Richmond Free Press April 15-17, 2021 edition

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Virginia suspends use of Johnson & Johnson vaccine mendation of the Federal Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Those agencies are investigating reports that six women developed blood clots after receiving the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. A Virginia woman died in March after receiving the vaccine, according to reports.

Currently, more than 6.8 million people across the nation have been given the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. A vast majority of people have reported no or mild side effects. Please turn to A4

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Virginia has suspended the use of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine after federal health agencies warned that the single-dose inoculation may cause a rare, and potentially fatal, blood clot disorder. A nationwide halt was announced Tuesday upon the recom-

APRIL 15-17, 2021

Double dose of wrong State Police, FBI and civil rights investigations launched into treatment of 2nd Lt. Caron Nazario during traffic stop in Windsor Free Press wire report

Virginia State Police and the state Attorney General’s Office of Civil Rights are investigating the traffic stop of 2nd Lt. Caron Nazario in rural Isle of Wight County, where two police officers, screaming with their guns drawn, threatened him, peppersprayed him in the face and demanded he get out of his SUV without giving him an explanation for the stop. Lt. Nazario, an Army Medical Corps officer with the Virginia National Guard, was in uniform after leaving training when he was stopped the night of Dec. 5 on U.S. 460 by two police officers in the town of Windsor. He drove to a well-lighted BP gasoline station where the 27-year-old graduate of Virginia State University ultimately was pulled out of his vehicle by police, struck multiple times with “knee-strikes” to his legs and knocked to the ground. He then was handcuffed and interrogated. On the police body camera footage, Lt. Nazario calmly and repeatedly asked the officers why he was stopped. The video shows him complying with their commands to hold his hands in the air outside the driver’s side window. He told the armed officers, “I’m honestly afraid Please turn to A4

Jim Mone/Associated Press

Katie Wright, center, attends a news conference Tuesday with attorney Benjamin Crump, who spoke about the death of her son, Daunte Wright, who was shot and killed by police Sunday afternoon in a Minneapolis suburb. Also attending the news conference were other members of the Wright family and the family of George Floyd, who was killed at the hands of police last May in Minneapolis.

Minnesota police officer charged in shooting death of 20-year-old Daunte Wright after Sunday traffic stop Free Press wire report

Photo by Rudolph Powell

2nd Lt. Caron Nazario, who was an ROTC student at Virginia State University, is shown as he is commissioned during the university’s 2016 commencement.

BROOKLYN CENTER, Minn. Once again, the killing of a Black motorist is grabbing the attention of Richmond and the nation. And once again it has occurred in Minnesota, this time in Brooklyn Center, a suburb located 10 miles Daunte from Minneapolis where the highprofile murder trial of former police officer Derek Chauvin for the killing of George Floyd is nearing completion. This latest incident involved a white female police officer shooting and killing 20-year-old Daunte Wright, who had been stopped Sunday

afternoon. Police said he was stopped for an expired vehicle registration, while Mr. Wright, who called his mother from his cellphone after he being stopped, said it was for having air freshener dangling from his rearview mirror. As in the Floyd case, the public reaction has been swift, with three Wright nights of protests, civil unrest and some looting in Brooklyn Center. Public outrage has not triggered the widespread protests spawned by the disturbing video of Mr. Floyd’s death. Seeking to restore calm, the official response Please turn to A4

UR faculty votes for rector’s removal as board outlines new plan By Jeremy M. Lazarus

The University of Richmond Board of Trustees this week took a first step to organizing a commission that would “establish principles on renaming” buildings at the private, 4,000-student school. The board launched its new effort a week after dumping a previous plan to keep the building names of two historic white individuals who supported slavery and racial segregation. The board decided to re-evaluate its decision following backlash from students, faculty, staff and alumni over the plan to keep the names. The board’s latest move came Monday, the same day the UR faculty overwhelmingly approved a resolution of “no confidence” in Paul Queally, the board’s rector, after his meetings with members of the university community appeared to further inflame the issue. Mr. Queally was described as dictatorial and insensitive by opponents of the names, though trustees who were present at the meetings disputed such claims as inaccurate and misleading. As reported Monday, 306 members of the faculty voted for the no-confidence resolution that calls on Mr. Queally to quit as rector and resign from the board. Forty-six faculty members

either opposed the resolution or abstained from voting. The total pool of 352 participants represented 82 percent of the 428 eligible voters, the Free Press was informed. “Nearly 100 percent of us agree the Board of Trustees and our rector have violated our trust and confidence in their recent decisionmaking imposed on our community from the tyranny of their minority judgment,” Dr. Mr. Queally Mari L. Mitford, a professor of rhetoric and women, gender and sexuality studies, said before the vote. The campus buildings in question are named for the Rev. Robert Ryland, the school’s slave-owning and Confederate-supporting first president, and Douglas Southall Freeman, an alumnus, longtime rector, historian and advocate of white supremacy as a newspaper editor and radio commentator. Without commenting on the vote, the Board of Trustees announced that two of its members have been tasked to start creating the commission “that will be inclusive and will ensure a fresh start with respect to renaming decisions.” The two board members are Dr. S. Georgia Nugent, president of Illinois Wesleyan University, and Dr. John A. Roush, president emeritus of Centre College in Kentucky.

The two members, in consultation with UR’s current president, Dr. Ronald A. Crutcher, and senior university leadership, are to provide to the board a proposal on the commission’s membership and the process it would follow, according to the board’s statement. Former UR President Edward L. “Ed” Ayers and Dr. Julian Please turn to A4

Free COVID-19 testing Free community testing for COVID-19 continues. The Richmond and Henrico County health districts are offering testing at the following locations: • Thursday, April 15, 1 to 3 p.m., Hotchkiss Field Community Center, 701 E. Brookland Park Blvd. in North Side. • Thursday, April 22, 2 to 4 p.m., Eastern Henrico Health Department, 1400 N. Laburnum Ave., Eastern Henrico. Drive-thru testing. Appointments are encouraged by calling the Richmond

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Confederate chair found in New Orleans; alleged bandits nabbed By Jeremy M. Lazarus

Regina H. Boone/Richmond Free Press

Dads’ day out A new weekly PopUp Market at The Diamond became an outing for these dads and their sons last Saturday as they walked among the dozens of vendors featuring locally grown products, food, art and children’s games and activities. Justin Everson, left, wheels his 3-year-old son, Maddox, while Zlatan Hadzic, wheels his 17-month-old son, Kian. The PopUp Market is sponsored by River City Festivals in conjunction with the Richmond Flying Squirrels. It will be held 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. each Saturday in the Blue Lot of the ballpark at 3001 N. Arthur Ashe Blvd. Details: RiverCityFestivals.com.

The stolen chair dedicated to Confederate President Jefferson Davis has been recovered in New Orleans, and the owners of a tattoo parlor in the “Big Easy” have been arrested on related felony charges, though their attorneys are calling their arrests “a mistake.” The bottom line: The Richmond-based United Daughters of the Confederacy never had to pay the unusual ransom demanded for their carved limestone chair — raising a banner bearing a quote from former Black Liberation Army member Assata Shakur. In a 12-month period in which at least 160 Confederate memorials were taken down in Richmond and cities across the country, the story of the chair theft garnered widespread attention.

Mugshots of Jason Warnick, Kathryn Diionno and Stanley Pate

The ornate, 500-pound Jefferson Davis Memorial Chair was snatched from the Confederate section of the Old Live Oak Cemetery in Selma, Ala., early on March 19. The chair, owned by the UDC, had been in place for nearly 120 years. A still-anonymous group calling itself White Lies Matter sent a ransom message April 5 to the UDC and media outlets including the Richmond Free Press. The message stated the group had possession of

the chair valued at $500,000. The message also included a demand that the UDC hang the banner outside its Richmond headquarters on Arthur Ashe Boulevard on April 9, the 156th anniversary of Gen. Robert E. Lee’s surrender of the Confederate Army to the Union at Appomattox in 1865, ending the Civil War. White Lies Matter stated the banner should read: “The rulPlease turn to A4


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April 15-17, 2021

Richmond Free Press

Local News

City police, firefighters seek $8.9M for simpler, more competitive pay plan By Jeremy M. Lazarus

