June 21-23, 2018 issue

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Richmond Free Press © 2018 Paradigm Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.

VOL. 27 NO. 25

RICHMOND, VIRGINIA

www.richmondfreepress.com

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U.S. senator fires up Dems in city A3

Meet president-elect of Urban League’s ‘younger’ group B1

June 21-23, 2018

Obama Elementary! Richmond School Board votes to dump Confederate name at North Side school to honor nation’s first African-American president By Ronald E. Carrington

Broken promise?

City seeks bids only for 3 new schools By Jeremy M. Lazarus

Earlier this year, Mayor Levar M. Stoney stumped to raise $150 million to help replace obsolete and decaying schools. His sole condition: That Richmond City Council approve a 1.5 percent increase in the city sales tax on restaurant meals and other prepared food so that the borrowed money could be repaid. City Council quickly w e n t along on a 7-2 vote in February, and a Mayor Stoney delighted Mayor Stoney stated: “We are moving full-steam ahead with our plan to generate $150 million in new school construction and renovation of facilities that have been neglected for far too long.” But in a little noticed policy shift, City Hall and the Richmond School Board have agreed to cut back that investment ahead of Sunday, July 1, when Richmond diners will start to see the government’s take from meals rise from 11.3 percent to 12.8 percent, including Please turn to A6

Photos by Ava Reaves

Summer send-off Last Friday, students at Richmond’s Overby-Sheppard Elementary School in Highland Park get a rousing send-off for the summer by school staff on the last day of school.

Barack Obama in. J.E.B. Stuart out. The Richmond School Board voted 6-1 Monday night to change the name of J.E.B. Stuart Elementary School to Barack Obama Elementary School. The new name for the school at 3101 Fendall Ave. in North Side should be in place by August for the new school year, officials said. “Students will now have the opportunity to attend a school President that honObama ors a leader who represents the great promise of America,” said Superintendent Jason Kamras. “In the former capital of the Confederacy, we decided to stop honoring an individual who fought to preserve slavery and to begin honoring our first African-American president instead.” Roughly 18 schools in 14 states have either been named Please turn to A6

$1.3B Coliseum area development plan advancing By Jeremy M. Lazarus

An investment group led by Dominion Energy’s top executive is proposing to bring a mix of 2,800 affordable and market rate apartments to mostly public land north of Richmond City Hall. The massive housing development is to accompany the construction of a modern 17,500-seat arena to replace

Ms. Swanson

Ms. Turner

the 46-year-old Richmond Coliseum, a 500-room convention hotel that would be attached to the vacant, but historic Blues Armory and an enclosed GRTC bus transfer station. Three people with knowledge of the potential $1.3 billion project that is being spearheaded by Thomas F. “Tom” Farrell II, chairman, president and chief executive officer of Dominion Energy,

Ms. Braxton

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separately provided an outline of the plans to the Free Press on the condition of anonymity as they are not authorized to comment. The high-rise apartments to be built atop parking decks would be a key feature of the project that would require substantial city support in the form of donated land and tax contributions. The entire project is targeted

for a portion of the 10 acres between Leigh and Marshall streets Downtown between 5th and 10th streets that has been set aside for the development. If approved, it would be the largest investment ever for Richmond and four times larger than anything yet envisioned for the city’s 60-acre Boulevard property where The Diamond stands. None of the details were released when Mayor Levar M. Stoney announced June 13 that his administration is starting negotiations with the NH District Corp. led by Mr. Farrell. According to NH

District, the project will create “a world-class housing, retail, hospitality, office and entertainment destination in Virginia’s capital city.” City Hall officials have been reviewing the plan since NH District submitted it in February following at least two years of planning. It was the only response to a city request for proposals. By then, it was well known that Mr. Farrell; Martin J. “Marty” Barrington, the retired chief executive officer of Altria; and retired SunTrust Bank executive C.T. Hill were Please turn to A6

Ms. Medina

Talent and beauty competing in Miss Virginia Pageant this weekend By Ronald E. Carrington

A record five African-American women will be among the 30 contestants vying to be crowned the next Miss Virginia this weekend. The pageant will be held Saturday, June 23, at Liberty University in Lynchburg, with preliminary competition, including contestants showcasing their

talent, starting on Thursday, June 21. The winner moves on to compete in the Miss America contest Sept. 9 in Atlantic City, N.J. Kyle Grinnage, executive director of the Miss Chesterfield competition, said having five African-American women compete for the state title is a record. Among them is a Henrico resident Carlehr Swanson, a 21-year-old senior

at George Mason University, who was crowned Miss State Fair of Virginia in October. Ms. Swanson is a jazz pianist and vocalist whose platform for the state pageant is “Music is UNITY.” The others are Breana Turner, Miss Greater Charlottesville, a pianist whose Please turn to A6

Google maps

This map shows the boundaries of the development area where a new arena and 2,800 apartments would rise — bounded by 5th and 10th streets between Leigh and Marshall streets. Virtually all of the buildings along East Marshall Street would remain under the proposal.

Pluses, minuses expected with June 24 start of Pulse By Jeremy M. Lazarus

Church Hill residents who have long taken GRTC buses to their jobs at the University of Richmond and other places in the far West End no longer will be able to get to work by 7 a.m. after this week. Residents of the Maymont area who are used to catching a bus until midnight to get home will have service cut off after 7 p.m. next week. And untold numbers of riders will be forced to catch three buses instead of two to get to and from other parts of the city, possibly paying an extra fare to reach their destination. The regular one-way fare is $1.50 and 25 cents for a transfer.

GRTC is promising better service, but not everyone believes that will happen when the company launches its long-awaited Pulse bus rapid transit service and ushers in big changes on its regular routes that are being dubbed “the Great Richmond Reroute.” The changes do not affect the door-to-door CARE van service. The changes will go into effect this Sunday, June 24, when the Pulse service begins running on its 7.6-mile route between Rocketts Landing and The Shops at Willow Lawn. All of the new route changes go into effect Monday, June 25. The transit company is billing June 24 as a “milestone day” on a new website, www.theGreatRichmondReroute.com, noting it will begin the biggest change in service since motorized buses

replaced electric trolleys in 1948. The company describes the changes as the creation of “a new public transit system, one that will connect more people to more places with more frequent service. … And we’ll have a positive effect on the lives of the more 20,000 people who currently ride the bus, bringing them the frequency and reliability they need.” To help people get used to the change, GRTC is allowing passengers to ride free Sunday, June 24, through Saturday, June 30. But GRTC spokeswoman Carrie Rose Pace confirmed that Please turn to A6


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