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Richmond Free Press © 2021 Paradigm Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.
VOL. 30 NO. 38
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
www.richmondfreepress.com
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Reclaimed, Removed and Reshaped A6-A7
SEPTEMBER 16-18, 2021
Tough love
Task force recommends subpoena powers for police oversight board By Jeremy M. Lazarus
pendent of police.” Long sought by some activists, the A recommendation for creating a proposal is an outgrowth of the dempowerful new city office to police the onstrations against police brutality and police has been sent to Richmond City for racial justice that erupted late last Council for review. spring following the police killing of The proposal — the work of a George Floyd in Minneapolis in May nine-member commission that coun- 2020. The proposal is backed by a new cil established a year ago — calls for state law allowing Virginia localities to stripping Police Chief Gerald M. Smith endow such police review operations of most authority over disciwith substantial powers. pline of officers and reducing The recommendation his control over the police panel was led by Virginia budget. Commonwealth University The proposed civilian sociologist Eli Coston and review commission would career coach and consultant accept and investigate all Angela Fontaine. complaints filed against poThe proposal arrives, lice officers for misconduct, however, at a time when the ranging from rudeness to city’s police force has shrunk Eli Coston corruption. because of officers retiring It would have the ability “to make or quitting, leaving Chief Smith hardbinding disciplinary decisions” and pressed to field enough officers during would be the first such office in the a spike in violent crime. state vested with subpoena power to Currently, the department has 120 compel the release of documents and vacancies in its authorized sworn force to call witnesses. It also would be the of 711 officers, not including recruits first vested with disciplinary authority in training. that is described as “key to providing Please turn to A4 an oversight agency that is truly inde-
Regina H. Boone/Richmond Free Press
Devon Henry, whose company, Team Henry Enterprises, took down the Monument Avenue statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee, works with Grindly Johnson, Virginia’s secretary of administration, to place a new time capsule into the base around the pedestal.
Time capsule with items from a new Virginia buried at former Lee site By George Copeland Jr.
The streets of Monument Avenue were filled with sounds of construction equipment last Thursday as more than a dozen workers searched from sunrise to sunset, and through sporadic rainfall, for a 134-yearold time capsule believed to be hidden in the base of the pedestal that until Sept. 8 held the statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. No sign of the capsule was found after 12 hours of effort that involved multiple forklifts, a variety of construction equipment. More than 20 pieces of the base were moved from the northeast corner, where the capsule was believed to be. Ultimately, no capsule was found, but a space
was created at the site for a new time capsule, one meant to better represent Virginia and its place in history at this time. In the new time capsule — a stainless steel box made by Richmond sculptor Paul DiPasquale, who created the Arthur Ashe Jr. statue on Monument Avenue — 39 items nominated by individuals, communities and institutions across Virginia were placed, and the box was then put into the pedestal. Among the items: a “Monument Avenue” hip-hop album by artists Noah-O and Taylor Whitelow; a photo of a Black ballerina dancing on the graffiti-tagged base holding the Confederate statue; a Black Lives Please turn to A4
A.P. Hill statue may be headed to Culpeper
Early voting begins Sept. 17 for Virginia’s top posts Early
VOTE
By Jeremy M. Lazarus
The future direction of Virginia’s government is now in the hands of voters, Starts with early voting cranking up on Friday, Se pt. 17 Sept. 17 – 45 days ahead of the official Election Day on Tuesday, Nov. 2. In Richmond and across the state, those casting ballots will Sandra Sellars/Richmond Free Press fill the state’s three top offices — governor, lieutenant governor and attorney general — and select their representatives to the Cousins Sanai Moore, 8, left, and Kingsley Lynch, 6, have 100-member House of Delegates. In Richmond, voters also will elect a commonwealth’s atfun showing off their hula hoop skills during the 30th Annual Down Home Family Reunion last Sunday at Kanawha Plaza torney, sheriff and treasurer and decide whether to allow Black in Downtown. It was a new location for the event put on by media giant Urban One to develop Richmond’s first casino on a 100-acre site at Commerce Road and Walmsley Boulevard the Elegba Folklore Society. Please see more photos, B2. in South Side, adjacent