VSU does it again A10
It’s a rap for her! B3
Richmond Free Press © 2018 Paradigm Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.
VOL. 27 NO. 3
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
www.richmondfreepress.com
ee Fr
Fr ee
c e l e b rating our 2 6 th A nniv e r s ary
JANUARY 18-20, 2018
‘Tomorrow can be better’ Gov. Ralph S. Northam is sworn in as Virginia’s 73rd chief executive By Jeremy M. Lazarus
“Virginians didn’t send us here to be Democrats or Republicans. They sent us here to solve problems.” So said Ralph Sherer Northam on Saturday after he was sworn in as Virginia’s 73rd governor with his wife, Pam, and children beside him. Gov. Northam spoke of the need to use goodwill and a common effort “to leave this place better than we found it” at a ceremony that showcased diversity, from African-Americans singing patriotic songs to Native American dancers blessing the Capitol grounds and Muslim Boys and Girls Scouts leading the Pledge of
Photos by Sandra Sellars/Richmond Free Press
Right, Gov. Ralph S. Northam is sworn into office last Saturday by family friend, retired Accomack County Circuit Court Judge Glen A. Tyler, amid the smiles of his wife, Pam, holding the Bible, and their children, Aubrey and Wes. Above, Lt. Gov. Justin E. Fairfax and his wife, Dr. Cerina Fairfax, enjoy the performers and units in the inaugural parade from the stands with their children, Cameron, left, and Carys.
Photo feature on A4, A5, Inaugural speech on A9
‘This is the moment for real progressive change’ By Brian Palmer
Well before the inaugural ceremonies kicked off last Saturday, former state Sen. Henry L. Marsh III, a groundbreaking civil rights attorney now retired, was seated in front of the stage with a clear view of the podium on the Capitol steps. It was cold, the sky was white and the temperature was dropping, but the 84-year-old seemed not to notice. As admirers young and old stopped to greet him, he paused briefly to talk with the Free Press. “This day is the combination of hard work of a lot of people who believe in treating people fairly,” said Mr. Marsh, a commissioner on the state Alcoholic Beverage Control Board. “That’s what the Democrats do, and that’s why we’re here.” Our party, he continued, is a party of “white people, black people, handicapped people, straight people, gay people, Muslims, everybody. The promise of America is that everybody will have a fair chance, if you work for it.” He expressed optimism about the future of Virginia, now in the hands of the new Democratic administration
of Gov. Ralph S. Northam, Lt. Gov. Justin E. Fairfax and returning Attorney General Mark R. Herring, despite the current national political environment. “Virginia is optimistic because we didn’t follow the trend of some states” toward the Republican Party, he said. Keisha Samuels and her 13-year-old daughter,
Alauna, of Hampton waited in line for hot cider after clearing a security checkpoint in Capitol Square. Ms. Samuels proudly wore her Delta Sigma Theta Sorority jacket over layers of warm clothing. “I like the upward trajectory of Virginia,” Ms. Please turn to A6
Inaugural prayers mirror new governor’s themes of tolerance, unity By Jeremy M. Lazarus
The Rev. Kelvin F. Jones called on new Gov. Ralph S. Northam and his leadership partners to “pursue an aggressive agenda” with a focus on “health care, a fair living wage, a thriving economy and a superb education for all” in his opening prayer at the governor’s inauguration Saturday. And Rabbi Michael Knopf separately urged Virginia’s Rev. Jones
Rabbi Knopf
Please turn to A6
Former Powhatan High School football star headed to Olympics By Fred Jeter
The explosive power that made Hakeem Abdul-Saboor a star football running back has earned him a berth on the U.S. Olympic bobsled team. The Powhatan County native will compete in the two- and four-man bobsled events during next month’s Winter Olympics in PyeongChang, South Korea. The bobsled two-man competition will be Feb. 18 and 19 and the four-man competition on Feb. 23 and 24. Mr. Abdul-Saboor will serve as his team’s “pusher,” meaning he provides the initial, muscular push-off at the top of the slope. Getting a sled moving takes great strength and take-off speed. A two-man sled weighs a minimum of 860
pounds with crew and equipment; a four-man sled carries a minimum 1,389 pounds. Mr. Abdul-Saboor, who was in the Powhatan Class of 2005, earned All-State football honors in high school and went on to star at the University of Virginia-Wise before being derailed by injury. After becoming involved with bobsledding, he made the U.S. National Team in 2015. There is a history of late-comers to the sport excelling as bobsled pushers, as opposed to pilots guiding the sled. In 1980, Olympic high-hurdles track champion Willie Davenport earned a spot on the U.S. bobsled team, thus becoming the first African-American to ever compete in the Winter Games. Football legend Herschel Walker was a pusher for the U.S. two-man team that placed seventh at the 1992 Winter Olympics in France.
