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County Board honors service of Planning Commission’s Daniel Weir

County Board members are paying tribute to Daniel Weir, who recently rotated off the Planning Commission after eight years of service.

“Being on the Planning Commission is not for the faint of heart,” Board member Maureen Coffey said at Tuesday’s meeting. “And over the past few years, it has ramped up in terms of a time commitment and a mental-space commitment.”

Weir’s most recent four-year appointment to the Planning Commission ended on April 30, but he was asked to stay on for several additional months during consideration of several high-profile projects. His last major duty was to chair the site-plan review committee for the RiverHouse expansion in Pentagon City.

“It is a great deal of work,” Board member Susan Cunningham said of Planning Commission service. “To do it with the level of integrity you did is really a gift to our community.”

Weir was tapped as Planning Commission vice chair in 2021 and chair in 2022, and served as a sounding board for new arrivals.

Coffey praised the “leadership in action and mentorship you’ve been able to provide new commissioners, who come on and need to learn very complicated content very quickly.”

Northern Virginia’s only unpaid Planning Commission members are in Arlington and Alexandria. By contrast, members of the Fairfax County Planning Commission receive $25,000 per year — still a relatively small stipend, considering the hours involved.

Weir, who has lived in Arlington since 2007, previously served on the Transportation Commission and the Thomas Jefferson Working Group. He and his wife Laurel live in the Barcroft community, and he serves on the board of directors of the Barcroft School and Civic League.

Also at the Tuesday meeting, Board members paid tribute to three community leaders who had died since the Board last met in July.

Bryant Monroe (1956-2025) was memorialized for his work in guiding development planning in the Columbia Pike corridor, said Board Chair Takis Karantonis, who called Monroe “a very good friend and neighbor.”

Monroe was also a community liaison from the Department of Defense when Arlington saw a major exodus of federal workers and contractors during the Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) process of the late 1990s and early 2000s.

Another who played a major role in the Columbia Pike corridor, Todd Endo (1941-2025), was lauded by Karantonis as “an amazing mentor to many, many Arlingtonians who are today active in civic affairs.”

Todd Endo and his wife Paula were longtime educators and civil-rights advocates, and instrumental in developing and nurturing the Columbia Pike Documentary Project.

Additionally, Robert “Rick” Keller Jr. (1949-2025) was honored for his work in helping to found what today is known as Eco-Action Arlington and his support for a host of local environmental initiatives. His family moved to Arlington while he was a teenager, and he was an alumnus of Washington-Lee High School, as Washington-Liberty was then known.

“A lot of Arlingtonians will miss him,” said Karantonis, who also noted Keller’s role as a “founding father” of pickleball in the county.

About the Author

  • A Northern Virginia native, Scott McCaffrey has four decades of reporting, editing and newsroom experience in the local area plus Florida, South Carolina and the eastern panhandle of West Virginia. He spent 26 years as editor of the Sun Gazette newspaper chain. For Local News Now, he covers government and civic issues in Arlington, Fairfax County and Falls Church.