City of Fairfax Phone Directory

The Fairfax phone directory is the fastest way to find a city office, clerk, or public safety contact in Fairfax, Virginia. People use the Fairfax phone directory to reach the right desk for court records, FOIA requests, tax questions, or voter help. The City of Fairfax is an independent city surrounded by Fairfax County. The county seat sits in the city, and some county offices serve city residents. This page links to the official Fairfax staff directory and shows how to search public records through state and local portals. Use the tool below to look up people and public info tied to Fairfax.

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Fairfax Phone Directory Overview

703-385-7855Main Line
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Fairfax Phone Directory Basics

The Fairfax phone directory is the public list of city departments, staff, and office numbers. The city puts it online so people can find help fast. Most folks use it to reach the clerk, police, or tax offices. The directory groups contacts by department. Each entry shows a name, role, and direct line. You can also get an email from most listings. Start at the Fairfax County FOIA records request to see the full list.

Every office in Fairfax has a role in public records. The phone directory ties them all together. When you want a specific record, the directory tells you who to call. You don't need to guess. Look up the right office by topic, not by name. If the topic is a court file, you want the circuit court clerk. If it's a tax bill, you want the treasurer. The phone directory makes this sort of task much faster.

The city updates the directory often. Staff come and go. Phone lines change.

Note: The Fairfax phone directory does not list private cell numbers unless a staff member chose to share them for public use.

Public Records and the Fairfax Phone Directory

Virginia law sets strong rules for open records. Under the Virginia Freedom of Information Act, any state resident can ask to inspect or copy public records held by the City of Fairfax. The rules live in Va. Code § 2.2-3700 and the sections that follow. The law gives you a right of access. It does not ask why you want the record. It just asks that you be clear about what you want. FOIA applies to all city offices, boards, and public bodies in Fairfax.

To make a FOIA request in Fairfax, pick up the phone directory and find the right FOIA officer. Each department has one. Some offices list a single point of contact; others split it by topic. The city must reply within five work days. The five-day clock starts the day after your request comes in. If the city needs more time, it can ask for seven more days under Va. Code § 2.2-3704. Weekends and state holidays don't count toward the five days.

Fees apply when a request takes real work. The city can charge for staff time to search, review, and copy. If the cost will top $200, the city can ask for a deposit up front. This is standard across Virginia. The Fairfax phone directory helps you reach the FOIA officer, who can give a cost estimate before you commit to a large pull.

Court Records and Clerk Contacts

Court records in Fairfax are kept by the circuit court clerk. The Fairfax Circuit Court holds civil case files, criminal files, land records, marriage licenses, and old court books. The clerk does not take FOIA requests for court files. Court records are public under a separate set of rules. To ask for a court file, call the clerk's office direct. The number is in the Fairfax phone directory under Clerk of the Circuit Court.

General District Court and Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court files are also public, with some limits. You can search many of them online at vacourts.gov. The state's case search portal covers most courts across Virginia. It's free. You can look by name or case number. It does not give full document images in most cases, but it shows case status, hearing dates, and docket entries.

For a certified copy of a court order or judgment, you must go in person or mail the clerk. Fees run from about $2 per page for plain copies to $5 or more for certified copies. Call first to ask the current rate.

Police and Public Safety Numbers

The City of Fairfax Police Department serves the city. The police department runs its own records unit. It handles crash reports, incident reports, and local arrest history checks. For a crash report, call the records desk. Some reports cost a small fee. Others are free to the people named in the report. Insurance companies and attorneys can ask for reports on company letterhead.

Emergency calls still go to 911. The Fairfax phone directory lists non-emergency lines for reports and general questions. These lines are open 24/7 in most cases. Police records are open to the public, with limits. Ongoing investigation files, juvenile records, and some personnel files stay closed under state law.

If you need a full criminal history background check, the Virginia State Police handle those statewide. Contact the State Police Central Criminal Records Exchange. The Fairfax police can't run a full statewide check for you, but they can pull a local arrest report.

Vital Records and Fairfax Phone Directory Links

Birth and death records in Virginia are not held by the city. They live at the Virginia Department of Health, Division of Vital Records. Visit vdh.virginia.gov/vital-records for certified copies. Marriage records are filed with the circuit court clerk in the city or county where the license was issued. Divorce decrees are held by the same clerk's office.

If you're not sure where a marriage or divorce was filed, you can call the Fairfax circuit court clerk first. They can check their index. If the record isn't there, they can point you to the right county. The state health department keeps a central index of marriage and divorce events going back many years, which helps when you don't know the county of filing.

Keep in mind that vital records have some access limits. Only the person named, immediate family, or a legal rep can get a certified birth certificate. Death certificates are a bit more open. Marriage records are public.

Voter Info and Elections Office

The General Registrar's office in Fairfax handles voter registration, polling sites, and absentee ballots. Find the direct number in the Fairfax phone directory under Voter Registration or Office of Elections. You can also register and check your voter status at the state portal: vote.elections.virginia.gov. The state site works for every city and county in Virginia.

Voter lists are public in Virginia, but they are not on the city phone directory. You have to ask the registrar. Commercial use is banned. The state gives voter data only for political, civic, and journalistic work.

Note: Check your polling place on the state portal before Election Day. Sites sometimes move.

Official Fairfax Phone Directory Pages

The city keeps useful contact info on the Virginia FOIA statute page, which lists staff, numbers, and office hours.

Fairfax Virginia phone directory Virginia FOIA statute page

The page helps folks find the right office fast when they need to use the Fairfax phone directory or ask for a record.

Tips for Using the Fairfax Phone Directory

Before you call, write down what you need. Be clear. Staff in Fairfax field calls all day long. A clear ask gets a faster answer. If you want a record, say so. Name the record if you can. If you're not sure of the record name, describe what's in it. The staff can help you name it.

Use email for complex asks. A written note gives the office a paper trail and lets them route it to the right person. Email also works well when you want copies of a record. You can attach a form or a case number. The city's FOIA officer will reply within the five-day window set by state law.

Some records have legal exemptions. Personnel files, attorney-client notes, and open investigation files are among the items the city may withhold under Va. Code § 2.2-3705.1. The staff will tell you if part of your request falls under an exemption. They must point to the specific code section when they deny a record.

You can also walk into City Hall to ask in person. Bring ID. Some requests can be handled on the spot. Others take a few days. The phone directory lists office hours for each department so you know when to stop by.

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