to the Bells Road interchange of Interstate 95. The Richmond Voter Registrar’s Office has announced that the city’s registered voters can vote early in person at its main office at 2134 W. Laburnum By Ronald E. Carrington and Jeremy M. Lazarus Ave., on the first floor of City Richmond Public Schools reopened last week Hall and at the Hickory Hill and school trash cans are overflowing with rejected Community Center, 3000 E. prepackaged lunches that students would rather throw Belt Blvd. in South Side. away than eat. And parents don’t blame them. Residents can also request The Free Press has been told that many of the absentee ballots they can either students are throwing away the prepackaged meals, return by mail or deposit in drop some of which don’t contain the minimal nutritional boxes at several sites, includrequirements for students. Trash cans are overflowing ing City Hall and at the voter with student discards, the Free Press was told. registrar’s office on Laburnum Victoria Walters quit her job Tuesday as a cafeteAvenue. ria worker at Blackwell Elementary School because Topping the list for those of the terrible meals being distributed to students, casting ballots is the decision including her daughter, Viccori Leake, a 5-year-old on who will replace current kindergartner at the school. Gov. Ralph S. Northam, who “I was not liking the fact of having to serve this cannot seek re-election. type of meal to our children,” Ms. Walters told a Free Based on Virginia’s locaPress reporter on Wednesday. “The meals — including tion near the power centers of breakfast of yogurt or cereal, juice and cup of fruit the East Coast, the governor’s with milk — are not adequate for the students.” election is being viewed partly She said her daughter refuses to eat the prepared Here are photos of pre-packaged as a mini-referendum on the lunch meal because students are fed the very same lunches given this week to students at Biden Administration ahead lunch every day — a cold turkey sandwich with cheese, Blackwell Elementary School. The only of the 2022 midterm elections identifiable food is the deli sandwich, that will decide control of the potato salad, fruit and a carton of milk. Emily Kavanaugh, whose 13-year-old daughter, which a parent said was supposed to U.S. House of Representatives Maggie, is an eighth-grader at Binford Middle School, be a bologna sandwich. According to and Senate. the parent, the meal is taken to the brought several of the packaged lunches to Monday classroom to be heated in a microwave The main contestants in night’s School Board meeting and presented them to and eaten there because there are few the Virginia race are political
By Jeremy M. Lazarus
The last city-owned Confederate statue is on its way out of Richmond, though the process will not be swift because a grave is involved, according to Mayor Levar M. Stoney That statue is of Gen. A.P. Hill, and it stands in the center of the intersection of Laburnum Avenue and Hermitage Road. It was installed 131 years ago, but could not be swiftly removed because it is essentially a marker for A.P. Hill’s grave, adding additional steps to the process. At a Sept. 9 news conference, Mayor Stoney told reporters there appears to be an agreement between the city and the family for both the casket and statue to be transferred to a Culpeperarea cemetery.
Old-fashioned fun
RPS opens with problems with lunches, new buildings
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cafeteria workers.
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A.P. Hill
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Free COVID-19 testing and vaccines Free community testing for COVID-19 continues. The Richmond and Henrico County health districts are offering testing at the following locations: • Thursday, Sept. 16, 1 to 2:30 p.m., Hillside Court, 1500 Harwood St. • Tuesday, Sept. 21, 9 to 11 a.m., Second Baptist Church of South Richmond, 3300 Broad Rock Blvd., drive-thru testing. • Wednesday, Sept. 22, 9 to 11 a.m., Eastern Henrico Recreation Center Pavilion, 1440 N. Laburnum Ave. Appointments are not necessary, but can be made 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. A list of area COVID-19 testing sites is online at https://www. vdh.virginia.gov/richmond-city/richmond-and-henrico-area-covid19-testing-sites/ Want a COVID-19 vaccine? The Richmond and Henrico health districts are offering free walkup COVID-19 vaccines at the following locations: • Thursday, Sept. 16, 1 to 4:30 p.m. – Richmond Health District Cary Street Clinic, 400 E. Cary St., Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson; 1 to 3 p.m. – Anna Julia Cooper School, 2124 N. 29th St., Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson. • Friday, Sept. 17, 9 a.m. to noon – Henrico West Health Department Clinic, 8600 Dixon Powers Drive, Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson. • Saturday, Sept. 18, 2 to 4 p.m. – Brookland Park Community
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