Pharrell Williams dons cap for grads B2
Richmond Free Press © 2021 Paradigm Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.
VOL. 30 NO. 51
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
www.richmondfreepress.com
Ready for the holidays
Regina H. Boone/Richmond Free Press
Tameka DePriest, the Communities in Schools site coordinator at Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School, sorts through donated gift items that will be given to students and their families this holiday.
Communities in Schools coordinators bring together volunteer efforts to assist children, families during holiday season
Ronald E. Carrington/Richmond Free Press
Linda Shaw holds a package of her new graham crackerbased cookies, LindaGrams.
Richmonder’s baking passion turns into burgeoning family business during the holiday By Ronald E. Carrington
Community in Schools is making Christmas merry for students and their families in schools in Richmond’s East End and Eastern Henrico County. The CIS program is providing gifts, gift cards, clothing and
It’s holiday time — a time for family and friends and to give thanks for blessings of the past year. Richmonder Linda Shaw is doing just that — giving thanks as she makes memories and money with her LindaGrams, a trademarked graham cracker-based cookie she created and now sells online and in pop-up events. Mrs. Shaw fell in love with baking cookies at age 12. Since
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By Ronald E. Carrington
City Council delays transfer of money to RPS for new George Wythe By Jeremy M. Lazarus
So much for quick approval. By a vote of 8-1, City Council on Monday put off a decision to transfer $7.3 million to Richmond Public Schools for development of a replacement building for the aged George Wythe High School. The funds currently are available in a city account that would allow RPS to proceed with hiring an architectural firm to design the new school building. Only Councilwoman Kristen N. Larson,
4th District, a former School Board member, urged approval of the measure proposed by Mayor Levar M. Stoney. The transfer is expected to come up again at the next City Council meeting on Monday, Jan. 10. For the moment, the delay will not hinder the launch of the design work, according to RPS Superintendent Jason Kamras. Mr. Kamras said his administration is still reviewing proposals submitted by nine design firms. He said a recommendation would not be sent to the School Board
Regina H. Boone/Richmond Free Press
Top spellers Zainab Iqbal, center, a fifth-grader at Al Madina School in Midlothian, takes home the first place trophy from the Dec. 10 schoolwide spelling bee. The winning word was “semblance,” with Zainab clinching the school title after 19 rounds. With her are Asiyah Mustapha, left, an eighth-grader and second place winner, and Fatima Alobaidi, a seventh-grader who won third place. The school was established in 1998 and is the only Islamic school in the Richmond area. It offers Montessori classes for pre-kindergarten students and a standard curriculum through 12th grade, including spelling, Quranic studies and Arabic. The spelling bee winner now goes on to compete against winners from other area private, parochial schools.
for approval until late January or early February. For most of the City Council, the key holdup on the money remains their questions about the proposed capacity of Dr. Jones the new building. A five-member majority of the School Board, which has retaken control of school construction, approved building a new school for 1,600 students, or about 200 more than the 61-year-old George Wythe building was constructed to serve. Mayor Stoney, along with Mr. Kamras and the majority of City Council, believes that a new school to serve 2,000 students would be needed to prevent overcrowding when the new building is opened, which is now estimated by the School Board for fall 2024. “It would be irresponsible” to open a building that was overcapacity on day one, Council Vice President Ellen F. Robertson, 6th District, said Monday. The School Board majority, led by board Vice Chairman Jonathan M. Young, 4th District, has noted that the new George Wythe is one of two new high schools targeted for South Side. The other is a career and technical high school that would absorb 1,000 students. By building a smaller George Wythe than originally contemplated, money would be left over to invest in building a new elementary school in Church Hill to replace Woodville and Fairfield Court elementary schools. At the City Council meeting, CouncilPlease turn to A4
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Meet this week’s Personality B3
DECEMBER 16-18, 2021
Richmond, VLBC stand to lose under redrawn district maps By Jeremy M. Lazarus
A major political shake-up. That’s the expected result when the Virginia Supreme Court approves new boundaries for the state’s 100 House of Delegates districts, 40 state Senate districts and 11 congressional districts. As many as 12 incumbents in the House and as many as 10 incumbents in the Senate could lose their seats under the redrawn maps the court is preparing to issue, according to the Virginia Public Access Project. VPAP noted that the proposed boundary lines for 23 House districts would include the homes of two or three current members and the proposed boundaries for nine Senate districts would include the residences of two or more current incumbents. The sweeping changes were included in the redistricting plans Mr. Grofman Mr. Trende released Dec. 8 by the court’s two special experts, Democrat Bernard Grofman and Republican Sean Trende. Richmond, too, would feel the impact of the map changes in the form of reduced influence in the General Assembly. The city, now represented by eight House members and three Senate members, would be reduced to three House districts and two Senate districts under the proposed changes. The Virginia Legislative Black Caucus also could see its influence shrink as well. The caucus will go into the new General Assembly session in January with 17 House members and four senators. Under the proposed redistricting plans, six caucus members in the House and at least one caucus member in the Senate could lose their seats, the VPAP analysis indicates. Those at risk would include Henrico Delegate Lamont Bagby, the caucus chairman, and Sen. L. Louise Lucas of Portsmouth, a senior caucus member and the first AfricanAmerican and woman to serve as president pro tempore of the Senate. In the special experts’ redrawing of the congressional districts, the 7th District was completely redrawn, with current 7th District Congresswoman Abigail Spanberger Please turn to A4
The shake-up By Jeremy M. Lazarus
Here is how the Virginia Supreme Court’s new redistricting maps would shake out for Richmond and the Virginia Legislative Black Caucus. In the city, three Democratic House members would be placed in a redrawn 78th House District that would cover the western half of the city: Jeffrey M. Bourne, 70th District; Betsy B. Carr, 69th District; and Dawn M. Adams, 68th District. Delegate Delores L. McQuinn, 70th District, would be in a new 79th District that would be entirely in Richmond, stretching in a semicircle from the city’s southern border through Church Hill and Fulton and up to Washington Park in North Side. The city’s delegation would include the winner of a new 77th House District, which would include a big chunk of South Side and part of Chesterfield County. In the Senate map, Richmond is carved into two new districts, the 14th and 15th. The 14th covers most of the city and incorporates the 9th District, which is currently represented by Democratic Sen. Jennifer L. McClellan. The 15th District includes a portion of South Side but is mostly in Chesterfield County. The 16th District that Sen. Joseph D. “Joe” Morrissey represents would become the 13th Senate District. That new district would bypass Richmond in stretching from Sussex County to Henrico County and include Hopewell and Petersburg. Richmond Sen. Ghazala Hashmi, 10th District, a Democrat, would lose her city precincts and be drawn into a new 12th District with Chesterfield Sen. Amanda Chase, a Republican who now represents the 11th District. That district would be wholly in the county and include Colonial Heights. The VLBC faces the potential for major shrinkage, with six members of the House and one member of the Senate at risk. For example, caucus chairman, Henrico Delegate Lamont Please turn to A4
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: • Tuesday, Dec. 21, 9 to 11 a.m., Second Baptist Church of South Richmond, 3300 Broad Rock Blvd. • Wednesday, Dec. 22, 9 to 11 a.m., Eastern Henrico Recreation Center Ballroom, 1440 N. Laburnum Ave. Appointments are not necessary, but can be made by calling the Richmond and Henrico COVID-19 Hotline at (804) 205-3501 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, or by registering online at https://bit.ly/RHHDCOVID.
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