
“I’ve been very frustrated by developers hiring high-priced attorneys who then request off-the-record meeting with me, and then developers having the chutzpah to claim that I’m biased.”
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If you’re in Charlottesville on March 25, consider coming by the FOIA workshop being put on by the city, VCOG and Smart Cville. It’s free and open to the public, but you do have to register.
Vienna Town Council members may choose not to meet with developers outside of public meetings, or converse with them only in the presence of town staff, but the Council cannot prohibit such gatherings, Town Attorney Steven Briglia said. Banning such meetings might violate the First Amendment and likely would run afoul of the Dillon Rule, under which Virginia localities may exercise only those powers granted them by the General Assembly, Briglia said at the Council’s March 4 joint work session with the town’s Planning Commission. Council member Pasha Majdi on Jan. 29 took the unusual step of issuing a press release calling for a ban on private meetings with developers who would be submitting applications under the town’s Maple Avenue Commercial (MAC) zoning ordinance. “I’ve been very frustrated by developers hiring high-priced attorneys who then request off-the-record meeting with me, and then developers having the chutzpah to claim that I’m biased against their application because I refuse to meet with them off the record,” he said.
Sun Gazette
Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa) took to the floor of the U.S. Senate on Thursday afternoon to demand answers from the FBI about its investigation into the death of Bijan Ghaisar. Ghaisar, 25, was shot to death by two U.S. Park Police officers in Fairfax County, Va., in November 2017 as he sat behind the wheel of his Jeep Grand Cherokee after a short chase. The officers’ names have not been released, and no decision has been made on whether they should be charged.
The Washington Post
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