This is a sponsored column by attorneys John Berry and Kimberly Berry of Berry & Berry, PLLC, an employment and labor law firm located in Northern Virginia that specializes in federal employee, security clearance, retirement and private sector employee matters.

By John V. Berry, Esq.

Our law firm has represented both employees and employers in employment investigations. This article discusses some of the issues involved when an employer conducts an investigation in the workplace and also issues that employees should consider.

Employers conduct workplace investigations into employee complaints typically because they may face legal consequences if confronted with allegations that they do not investigate. For example, if an employee alleges sexual harassment, religious discrimination or race discrimination at work and the claims are not investigated, an employer can be more readily held liable should litigation later occur. The same type of investigation is necessary when dealing with claims of whistleblowing and other alleged inappropriate conduct at work.

Of note, Virginia has recently added a number of new pro-employee protection laws that will make workplace investigations more likely.

Typical Steps in a Workplace Investigation

In most employment investigations, it’s common for an employer to hire an outside law firm (or occasionally use internal counsel) to conduct an employment investigation. Other employers will begin the process with human resources personnel conducting the investigation.

Once an investigator is appointed, they will start their investigation. From the employer’s perspective, their ultimate goal is to minimize their liability. While an investigator may find an individual employee at fault, the investigator ultimately wants to find and document that no fault on the part of an employer occurred. They also want to document the fact that they seriously looked into the allegations at issue.

While these vary, the following steps usually take place in an employer investigation:

  1. The investigator reviews the complaint and plans their investigation.
  2. The investigator then interviews the complainant or complainants regarding the allegations.
  3. The investigator interviews the employee or employees with knowledge of the issues in the complaint and allegations.
  4. The investigator interviews the accused employee or employees.
  5. The investigator conducts follow-up interviews of any witnesses as needed.
  6. The investigator reviews any relevant documentation, emails or other evidence involving the complaint.
  7. The investigator often concludes by issuing a final report with recommendations to an employer.
  8. The investigator or employer human resources personnel, to varying degrees, informs the complainant and/or employees under investigation of the outcome of the investigation.

Employee Representation

Depending on the employer and circumstances, an employee may have the right to legal representation during the investigative process. We assist complainants during such investigations and also defend employees accused or under investigation in the workplace for alleged misconduct. It is highly recommended that both complainants and those under investigation have legal counsel.

Results of the Workplace Investigation

Once an employer’s investigation is over, the outcome can vary. A report might be prepared, along with recommendations on actions to be potentially taken.

The investigation can result in the termination or other discipline for an accused employee or employees. The investigation can also result in a complainant filing an Equal Employment Opportunity complaint against an employer. Finally, an investigation can also vindicate an accused employee. No matter the outcome, an employer must be careful in avoiding retaliation against a complaining employee, even when their complaint is found to not be sustained. Retaliation is quite common against complainants, and employers can be held liable for retaliation when this occurs.

Each investigation is different, and different employers vary significantly in how they handle workplace investigations. Complainants and other employees should be represented throughout the process.

Conclusion

If an employee needs assistance with an employment investigation or other issue, please contact our office at 703-668-0070, or visit our website to schedule a consultation. Please also visit and like us on Facebook or connect with us on Twitter.


This regularly scheduled sponsored column is written by the Arlington Initiative to Rethink Energy team (AIRE). This county program helps you make smart energy decisions that save you money and leaves a lighter footprint on the environment.

More and more Arlingtonians are buying electric vehicles.

We know the majority of electric vehicle (EV) charging happens at home or work. But where do you charge when traveling around town?

If you have an electric vehicle or are considering an EV, the number of locations to charge continues to grow. Below is a map that shows areas around town that you can charge.

Bus, rail, bike and walking are always the preferred choice for travel around town, but if you have to use a car, electric vehicles are the way to go. Electric vehicles are the future (and present) of transportation.

Arlington is also striving to be carbon neutral by 2050, including using renewable electricity for the entire community by 2035. We’re shifting gears to renewable energy coupled with electric vehicles — a win-win.

Are you considering an EV? The apps below will steer you in the right direction to find EV charging stations. They are popping up faster than we can keep track of…


Looking for a home? There are plenty of houses and condos open for viewing this weekend.

Check out the Arlington Realty website for a full list of homes for sale and open houses in Arlington. Here are a few highlights:

2437 N. Nottingham Street
6 BD/5 BA, 1 half bath single-family home
Agent: Compass
Listed:$1,895,000
Open: Sunday, 12-2 p.m.

 

5720 2nd Street S.
5 BD/5 BA single-family home
Agent: Albrittain Group
Listed:$1,489,000
Open: Saturday and Sunday, 1-4 p.m.