The Richmond Fire Department is so short of trained manpower that it plans to impose mandatory overtime later this month to ensure adequate coverage for fires and medical emergencies, firefighters told Richmond City Council on Monday night. Meanwhile, the Richmond Police Department is hard-pressed to maintain patrols, a flood of police officers chimed in during the council’s public hearing on the 2021-22 budget the governing body is finalizing. Despite mandatory overtime, there are only four police officers on a shift to cover a precinct on some days, City Council was told. In too many cases, officers either must go it alone or hold off responding because a second officer is unavailable to back them up. “We’re not entering a crisis, we’re in a crisis,” Officer Brendan Leavy, president of the Richmond Coalition of Police, said. He noted that 70 police officers retired or left the department in the past 10 months, which he called unprecedented. He said that’s far too many vacancies to make up with recruits with little experience at a time when Mayor Levar M. Stoney’s administration has barred the department from filling 58 vacant positions. Despite a rough 12 months that included a pandemic and protests over racial justice, the problem is the city’s “broken pay plan,” which he and others called the real morale buster. Joined by Keith Andes, president of Local 995 of the International Association of Fire Fighters, Officer Leavy urged City Council to scrap the mayor’s proposal to spend $2.5 million to provide a two-step increase in pay, saying that would simply throw money into a failed system. Instead, they want council to adopt a new, simpler 20-year pay plan developed by two members of the Fire Department, Capt. Steven Hall Jr. and Battalion Chief Bailey Martin Jr. Their plan would pay sworn personnel in the fire and police departments based on rank and years of service. The cost: $8.91 million. While advocates for affordable housing, Carytown and police oversight called in to the hearing to urge council to add funding in those areas, the pay issue dominated the meeting. Currently, police officers and firefighters can get no explanations for what they are paid and why one is paid less than others doing the same job. The Hall-Martin report notes that Richmond police officers and firefighters struggle to reach top pay. Currently, 236 nonsupervisory firefighters are stuck at firefighter 4 and unable to move up to the top grade of master. The report also found pay inconsistencies at every rank in both departments. The situation is being compounded by neighboring jurisdictions that are ratcheting up the pay competition, most notably in Henrico County. The county is boosting starting pay for police and firefighters to $51,913 and adding an automatic 15 percent increase for those who secure Advanced Life Saving certification. Mr. Andes, president of Local 995, said that Richmond might not have the money to compete with Henrico, but he said the Hall-Martin plan is the city’s best shot to remain marginally competitive. He said their proposed pay plan is simpler and easy to understand. “If you have 10 years of service, you can look at the plan and see what the pay should be,” he said. “This plan gets rid of all the complications.” Officer Carl Scott, vice president of the Richmond Coalition of Police and the first African-American pilot in a regional air patrol unit, noted he has been with the city department for 15 years. He said he has been blocked by the freezes from moving up to the highest pay grade for non-supervisory patrol officers for four years, costing him and his family. He loves the work, but it galls him that his county counterparts are paid $12,000 to $20,000 a year more and receive extra benefits that the city denies him, including hazard pay and a night differential.

Clarification The new program to assist people to file petitions in Richmond Circuit Court to expunge their records of acquittals and criminal charges that were nolle prossed or dismissed requires payment of a refundable $91 fee. Richmond Circuit Court Clerk Edward F. Jewett said the money is returned when the court grants the petition and enters the expungement order. Richmond Commonwealth’s Attorney Colette W. McEachin also is allowing people to file a copy of the petition with her office without paying a previously required service of process fee. An article in the April 1-3 edition of the Free Press stated the program is without cost. As of July 1, an automatic process of expungement of such records is to go into effect under a new law passed this year by the General Assembly and signed by Gov. Ralph S. Northam. The law puts in place a process involving the State Police, the Virginia Supreme Court and local circuit courts to seal the records without requiring a petition.

Correction Nicci Carr, star of the popular GEICO commercial featuring the reworked lyrics to the song, “Whoomp! There It Is,” earned a diploma from Richmond’s Thomas Jefferson High School in 1990. Growing up, Ms. Carr saw her first movie with her father and, while teaching in Washington, D.C., was urged to move to Los Angeles to pursue an acting career by the uncle of one of her students. She was married once and is divorced and works at Georgia State University in Atlanta, where she now lives. Because of reporting errors, an article published in the April 8-10 edition of the Free Press contained several inaccuracies about Ms. Carr’s life and career. The Free Press regrets the errors.

Regina H. Boone/Richmond Free Press

Cityscape Slices of life and scenes in Richmond

This is one of 55 new signs City Hall has installed around Richmond to remind drivers that state law grants pedestrians in a crosswalk the right of way; vehicles must stop for them. Location: The intersection of Main and Plum streets in The Fan. City workers began installing the informational signs April 8 at street corners that pedestrians commonly use. The signs are part of the city’s efforts to boost safety and mobility for walkers, cyclists and drivers. The signs grew out of the city’s embrace of the Swedish-born Vision Zero strategies that seek to eradicate traffic injuries and deaths.

School Board taking control of new building construction By Jeremy M. Lazarus

The Richmond School Board is taking back control of the design, development and construction of new schools, potentially blocking a City Hall plan to fast-track design and development of a replacement building for worn-out George Wythe High School. In a 5-4 vote Monday, the board adopted a resolution by board member Kenya J. Gibson, 3rd District, to remove the city and return to the more traditional approach that most Virginia school districts follow of taking charge of building development. The decision came on a night when Superintendent Jason Kamras offered the board his proposal for reopening for summer school and in the fall. Under the plan that the board may consider at its Monday, April 19, meeting, in-person classes would be offered in the summer for all students, the first significant reopening since the pandemic began. Currently, about 800 students are allowed in-person instruction. For the start of the 2021-22 school year, the plan would allow middle and high school students to opt for in-person classes or enroll in the Virtual Virginia online program, with RPS paying the $350 fee per course. Mr. Kamras’ proposal noted that social distancing requirements could result in a hybrid system, particularly in elementary grades. That would mean groupings of students would attend on alternate days or alternate weeks to ensure adequate spacing, he indicated. On the building front, the board ap-

proved the resolution over the objections of Mr. Kamras, who urged the board to stick with the Joint Construction Team approach used in the development of the school district’s three Ms. Gibson new schools, Henry L. Marsh III and Cardinal elementary and River City Middle School. Under that approach, the board would continue to select the design and allow the city to lead in securing the construction team and managing the project through its contracted construction manager, AECOM. Ms. Gibson told the board that state law vests the board with the authority to control development of school buildings, and she urged an end to the practice of handing the lion’s share of responsibility to city officials who she believes have delivered more expensive and less useful buildings. Data from the state shows that Richmond paid millions more than Chesterfield County for similar sized elementary schools in the latest round of construction the Joint Construction Team oversaw. And all three new buildings missed the deadline for being ready for use by three months. In vain, Mr. Kamras argued that the board and administration should “maintain our focus on teaching and learning rather than construction.” But a majority of the board disagreed, including Ms. Gibson; Mariah L. White, 2nd District; Vice Chairman Jonathan M. Young, 4th District; Stephanie M. Rizzi, 5th District; and Shonda Harris-

Muhammed, 6th District. Following the vote, Mr. Kamras temporarily shut off his camera at the virtual meeting. So did School Board member Liz B. Doerr, 1st District, who opposed the move. Also voting against the change were board Chairwoman Cheryl L. Burke, 7th District; Dawn C. Page, 8th District; and Nicole Jones, 9th District. The approved resolution calls on Mr. Kamras to provide recommendations for hiring up to four staff, including a project manager, to manage school development in house. Ms. Gibson believes that the school budget can accommodate adding staff and RPS can begin the process of hiring an architect to design and assist in contractor bidding for George Wythe High School’s replacement. City Council has approved Mayor Levar M. Stoney’s proposal to provide up to $100 million for building the replacement effective July 1, 2023. Mr. Kamras told the board that the city was on the verge of releasing a request for proposals to begin the process of hiring a construction manager-at-risk. Fifth District City Councilwoman Stephanie A. Lynch confirmed that the announcement had been imminent and expressed concern the move would result in a delay in building the replacement high school in the district. In her view, the board should use its time resolving key educational issues. In the wake of increased city investment, she said she would prefer the board to show that its educational improvement plan is working and be involved in providing adequate before- and after-school programming that it largely leaves the city to provide.

Timeline outlined for disposal of city-owned Confederate statues By Jeremy M. Lazarus

Richmond City Council could vote to dispose of the city’s collection of Confederate statues at the Monday, June 14, meeting, according to a tentative plan for action. Just a week after appearing uncertain how to proceed, City Council now appears to be moving to get the job done nearly a year after the racist iconography came down. At the informal session Monday, Joyce Davis, council’s interim chief of staff, outlined what she described as a “proposed aggressive” plan for getting rid of the items, including the four statues from Monument Avenue of Confederate Gens. J.E.B. Stuart and Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson, scientist and submarine developer Matthew Fontaine Maury and Confederate President Jefferson Davis. If the plan is adopted by City Council,

Ms. Davis said she and other council staff would work with the administration to review the more than 20 bids to obtain the statues and offer recommendations. City Council would receive an update at the Organizational Development Committee meeting set for Monday, May 3, Ms. Davis said, with a resolution for disposition possibly introduced at the Monday, May 10, council meeting. Among other things, the resolution, which could be updated, would need to include information on the proposed owners of the statues, sites for relocation and other details, Ms. Davis said. Ms. Davis said the council also would hold a scheduled listening session to allow the public to weigh in on the disposition proposal. That date has not been set, she said. If the schedule is maintained, the city

Commission for Architectural Review, an arm of the Planning Commission that considers changes to city-owned property, would offer its views on the disposition proposal at its Tuesday, May 25, meeting. The Planning Commission would consider the matter at its Monday, June 7, meeting, enabling the decision to go to City Council, which could vote the following week, Ms. Davis said. Fourth District Councilwoman Kristen N. Larson said no one should be surprised if the schedule stretches out two to four additional weeks. Ms. Larson, who advocated for the council to lead the disposal effort, appeared satisfied with the schedule that Ms. Davis outlined, including the provision for the listening session as well as the public hearing that would be held before council acted on the resolution.

