Remembering Mary Wilson
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Richmond Free Press © 2021 Paradigm Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.
VOL. 30 NO. 7
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
www.richmondfreepress.com
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FEBRUARY 11-13, 2021
Keeping Kamras Richmond School Board votes 6-3 to extend Superintendent Jason Kamras’ contract for another 4 years By Ronald E. Carrington
It’s official: Richmond Schools Superintendent Jason Kamras will stay on for another four years. The Richmond School Board voted 6-3 Monday night to give Mr. Kamras a new contract, the details of which have not been released. Mr. Kamras, whose current contract runs through June 30, is the highest paid school administrator in Richmond’s history, with a current annual salary of $250,000. The board was under constant pressure from constituents and others who advocated that he remain at the helm of Richmond Public Schools for four more years to ensure continuity and progress, particularly during the pandemic. One group even held a car parade last weekend in South Side to show support for the superintendent. Mr. Kamras told the board he would leave RPS if his contract was extended for only two years, according to sources. The three members voting against a four-year renewal were Kenya Gibson, 3rd District; Stephanie M. Rizzi, 5th District; and Mariah L. White, 2nd District. Following the vote, Mr. Kamras expressed his gratitude and said he loves all RPS students, families and staff. Please turn to A4
Kamras: RPS has too many obstacles to reopen safely by March 15 By Ronald E. Carrington
Both houses still must reconcile their differences and pass a final version that can head to Gov. Ralph S. Northam for his signature. The governor submitted the initial bill and has promised to sign the finished product when it reaches his desk. Through his intervention, the legislature Gov. Northam has been granted 16 additional days to get through the final procedural hurdles on that bill and such equally high-profile bills including legalizing personal marijuana use and providing for the expungement of criminal records. With final passage, Virginia would join 22 other states that already have done away with the death penalty and become the first former Confederate state to do so, according to national data. A signal of the political change that has washed over the once stalwart conservative state, the vote also reflects the waning support for capital punishment
With all due respect, governor: No way, no how. That’s the message the Richmond School Board and Superintendent Jason Kamras are sending in response to Gov. Ralph S. Northam’s call for public schools to reopen at least partially by March 15. At a special board meeting Tuesday night, Mr. Kamras made it clear that RPS has no plans to comply with Gov. Northam’s call for reopening. He told the board the governor has issued an expectation, distinct from an official executive order or mandate, that Richmond cannot and will not meet. “This gives school systems latitude in how they respond,” Mr. Kamras informed the School Board in explaining why RPS plans to remain virtual and is turning a thumbs down to the governor’s request even as other area school districts already have reopened their buildings or have announced plans to do so. Despite the governor’s call, Mr. Kamras noted that reopening does not enjoy wide support. “The division has gone to great lengths to survey stakeholders, and their responses have driven the decision to remain virtual for the second semester,” Mr. Kamras reminded the board. According to that data, 63 percent of families responding to an RPS survey said they did not want to resume in-person
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Sandra Sellars/Richmond Free Press
The Erby family shows their support for Superintendent Jason Kamras and a four-year extension of his contract during an 80-vehicle, “#KeepKamras” parade last Saturday in South Side. They are Richmond Public Schools students, from left, Elijah Erby, 5; Christopher Erby, 13; and Lamar Erby, 11, with their mom, Tisha Erby.
Virginia is poised to eliminate the death penalty By Jeremy M. Lazarus
The death penalty has been a staple of Virginia law since the first English settlers arrived in Jamestown. But more than 412 years after an English ship’s captain became the first person to be put to death in Virginia for spying for Spain, the death knell is ringing for the death penalty itself. With the governor, lieutenant governor and attorney general cheering them on, members of the General Assembly are hustling to eliminate the increasingly unpopular ultimate punishment that has long been
regarded as a tool of racial oppression. In historic actions — a 21-17 vote in the state Senate on Feb. 3and then in a 57-41 vote in the House of Delegates on Feb. 5 — the legislature put itself on record to abolish Virginia’s death penalty that once had huge support as a crime deterrent but now is derided as an extension of lynching. With slight variations, the approved bills would eliminate capital punishment and replace death with a life sentence from which the convicted could not be paroled, a move some political analysts are describing as a watershed moment for a state that has been a national leader in executions.
City plans $3.5M sale of Public Safety Building for new development By Jeremy M. Lazarus
Sandra Sellars/Richmond Free Press
Public Safety Building
Unveiled nine months ago, a $325 million plan to replace the city’s decaying Public Safety Building in Downtown is gathering steam. Mayor Levar M. Stoney on Monday sent to Richmond City Council a finished proposal to sell the building for $3.5 million to a private partnership. The purpose: To create a complex that would include two new high-rise buildings, two nonprofit hotels along with new retail and child care space, generate new tax revenue to fund public services and create job and business opportunities for city residents. In a bid to ensure the required seven City Council members stay on board and Please turn to A4
Free COVID-19 testing Free community testing for COVID-19 continues. The Richmond and Henrico County health districts are offering testing at the following locations: • Tuesday, Feb. 16, 10 a.m. to noon, Diversity Richmond, 1407 Sherwood Ave., in North Side. • Friday, Feb. 19, 1 to 3 p.m. Eastern Henrico Health Department, 1400 N. Laburnum Ave., in Eastern Henrico. Drivethru testing. Appointments are encouraged 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. Testing will be offered while test supplies last. The Chesterfield County Health Department also is offering free COVID19 testing at the following locations: • Second Baptist Church, 5100 W. Hundred Road, Chester, 1 to 3 p.m. Monday, Feb. 15 and 22. • St. Augustine Catholic Church, 4400 Beulah Road, North Chesterfield, 1 to 3 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 17 and 24. • Walmsley United Methodist Church,
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Neighbors want answers about planned GreenCity development By Lyndon German
Rendering of GreenCity development
Barksdale Haggins Sr., 88, was shocked after reading newspaper accounts in early December that Henrico County officials were endorsing a massive 250-acre project to build an entertainment, housing, retail, office and hotel complex dubbed GreenCity near his home on quiet Scott Road. Mr. Forrester “I really was surprised, very surprised,” Mr. Haggins said. The project calls for a $2.3 billion investment in Scott Farms and the former Best Products headquarters building north of Parham Road and Interstate 95 to build a 17,000-seat arena for concerts and sporting events, 2,400 housing units, two hotels, about 2 million square feet of office space and 280,000 square
feet of retail space. Mr. Haggins has lived for 40 years in the quiet Garden City community, a largely African-American neighborhood in an area surrounding the proposed GreenCity development. About 50 homes are along Scott Road, where there is concern that four homes closest to the Best Products building may be taken for the project, said William “Bill” Forrester Jr., Mr. Thornton president of the Garden City Neighborhood Civic Association. Another 15 homes along Scott Road may be impacted, as well, he said. The neighborhood is made up of older people, he explained, retirees living on a fixed-income, people who are unsure about Please turn to A4