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Slow-Growth Board Candidates Win
At a party in McLean, Mary Lee Cerillo responds to a Northern Virginia Senate race in which a Democrat appeared headed for victory.
(By Melina Mara -- The Washington Post)
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"Clearly, Loudoun Republicans are disappointed with our performance in this year's election, which appears in many ways to be an extension of challenges our party is facing on the regional, state and even national levels," he said. "We continue to believe that Loudoun County is GOP territory and that our base is strong and resilient."
[an error occurred while processing this directive]In 2003, a slate of pro-growth Republicans wrested control of the Board of Supervisors. The previous board, elected in 1999, had angered property rights advocates by trying to institute one of the country's strictest growth-control policies.
This year, Democratic candidates and the board's two independent incumbents hammered the Republicans, saying they had taken their pro-growth policies too far. They accused the Republicans of being cozy with developers and approving too many homes without adequate infrastructure. The result, they said, was traffic-clogged roads, crowded schools and ballooning tax bills.
Growth, and how the board has managed it, figured into the decisions of many voters yesterday at Ashburn Elementary School.
"I think that too much development isn't good for traffic and schools," said Cynthia Croissant, 35, a stay-at-home mother from Ashburn who voted for two slow-growth candidates.
The Republicans tried to fend off criticism about growth, saying the majority of homes built over the past four years had been approved by previous boards. They also said they had voted to restrict building somewhat in the county's rural outer reaches and had voted against a plan to allow as many as 33,800 homes south of Dulles International Airport.
To appeal to an electorate that they said has remained mostly conservative, the Republicans underscored their efforts to keep taxes low and to work with developers to bring millions of dollars' worth of road improvements and amenities without spending any tax money.
They also promoted their recent efforts to crack down on illegal immigration. This summer, the board's Republicans followed Prince William County's lead and passed a resolution aimed at driving out illegal immigrants, who they said were committing crimes and bringing blight to neighborhoods.
In the Loudoun School Board races, incumbent Thomas E. Reed defeated challenger Herbert L. Bryan for the at-large seat. Other incumbents who won contested races were Robert F. DuPree Jr. (Dulles), Priscilla B. Godfrey (Blue Ridge) and Joseph M. Guzman (Sugarland Run). In the Catoctin District, however, challenger Jennifer Keller Bergel defeated incumbent Mark J. Nuzzaco.
Write-in candidate Thomas A. "Tag" Greason lost in his challenge of incumbent Robert J. Ohneiser in the Broad Run District. Despite being disqualified from the ballot for improperly filing paperwork, Greason won endorsements from the Loudoun Republican party and the county's teachers association.
With a majority of precincts reporting, voters also appeared to favor seven of eight bond measures that would provide almost $100 million for fire stations, community centers, sheriff substations and a library, and to buy land for schools.
Staff writers Arianne Aryanpur, Bill Brubaker, Michael Chandler and Jonathan Mummolo contributed to this report.


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