Land conservancy to acquire 5.2 acres on riverfront for parkland By Jeremy M. Lazarus

Instead of private condos or offices, a major piece of Dock Street property that nestles the James River is on its way to becoming parkland everyone can use. The Capital Region Land Conservancy and Mayor Levar M. Stoney are to jointly announce Thursday that the land conservancy is acquiring what is now called the Echo Harbour property to be part of the James River Park system. The prospects that this 5.2-acre site will forever be green space represents a major win for those who fought to prevent its development to preserve the hilltop view that Richmond’s founder, William Byrd II, indicated inspired him to name his new town after a section of London called Richmond-upon-Thames. Credit is going to Parker C. Agelasto, a former City Council member and current executive director of the land preservation group, for engineering the acquisition of the riverfront property

on behalf of the public. Mr. Agelasto worked with the private owners on a deal to have CRLC buy the land encompassing 3011 and 3021 Dock Street, the former home of the Tarmac cement plant. Plans for development of the land have remained dormant since 2012. The land sits between the Great Shiplock Park, where the James River and Kanawha Mr. Agelasto Canal meet, and the former Lehigh Concrete property the city previously acquired. The purchase will create a continuous public area on the south side of Dock Street between 14th Street and the privately owned Rocketts Landing development. Mr. Agelasto said the purchase became possible after resolving the last major sticking point, terminating a perpetual easement The Tobacco Company restaurant owner Jerry Cable held to a dock on the site. He

also held the right to have two parking spaces on the property. Mr. Agelasto said CRLC worked out an agreement to satisfy Mr. Cable, who first got involved with the property in the fall of 1999 when he bought and cleared the cement plant to make way for condos that were never built. According to city assessment records, the property is valued at about $5.1 million. The owner of the property is listed as USP Echo Harbour LLC of Chantilly in Northern Virginia. Mr. Agelasto said CRLC would pay “north of $5 million” for the property and is undertaking a campaign to raise the needed funds to complete the purchase within a few months. He considers the purchase the final chapter in the decadeslong effort to create a continuous park in this area, as well as to provide a public dock on the river’s north bank. This stretch already features portions of the Virginia Capital Trail and the Canal Walk as well as Intermediate Terminal, a popular fishing spot.


Richmond Free Press

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Richmond Free Press

A4  April 15-17, 2021

News

State Police, FBI and civil rights investigations launched into treatment of 2nd Lt. Caron Nazario during traffic stop in Windsor

Minnesota police officer charged in shooting death of 20-year-old Daunte Wright after Sunday traffic stop Continued from A1

Continued from A1

to get out.” “Yeah, you should be!” one of the officers responded. An officer also could be heard using a slang term to suggest Lt. Nazario was facing execution. Lt. Nazario later was released by police without any charges. Video of the incident has gone viral on the internet, once again raising alarms about law enforcement and their continuing Windsor Police handout via Reuters use of excessive force against Army 2nd Lt. Caron Nazario reacts after being Black people. peppersprayed by Windsor Police Officer Joe Gutierrez Lt. Nazario, who is Black and during a Dec. 5 traffic stop on U.S. 460. The still image is Latino, was raised in Brooklyn, from police body camera video. N.Y., by relatives who were also “It was shameful. It was embarrassing. It was cousins to Eric Garner, the man killed by police in July 2014 on a Staten Island sidewalk when disgusting,” Delegate Don Scott, a member of he was put in a continuous chokehold despite the Virginia Legislative Black Caucus, said of the traffic stop. his pleas that he couldn’t breathe. In a statement, the VLBC called the actions of According to The Washington Post, Lt. the two officers “atrocious” and said they must Nazario called Mr. Garner his uncle. Lt. Nazario, a former ROTC student who be investigated and held accountable. “Not even a military uniform and brave sergraduated from VSU in 2016, filed a $1 million lawsuit in federal court against the two officers, vice to this country can shield Black and Brown Joe Gutierrez and Daniel Crocker, which was Virginians from racist police harassment and announced this week. The lawsuit accuses the brutality. In stark contrast stands the shield of officers of violating the U.S. Constitution’s Fourth qualified/sovereign immunity, which allows law Amendment prohibition on unreasonable searches enforcement to engage in racist brutality with little to no consequences,” the caucus stated. and seizures, assault and other claims. The caucus also called for passage of a bill by Mr. Gutierrez was fired after an investigation determined he did not follow police department Richmond Delegate Jeff Bourne that would end policies, Windsor officials said in a statement qualified immunity for police officers and their governing bodies from civil liability for violations on Sunday. The Isle of Wight Branch NAACP and other of a person’s rights. The bill was shot down durlocal and state leaders held a news conference ing the latest General Assembly session. “We must revolutionize police accountability Monday evening across the street from the gas here in Virginia …These wanton acts of racist station where Lt. Nazario was stopped. “There are so many things that went wrong aggression from law enforcement cannot be with this traffic stop, but it is indicative of what’s allowed to continue,” the caucus stated. Attorney General Mark R. Herring directed happening around the country, and how officers walk away from cases with no disciplinary ac- his civil rights office to investigate a possible tion, to include termination and or firing,” said “pattern of misconduct” by Windsor Police. NAACP chapter President Valerie Butler, who His office has asked the Windsor department to release records involving use of force during the also called for Officer Crocker to be fired. The civil rights organization also called for past 10 years. He also wants access to various the resignation of Windsor Police Chief Rodney complaints against the department that involve “Dan” Riddle following a Wednesday news traffic stops, use of force and “treatment on the conference in which the chief defended the basis of race, color, and/or national origin.” In a CNN interview, Mr. Herring called the actions of the officers. He said there were “red flags” that caused them to draw their weapons conduct of the officers “appalling” and “dangeron Lt. Nazario and claimed that Officer Crocker ous,” adding that he saw nothing in the video that would justify their actions. attempted to de-escalate the situation. The lawsuit said the traffic stop “was ostensibly Chief Riddle said he is using the incident as a teaching moment, with the department pursuing for the lack of a rear license plate, though the additional training for officers in implicit bias temporary tags (for the new vehicle) were affixed to the back of the vehicle and visible.” and citizen encounters. Located about 70 miles southeast of RichHe also confirmed that the FBI is conducting mond, Windsor has a population of 2,721 and a federal investigation into the incident. Gov. Ralph S. Northam called the encounter seven full-time police officers. Nearly three“disturbing,” and said he directed State Police quarters of the town is white and nearly 18 percent is Black. to review what happened.

has been swift as well. The officer, Kim Potter, a 26-year veteran of the force and police trainer, turned in her badge Tuesday. On Wednesday, Ms. Potter, 48, was charged with second degree manslaughter. She was being held without bail while awaiting a court appearance. If convicted, she could be sentenced to 10 years in prison and fined up to $20,000. Brooklyn Center Police Chief Tim Gannon, who told reporters on Monday that the shooting appeared to be accidental, also submitted his resignation on Tuesday to the city’s first Black mayor, Mike Elliott. Mr. Gannon said the evidence indicated that Ms. Potter meant to draw her Taser, but instead pulled her gun when Mr. Wright broke away from a fellow officer, jumped in his car and tried to drive off. The situation escalated when Ms. Potter’s records check showed Mr. Wright had an outstanding arrest warrant. A short clip of body camera video released Monday showed Mr. Wright trying to get back in his car as a female voice could be heard shouting, “I’ll Taser you! Taser! Taser! Taser!” as she fired. The same female voice could be heard saying, “Holy s---, I just shot him,” as the car pulled away. The Washington County District Attorney’s Office, which brought the charge after the medical examiner ruled Mr. Wright’s death a homicide by gunshot, disclosed that Ms. Potter was acting as her partner’s field training officer at the time. “We will vigorously prosecute and intend to prove that Officer Potter abrogated her responsibility to protect the public when she used her firearm rather than her Taser,” according to a statement from the office. “Her action caused the unlawful killing of Mr. Wright, and she must be held accountable.” Members of the Wright family called for an end to the rioting, but also expressed

UR faculty votes for rector’s removal Continued from A1

M. Hayter, an UR associate professor of leadership studies, are to serve as advisers in formulating the recommendation. The board did not announce a timetable for receiving the recommendations or for creating the commission, except to state

“the planning work will be conducted expeditiously.” The board also laid out some expectations for the commission, including that members would be drawn both from UR and from outside the campus and that the commission would engage “in substantive and inclusive conversations and provide a

range of opportunities for faculty, staff, students and alumni to share their views.” It is unclear whether the board’s action, which some see as a delay tactic, will work for students and faculty who have demanded the names be removed or alumni supporters who have withheld contributions.

