Bobby Dandridge to be honored A10
Richmond Free Press © 2021 Paradigm Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.
VOL. 30 NO. 50
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
www.richmondfreepress.com
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Meet this week’s Personality B3
DECEMBER 9-11, 2021
On the way out Gov. Ralph S. Northam orders removal of 40-foot granite pedestal that held Confederate Robert E. Lee’s statue on Monument Avenue, and for the land to be turned over to the city By Jeremy M. Lazarus
When the giant monument of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee went up 131 years ago, fiery Richmond Planet editor John Mitchell Jr. described it as monument that would hand down to future generations “a legacy of treason and blood.” Suddenly, that legacy that seemed a permanent fixture of the Richmond landscape is about to disappear, leaving an
Charlottesville’s Lee statue to be melted down for new art
empty grassy circle, 200 feet in diameter, at the intersection of Monument and Allen avenues. Since Monday, workers have put scaffolding around the 40-foot tall granite base that once held the 21-foot tall statue of Gen. Lee that was taken down in early September. For the next few weeks, the crew organized by Team Henry Enterprises — the same Black-owned construction firm that took down the statue — will be engaged in the painstaking work of dismantling the last vestige of this monument to white supremacy and carting to it storage. “It’s about time,” said Richmond artist and clothing designer Brandon Fountain, who has come to the site almost daily since June 2020. At that time, the site became a regional epicenter of protest against racial injustice and police brutality following the Minneapolis Police murder of George Floyd in late May 2020. Mr. Fountain had created a garden at the site before the state fenced off the area to keep people out, and he sees the pedestal’s removal as an opportunity to create “an inclusive space that is welcoming to all.” The base is still covered in colorful artwork condemning racism and police and that transformed the circle into an activist centerpiece. An impressed New York Times ranked the pedestal as the most influential piece of American protest art since World War II. It was expected to remain in place. Please turn to A4
REA wins victory giving city teachers, staff collective bargaining authority
Free Press wire report
CHARLOTTESVILLE The statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee that drew violent protests to Charlottesville will be melted down and turned into a new piece of public art by an African-American heritage center. The Charlottesville City Council decided how to dispose of the now-removed statue at the center of the Unite the Right rally in 2017 during a meeting that began Monday and stretched into Tuesday morning, The Daily Progress reported. The Lee statue and another of Confederate Gen. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson were removed on the same day in July. The city received six proposals from entities interested in Please turn to A4
Regina H. Boone/Richmond Free Press
Workers secure scaffolding around the 40-foot tall granite pedestal on Monument Avenue that once held the towering statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. The work to remove the pedestal began Monday.
By Ronald E. Carrington
Ms. Rizzi
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In a nearly unanimous vote, the Richmond School Board voted 8-1 Monday night to approve a resolution giving teachers and other school staff the power to establish a union and collectively negotiate for pay and benefits. “I cannot be prouder to support our educators in their advocacy for themselves and their students,” School Board Chairwoman Cheryl L. Burke, 7th District, a retired Richmond Public Schools principal, told the Free Press.
“I have always been a ‘yes’ vote to empower our teachers and staff with the right to organize.” School Board member Jonathan M. Young, 4th District, was the lone dissenting vote during the meeting, which had some contentious exchanges. Richmond Public Schools is now the first school district to grant negotiation rights to teachers after the Virginia General Assembly approved collective bargaining for public employees. The new law repealing Virginia’s Please turn to A4
Trammell to introduce collective bargaining ordinance at next City Council meeting By Jeremy M. Lazarus
Richmond is poised to consider expanding collective bargaining to city employees. A proposal to authorize City Hall and public safety employees to organize and negotiate contracts on pay and working conditions is headed to City
Council just days after city schoolteachers were authorized to organize and negotiate contracts with Richmond Public Schools. City Councilwoman Reva M. Trammell, 8th District, is expected to introduce the ordinance on Monday, Dec. 13, to launch the debate over
Free COVID-19 testing, vaccines Regina H. Boone/Richmond Free Press
What’s grabbing their attention? Timmesha Grimes, left, and her 5-year-old son, Malikhai Hamilton, right, and her nephew and niece, Tisiah and Tiriyah Brassell, ages 7 and 5, are engrossed in something just like the crowd around them on the curb along Broad Street last Saturday. Ms. Grimes even pulled out her cellphone to record the action. What is it? Hint: It’s an annual event that kicks off the December holidays in Downtown. Please see Page B4 for more photos and the answer.
Free community testing for COVID-19 continues. The Richmond and Henrico County health districts are offering testing at the following locations: • Tuesday, Dec. 14, 9 to 11 a.m., Second Baptist Church of South Richmond, 3300 Broad Rock Blvd. • Wednesday, Dec. 15, 9 to 11 a.m., Eastern Henrico Recreation Center Pavilion, 1440 N. Laburnum Ave.
Please turn to A4
extending union rights to public workers under a new state law that went into effect May 1. Ms. Trammell did not respond to a request for comment, but her aide, Rick Bishop, confirmed that Ms. Trammell requested that the City Att o r n e y ’s Office Ms. Trammell draft the legislation for introduction at the next meeting. Lincoln Saunders, the city’s chief administrative officer, also did not respond to a request for comment on the legislation that Please turn to A4
‘Skill games’ back in business in convenience stores, truck stops statewide By Jeremy M. Lazarus
“Skill games” are suddenly legal again. Those are the slot machine-style games that were mainstays of convenience stores and truck stops until the General Assembly banned them on July 1. On Monday, a Virginia judge temporarily barred the state from enforcing the ban, allowing store owners in Richmond and across the state to turn on thousands of machines in their stores. The ruling from Circuit Court Judge Louis Lerner was a victory for Emporia native Hermie Sadler, a NASCAR driver, race announcer, wrestling promotor and co-owner of an oil business that operates truck stops that offered the games. Attorney General Mark R. Herring has yet to say whether his office will ask the Virginia Supreme Court to reject Judge Lerner’s
temporary injunction and find the legislature and governor had full authority to approve or eliminate the games. At this point, the injunction is set to continue until next May, when a hearing is scheduled on whether the injunction should be made permanent. Two Republican state senators who opposed the ban, Sen. William M. “Bill” Stanley Jr. of Franklin and Sen. Ryan T. McDougle of Hanover County, led the legal fight for Mr. Sadler. Outside the courtroom, Sen. Stanley called the decision “a great victory” for his client and for small businesses that had been forced to shut down the machines that had provided a significant source of income for their businesses during the pandemic. Mr. Sadler, who estimated the ban would cost his businesses Please turn to A4
File photo