Richmond Free Press November 29 to December 1, 2018

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Richmond Free Press

VOL. 27 NO. 48

© 2018 Paradigm Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.

RICHMOND, VIRGINIA

www.richmondfreepress.com

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November 29-DeCEMBER 1, 2018

Coliseum’s success raises new questions about need to replace it Advocate aims to change RPS culture through Restorative Practices program By Ronald E. Carrington

An activist who moves people with the beat of drums will now have his hand on the pulse of Richmond Public Schools as the new manager of School Climate and Culture Strategy. The Restorative Practices pilot program, led by artistic director of “Drums No Gun” Dr. Ram Bhagat, will be housed in three middle schools — Albert H. Hill in the West End, Martin Luther King Jr. in the East End and Boushall in the South Side. Each school will have a Restorative Practices Room for self-care where students given in-school suspensions can resolve conflict situations by calming and cooling down or have someone to talk if they are having a tough day. Any student will be able to go to the room to decompress, refresh and center themselves. Teachers and staff needing to use the space to unwind or reboot are welcome as well. “Each school’s Restorative Justice Leadership Team has teachers and staff committed to the training and practicing of restorative justice and getting the project off the ground,” said Dr. Bhagat, whose job involves being the trainer. Dr. Bhagat, who is conducting training through the end of the school year, is starting with having teams understand the philosophy, applications and principles of the Talking Circle Process — engaging and building relationship — which helps to build trust between students and adults. Additionally, Cultural Responsive Please turn to A4

By Jeremy M. Lazarus

The 13,500-seat Richmond Coliseum has been the busiest arena in Virginia during the past six years, according to a Chicago-based consulting company that was paid $500,000 by the city to review a proposal to replace the facility. Hunden Strategic Partners found that the 47-year-old arena averaged more events per year than the four other indoor arenas in Virginia combined. It also hosted more events than each of the far larger arenas in Greensboro and Raleigh, N.C. The findings raise questions as to why a new, larger coliseum is needed, a question advocates have yet to fully address. Indeed, the only public response to date has been that other state capitals have nicer, larger coliseums than Richmond. According to the study Hunden delivered to the city and its financial consultant on Oct. 31, the Richmond Coliseum hosted 550 events from 2013 to 2018, or an average of 92 concerts, sporting events, conferences and other activities per year. By comparison, the University of Virginia’s 15,200-seat John Paul Jones Arena in Charlottesville, which is described as Richmond’s toughest in-state competition for concerts, hosted an average of 10 ticketed events a year in the three-year period

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Regina H. Boone/Richmond Free Press

Dr. Ram Bhagat sits in the Restorative Practices Room at Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School that will be used for in-school suspension students to work with trained staff to better handle conflicts.

from 2015 to 2017, Hunden reported. The consultants also reported that, during the same period, the 13,800-seat Hampton Coliseum averaged only 3.5 ticketed events a year; the 13,000-seat Norfolk Scope averaged six ticketed events a year; and Roanoke’s 10,500-seat Berglund Center averaged 3.5 ticketed events a year. According to Hunden, Richmond’s indoor arena also was busier than Virginia Beach’s outdoor amphitheatre, which hosted an average of 25.5 events per year during the period from 2015 to 2017. Indeed, the 23,000-seat Greensboro, N.C., Coliseum Complex and the 19,722-seat Raleigh, N.C., PNC Arena had less activity, Hunden reported. Greensboro hosted an average of 13 ticketed events during the 2015-2017 period, while Raleigh hosted an average of eight ticketed events a year during that period. According to Hunden, even Washington’s 20,500-seat Capital One Arena, home to the Washington Capitals pro hockey team, the Washington Wizards pro basketball team and Georgetown University’s men’s basketball team, averaged only 35 ticketed events a year during the same timeframe. The study essentially belies the claims of advocates for a new facility, who suggest that the Richmond Coliseum is a failed “white elephant’ that costs city taxpayers too much — about $1.5 million a year for operations and debt repayment — and delivers too little. Please turn to A4