Confederate chair found; alleged bandits nabbed Continued from A1

ers of this country have always considered their property more important than our lives.” The quote is attributed to Ms. Shakur, who was convicted in 1973 in the slaying of a New Jersey state trooper. She daringly escaped from prison in 1979 and successfully made it to Cuba, where she continues to live. The group claimed it would turn the chair into a toilet by boring a hole in it if the banner wasn’t posted. In a subsequent email to some media, the group acknowledged that photos showing the chair with a hole in the seat were really that of a model chair the group had created. The UDC never responded to the emails, according to White Lies Matter, and officials at the national headquarters remained mum. Pat Godwin, president of the UDC’s Selma chapter, said the organization had no intention of complying with the demand. A $5,000 reward posted for the chair’s recovery produced a tip that it was being held in a storage room at a New Orleans tattoo parlor nearly five hours away from Selma. The chair ultimately was found April 8 on a New Orleans street, about a mile from the tattoo parlor, after someone sent the GPS coordinates of the chair’s location to the UDC. Police arrested tattoo parlor owners Jason Warnick, 32, and Kathryn Diionno, 24, on April 8, while Stanley Pate, 34, was arrested on Saturday. Each was charged with a single count of felony possession of stolen property. All have been released from custody on their own recognizance. Back in Selma, Dallas County District Attorney Michael W. Jackson said those in custody would face additional charges of extortion and theft in Alabama. “This was stolen from a cemetery, and you don’t want to encourage young people to steal and that theft is OK,” he told reporters. Attorneys for Mr. Warnick and Ms. Diionno issued statements denying their clients were involved with White Lies Matter or any other political activist group. “They are small business owners who have been struggling through the coronavirus pandemic like everyone else with a business,” stated attorney Michael Kennedy, the spokesman for their defense team. “Obviously, they’re upset to have been arrested and to have their names associated with anything like this. It comes down

concern that Ms. Potter was not then go to the jury. charged with murder. The defense by Wednesday Attorney Benjamin Crump, had presented six witnesses, who represents the Wright fam- with the most notable being a ily, stated after the arrest that the former chief medical examiner charge fell short and indicated in Maryland who testified that more work is needed on police Mr. Floyd died from sudden reform. cardiac arrest. “While we appreDr. David Fowler, ciate that the district though, acknowlattorney is pursuing edged during crossjustice for Daunte, examination that a no conviction can person would suffer give the Wright famirreversible brain ily their loved one damage if someone back. This was no knelt on the back of Mr. Floyd accident. This was his or her neck for an intentional, deliberate, and 4 minutes, less than half the unlawful use of force. Driv- 9 minutes and 29 seconds Mr. ing while Black continues to Chauvin knelt on Mr. Floyd’s result in a death sentence,” Mr. neck. Crump said. The defense also offered Meanwhile, prosecutors in testimony from its own exthe Chauvin trail wrapped up pert in the use of force, Barry their case Monday with testi- Brodd, who testified that he mony from a heart specialist, believed Mr. Chauvin acted who testified that Mr. Floyd, reasonably. 46, did not die of a heart attack “I felt that Derek Chauvin or a drug overdose, but from was justified, was acting with asphyxiation. objective reasonableness, folHis testimony sought to bol- lowing Minneapolis Police ster the case against Mr. Chauvin Department policy and current and rebut the defense theory that standards of law enforcement in Mr. Floyd’s health issues, along his interaction with Mr. Floyd,” with a drug overdose, were the Mr. Brodd told the jury. actual cause of his death. The prosecution earlier preWhile it is still uncertain sented testimony from the Minwhether Mr. Chauvin will neapolis police chief and veteran testify, the defense has begun training officers that Mr. Chaupresenting witnesses, with clos- vin’s actions violated department ing arguments expected Mon- policy, practice and procedure day at the Hennepin County and did not comport with the courthouse. The case would training officers receive.

Free COVID-19 testing Continued from A1

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. The Virginia Department of Health also has a list of COVID19 testing locations around the state at www.vdh.virginia.gov/ coronavirus/covid-19-testing/covid-19-testing-sites/. Want a COVID-19 vaccine? Seniors ages 65 and older who live in Richmond or Henrico County can call the Richmond and Henrico Health Districts COVID-19 hotline — (804) 205-3501 — from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday to schedule a vaccine appointment. Others who want a vaccine should contact the statewide COVID-19 Vaccination Pre-Registration System at vaccinate. virginia.gov or by calling 877-VAX-IN-VA, or (877) 829-4682. The statewide call center is open 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. seven days a week to help people pre-register by phone or to answer questions about the vaccine. The call center has English- and Spanish-speaking agents and a call-back service to help people in more than 100 other languages. Additionally, TTY service is available to help people who are deaf or hard of hearing. Despite a nationwide halt in the use of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine as federal health officials investigate side effects, the United States remains on track to have half of its adult population vaccinated by the end of the week, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The nation also is getting closer to President Biden’s goal of 200 million doses of the vaccine administered by his first 100 days in office. Locally, health districts in Richmond, Henrico, Chesterfield, and the surrounding counties have opened vaccination eligibility to anyone age 16 and older. Health officials marked the occasion April 9, with the newly eligible set up with appointments beginning this week. Nearly 5 million doses of the vaccine have been administered in Virginia as of Wednesday, according to state health data, with 1.89 million people fully vaccinated or 22.2 percent of the population. Data show that 37.5 percent of the state’s population has been vaccinated with at least one dose. Still, the number of positive cases of the coronavirus continues to grow. State officials reported 640,211 cases of COVID-19 statewide on Wednesday, along with 27,397 hospitalizations and 10,510 deaths. Virginia’s seven-day positivity rate is 6.1 percent. Last week, it was 6.2 percent. According to state data, African-Americans comprised 22 percent of cases statewide and 24.8 percent of deaths for which ethnic and racial data is available, while Latinos made up 16.4 percent of cases and 6.5 percent of deaths. Reported COVID-19 data as of Wednesday, Apr. 14, 2021 Cases Hospitalizations Deaths Richmond 16,313 765 255 Henrico County 24,147 999 588 Chesterfield County 26,323 899 406 Hanover County 7,705 271 148

State suspends use of Johnson & Johnson vaccine Continued from A1

Sandra Sellars/Richmond Free Press

Anti-racist demonstrators hold a banner Saturday outside the headquarters of the United Daughters of the Confederacy on Richmond’s Arthur Ashe Boulevard. The two said they are not affiliated with the White Lies Matter group that claimed responsibility for stealing a Confederate chair from a Selma, Ala., cemetery in March and then demanding the UDC post a banner at the Richmond headquarters on April 9, the anniversary of the Confederate surrender at Appomattox, ending the Civil War. The two demonstrators had their own message for the UDC.

to just a mistake, clearly an unfortunate one, but a mistake,” he said. Ms. Godwin said the UDC is considering whether to return the chair to the cemetery or relocate it to a more protected location.

“This pause is reassuring in that it demonstrates that the systems that are in place to monitor vaccine safety are working,” said Dr. Danny Avula, Virginia’s vaccination coordinator for the state Department of Health. He said vaccinations will continue across the state using the two-dose vaccines developed by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna. Locally, the suspension has impacted several small vaccination events and mobile vaccine efforts planned by the Richmond and Henrico County health districts. The Johnson & Johnson vaccine was to be used, as well as for homebound residents and a new, walk-up vaccination initiative for seniors. Anyone who had an appointment at one of the four Johnson & Johnson vaccine events is asked to contact the health district call center at (804) 205-3501. People will be offered the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines at their scheduled appointment. – GEORGE COPELAND JR.


Richmond Free Press

April 15-17, 2021 A5

With nearly one million cases of Parkinson’s disease in the U.S., how does this affect the African American community? April is Parkinson’s Disease Awareness Month. While studies show those in the African American community have similar rates of Parkinson’s to white Americans, disparities in access to health care and lack of information translate to worse outcomes and higher mortality. VCU Health is working to eliminate these disparities, providing education and treatment options.

What is Parkinson’s Disease and What are Its Signs? Parkinson’s disease is the second most common neurodegenerative disease and is believed to be caused by a deficiency of dopamine in the brain. Symptoms typically begin gradually on one side of the body.

Ways to Manage Parkinson’s Disease?