 

2510 N. Columbus Street
5 BD/3 BA, 1 half bath single-family home
Agent: McEnearney Associates
Listed: $1,299,000
Open: Sunday, 1-4 p.m.

 

1418 N. Rhodes Street, B410
2 BD/2 BA, 1 half bath condo
Agent: Samson Properties
Listed: $967,000
Open: Sunday, 1-3 p.m.

 

6 N. Montague Street
4 BD/2 BA single-family home
Agent: Century 21 Redwood Realty
Listed: $799,000
Open: Saturday and Sunday, 12-3 p.m.

 

4908 29th Road S.
2 BD/2 BA condo
Agent: Samsom Properties
Listed: $579,900
Open: Sunday, 1-4 p.m.


Just Listed highlights Arlington properties that just came on the market within the past week. This feature is written and sponsored by Andors Real Estate Group.

Hello, Arlington! It’s a snow day as I write this (Thursday), and I am predicting it will be another one as you read this (Friday). Do not expect this to deter homebuyers, sellers or agents from transacting real estate sales and events this weekend…

With fewer and fewer single-family homes as well as townhouses/semi-detached available in Arlington, the median and average price for available homes is dropping. Condominiums make up such a large proportion of the available inventory (75.3%!) and tend to cost less than single-family/townhomes. This week, there are 365 available properties for sale, a decline of 11 from the week prior. There are just 67 single-family homes to choose from and only 23 townhouses/semi-detached.

For a bit of contrast, this week last year, we only had 157 active properties — total! Despite over double the inventory, demand is way up, and we’re moving along at a brisk pace.

Sellers put a whopping 91 homes on the market this past week, and buyers worked hard to grab them before the weekend open house rush, despite the snow. Seventy-three homes went under contract over the past seven days, and 33 of those were homes were just listed in the past week.

New builds can barely keep pace with the wealthier buyers in Arlington, frequently being taken under contract prior to the old house even being demolished. The price threshold keeps being pushed higher and higher, and many of these homes are now on million dollar lots. Yes, a builder in certain areas will pay over $1 million just to tear down what was there and can sell a $2.5 million (or more) home almost instantly.

Despite many longtime Arlingtonians’ hesitancy toward new construction, it plays a vital role for the county. First, they generate substantially more tax revenue than older homes, often times doubling or more the revenue from that same lot. Additionally, a lot of them are being built by local builders who either reside in Arlington, employ a workforce based in Arlington or have other close ties to our community. Because we do not have many large tracts of land available for big, multi-state production builders to develop, this keeps the new construction quality much higher as well. It also raises the value overall of Arlington real estate because of the relationship each property has to another. Put simply, as the top end of the market stretches higher and higher, it’s bringing the bottom up with it.

One downside, of course, is the rising property tax bills we all pay as home values continue upward.

This same week in 2020, sellers listed 68 homes and buyers ratified 53 contracts, so we’re way ahead of the 2020 pace, still pre-pandemic at this point…

The average list price for currently available properties is $718,508 and the median is $459,700.

Click here to search currently available Arlington real estate. If you see a home you’re interested in purchasing, give us a call.

Call the Andors Real Estate Group today at 703-203-1117 to talk more about buying or selling Arlington real estate. Below are eight new listings I think you might like to check out:


If the pandemic has taught us anything, it’s that flexibility and scalability are important. Office life has likely changed forever as employers have embraced the reality that employees can be just as productive in a flexed work location scenario as they are in a full-time, in-office arrangement.

With that in mind, Venture X Courthouse Arlington has just opened its doors at 2300 Wilson Blvd — just steps from the Courthouse Metro.

The 25,000-square-foot space is crafted with the serious professional in mind while offering a variety of shared amenities, including gourmet coffee, printing, a café and gym. Plus, the IT infrastructure is designed to enable government contractors to work from the space securely.

From open workspaces to private offices to rooms that can accommodate up to 22 people, Venture X Courthouse Arlington can accommodate a variety of employer needs. Additionally, membership terms for offices and conference room spaces range from hourly to weekly to multi-month contracts, which ensures no one is tied to a long-term, expensive lease.

Venture X Courthouse Arlington wants you to see for yourself. Come visit and try it out for a week for free!


This sponsored column is by James Montana, Esq. and Doran Shemin, Esq., practicing attorneys at Steelyard LLC, an immigration-focused law firm located in Arlington, Virginia. The legal information given here is general in nature. If you want legal advice, contact James for an appointment.

The best things in life are free. The best things in law are expensive, with one exception: Freedom of Information Act requests, which are free, free, free.