Council committee blocks entry of medical transport company into Richmond market By Jeremy M. Lazarus

A City Council committee has rebuffed Mayor Levar M. Stoney’s attempt to end the Richmond Ambulance Authority’s 28-year monopoly on emergency and nonemergency medical transports. By a 3-0 vote, the council’s Public Safety Committee led by 8th District Councilwoman Reva M. Trammell voted to ask the full council to strike a Stoney-introduced

ordinance opening the door to competition to RAA on non-emergency service. The mayor had recommended a permit for an Atlantabased company, Western-Star Ambulance Authority Inc., which has established a presence in Henrico County for its operating arm, Metro Health EMS. The bottom line concern among the council committee: That RAA stood to lose a major chunk of the money it earns from non-emergency transport service that now goes

to support the far more expensive emergency services. That formula helps ease the pressure on City Council to provide subsidies to RAA. The committee also found that city officials, including Fire Chief Melvin Carter, failed to note that Metro Health’s chief operating officer, B. Lamont Doyle, is barred from doing business with the federal government because of a Please turn to A4

Fire Chief Carter

Mayor: Social Services would still have City Hall office if headquarters moved By Jeremy M. Lazarus

Sandra Sellars/Richmond Free Press

Delicious! Jabriel Birchett, 5, takes a bite of his roll on Thanksgiving Day and doesn’t want to let go. The youngster was enjoying good food with family at The Giving Heart Community Thanksgiving Feast at the Greater Richmond Convention Center in Downtown. Please see more photos, B3.

The Richmond Department of Social Services would continue to have a presence at City Hall even if its headquarters building is moved to a distant location to make way for development of an apartment and retail complex as part of the Richmond Coliseum replacement plan. So said Mayor Levar M. Stoney in response to concerns from City Council members that moving the department from Downtown would make it harder for the city’s poorest residents to meet with social workers or apply for food stamps, Medicaid and other services. Two council members told the Free Press that they have been speaking in opposition to a move because the mayor and his staff never told them about plans to keep a Social Services office in Downtown. The mayor said the city would never deliberately seek to create a hardship for Social Services clients. “It would make no sense to build a new GRTC transfer center as part of the coliseum development and not have residents able to have access to Social Services” nearby, Mayor Stoney said on Nov. 16. Space is being set aside for GRTC to develop a modern, indoor transfer space as part of the proposal to replace the 47-year-old Richmond Coliseum and bring new apartments, a hotel and other private

developments to an adjacent 10-block section of Downtown. Mayor Stoney did not offer any specifics as to what such a City Hall space for Social Services would offer and whether it would Mayor Stoney relieve the need for people to travel to the department’s proposed new offices that might be located 6 miles away in a hard-to-reach commercial

district in South Side. The mayor’s response came after several members of City Council raised concerns about his proposal to move the department’s offices that now sit across from City Hall to a commercial area on Walmsley Boulevard near the Philip Morris cigarette factory, an area that has limited GRTC bus service. Mayor Stoney previously said that the city intends to increase its subsidy to GRTC Please turn to A4

Pressure mounts for councilman to resign Council President Chris A. Hilbert, 3rd District, who exRichmond City Councilman pressed disappointment in Mr. Parker C. Agelasto could soon Agelasto and the problem he has face fresh pressure to resign from created for his colleagues, said his 5th District seat following his last Friday that he is seeking a admission last week that he and formal opinion from City Attorhis family now live in a West ney Allen L. Jackson on whether Franklin Street house located the City Charter authorizes the Mr. Agelasto in the 1st District. council to remove a member. While Mr. Agelasto has declined to One section of the charter empowers make any more statements, City Council the council to be the judge of “the elecis quietly considering what steps it might Please turn to A4 need to take. By Jeremy M. Lazarus


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