Dopamine Deficiency

Living with Parkinson’s can make every day a challenge, but there are ways to fight back and enhance your quality of life. Make a plan for medications, treatment, support, and ways to stay independent. • • • •

Symptoms may include: • • • • •

Trembling of hands, arms, legs, jaw and face Stiffness of the arms, legs and trunk Slowness of movement Poor balance and coordination Speech and writing changes

Participate in National Parkinson’s Disease Awareness Month

Now Offering Care in Multiple Convenient Locations:

Things you can do: • • • • •

Join a support group Attend a Parkinson’s exercise group Be part of a local Parkinson’s support event Share your story and support others with Parkinson’s disease Contribute to PD fundraising campaigns and events

National Parkinson’s Disease Awareness Month

Be active Drink plenty of water Eat fruits and vegetables Visit your movement disorders specialist Plan medical treatment and therapy

• • • • • •

Movement disorder neurologists and physician assistants Neuropsychologists Physical, occupational and speech therapists Social workers Imaging and laboratory services Treatment for other movement disorders such as tremors, dystonia, ataxia, restless legs syndrome, tic disorders and Huntington’s disease Opportunities to participate in cutting-edge clinical research studies

We care about the health and safety of our communities. To learn more, visit vcuhealth.org. © 2021 VCU Health. All rights reserved. Sources: VCU Health; Parkinson’s Foundation; The National Center for Biotechnology Information; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


Richmond Free Press

Tulips in the West End

Editorial Page

A6

April 15-17, 2021

Police abuse redux When will the police abuse and killing of Black people stop? What will it take for these continued tragedies to end? The latest reports from rural Windsor, Va., and Brooklyn Center, Minn., demonstrate that the horrific death of George Floyd at the hands of police wasn’t enough to change the malevolent actions of some law enforcement officers. Video of the disturbing traffic stop of Army 2nd Lt. Caron Nazario on U.S. 460 in Isle of Wight County show the wretched abuse that Black men are met with, regardless of whether they are in military uniform. Lt. Nazario was never told by police why he was being stopped, even as he complied with their commands to show his hands as police threatened him with guns drawn and peppersprayed him directly in his face. He was pulled from his car and knocked to the ground and handcuffed. No charges were filed against him. One of the officers involved has been fired. The State Police, FBI and Attorney General’s Office of Civil Rights are investigating. In suburban Minneapolis, 20-year-old Daunte Wright was shot and killed Sunday afternoon when he was pulled over allegedly for having air fresheners dangling from his rearview mirror. The officer, who resigned on Tuesday along with the Brooklyn Center police chief, claimed she accidentally pulled out and shot her gun instead of her Taser. She has been charged with second degree manslaughter. Richmond, and cities across the nation, continue to talk about training and reforms to prevent these acts from happening. But we believe the issue goes much deeper — the ingrained racism that enables white police officers to view Black people, and particularly Black men, as threats. It is that deep-seated racism that prompts officers to pull their weapons from the start and then blame the dead person or the abused. Too many Black people and their families have had to suffer the trauma and consequences of such deeply embedded racial animus. How do you eradicate such thinking that leads to the aberrant behavior by police in Windsor and Brooklyn Center? How can we stop police from becoming criminals? Local efforts are not enough. It will take a national stand-down to deal with police reform. It goes without saying that rogue officers who threaten, intimidate, abuse, hurt and kill must be held accountable for their actions, whether it is through firing, a loss of pension, loss of ability to ever again wear a badge or criminal prosecution, or any combination of the four. We also must be able to hold the officer and his or her jurisdiction civilly responsible for such actions. And we urge Virginia lawmakers to end qualified immunity that shields law enforcement and their localities from civil liability. The record $27 million civil settlement by the city of Minneapolis in the death of George Floyd will not bring him back. But it will help educate his youngest children and may help provide therapy for the others who still are suffering from his loss. Even more, it may put pressure on law enforcement officials to make changes and act more quickly when they suspect an officer of racial bias. These atrocities must stop. The lives of our community members should not be abandoned to abusive police.

Sandra Sellars/Richmond Free Press

National standards needed for police behavior

Even as former police officer Derek Chauvin is on trial in Minneapolis for the murder of George Floyd, police 10 miles away fatally shot an African-American man, Daunte Wright, after pulling him over for an alleged traffic violation. That triggered protests that led to confrontations with police, despite Mr. Wright’s family pleading for non-violence. The Washington Post reports that 985 people have been shot and killed by police in the past year, with Black people more than two times as likely to be shot and killed than white people. Fundamental reform is long overdue. Now the U.S. House of Representatives has passed the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act for the second time. The act, drawn up by Rep. Karen Bass of California and Judiciary Committee Chair Rep. Jerrold Nadler of New York, has been endorsed by leading civil rights and criminal justice groups, pushed by the Congressional Black Caucus and hailed by George Floyd’s family and attorneys. The act would set national standards for police behavior.

It bans the use of chokeholds of various sorts like that used to kill George Floyd. It bans no-knock warrants that led to the shooting of Breonna Taylor in Louisville. It restricts the transfer of military weaponry to police forces. Federal assistance would be conditioned on local police forces requiring the use of

Jesse L. Jackson Sr. body and car cameras, as well as anti-discrimination policies and training. It restricts the qualified immunity doctrine that shields police from civil liability. President Biden has called on the U.S. Senate to pass the measure and promised to sign it into law. These common sense reforms should have bipartisan support, but sadly the bill received only one vote from Republicans when it passed the House in February. The reforms are far from complete. The Movement for Black Lives, or M4BL, the collection of 150 civil rights groups that helped organize the unprecedented protest movement across the country after George Floyd’s death, praises the creation of federal standards, a ban on chokeholds and restriction of the immunity doctrine, but says that the bill goes “nowhere near far enough.”

M4BL calls for investments upfront in communities and people, addressing mass incarceration and systemic racism and making police accountable to communities. The leaders worry that passage of the George Floyd Act would exhaust reform efforts, not simply be the first step toward reform. Surely the M4BL is right. Sensible police reforms are necessary but not sufficient. Renewed investment in communities and greater community control over the police are essential. The plague of mass incarceration must be ended. The George Floyd Act, however, need not be in conflict with broader reforms. Conservative Democrats fret that the M4BL slogan, “defund the police,” alienates voters. Certainly, most African-Americans want protection from crime and violence. They don’t want to get rid of the police. They want to turn police from a threat to an ally. Many police officers agree that we’ve loaded police with too many responsibilities — from dealing with domestic disputes to handling the mentally unstable — because social services have been starved in poor communities. Police reforms will never work unless accompanied by rebuilding and empowering communities. The movement that mobilized

Biden offers diverse judicial nominees People who care about equal justice under the law should be very happy about President Biden’s first set of judicial nominees. I am especially excited about the three outstanding Black women that President Biden nominated to the circuit courts — the appeals court level just below the U.S. Supreme C o u r t . Yo u will be hearing more soon about all these highly credentialed and accomplished women — Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, Candace Jackson-Akiwumi and Tiffany Cunningham. The president is fulfilling his promise to bring professional diversity to courts that are dominated by former prosecutors and corporate lawyers. Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson and Candace Jackson-Akiwumi both have experience as public defenders. Judge Jackson was unanimously confirmed by the U.S. Senate in 2013 for the seat she now holds on the federal district court for the District of Columbia. President Biden has pledged to nominate the first Black woman to the U.S. Supreme Court. These nominees are a good sign that he intends to keep that promise. It is shameful that the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which has jurisdiction over diverse cities including Chicago, Milwaukee and Indianapolis, currently has only white judges. The confirmation of Ms. Jackson-Akiwumi will change that.

The confirmation of Ms. Cunningham will make her the first Black judge ever to serve on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. These brilliant women also will bring other perspectives that are sorely lacking on the courts. Judge Jackson was vice

Ben Jealous chair and commissioner on the U.S. Sentencing Commission, where she advocated for ending the brutally unjust and anti-Black discrepancy between sentences for crack cocaine and powder cocaine. As a public defender, Ms. Jackson-Akiwumi represented more than 400 people who could not afford a lawyer. Ms. Cunningham has been nominated to the specialized federal circuit, which needs judges familiar with science and technology issues. Ms. Cunningham not only has a law degree from Harvard University, but a degree in chemical engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She repeatedly has been named to legal publications’ lists of the country’s best lawyers. She is impressive. This is history in the making, not just for these judges but for all the people who will be influenced by their decisions. Legendary civil rights advocate Mary Frances Berry recently wrote, “When the American people voted in November, we chose a new Congress and administration that we believed would deliver change. That means passing legislation that actually helps everyday people, not just the rich and powerful.

