Mother’s Day
A Q&A in honor, celebration of Moms B2
Richmond Free Press © 2016 Paradigm Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.
VOL. 25 NO. 19
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
www.richmondfreepress.com
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What wisdom did your mother impart to you?
MAY 5-7, 2016
Ignoring call to duty Failure to sign up for Selective Service hurts thousands By Jeremy M. Lazarus
Register for Selective Service. Otherwise, you could ruin your life. Jacquel Parker wishes he could tell that to every young man turning 18. That’s because the Richmond resident knows firsthand about the dismal impact that can come from failing to register with the Selective Service System before age 26. Mr. Parker never did — one of the millions who fail to register for a military draft that will
never take place. So now at 35, “I can’t get any federal help to go to college,” Mr. Parker said. That includes Pell grants and federal student loans to help cover the cost of schooling. Mr. Parker also cannot qualify for a federal job or work for a company carrying out a federal contract. He is barred from job training services from the area Workforce Resource Center and other beneficial services. That’s the law, according to the Selective Service System, even though there has been no conscrip-
tion for the military since 1973. The draft was eliminated and the military has been a completely volunteer operation since then. According to the most recent Selective Service report, an estimated 95,000 Virginia men who currently are between 18 and a day shy of their 26 birthday have not registered. That’s 21 percent of the 440,000 men in that age range who are required to sign up. Nationally, about 17 million men are in the Please turn to A4
Mr. Parker
Henrico School Board chooses ‘Quioccasin’ Free Press staff report
Coach Barlow
VSU to name Barlow as new coach By Fred Jeter
Reggie Barlow, a former NFL player and Alabama State University football coach, will be introduced as the new football coach at Virginia State University, the Free Press has learned. The announcement is to be made Thursday, May 5, by VSU Athletic Director Peggy Davis at the university’s Gateway Dining and Events Center. The 43-year-old Coach Barlow posted a 49-42 record between 2007 and 2014 at his alma mater, Alabama State, located in his hometown of Montgomery, Ala. Under Coach Barlow, Alabama State won three consecutive Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) Eastern Division titles from 2010 to 2012. While serving as assistant coach at Alabama State in 2005-06, Coach Barlow helped groom quarterback Tarvaris Jackson, now with the NFL’s Seattle Seahawks. Coach Barlow was a recordsetting receiver at Alabama State from 1992 to 1995, and was drafted in 1996 by the Jacksonville Jaguars. In 1997, with Jacksonville, Coach Barlow led the NFL in total yards Please turn to A4
Sandra Sellars/Richmond Free Press
Kathy Deshazo-Jackson, who said she was one of the first African-American students to attend the former Byrd Middle School, is elated by the vote last week to rename the Henrico County school.
Quioccasin Middle School. That’s the new name chosen by the Henrico County School Board for the former Harry F. Byrd Sr. Middle School. The board’s decision, coming on a 3-0 vote last Thursday was viewed as a “safe” choice by a panel looking to escape any further controversy. The new name rids the public school of honoring the late Mr. Byrd, a racist and segregationist who, as a U.S. senator, spearheaded Massive Resistance efforts in the 1950s to shut down public schools rather than desegregate them as the U.S. Supreme Court ordered. A successful student-led effort prompted the board’s unanimous vote March 10 to rename the middle school. But after receiving hundreds of suggestions, the board declined to name the school for another person. Instead, most members took their cue from board member Lisa A. Marshall, who represents the Tuckahoe District where the school is located and opted for Quioccasin, which is said to be of Native American origin. “There are so many worthy suggestions in honor of individuals who contributed greatly to our community,” Ms. Marshall said during a board work session before the formal meeting and vote. “It would be very difficult for me to pick between the individual names suggested.” Her sentiment was echoed by board member John W. Montgomery Jr., the Varina District representative, who backed Ms. Marshall’s motion in favor of the name Quioccasin. “Quioccasin is more than just a locaPlease turn to A4
$5.5M more found for city schools By Jeremy M. Lazarus
Parents and students may hate it. But Armstrong High School and four elementary school buildings — Cary, Overby-Sheppard, Southampton and Swansboro — are moving closer to the chopping block. While Richmond School Board Chairman Jeffrey M. Bourne told reporters Wednesday that he and his eight colleagues “will try to avoid closing schools at any and all costs” to avoid the community disruption
that it would cause, he indicated later the board might have little choice. The School Board is facing at least a $10.7 million shortfall between the revenue it expects and the spending it wants to undertake in the 2017 fiscal year that begins July 1 to upgrade Mr. Bourne long depressed teacher and staff pay and crank up an academic improvement plan.
Hopes that the Richmond City Council might come to the rescue evaporated this week after the governing body completed its work on an amended city budget for the 2017 fiscal year, including appropriating local tax dollars for public education. Though there are still a few steps left to official approval, the budget the council is poised to pass May 13 includes only $5.52 million in additional operating funds for the school system — far short Please turn to A4
School bus plan raises safety concerns By Joey Matthews
Sandra Sellars/Richmond Free Press
Tara Spencer sits on the porch of her apartment on Creighton Road with her daughters, from left, Dionicia, 8, La-Taja, 6, and Japria, 12.
Tara Spencer stands on her porch in the Creighton Court public housing community each school day and watches as her 12-year-old daughter, Japria, waits about 20 yards down the street to catch the bus to Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School where she is a sixth-grader. Ms. Spencer, a 32-year-old single mother of three, said she is concerned for her daughter’s future safety after Richmond Public Schools announced a new bus transportation plan for the school year starting in the fall. As approved by the Richmond School Board, the plan requires middle and high school students to go to the nearest elementary school to catch the bus to their respective schools. The move is among the cost-cutting measures taken by the School Board to balance the
2016-17 budget. Most students now catch the school bus at stops located much closer to their homes. School officials told the Free Press last week they intend to notify parents and other caretakers of thousands of affected students early this month. They plan to send letters, emails, newspaper advertisements and other communications with the details. Japria would have to walk about six blocks, or four-tenths of a mile, from her home on Creighton Road to Woodville Elementary School to catch a bus to Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School, located a little over a mile away. While the distance isn’t far, safety is a major factor, Ms. Spencer said. “I don’t feel safe with that,” she told the Please turn to A4