Please turn to A6
RRHA takes steps to address heating crisis By Jeremy M. Lazarus
Worried about failing heating systems in public housing, Richmond Redevelopment and Housing Authority CEO T.K. Somanath and his staff began seeking bids to replace aging boilers and pipes. The only problem: They were seeking bids for work on heating units in the Fairfield Court public housing community, while apparently withholding from the RRHA Board of Commissioners that an emergency situation was developing with some of the heating systems in Creighton Court. It is not clear when Mr. Somanath told the board’s Property Maintenance Committee that furnaces in 50 apartments in 12 buildings in Creighton Court had to be turned off. who sometimes does not reflect the He has not responded to legacy of my father.” questions from the Free Press. In Washington, Dr. King’s eldest Nor has Carol Jones-Gilbert, son, Martin Luther King III, criticized RRHA’s chief operating ofPresident Trump on Monday, saying, ficer. “When a president insists that our nation But in recent statements to needs more citizens from white states others, including Richmond like Norway, I don’t even think we need City Council, Mr. Somanath to spend any time even talking about and his staff said RRHA knew what it says and what it is.” in October, as soon as the He added, “We got to find a way to heat was turned on, that the work on this man’s heart.” Creighton Court buildings had On Monday, down the street from failing radiator water pipes that President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort threatened to flood the second in Palm Beach, Fla., Haitian protesters floor of buildings and damage and Trump supporters yelled at each ceilings in at least two dozen other from opposing corners. units. President Trump was staying at the The nine-member RRHA resort for the Dr. Martin Luther King Please turn to A6 Jr. holiday weekend.
Trump ignites MLK Day racial firestorm Free Press wire, staff reports
ATLANTA The first Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. holiday of the Trump presidency took place amid a racial firestorm of the president’s own making. In the same week that he honored Dr. King by making a national park out of the ground where Dr. King was born and preached until his death, President Trump denigrated practically the entire African Diaspora, and left many Americans headed into the civil rights icon’s birthday convinced that the leader of their country is a racist. He began last week by designating the historic site around Dr. King’s Atlanta birth home as a national park. By week’s end, he was signing a King
holiday proclamation with the martyred activist’s nephew at his side. But in between, the president sat in a White House meeting on immigration policy and denigrated Haiti, El Salvador and much of the African Diaspora as “s**thole countries,” while expressing a preference for immigrants from Norway, a majority white nation. For African-Americans in particular, this latest insult from President Trump felt like whiplash. This is the type of thing that activists, religious leaders and scholars say puts Trump’s presidency in direct conflict with the legacy of Dr. King, who was assassinated April 4, 1968, while trying to make America a more inclusive society. President Trump has denied using
that language and being racist, labeling himself the “least racist person there is” during his 2016 campaign and after this latest debacle. In Atlanta, the Rev. Bernice King, the daughter of Dr. King, was the keynote speaker Monday at a commemorative service honoring her father at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta. She told hundreds of people who packed the pews that they “cannot allow the nations of the world to embrace the words that come from our president as a reflection of the true spirit of America.” “We are one people, one nation, one blood, one destiny. … All of civilization and humanity originated from the soils of Africa,” Rev. King said. “Our collective voice in this hour must always be louder than the one
Allegiance. Optimism and a show of good will radiated at the event that drew about 4,000 people, including 10 former governors, judges, members of Congress and ordinary citizens. The program also featured Justin E. Fairfax taking the oath of office as the state’s second African-American lieutenant governor and Mark R. Herring being sworn in for his second term as attorney general. A pediatric neurosurgeon and politician, Gov. Northam, 58, brings unusually varied experience in taking over from his fellow Democrat, former Gov. Terry McAuliffe, whose boisterous, enthusiastic and outgoing manner stands in sharp contrast with his successor’s more low key and less flashy style.