It also means having the right people in key positions to bring that ‘real people’ focus to policymaking and to upholding the law.” As Ms. Berry pointed out, the success of these trailblazing women also will create new opportunities for the women and girls who follow. Former President Trump’s judicial nominees were overwhelmingly white — around 4 percent of his judges are Black — and picked mostly for their loyalty to a right wing judicial ideology that sacrifices individual rights and the common good to states’ rights and the power of corporations. President Trump appointed no Black women to the federal circuit courts. Confirming President Biden’s judicial nominees will begin the process of repairing the damage done to our courts during the Trump administration and restoring faith in our courts. Unfortunately, we have seen that being extremely well qualified does not prevent women of color from being unfairly attacked. Right wing groups have spent millions of dollars to smear women of color nominated to President Biden’s cabinet and to high-level positions at the U.S. Justice Department. People For the American Way has launched the Her Fight Our Fight campaign to support the women of color who are ready to help lead the way to a more just, more inclusive, multiethnic and multiracial democratic society. The writer is president of People For the American Way and People For the American Way Foundation.

The Free Press welcomes letters The Richmond Free Press respects the opinions of its readers. We want to hear from you. We invite you to write the editor. All letters will be considered for publication. Concise, typewritten letters related to public matters are preferred. Also include your telephone number(s). Letters should be addressed to: Letters to the Editor, Richmond Free Press, P.O. Box 27709, 422 East Franklin Street, Richmond, VA 23261, or faxed to: (804) 643-7519 or e-mail: letters@richmondfreepress.com.

after the horrific killing of George Floyd has begun to spark reforms across the country. I urge the civil rights and criminal justice community to unite to push the U.S. Senate to pass the George Floyd Act as a first step, to be accompanied by state and local efforts to transform police and federal resources to invest in communities and create new lines of accountability. The vibrant movement for justice that the M4BL has helped trigger will not stop there. The unprecedented outpouring of support must continue to mobilize, demand accountability, protest police violence and keep the pressure on for broader reform. The movement can’t let the perfect be enemy of the good, nor allow partial reforms to slake the need for more action, more experimentation and greater community control. The writer is founder and president of the national Rainbow PUSH Coalition.

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Richmond Free Press

April 15-17, 2021 A7

Letter to the Editor

‘Let all of the people determine what’s good for the city’ I find many recent responses to a casino resort in the city bothersome. We can’t allow

certain people to use their knapsack of special provisions, maps and blank checks to determine

what’s good for the entire city, especially for a predominantly African-American city, on an issue this important. Instead of using privilege and entertaining certain voices that are making noise and attempting to push their weight around, use it to dismantle systems that oppress PUBLIC NOTICE people. This is a good RICHMOND CITY COUNCIL PUBLIC HEARING way to start. AMENDMENT TO THE 2019-2020 ANNUAL ACTION PLAN Racialization creates community reacIn accordance with City’s citizen participation requirements for federal tions, and nimbyism funds, a 10-day public comment period for the amendment to 2019 Annual reactions smooth the Action Plan (City FY 2020) that began on February 25, 2021, and will way for replication of be extended through April 25, 2021. By this notice the City of Richmond white privilege. Stop announces the availability of the Amended 2019 Annual Action Plan Budget, is ready for public review and comment. the division and act as allies. On Monday, April 26, 2021 at 6:00 p.m. in City Council Chambers, the If you support Richmond City Council will hold a public hearing on an amendment to equity and equality, the 2019 Annual Action Plan and FY 2019-2020 budget for CARES Act funding related to COVID-19 pandemic for Community Development Block Grant COVID-19 (CDBG-CV). The additional funds are a result of the CARES Act passed by Congress and signed by the President in March of 2020 to address the Corona Virus Pandemic. These funds were allocated to the City from the U. S. Department of Housing & Urban Development to address the City of Richmond priorities as a result of the COVID-19 SDQGHPLF WKDW KDYH EHHQ LGHQWL¿HG LQ WKH $QQXDO $FWLRQ 3ODQ Citizens and interested persons are invited to give their views regarding the use of CDBG-CV funds for the proposed Annual Action Plan. The City will arrange for reasonable accommodations for non-English speaking persons or those persons with visual, hearing, or mobility impairments when QRWL¿HG $Q\RQH ZLVKLQJ WR VSHDN DW WKH SXEOLF KHDULQJ SOHDVH FRQWDFW WKH 2I¿FH RI WKH &LW\ &OHUN E\ DP $SULO DW The following project budget amendments are the result of additional HUD funding and reprograming of surplus funds and the cancelation of an existing activity. No additional funds were received from HUD for this amendment. The propose activities are outlined below: Community Development Block Grant funds (CDBG-CV): $1,600,000 Re-Employment Assistance (BHC) – Cancel the BHC’s Reemployment Assistance activity. Decrease activity by $150,000 IURP WR 7KLV DFWLYLW\ ZDV DZDUGHG IXQGV LQ WKH ¿UVW round of the NOFA for COVID-19 funding; however, HUD made a determination that the activity was not an eligible activity. The City is reprogramming the $150,000 to other eligible activities in this O & R.

prove it. Our city is in search of economic vitality for all. Yet we hear nimbyism and racialization in opposition to the casino: “We don’t want a casino in our neighborhood because of increased traffic, it’s going to bring down our property values and crime will increase.” The latest argument against the casino is that a nesting pair of bald eagles will be affected. Stop the madness. This is a sneaky way to attempt to sound like race isn’t involved. Shameful. This is coded language that preserves the legacy of racial exclusion. It’s funny how a few privileged people can get a response and, in the reverse, communities of color are forsaken. All this is doing is continuing to

separate us more. suring we select a responsible The very same people who developer that will be a good are signing petitions, protest- community partner. ing and learning about racial Let’s work to eliminate rainjustice are the very ones cialization and nimbyism and opposing changes, such as a build a more equitable future casino, that could improve the for every resident in the city of livelihoods of communities of Richmond. A casino resort can color significantly. do that right now when RichWith a casino resort, we mond needs it the most. can create good, paying jobs Let all of the people defor communities of color, termine what’s good for the spark an economic resurgence city. to support the business community and local government TAVARES FLOYD and help support the orga- Richmond nizations that provide critiEMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES cal services to the Richmond Transplant Surgeon, Richmond, VA. community. Perform surgical operations for donor, The priliver, kidney, & pancreas transplantations; inpatient/clinic care; & preoperative mary focus selection meetings. Mail resume to J. should be en-

The City of Richmond announces the following project(s) available for services relating to: RFP No. 210008424: Road Condition Assessment For all information pertaining to this RFP please logon to the Richmond website (www.RichmondGov.com). Due Date: Monday, May 10, 2021/Time: 3:00 P.M. NOTE: Offerors choosing to submit proposals through hand-delivery should allow extra time for delivery of proposals. Due to COVID-19, hand-delivered proposals will be accepted only during the hours of 9:00 A.M to 5:00 P.M. Monday through Friday at the 9th Street entrance to City Hall at 900 East Broad Street, Richmond, Virginia 23221. Offerors choosing to hand-deliver proposals must call Corliss Spurlock at 804-646-5804 when arriving at City Hall, and Corliss Spurlock will meet the offeror at the 9th Street entrance of City Hall to collect the submittal. Proposals will not be accepted after the Due Date and Time listed above. Information or copies of the above solicitations are available by contacting Procurement Services, at the City of Richmond website (www.RichmondGov.com). The City of Richmond encourages all contractors to participate in the procurement process.

City Workforce Development Program (PRCF) – Add a new activity at $100,000 for the training and hiring of persons who lost their jobs or had their hours cut in the retail and hospitality industry during COVID-19. Provide referrals to job opportunities offered through the City and other regional employment partners. CDBG-CV Surplus (HCD) – This is money that was not appropriated WR D SURMHFW IURP WKH &'%* &9 DOORFDWLRQ ,QFUHDVHG E\ IURP WR WR IXQG IXWXUH HOLJLEOH &29,' activities. Copies of the amended 2019 Annual Action Plan are available for public review online on the Department of Housing and Community Developments website located at www.richmondgov.com. Citizens can also request a hard copy or electronic copy via e-mail or US Mail. To request a copy, contact Daniel Mouer at daniel.mouer@richmondgov.com or by mail at the City of Richmond, Department of Housing & Community 'HYHORSPHQW ( 0DLQ 6WUHHW 6XLWH 5LFKPRQG 9$ The City of Richmond does not discriminate on the basis of disability status in the admission of, or access to, or treatment in its federally assisted SURJUDPV RU DFWLYLWLHV 9LUJLQLD 5HOD\ &HQWHU 7'' 8VHUV Citizens and interested persons are invited to give their views regarding the use of CDBG-CV funds for the proposed Annual Action Plan. The City will arrange for reasonable accommodations for non-English speaking persons or those persons with visual, hearing, or mobility impairments when QRWL¿HG ZLWKLQ ¿YH EXVLQHVV GD\V RI WKH FORVH RI WKH SXEOLF FRPPHQW period. Submit comments and views in writing to: Daniel Mouer, Housing and Community Development Administrator, Housing and Community 'HYHORSPHQW ( 0DLQ 6WUHHW 6XLWH 5LFKPRQG 9$ or by e-mail to daniel.mouer@richmondgov.com.

