Simms House – Demolished
By Margaret Morton, Leesburg Today
December 6, 2006
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The long-running fight between the Loudoun County regulators and Milari
and Paul Madison, owners of a historic property in Waterford, came
to an end today.
The building was demolished this morning.
More than a year's worth of legal filings ended when Loudoun Circuit
Court Judge Thomas D. Horne ruled this week that the county must issue
a demolition permit for the property at 40153 Janney Street. Informed
this morning that the house had been razed, County Zoning Administrator
Melinda Artman was surprised, indicating that she was unaware that
any demolition permit had yet been issued.
Comments
from a
reader from Hamilton, Virginia
Margaret
Morton's story is a well-researched summary of a local preservation
battle. The story does not mention, however, that the owners' protracted
and often absurd actions mangled and twisted County and State laws--to
the owners' advantage.
That the house was in a state
of disrepair is true. That the house was not in that state
when the owners first purchased it, and that the owners purposely
allowed and aided its deterioration, despite apparently having
the resources to prevent its deterioration, is also true. If
there were such a thing as fairness, the owners would reimburse
the taxpayers for the exceptional burden they placed upon the
courts. That will never happen.
The owners have systematically
destroyed a historic property. Now they are laughing all the
way to the bank. Go figger.
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The property was commonly known as the Simms House, after Lizzie Simms,
a black resident who taught segregated black children at the nearby
Second Street School for many years. In his ruling, which he said was
based upon the findings of an independent expert appointed by the court
to examine the soundness of the structure, Horne said the parties must
abide by several other conditions:
- that all cases brought by the Madisons pending in the Circuit Court,
the Loudoun County General District Court and before the Technical
Review Board as well as the board of Building Code Appeals be dismissed;
- that if the Madisons submit plans for a new structure on the property
for review by the Historic District Review Committee, the county
is to review those plans with no undue delay, and without comparison
to the existing structure; and
- that any new construction plans submitted by the Madisons must
meet all HDRC submission requirements and applicable zoning requirements.
The Madisons purchased the home for $180,000 in the summer of 2003.
When they bought the house, it was under renovation by previous owners
who left the project in midstream after having been issued a Stop Work
order for having removed, without permission, the exterior German siding
of the building.
The Madisons' attempts to significantly expand the home failed to
gain approval from the HDRC and almost two years of litigation followed,
including repeated requests from the Madisons to be able to demolish
the house because they claimed it was unsafe.
Reaction from the Waterford community to the news that a demolition
permit would be issued was a mix of sadness, anger and shock. The 1733
village is one of the county's oldest, which was designated as a National
Historic Landmark in 1970 by the Secretary of the Interior. The Waterford
Foundation, which promotes preservation of the village's historic structures
and its landmark status, has been highlighting the community's rich
African-American history, of which Simms' long years of teaching was
a part.
Neighbors Laura Shaw and Jeff Bean deplored the ruling. The couple
has been trying to save Lizzie Simms' home since 1996 in the face of
several attempts to either greatly enlarge the simple white frame structure
or demolish it. Calling it a "blight on history" for the
Simms house to be torn down in a protected historic district, Shaw
said if the judge had ruled that the owners had to abide by the county's
historic district guidelines and ordered that the Simms House be put
up for sale at market value prior to demolition, "a buyer would
have been found."
Such a provision, she said, if followed, would have at least allowed
someone who had the resources and who wanted to try to save the house
to be able to do so.
Residents claimed that the house was never assessed independently
or put up for sale at fair market value; rather it was priced over
market. Although several offers, were made to the Madisons, they were
not accepted.
Shaw's husband, Jeff Bean, said, "We are witnessing the abject
failure of our current system regarding the protection of our historic
resources," pointing out that there is a loophole in the HDRC
guideline that requires a house to be placed on the market for a year
before it is demolished. None of that applies if the house is found
unsafe, he said.
After the county refused to issue a demolition permit, the Madisons
took their case to court. Amid the flurry of lawsuits was one in which
the Madisons challenged the establishment of the Waterford historic
district and its regulations.
In the long arbitration process, during which the county and the Madisons
agreed to Horne's determination that a binding settlement should be
arrived at on all outstanding legal issues, the residents of the town
were shut out of the process, according to several. "They could
no longer participate in that arena," Shaw said.
Instead, they watched as the building deteriorated. In November 2003
it was safely enclosed in Tyvek, with the door firmly boarded up with
plywood. It was "demolition by nature," said one resident
as over the months the rain and winds played havoc, tearing the Tyvek
and entering the building through several apertures, including door
and window openings. Although county officials cited the Madisons for
not keeping the building sound and protected, they were unable to enforce
that provision.
Another neighbor, Michelle Dunne, said she was disappointed by the
court ruling. Although she said county officials did their best under
the current code and zoning ordinances," Dunne said she was frustrated
by the way the case played out in the county's legal system.
"If the law permits you to do harm to yourself and your own community
and then to choose your own remedy, that's wrong. It's an abrogation
and needs to be corrected," she said.
Most of all, residents said, they were appalled by the precedent the
judge's ruling appeared to set and angered by what they saw as the
county's decision to end possibly years of litigation by jettisoning
Lizzie Simms' house.
John Kornacki, recently arrived executive director of the Waterford
Foundation, said future efforts must look to strengthen the laws that
protect the county's historic resources.
"We must examine the processes that yielded such a sad result
... and seek ways of correcting ambiguities in the county's codes,
laws and enforcement mechanisms that leave preservation efforts so
vulnerable to litigious opponents of those efforts," he said.
The Madisons could not be reached for comment.
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