NJG-Volume-123_No-46_Nov_16_2023

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NEWJOURNAL & GUIDE Serving Norfolk, Portsmouth, Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Suffolk & The Peninsula

Vol. 123, No. 46 | $1.50

November 16, 2023 - November 22, 2023

Publishing since 1900 ... that no good cause shall lack a champion and evil shall not thrive unopposed.

www.thenewjournalandguide.com

VA. DEMS’ VICTORY IN FALL ELECTION BLOCKS GOP AGENDA By Leonard E. Colvin

Chief Reporter New Journal and Guide A decade ago, Republicans were quick to slam Democratic rivals over their support of abortion rights because they deemed it as an intrusion on a sensitive family issue. With the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to strike down a woman’s protected right to the procedure, many southern states, notably, imposed restrictions on abortion or nullified the legality of the procedure. But in last week’s General Elections, the tables turned Photo: Ernest Lowery against the Republicans on the Chesapeake City Mayor, City and State Officials, to include Councilwoman Ella P.Ward, break ground for city’s new Historical Village. issue. Republican candidates in competitive races lost to Democrats who said Republicans were taking away a women’s right to choose. the Village will represent how By New Journal The Republican-leaning generations of our region’s & Guide Staff state of Ohio turned back residents lived, learned, a Republican effort to worked, farmed, and played.” CHESAPEAKE constitutionally restrict In addition to the Cornland A groundbreaking abortion rights in that state. ceremony in the city’s Dismal School Museum on the site, Virginia Republican Gov. Swamp region was held on other exhibits will highlight Glenn Youngkin and his November 9 highlighting the Indigenous groups who legislative allies had hinted at the rehabilitation of the first inhabited the Swamp, doing so if the GOP regained of Blacks historic Cornland School, experiences control of the General an early 1900s school for escaping slavery on the Assembly. Black children. The event Underground Railroad, the But Virginia Democrats also kicked off the first phase Maroon communities who during the election reminded of the city’s new tourist lived in the Swamp, and the voters of the GOP pledge and attraction, The Historical importance of the Dismal the state’s unique status and Village of the Dismal Swamp as a significant regained control of the State crossroad for trade, Swamp. The new Historical Village commerce and agriculture. Photo: Ernest Lowery The developing Village is is expected to become a major visitors and tourist site located on a 12-acre site on The historic Cornland School in its new location on Glencoe with exhibits showcasing Glencoe Street (off Route Street ready for remodeling. Chesapeake’s cultural 17), and once completed history and its connection to it will be the first Africanthe Great Dismal Swamp. American Historical District According to the Chesapeake in Chesapeake and the Historical Preservation Hampton Roads Region. ...see Cornland, page 3A Commission, “when finished,

CORNLAND SCHOOL AND DISMAL SWAMP LEGACIES UNFOLDING IN CHESAPEAKE

Chesapeake’s Historical Village is expected to become a major visitors and tourist site in Virginia.

Va. Gov. Glenn Youngkin, (R)

Democrats turned the tables on the abortion issue. House and kept the Senate. Virginia is the only southern state that has not imposed any abortion restrictions. And it is the destination for many women seeking the procedure from nearby states. Democrats not only regained control over the state legislature, but they also threw a political monkey wrench in the now lameduck Governor’s machinery for a bid for the Republican presidential nomination. Democrats are positioned now to block Youngkin and the state Republican party’s conservative agenda, including restrictions on abortion access. ...see Elections, page 6A

Lucas, Scott Assume Top Leadership Spots After Nov. 7 Elections

By Rosaland Tyler

GROUP SUPPORTING BEACH’S 10-1 ELECTION SYSTEM SOUNDS CONCERN

By Leonard E. Colvin

“Due the Right Things” group cautions that a faction may be trying to revert city to old elections system.

Chief Reporter New Journal and Guide When the Democrats take control of the Virginia General Assembly in January, Virginia Beach’s chance of having its charter changed to adopt its new 10-1 election system should be assured. A federal court order two years ago forced the city to abolish its old hybrid district/at-large system because it deterred AfricanAmericans from selecting council members of their choice. The city crafted 10 single districts to elect council members and elect the mayor

Rev. Gary McCollum at-large. The city held a council election last year using the new system and this attributed to a historic four AfricanAmericans being elected to the 11-member governing

panel for the first time in the city’s history. Recently after a series of city-sponsored meetings, a survey indicated that more than 75 percent of the city’s voters approved of the new 10-1 system. But Black civic and religious leaders and allies in the white community, have been keeping a wary eye out for political forces who may be seeking to undermine the new system and revert back to the old one.

According to Rev. Gary McCollum, chairman of the advocacy group “Due the Right Things,” that effort is being led by former Virginia Beach City Treasurer John Atkinson. In a late August and a recent edition of the “Princess Anne Independent News,” Atkinson noted in a paid ad that the council approved the new system without the consent of the voters via a referendum. ...see Beach, page 8A

Associate Editor New Journal and Guide

Democrat House Minority Leader Don Scott of Portsmouth was unanimously elected Speaker of the House by the House Democratic Caucus on Nov. 11, while Sen. Louise Lucas of Portsmouth is poised to chair the Senate Finance Committee. These two historic appointments surfaced after Virginia voters recently went to the polls on Nov. 7 and not only flipped control of the House of Delegates but also enabled Democrats to hold their majority in the state Senate. The full House of Delegates will vote to officially confirm Scott on Jan. 10, the first day of the 2024 legislative session. Meanwhile, Lucas is expected to chair the Senate Finance Committee, due to

Del. Don Scott

Two historic appointments surfaced after Nov. 7. the fact that one of its cochairs Democratic Sen. Janet Howell, age 78, announced her retirement in February after serving 32 years. ...see Scott, page 7A

(ANOTHER) NEW STUDY SHOWS RACIAL BIAS IS UNHEALTHY By Rosaland Tyler Associate Editor New Journal and Guide

A new Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) report has traced disproportionately high blood pressure and heart disease rates back to the stress that comes from living with

New report can be traced to what was said at 1st National Conference on Black Women’s Health Issues in 1983. discrimination--often in at-risk neighborhoods. Yet, the new report can actually be traced back to what happened after about 2,000 women showed up at the first National Conference

on Black Women’s Health Issues, which was held at Spellman College in Atlanta in 1983. While the VCU report shows Black adults are more likely to have poorer

Sigma Gamma Rho Donates $1M To St. Jude MEMPHIS, TN – Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc. is the first Divine 9 sorority to raise $1 million for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, as the organization marks its 101st anniversary. ...see ... see page 3A

cardiovascular health than White adults and other minority groups, it also suggests that Black adults are in a position to stave off heart disease, obesity and high blood pressure

by correcting these health problems at an earlier age. The point is the new VCU report comes on the heels of a groundbreaking, three-day conference held at Spelman in 1983. There, Black women analyzed oppression’s impact on their health, as well as how they talked to doctors and nurses in the health system. “More than half of the Black female adult population of the United States lives in a condition of psychological distress,” Byllye Avery, an organizer of Spellman’s historic 1983 three-day seminar, said at the

groundbreaking conference, as she welcomed women who had traveled from Mississippi, New York, Pennsylvania – even as far away as California – to the three-day event billed as the First National Conference on Black Women’s Health Issues. Avery organized the three-day Spellman conference with Lillie P. Allen, a public health activist. At the time, Avery was a grad student at the University of Florida in 1970, and the mother of two small children, as well as a widow. ...see Study, page 6A


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