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Route 60 (Midlothian Turnpike) Restricted Crossing U-Turn Improvement Chesterfield County Virtual Public Information Meeting Thursday, April 29, 2021, 5 – 7 p.m. https://www.virginiadot.org/Route60ChesterfieldRCUT See preliminary information for the proposed improvements to Route 60 (Midlothian Turnpike) from 0.25 miles west of Old Buckingham Road /Woolridge Road to Heaths Way, a total project length of 0.22 miles. The proposed plan is to construct a restricted crossing U-turn (RCUT) intersection at Route 60 and Woolridge Road/Old Buckingham Road in Chesterfield County. The purpose of this project is to improve safety at this intersection. Information may be found at the project website above. The meeting will be held as a virtual/online event. VDOT representatives will make a presentation beginning at 5 p.m. and be available to answer questions after the presentation is complete. The presentation will be available for review throughout the comment period. Give your comments during/after the virtual presentation, online through the project web site form, or by email to William.Wheeler@VDOT.Virginia.gov. Written comments may also be submitted to William Wheeler, Project Manager, Virginia Department of Transportation, 2430 Pine Forest Drive, South Chesterfield, VA 23834. All comments must be received by May 9, 2021. Please reference “UPC 115412 Route 60 RCUT Public Comments” in the subject line. VDOT ensures nondiscrimination and equal employment in all programs and activities in accordance with Title VI and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. If you need special assistance for persons with disabilities or limited English proficiency, contact the project manager listed above. State Project: 0060-020-854; Federal Project: NHPP-5A27(726); UPC: 115412

In the event of equipment or other issues, the meeting will be held Thursday, May 6 at the same time.

Fleming, VCU Health System Authority, 1010 E. Marshall St., Ste. 201, Richmond, VA 23219

Thank you for your interest in applying for opportunities with The City of Richmond. To see what opportunities are available, please refer to our website at www.richmondgov.com. EOE M/F/D/V

DEAN OF STUDENTS/ TITLE IX COORDINATOR #FA395 Reynolds Community College, Richmond, VA The Dean of Students/Title IX Coordinator provides student-centered leadership, vision, co-curricular planning and direction that facilitates students’ growth, personal and academic achievement, and career success through programs and services in support of the college’s mission. The Dean assists the Vice President of Enrollment Management and Student Success in strategic planning and execution for the division by leading the ongoing planning, development, and administration of programs in Advising Services; operations and wrap around student support services; counseling and behavioral health; Student Life; Accommodations (disability services); Veteran services; and, Library, Information Services and Academic Support Services.

TYPE OF APPOINTMENT: Full-time, twelvemonth administrative faculty-ranked appointment. Salary range: $90,000 - $110,000. Salary commensurate with the education and experience of the candidate. Application reviews will begin May 3, 2021. Additional information regarding the position is available at the College’s Web site: www.reynolds.edu/jobs AA/EOE/ADA/Veterans/ AmeriCorps/Peace Corps/ Other National Service Alumni are encouraged to apply.

Interstate 95 South Arthur Ashe Boulevard Ramp Widening (Exit 78) and Interstate 95 South Lane Reassignment City of Richmond Find out about the proposed Interstate 95 south (Exit 78) ramp widening at Arthur Ashe Boulevard (Route 161) and Interstate 95 south lane reassignment project from Bryan Park interchange to the Arthur Ashe Boulevard off ramp. This project includes widening the ramp to create a dedicated exit lane and option lane on Interstate 95 south. The project will improve safety and operations in the area while creating a dedicated lane for Interstate 64 east to Interstate 95 south just south of the Bryan Park Interchange. For more information about this project, visit http://www.virginiadot.org/projects/richmond/richmond---i-95-south-bryan-parklane-restriping-and-ramp-improvements-at-arthur-ashe-boulevard.asp. Project information is available at VDOT’s Richmond District Office located at 2430 Pine Forest Drive, South Chesterfield VA 23834-9002, 804-524-6000, 1800-663-4188, TTY/TTD 711. Please call ahead to make arrangements for personnel to share more information or answer your questions. If your concerns cannot be satisfied, VDOT is willing to hold a public hearing. You may request that a public hearing be held by sending a written request to Mr. Scott Chapman, Virginia Department of Transportation, 2430 Pine Forest Drive, South Chesterfield VA 23834-9002 or by email to scott.chapman@vdot.virginia.gov on or prior to April 22, 2021. If a request for a public hearing is received, notice of date, time and place of the hearing will be posted. VDOT ensures nondiscrimination and equal employment in all programs and activities in accordance with Title VI and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. If you need special assistance for persons with disabilities or limited English proficiency, contact the project manager at the phone numbers listed above. State Project: 0095-127-680, C501, P101, R201; UPC: 118581


Richmond Free Press

A8  April 15-17, 2021

Sports Stories by Fred Jeter

Jackie Robinson opened MLB’s doors to people of color 74 years ago on April 15 If Jackie Robinson had done anything wrong in 1947, it might have set back the movement for racial equality many years. Instead, he did everything right. For his brave efforts in breaking the color line with style and dignity, every April 15 since 2004 has been honored throughout professional baseball as Jackie Robinson Day. All players, managers and coaches will wear Robinson’s iconic No. 42, which was retired by Major League Baseball in 1997. Some history: Robinson was signed by Brooklyn Dodgers General Manager Branch Rickey in August 1945 as the first Black player in a MLB organization. He played the 1946 season at the Dodgers’ AAA farm club in Montreal before joining the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947 at age 28. The Dodgers opened on April 15, 1947, before a home crowd of 26,623, about 14,000 of whom were African-American. Rickey chose Robinson above many other talented players not only for his physical talent but for his character. Robinson had been involved with integrated athletics as a four-sport star at UCLA and he had a military background. There were skeptics for sure and others who wanted him to fail. Had he gotten into a fistfight with another player, become involved in an altercation with fans or media, failed to meet expectations on the field or been associated with any misconduct off field, the naysayers would have said, “I told you so.” The jeers turned quickly to cheers at Brooklyn’s Ebbets Field, with the Dodgers beating the Boston Braves 4-3 in the opener. Away from home, however, there were numerous ugly incidents, mostly involving fans. Robinson’s talent for “turning the other cheek” helped him

sidestep the nastiness. Robinson, with the support of his wife Rachel whom he married in 1946, foiled the haters by winning National League Rookie of the Year and helping the Dodgers to the National League pennant. As a rookie, he had 175 hits, 12 homers, 31 doubles, five triples and 29 stolen bases. Given an opening, many Black players followed. By 1952, there were 150 AfricanAmericans playing in MLB organizations, which also ushered the Negro Leagues into the history books. While Robinson played second base most of his career, he broke in as the Dodgers’ first baseman, usually hitting second in order. If Robinson were to view pro baseball today, he might be surprised and even a bit disappointed at the makeup of current MLB rosters. On opening day this season, only 7 percent of players were African-American. Among young Black athletes, basketball and football have become the more popular activities. That wasn’t the case in the 1940s. There is no shortage, however, of people of color suiting up at big league ballparks. About 28 percent of rosters are filled by Latinos from South America and the Caribbean. So when Jackie Robinson swung open the door of opportunity in 1947, it wasn’t just African-Americans who entered. Athletes around much of the world celebrated the green light and stepped forward as well.

Breaking barriers

George Wythe athlete Talik Bryant excels despite season without basketball

Reyes Moronta

Elhire Adrianza

Former Flying Squirrels now on MLB rosters

Today’s minor leaguers become tomorrow’s major leaguers. For proof, check out the Richmond Flying Squirrels alumni chapter. There are 16 former Flying Squirrels on this year’s big league opening day rosters. That includes seven players with the Squirrels’ major league affiliate, the San Francisco Giants. Here’s the list of the players and the dates they played for the Richmond Flying Squirrels: San Francisco Giants: Infielders Brandon Crawford and Brandon Belt (2010); pitcher Austin Slater (2015-16); pitcher Logan Webb (2018-19); pitcher Caleb Barager (2019); pitcher Reyes Moronta (2017); and pitcher Tyler Rogers (2015-16). Pittsburgh Pirates: Pitcher Chris Stratton (2014-15) and pitcher Kyle Crick (2014-15). Oakland Athletics: Catcher Aramis Garcia (2017-18). Boston Red Sox: Infielder Christian Arroyo (2016). Texas Rangers: Infielder Charlie Culbertson (2011). Toronto Blue Jays: Infielder Joe Panik (2013). Miami Marlins: Infielder Adam Duvall (2019). Atlanta Braves: Infielder Ehire Adrianza (2016-19). Philadelphia Phillies: Pitcher Sam Coonrad (2019). Many others figure to get called up to the majors sometime during the current season. The 2021 Flying Squirrels roster won’t be determined until later this month. The Giants’ minor leaguers currently are training in Scottsdale, Ariz. A member of the newly named AA Northeast League, formerly called the Eastern League, the Richmond Flying Squirrels open May 4 at The Diamond against the Hartford Yard Goats. There was no 2020 season due to the pandemic.

