At its Oct. 27 meeting, the Vienna Town Council delivered an unequivocal rebuke of Fairfax County Public Schools’ proposed redistricting plan, passing a resolution that strongly opposes shifting nearly 100 Vienna students from James Madison High School to George C. Marshall High School.
The proposed “Scenario 4” boundary change—part of FCPS’s first countywide redistricting effort in nearly 40 years—would carve out a small section of Northeast Vienna and detach it from the high school that has served as the community’s anchor for generations. Town leaders called the proposal disruptive, unnecessary, and harmful to both students and the broader community.
Mayor Linda Colbert said the Town Council is united in its concern that FCPS is disregarding the longstanding identity and cohesion of the Vienna community.
“The proposed boundary change would disrupt the sense of community all Town of Vienna residents enjoy now,” Colbert said. “Moving a small segment of students to another school away from the other town residents they’ve grown up with will not only make them feel excluded; it will disrupt their sense of stability, which can have a detrimental impact on their academic success and emotional well-being.”
Town officials emphasized that the plan would fracture a well-established community for no clear educational benefit. Despite FCPS’s stated goal of addressing overcrowding and improving program access, Vienna leaders argue that removing fewer than 100 students from Madison High School offers no meaningful relief—and instead imposes significant emotional and social costs on affected families.
Colbert and impacted parents have met directly with FCPS leadership to express their deep concerns, urging the School Board to reconsider what they view as an ill-conceived and poorly justified change.
Although FCPS held a public meeting on Oct. 29, 2025, at McLean High School to review the proposed boundary changes, the session left many Vienna residents deeply frustrated. Parents and community members in attendance voiced overwhelming opposition to the plan, arguing that FCPS has not provided a compelling justification for moving a small, isolated pocket of Vienna students out of James Madison High School.
Residents reported that during the meeting, FCPS officials repeated the same talking points used throughout the boundary-review process, offering little clarity on why this particular area of Vienna was targeted or how shifting fewer than 100 students would meaningfully address countywide overcrowding. Many parents felt their questions went unanswered and that the concerns of Vienna families were being minimized or dismissed.
Community members may also submit comments online at fcpsboundaryreview.org through Nov. 14, 2025. At print time on Nov. 16, the comment link was still available.

