It
was
when
we
first
having
the
huge
influx
so
yeah,
it's
because
of
all
the
wars
going
on
in
Central
America.
It's
gotten
a
lot
different,
and
that
was
before
really
cellphones.
You
know
so
people
have
different
ways
of
connecting
now,
and
so
this
is
gonna
really
kind
of
professionalize.
It
bring
it
into
the
21st
century.
C
A
way
of
connecting
people
who
you
know,
need
work
and
can
work
and
with
people
who
need
workers
and
I
think
it's
gonna
be
better
all
the
way
around.
It
also
will
open
up
that
space
because
that's
gonna
be
Jenny,
Dean
Park
and
that
space
will
be
developed
to
be
a
park.
So
I
think
it's
just
a
win-win
all
the
way
around.
It's
great
yeah.
A
A
We're
back
with
County
Board
wrap
up
our
monthly
chat
with
the
county
board
members
about
actions.
The
board
takes
at
its
monthly
meeting,
I've,
been
talking
with
board
chair,
Libby,
Garvey
and
board
member
mette
4nt
about
the
issues
from
the
February
meeting,
and
now,
let's
talk
about
it's
always
nice
to
talk
about
these
park
renovations
stories
that
were
improving
Arlington's
Park
and
this
time
we're
talking
about
Edison
Park.
What
kind
of
a
makeover
are
we
getting
here?
A
major.
C
Makeover
which
is
great-
and
this
is
part
of
the
neighborhood
conservation
project,
and
it
means
that
the
citizens
of
that
neighborhood,
which
is
our
Lincoln
Forest
civics
ocean,
came
together
to
kind
of
help
us
plan
what
they
want
and
recommended.
This
is
what
they
wanted.
It
kind
of
fits
in
with
our
theme
of
childcare.
Right.
C
We
have
a
lot
of
children
in
Arlington
and
this
is
a
really
popular
park
that
really
needs
a
major
renovation,
so
we're
putting
in
a
little
over
$900,000
and
it's
gonna
be
new
equipment,
we're
dismantling
the
old
one-
and
you
know,
there's
their
safety
issues
there
all
kinds
of
things,
but
we're
gonna
be
placing
it
with
a
modern
playground
for
two
sets
of
aged
children
for
little
children
and
the
ones
that
are
that
are
older,
that's
kind
of
more
appropriate
for
them.
It's
gonna
be
accessible.
B
I
wasn't
quite
in
there
with
the
two
to
five
years,
but
I,
but
I
did
actually
within
the
last
two
weeks.
I
pulled
up
to
this
park
and
across
there's
a
church
across
the
street
and
across
I
was
waiting
for
a
couple
minutes
as
the
two
two
five
year
olds
walked
from
the
church
where
they
were
in
a
childcare
over
to
the
park,
and
you
know
on
a
busy
day.
This
was
a
good
highlight
and
it's
so
thrilling
to
be
investing
here
with
the
infrastructure.
B
A
C
So
housing
Arlington
is
really
one
of
the
most
important
important
initiatives.
We've
been
undertaking
and
I.
Think
as
I
mentioned
earlier
in
this
in
this
segment,
that
housing
is
any
major
city
where
people
want
to
live.
It's
it's
a
huge
issue
when
we've
got
a
figure
how
to
make
it
so
that
everybody
can
thrive
here.
So
the
housing
Ireland
is
an
umbrella
initiative
and
under
that
we
are
focusing
on
what
we
call
the
missing
middle
now.
C
The
missing
middle
is
people
often
think
we
mean
middle-income
people,
which
does
some
extent
we
do,
but
actually
we're
just
talking
about
the
form
of
houses.
So
on
one
end,
you've
got
single
family
homes,
traditional
great
one,
family,
/,
home
separated
and,
on
the
other
end,
you've
got
and
that's
more
of
our
you
know
or
leafy
suburbs,
and
then
on
the
other
end.
You've
got
like
your
roselyn's,
your
crystal
cities,
which
is
the
high-rises
and
people,
lots
and
lots
of
people
in
one
building
in
between.
C
C
Frankly,
as
somebody
who's
lived
in
Farrington
since
1977,
it's
fairling
ttan,
it's
a
great
but
then
so
that
to
me
has
been
home
and
I.
Just
haven't
really
focused,
in
fact
that
there's
not
much
of
that
available
elsewhere
in
Arlington
and
we're
going
to
looking
at
all
different
kinds
of
ways
to
offer
that,
because
people
need
different
things
in
their
lives,
sometimes
a
single-family
house
where
sometimes
the
apartment
works.
Sometimes
you
need
something
in
the
middle
and
if
we're
going
to
be
a
healthy,
thriving
community,
we've
got
to
have
the
whole
gamut.
B
Well,
I
think
that's
it's
also
part
of
evolving.
The
number
of
these
units
that
we
have,
which
will
help
preserve
affordability,
really
so
that
people
can
can
buy
something,
but
do
so
in
a
way
that
fits
with
their
professions
either
working
in
DC
or
as
a
teacher
or
a
firefighter
police
officer.
I.
Think
the
types
of
housing
that
we
can
provide
through
missing
middle
are
really
helped
preserve
that
affordability,
that
is
the
ladder
up
the
economic
and
towards
prosperity
and
towards
a
successful
unprocess
and
thriving
life.
B
So
I
think
it's
great
I
also
think
that
what
we've
done
in
advertising
and
allowing
any
Civic
Association
to
come,
and
we
were
happy
to
go
our
five
board.
Members
will
go
to
your
Civic
Association.