The Freedom of Information Act is, as readers surely know, a useful tool for journalists and ordinary citizens to obtain information about what our government does. But it is extremely useful and vastly underused in the immigration context. Submitting FOIA requests for immigration records is a simple process that helps immigrants and practitioners alike by giving us a look at someone’s entire immigration history.

FOIA requests are filed with USCIS’s National Records Center online or by mail on a simple form called the G-639. The form can be used to request specific documents, such as an old application or certificate of naturalization, or an individual’s entire immigration file. There is no charge unless the government sends a bill; in our experience, the government never, ever does.

The results of FOIA requests have given us some of our most exciting cases. We’ve found:

  • A client who thought they were waiting for an asylum decision had been granted asylum years ago. The approval notice had been lost in the mail.
  • A client who thought he was simply a green card holder had actually been a U.S. citizen for many years.
  • A client who did not know about youthful interactions with immigration officials discovered, with our help, that he had an old deportation order. (There are many ways to find out that unpleasant fact, but believe us: filing an FOIA request is the least painful by far.)

Any time you have questions about what happened in an immigration case or if you’ve lost your documents, file an FOIA!

Where’s that file? I know it’s around here somewhere…

FOIAs are also helpful for American citizens researching family history. You can submit a G-639 seeking the records of a deceased family member using an obituary or death certificate. For example, Doran wanted to learn more about her grandmother Lillian’s immigration history and submitted an FOIA request to USCIS with a copy of her grandmother’s obituary.

In the FOIA results, Doran received a copy of Lillian’s Argentine birth certificate, a copy of Lillian’s visa application and Lillian’s application for U.S. citizenship. Doran also learned that her grandmother did not legally change her name from Luisa to Lillian until Lillian became a U.S. citizen in 1956. All of this information was sitting in a government office waiting to be discovered and would have otherwise been unknown.

Analyzing FOIA results are some of our favorite things to do at our office. We’re happy to help our clients request their file and make recommendations about how to move their cases forward. We do an FOIA request at no extra charge whenever we think it is necessary as part of a consultation — information wants to be free, and we want to help you liberate it.

We’ve participated in the immigration FOIA review process at an even nerdier level — helping sue USCIS to try to compel the production of allegedly exempt material — but that’s a story for another day. For now, our message is: File an FOIA request! You’ll learn a lot, and your future lawyer will be deeply grateful.

As always, we welcome any thoughts or comments and will do our best to respond.


The icy temps certainly haven’t slowed down homebuyers here in Arlington.

This past week, 68 properties were reported sold across the county — that’s more than double what we saw last week.

As of Feb. 14, there were 503 homes listed for sale in Arlington, according to Homesnap. This includes 369 condos, 105 detached homes and 29 townhomes.

“The median list price is $516,000 and the median sales price is $581,000,” Homesnap reports. “There have been 160 new listings in the last 4 weeks and 181 sales.”

Here’s a look at a few of the properties sold in the past seven days:

In the market? See properties that have been Just Listed and Just Reduced.


With today’s Zoom lifestyle, carving out a work-from-home space is essential, and the brand-new J Sol apartments in Ballston offer several solutions to help their residents boost productivity.

Some of the apartments at J Sol feature a built-in desk to provide a distinct workspace to keep you organized. There are also several floor plans that offer den options for an entire room dedicated to a home office. In the summertime, take your laptop out onto the balcony and enjoy the skyline view to WFH alfresco.

The community offers two private work pods that can be reserved. There are also several lounges with ample seating areas residents can utilize when they want to take advantage of the amenity areas outside their home. To cap it off, a 24/7 concierge is available to simplify your life.

Self-care is important, too, and residents can enjoy the fitness center with leading-edge equipment to help meet health goals. Or spend time unwinding by the fire pit on the rooftop terrace, swinging in a hammock, taking a dip in the rooftop infinity pool or playing a game — there’s an outdoor shuffleboard court and life-size chess, plus indoor gaming options including billiards, a shuffleboard table and ping pong.

These high-design apartments offer studio, one bedroom, one bedroom plus den and two bedroom layouts in a selection of two distinct finish packages to suit your style. Features include floor-to-ceiling windows to bring in natural sunlight, quartz countertops, herringbone tile backsplash, pantry, islands and sleek plank flooring. Thoughtful touches include built-in bookcases, LED under-cabinet lighting, custom closet organizers, cove lighting and blackout shades in the bedroom for a blissful night’s sleep.

For the eco-conscious, the building is smoke-free, offers bike storage and a maintenance bench, EV charging stations in the garage, and is LEED Gold certified.

With a 94 Walk Score, J Sol is mere steps from the best that Arlington offers, including Ballston Quarter’s shops, entertainment, cafés and restaurants, and also the Ballston Metro station on the orange and silver lines.

