Residents rally A2
Richmond Free Press © 2022 Paradigm Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.
VOL. 31 NO. 18
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
www.richmondfreepress.com
ee Fr
Fr ee
Meet this week’s Personality B1
APRIL 28-30, 2022
Working through long COVID Months to years after being infected by the coronavirus, thousands in Virginia, including Delegate Delores L. McQuinn and U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine, push through lingering symptoms such as shortness of breath, fatigue, headaches, brain fog and tingling nerves By George Copeland Jr.
Natarsha Eppes-Kelly has been working hard for the last four months to establish a new normal in her life. A Dinwiddie resident and former mortgage specialist who now works as a beauty and skin care entrepreneur, Ms. Eppes-Kelly contracted COVID-19 in late August. Unable to be vaccinated at the time because of her diabetes, Ms. Eppes-Kelly initially focused on getting the rest of her family tested and taking stock of the potential impact. The larger effects of her infection would quickly become clear in just a few days when she laid down but couldn’t seem to wake up. That lasted for four days. Ms. Eppes-Kelly was rushed to a hospital by her husband when she proved unresponsive and was barely breathing. Her infection led to months of care in a Richmond hospital and later, at-home treatment, as the long-term effects of COVID-19 subsided and emerged again and again. Now, nearly nine months after coming down with COVID-19, Ms. Eppes-Kelly is on the path to recovery at Sheltering Arms Physical Rehabilitation and Therapy Center in Bon Air, where she began rehab for her fatigue, diminished lung capacity and physical decline on New Year’s Day. The experience can be taxing, with Ms. Eppes-Kelly taking regular breaks between activities and needing a portable oxygen machine to assist with breathing. But her determination to regain a measure of the health she has lost to COVID-19 is clear. And
Living 2 years under
COVID
Regina H. Boone/Richmond Free Press
Natarsha Eppes-Kelly sits to catch her breath after completing physical therapy exercises with a weighted four-pound ball. Her therapist, Dr. Jason Seltzer, enters on his computer notes about her progress. Ms. Eppes-Kelly has been undergoing physical therapy at Sheltering Arms Physical Rehabilitation and Therapy Center in Bon Air.
Please turn to A5
‘Something in the Water’ flows to D.C.
City Council poised to approve $838.7M general fund budget for 2022-23
Free Press staff report
The council’s action to authorize the transfer of the money followed a 5-4 School Board vote April 11 accepting the demand by the City Council
Entertainment superstar Pharrell L. Williams has found a new home for his huge music festival “Something in the Water.” Snubbing his hometown of Virginia Beach where he held the inaugural edition of the event in 2019, he’s taking the mega-event to Washington, D.C., where it will run for three days during the Juneteenth holiday weekend, Friday, June 17, through Sunday, June 19. The dates and location were chosen to coincide with Juneteenth, a new federal holiday celebrating emancipation and the end of slavery in this country. Mr. Williams actively advocated for recognition of June 19 as a state holiday in Virginia, which was signed into law by former Gov. Ralph S. Northam on Oct. 13, 2020. President Biden later signed legislation making it a federal holiday beginning last year. Mr. Williams, a Grammy Award winner who has scored as a singer, songwriter, rapper, record producer, fashion designer and social justice advocate, made the decision to relocate the music festival from Virginia Beach after police in the resort city shot and killed his 25-year-old cousin, Donovon Lynch, at the oceanfront in March 2021. Mr. Williams sent a letter to Virginia Beach city officials in October expressing his disappointment in the city’s response
Please turn to A4
Please turn to A4
By Jeremy M. Lazarus
Major salary increases for police officers and firefighters, along with a 5 percent increase for other city employees and a city minimum wage of $17 an hour. A one-time boost in subsidy for the Richmond Ambulance Authority to maintain robust service. A jump in investment in public schools. Restoration of staff to care for Richmond’s trees and the expansion of hours at the city’s public libraries. And initial funding of City Hall expenses should employees be allowed to unionize, along with a small cost-of-living bonus for retirees. Those are a few of the highlighted items included in the new budget for the 2022-23 fiscal year that City Council is poised to approve and that will go into effect July 1. The council wrapped up its work on the Mr. Saunders budget Tuesday after nearly two months of review. The result: Only a few changes to the general fund proposal Mayor Levar M. Stoney presented in early March, and adoption without any changes of his plan for spending on sidewalks, streets, parks and other infrastructure needs. Final approval is anticipated before May 15. Overall, Richmond’s budget will top $2 billion – spending nearly $9,600 for each of the estimated 230,000 men, women and children in the city—when utilities, grants, infrastructure spending and other internal funds are included. Please turn to A4
Sandra Sellars/Richmond Free Press
A sign welcomes Fox Elementary School students to their new home at the once-vacant Clark Springs Elementary School building on Dance Street in Randolph.
Displaced Fox Elementary students to start classes May 9 in Clark Springs building By Ronald E. Carrington
Fox Elementary School students, teachers and staff will move into Clark Springs Elementary School in early May for the remainder of the school year. In a 5-0 vote on Monday night, the Richmond School Board approved an amended recommendation for the students to move Monday, May 9, into the school at 1101 Dance St. in Randolph from their temporarily quarters at First Baptist Church in The Fan. This will be the second relocation for Fox students since their 111-year-old school building
Full speed ahead for a new George Wythe High School. That’s the new message from City Hall after a monthslong battle over the future size and student capacity for the new South Side School ended. On Monday night, City Council cleared the way for the start of design work by approv-
Helping hand EJ, a young volunteer, hands out medals to runners as they cross the finish line last Saturday in the annual Monument Avenue 10K. Thousands of people participated in the 6.2-mile event, with the course going up Monument Avenue to Staples Mill Road and back to Franklin and Shafer streets near Virginia Commonwealth University. Please see more photos, B2.
Please turn to A4
City Council approves design funds for a new George Wythe By Jeremy M. Lazarus
Carlos Bernate/Richmond Free Press
on Hanover Avenue in The Fan was ravaged by fire on Feb. 11. Following the fire, students had virtual instruction before resuming in-person learning March 21 at the church. In the interim, Richmond Public Schools made $800,000 in repairs and upgrades to the vacant Clark Springs building, including electrical work, fresh paint, new exterior doors, ceiling tiles, mold removal and a new fire panel. Clark Springs is expected to remain the learning space for Fox students until the firedamaged school is rebuilt. No estimate has been
ing the transfer of $7.3 million to Richmond Public Schools so it could pay the architectural firm it is preparing to hire. The 9-0 vote was taken during Monday’s short meeting at which council officially terminated the 24-year-old Slave Trail Commission. The commission was down to three members who had not met for more than two years.
Free COVID-19 testing, vaccines Free community testing for COVID-19 continues. The Richmond and Henrico County health districts are offering testing at the following locations: • Thursday, April 28, 4 to 7 p.m. – Broad Rock Sports Complex, 4899 Old Warwick Road. • Wednesday, May 4, 9 a.m. to noon – Eastern Henrico Recreation Center, 1440 N. Laburnum Ave. • Thursday, May 5, 4 to 7 p.m. – Broad Rock Sports Complex, 4899 Old Warwick Road. Walk-up testing is provided. Appointments, however,
Please turn to A4