If
you
ask
or
your
civic
organization-
and
this
is
the
sort
of
engagement
that
we're
really
looking
for
and
need
in
order
to
figure
out
what
targeted
and
focused
ideas
that
should
move
forward
so
that
we
can
preserve
mostly
ownership
options,
but
also
some
moderate
rental
options
too,
and
so
I
think
this
is
a
great
moment.
B
C
C
Provides
a
you
know,
an
affordable
rent
for
somebody
and
enough
income
for
the
other
family
to
own
it.
So
there
are
a
lot
of
different
things.
You
can
do.
There's
a
lot
of
concern
and
misunderstand
because
this
is
actually
dealing
with
zoning
is
what
we're
looking
at,
because
many
places
in
Arlington
these
kinds
of
units
are
illegal.
C
You
can't
build
them
and
we
really
need
to
look
through
that
and
have
a
major
conversation.
People
are
worried
that
we're
gonna
completely
change
neighborhoods
and
make
them
look
different.
I.
Don't
think
we're
interested
in
doing
that.
There
are
a
lot
of
places
where
you
have
say:
duplexes
even
quadruplex.
Is
they
look
like
single-family
homes?
You
don't
have
to
ruin
the
trees
and
if
we
handle
the
transportation
well
in
the
location?
Well,
you
don't
have
to
have
a
whole
lot
more
cars.
C
So
I
think
there
are
a
lot
of
different
things
that
this
can
do
and
we,
but
we
really
need
to
talk
about
it
with
our
community
and
get
a
lot
of
understand
because
I
picked
up
I'm
sure
you
have
Matt
too
and
talking
to
people.
The
emails
would
get
a
lot
of
concern
that
we're
suddenly
going
to
change
everything
and
we
are
not
interested
in
doing
that.
I
mean
this
is
how
we
grow
and
change
but
preserve
what
we
liked
best
about
our
link
to
what.
C
Project,
it
was
one
of
the
most
wonderful
moments.
Cuz
frankly,
Riesling
had
been
on
the
dock.
When
I
first
came
on
the
board-
and
this
is
this
incredible-
and
we've
tried
different
things-
we
wanted
to
preserve
the
farmhouse.
What
we
found
more
and
more
was
that
farm
had
to
preserve
it.
You
couldn't
make
it
excess
there
weren't
ways
that
we
could
make
it
a
county
facility
and
actually
be
good
stewards
of
taxpayer
dollars.
We
just
couldn't
do
it
and
so
trying
to
figure
out.
C
So
we've
come
up
with
a
partnership,
so
we're
gonna
preserve
one
all
the
land
around
gets
it
there's
a
great
sledding
hill
that
stays
really
on
farm
project.
They've
got
the
gardens
that
stays.
So
you
know
it'll
still
be
a
community
resource
and
it's
gonna
continue
to
look
the
same
but
get
an
addition
on
we're
working
with
Habitat
for
Humanity
they're
partnering
with
L'arche,
and
it
will
be
a
home
for
five
to
seven
folks
that
have
some
disability
mental
disabilities
think
they.
C
They
need
to
be
in
a
sort
of
a
group
housing
situation,
and
this
will
be
a
home
for
them,
and
everybody
came
together.
It
was
one
of
the
most
heartwarming
meetings
it
was
just
I
was
just
delighted,
I
mean
there's.
Sometimes
it's
really
wonderful
doing
this
job
and
that's
exciting.
So
we
today
the
way
that
we
did
yesterday
was
we
just
signed
a
letter
of
intent,
okay,
I
kind
of
moved
forward,
so
the
project
could
move
forward,
so
it'll
be
coming
back
and
we'll
get
to
talk
about
it
again.
C
It's
just
heartwarming
it's
perfect
and
it
is
part
in
a
way
of
that
missing
middle
again,
as
you
said,
Matt,
it's
part
of
having
it's
so
options,
so
everybody
can
live
here
and
in
fact
you
know.
Sometimes
there
people
are
concerned.
I
can
make
it
so
people
who
are
older,
knitting
down
to
downsize
or
maybe
need
help
staying
in
their
homes,
it'll
make
it
possible
for
them
to
maybe
have
a
family
living
in
the
home
and
then
help
run
the
house
and
take
care
of.
C
C
C
B
I
also
I
mean
you
mentioned
a
couple
of
different
pieces
of
this.
It's
fiscally
responsible
and
it's
served
more
people
and
if
you
think
about
the
history
of
the
discussion,
that's
a
key,
that's
a
key
component
and
well
as
our
Civic
Association
president.
There
will
be
some
some
public
meetings
to
further
discuss
this.
It's
not
all
finished,
but
this
is
a
win,
win,
win
and
Christie.
Who
is
a
Civic
Association
president
did
a
great
job
and.
C
Here's
what
really
attacked
it
along
yet
no,
it's
great
and
actually
the
whole
this
and
a
lot
of
things
with
a
missing
mill.
It's
gonna
be
environmentally
responsible
too.
There
are
a
lot
of
people
who
are
afraid
that
we're
just
gonna
kind
of
pave
over
everything
and
we're
not
and
we're
gonna
work
it
through
and
we're
going
to
figure
it
out
all.
A
Right
well
on
that
note
that
will
bring
us
to
the
end
of
our
February
board:
wrap-up
Thank,
You,
Libby
and
Matt
for
joining
us
today
and
for
your
insight
and
remember
all
of
our
county
board
meetings
are
open
to
the
public
and
live
streamed
and
archived
on
our
website.
That's
Arlington,
Va
us
just
search
county
board.
I'm
your
host,
Cara,
O'donnell,
I,
hope
you'll
join
us
again
in
March
for
another
board.
Wrap-Up.