J Sol is located at 4000 Fairfax Drive. Call 703-782-4168 to schedule either an in-person tour or contact-free self-guided tour, or visit the website to explore floor plans and availability, browse the photo gallery and 360-degree walk-throughs, and learn more about these boldly designed, brand-new apartments ascending 22 stories above Ballston.


This column is sponsored by Arlington Arts/Arlington Cultural Affairs, a division of Arlington Economic Development.

Poetry in Arlington is quite literally on the move. The six winners of Arlington’s 22nd annual MOVING WORDS Poetry Competition have their poems printed on colorful placards displayed aboard Arlington Transit ARTBus vehicles, enlivening the ride for thousands of commuters.

The six winning poets were juried by Arlington’s 2nd Poet Laureate, Holly Karapetkova, who also will have a poem displayed. The winners were chosen from a field of 211 poems submitted by 85 poets from the D.C. area. Printed on colorful placards and displayed prominently inside Arlington Transit’s ART Buses between February and September, their poems will be seen by thousands of riders. Each winner also will receive a $250 honorarium.

“This is like a new beginning,” said winner Rana Jaafar Yaseen, who is a published poet and TV host in her native Iraq. “I challenged myself to write in English, and this is my first work since leaving an abusive marriage last year. I see it as ‘a sign’ to get involved again in the creative world that I adore.”

Designed to promote the work of local writers and make poetry a part of daily life for commuters in Northern Virginia, the MOVING WORDS Program was launched in 1999 during National Poetry Month. It was conceived by award-winning poet and literary historian Kim Roberts (founder of Beltway Poetry Quarterly), the then Literary Program Coordinator for Arlington Cultural Affairs.

Originally held in partnership with Metrobus/WMATA, MOVING WORDS launched a new partnership with Arlington Transit for its 16th year. This complements another ongoing Arlington Arts program, Art on the ART Bus, which places original artwork by area artists inside select ART Buses. A parallel Student Competition is held in the fall as the culmination of the Pick a Poet project, a partnership between Arlington Cultural Affairs and the Arlington Public Schools Humanities Project, which places professional poets in APS classrooms.

Moving Words is a program of Arlington Arts in partnership with Arlington Transit, the poems are posted on the Arlington Arts website and will be archived on the Arlington County CommuterPage.com website. Read on to learn more about this year’s winners!

(more…)


Say “hi” to our latest Pet of the Week, Leif, a 4-month-old rescue who’s adjusting quite well to her life here in Arlington.

Here’s what Leif’s owner had to say about her:

Leif, meaning “dearly loved,” is named after her owner’s first puppy who sadly passed at just 14 weeks. This energetic girl is a 4-month-old rescue from Mississippi who is ready to take on the world!

She enjoys exploring the streets of Arlington and saying “hi” to everyone she encounters — humans and dogs alike! She loves the neighborhood and all of the furry friends she gets to meet on her daily walks. Her favorite things to do are dig in the grass and pick up sticks to chew.

She is praying for more snow in the forecast and loves eating and rolling around in the fresh powder!

Want your pet to be considered for the Arlington Pet of the Week? Email [email protected] with a 2-3 paragraph bio and at least 3-4 horizontally-oriented photos of your pet. Please don’t send vertical photos — they don’t fit in our photo galleries!


Each week, “Just Reduced” spotlights properties in Arlington County whose price have been cut over the previous week. The market summary is crafted by Arlington Realty, Inc. Maximize your real estate investment with the team by visiting www.arlingtonrealtyinc.com or calling 703-836-6000 today!

Please note: While Arlington Realty, Inc. provides this information for the community, it may not be the listing company of these homes.

The COVID-19 pandemic has changed what folks need and want in a home.

The National Association of Home Builders just came out with its latest report on home features. Within it are a few interesting nuggets. While the average-sized new home was relatively unchanged (2,486 square feet), the number of new homes sold with four-plus bedrooms and three or more baths jumped to 46% and 33% respectively.

So, clearly folks are wanting a bit more options at home, perhaps for a home office or to have a more diverse refuge from the wild and wacky world we are living in.

Whatever your reason may be for a change — whether it involves more or fewer rooms! — the time-tested team at Arlington Realty, Inc. is ready to help make your dreams a reality. Until then, let’s dive into this week’s Just Reduced figures…

As of Feb. 15, there are 83 detached homes, 32 townhouses and 295 condos for sale throughout Arlington County. In total, 25 homes experienced a price reduction in the past week:

Please note this is solely a selection of Just Reduced properties available in Arlington County. For a complete list of properties within your target budget and specifications, contact Arlington Realty, Inc.


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