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Former board president steps down from Reston Association board

Sarah Selvaraj-D’Souza, former president of Reston Association’s Board of Directors, has resigned from her position after more than three years on the board. In a Facebook post announcing her resignation on Friday (May 26), Selvaraj-D’Souza said her commitments to other projects and her nonprofit advocacy organization Reston Strong motivated her decision to resign. “My decision

2021 Reston Association Board Election: Meet Sarah Selvaraj-Dsouza

February 24, 2021 at 10:45am Voting in the 2021 Reston Association Board of Directors election will run from March 1 through April 2. This week, we will begin posting profiles on each of the candidates. The complete election schedule is available online. Featured here is Sarah Selvaraj-Dsouza who is running against three other people for one of two at-large seats. T he profiles are in a Q-and-A format. With the exception of minor formatting edits, profiles are published in unedited form. Each candidate had an opportunity to answer the same questions in their own words. How long have you lived in Reston? What brought you here?

Reston Association State of the Environment Report 2020

Anyone who has met Doug Britt of Reston knows he has a wealth of information on the creepy, crawly, slimy, majestic, utterly beautiful creatures, insects, and flora that call Reston home. Britt, and the RASER (Reston Association State of the Environment Report) 2020 team, have traipsed nearly every area of Reston s 17.4 square miles in its humid subtropical climate. Britt knows the fastest vertebrate on the planet Earth lives, where else but in Reston, actually Reston Town Center, and it hunts Reston-wide. He can rattle off the names of more than 30 species of mammals seen in Reston, along with 1,588 insect species and 141 arachnids. Those are spiders, daddy longlegs, mites, ticks, and more. Britt is a tad partial to each of the ten species of crustaceans, seven millipedes, and three worms that live the low life in Reston. Love mosquitos? Check out English ivy, according to Britt. They love it too.

Reston Association Hears State of Environment

December 18, 2020 at 9:45am The Reston Association’s (RA) Board of Directors listened to a presentation about its surrounding environment as part of the  Doug Britt, a Virginia Master Naturalist and chair of RA’s Environmental Advisory Committee, presented the RASER study update to the board and RA’s members. The update has 18 authors and coauthors that include members of RA’s environmental advisory committee and outside individuals. The update conforms to RASER’s five objectives listed on RA’s website: Summarize existing quantitative environmental data for the Reston community in one publicly accessible document. Establish an environmental baseline that can be reassessed annually to facilitate the identification of environmental trends and to evaluate the efficacy of environmental improvement and conservation programs and initiatives.

Report Set to Show State of Reston Environment

December 11, 2020 at 2:30pm The Reston Annual State of the Environment Report (RASER) will be presented to the Reston Association (RA) during its regular board meeting on Thursday, Dec. 17. Doug Britt, a Virginia Master Naturalist and chair of RA’s Environmental Advisory Committee, will present the study update and the state of Reston’s environment to the RA board and members. The comprehensive study is roughly 200 pages long and comes on the heels of more than 1,000 volunteer hours to update the report on its bi-annual basis. The report covers 21 different environmental attributes of the community that includes natural resource maintenance, health of wildlife, air quality, and environmental education and outreach.

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