DeAndrea Neal, VSU Hall of Famer and former offensive line coach, dies at 53 DeAndrea Neal, a member of the Virginia State University Sports Hall of Fame, died Friday, April 9, 2021. Mr. Neal, 53, was a four-time All-CIAA selection as a football lineman from 1986 to 1989. He also earned All-CIAA honors throwing the shot put in track and field. Following his distinguished playing career, Mr. Neal served as the Trojans’ offensive line coach from 1990 to 1997. He was part of the coaching staff that won CIAA football titles in 1995 and 1996. During his long tenure at VSU, he also served as assistant director of student activities and director of Greek affairs. He was a member of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity and served as an adviser to the fraternity’s Nu Psi Chapter. Licensed as a minister in 2010, Mr. Neal led the college ministry at Mount Olivet Baptist Church in Petersburg, where he began attending services in 1987 as a VSU student. A tribute and balloon release was held in Mr. Neal’s honor on Monday at VSU’s Foster Hall. He was selected to the VSU Hall of Fame in 2003.

Talik Bryant has earned a spot on the “A Team” at Richmond’s George Wythe High School. Whether the challenge is academic or athletic, the gifted senior is likely to ace the test. Bryant ranks in the top five of his class with a nearly 4.0 GPA, while earning significant college credits in the Early College Academy offered by Reynolds Community College. He has substantial academic scholarship offers from the likes of Virginia Tech and the College of William & Mary. When he does enroll in college, it will be as at least a sophomore. On the basketball court, the quick, savvy 5-foot-7 point guard known as “Sweetpea” was one of 11 athletes in Virginia nominated for the McDonald’s All-American team. That award came in 2020 following Bryant’s junior year under Coach Willard Coker. His senior season on the hardcourt was canceled with all Richmond Public Schools sports because of COVID-19. “Talik never says much on the court, but he plays hard and he’s tough, despite his size,” Coach Coker said. “He never minded taking a charge for the good of the team.” Bryant was a two-year starter for the Bulldogs and was in position for a stellar senior season before the pandemic

got in the way. “It’s been difficult. I’ve been playing basketball my whole life,” Bryant said. “This year, I really wanted to be a leader and help a great group of guys to a championship. I hate for it to end like this.” Bryant said he never let his diminutive stature prevent him from pursuing basketball. “Being one of the smallest out there, I had to be quicker and more aggressive and do the dirty work, like taking charges.” Bryant is the son of Chifawn Taylor and Tobias Bryant. He also is the nephew of Wythe Hall of Famer Jerry Lee Morton, a basketball standout at Wythe during the mid-1970s under legendary Coach Bob Booker. Morton has been something of a mentor to his nephew. “I helped teach Talik how to play basketball, baseball and football, and also tennis and chess,” Morton said. With the guidance, Bryant went on to win awards in both tennis and chess at the Westover Community Center near George Wythe High School. Looking ahead, Bryant suggested he likely will major in computer science in college and perhaps pursue a walk-on role on the basketball team. “We’ll see where my journey goes,” he said.

Who will be NBA Rookie of the Year?

LaMelo Ball did everything and more that could have been expected of him — everything, that is, but stay healthy. As a result, the coveted NBA Rookie of the Year Award that once seemed his for the taking is now up for grabs. The dynamic 6-foot-6 Charlotte Hornets guard was averaging 16 points, six rebounds and six assists through 41 games of a 72game schedule. Even more, Ball’s pizzazz and creativity had placed him among the league’s top attractions. Unfortunately, his LaMelo Ball season came crashing down March 22 when he broke his right wrist — his shooting hand — in a game against the Los Angeles Clippers. His return remains doubtful. The 2020 third overall draft pick despite never competing collegiately, Ball will have played in 57 percent of the Hornets’ games should his season be over. Is that enough to be NBA Rookie of the Year as voted on by the 100-person media panel at the end of season? In 1986, the New York Knicks’ Patrick Ewing won top rookie honors playing 61 percent of his games. That’s the lowest percentage of games ever played by a rookie champ. A year ago, injury-plagued Zion Williamson was sensational in 24 games for the New Orleans Pelicans, but the Memphis Grizzlies’ Ja Morant won the award with 99 of 100 first-place votes. With Ball on the sidelines, here are others sure to draw voting attention: Anthony Edwards (Minnesota Timberwolves): The overall No. 1 draft pick out of

Georgia, Edwards is averaging 17.8 points, 4.4 rebounds and 2.6 assists. Tyrese Haliburton (Sacramento Kings): Drafted 12th overall out of Iowa State, the 6-foot-5 guard averages 15.1 points, 3.3 rebounds and five assists. Immanuel Quickley (New York Knicks): After one season at the University Kentucky, the 6-foot-3 guard averages 12 points, 2.3 rebounds and 2.2 assists. Jae’Sean Tate (Houston Rockets): Undrafted out of Ohio State, the 6-foot-4 guard averages 10.8 points, 5.4 rebounds and two assists. James Wiseman (Golden State Warriors): The 7-footer played briefly at the University of Memphis before going pro. The second overall pick averages 11.5 points, six rebounds and has 36 blocked shots. He suffered a torn meniscus last weekend and may be lost for the season. Saben Lee (Detroit Pistons): The second round pick out of Vanderbilt averages six points, two rebounds and three assists.

Saddiq Bey (Detroit Pistons): Selected 19th overall out of Villanova, the 6-foot-7 forward averages 11 points, 5.4 rebounds and two assists. Cole Anthony (Orlando Magic): Drafted 15th out of the University of North Carolina, the son of former NBA player Greg Anthony averages 11 points, 4.5 rebounds and 3.6 assists. Desmond Bane (Memphis Grizzlies): The 6-foot-5 guard, drafted 30th overall out of Texas Christian, averages 9.5 points, 3.0 rebounds and 1.4 assists. Patrick Williams (Chicago Bulls): At 6-foot-7, the fourth overall draft pick from Florida State averages 9.7 points, 4.7 rebounds and 1.3 assists.

They are an impressive rookie crop, and still others may shine brighter in the final couple of months prior to the playoffs. How voters evaluate Ball’s partial, but scintillating first season will determine the outcome.

Ray Felix was first Black NBA Rookie of the Year

As star newcomers go, Ray Felix was a trailblazer in 1954 when he became the first African-American to be named NBA Rookie of the Year. The 6-foot-11 center averaged 18 points and 14 rebounds during the 1953-54 campaign for the Baltimore Bullets. He also was likely the league leader in blocked shots, although that was not an official statistic at the time. In that same 1954 season, Felix became just the second African-American player to be named an NBA All-Star. The first was Don Barksdale in 1953. A native of New York, Felix starred at Long Island University before becoming the Bullets’ top draft pick in 1953. Felix was the overall first pick after Ernie Beck, Walter Dukes and Larry Hennessy were taken as territorial picks. Felix, who had an intense rivalry with the Boston Celtics’ Bill Russell, went on to play 10 NBA seasons with the Bullets, the New York Knicks and the Los Angeles Lakers, averaging 11 points and nine rebounds during his career.


April 15-17, 2021 B1

Section

B

Richmond Free Press

Happenings Personality: Dr. Sesha Joi Moon

The 150th anniversary of Jackson Ward’s creation is close, and Dr. Sesha Joi Moon is intent on seeing that the full history of the district in Downtown is recognized and celebrated. Dr. Moon and her sister, Enjoli Moon, are co-creators of The JXN Project, which seeks to lowed Wednesday, April 21, “excavate, elevate and educate” with a virtual lecture at 7 p.m. people on the hidden histories kicking off a six-part series to and origins of the first historically discuss the project. The initiative ends later this registered African-American year with “Unveiling the Vanneighborhood in America. A celebration this Saturday, guard” during the annual 2nd April 17, called “Illuminating Street Festival that recaptures the Legacies: Giles B. Jackson essence of Jackson Ward. Work of this scale would be Day,” will be the first in what Dr. Moon says is a multi-part effort difficult for many, but doesn’t to explore and undo long-lasting seem to faze Dr. Moon, a Richwrongs within the area, and the mond native and Northern Virginia resident who leads similar city at large. “Jackson Ward is a com- initiatives through her profesmunity steeped in culture and sional and volunteer work. Her rich in history – a history whose hope is that The JXN Project’s multiple layers have yet to be work will recontextualize the historic district in honor of Giles B. unearthed,” Dr. Moon says. Formally founded in De- Jackson, an attorney, newspaper cember 2020 following months publisher and civil rights activof discussion, The JXN Project ist who some speculate Jackson has mapped out a long-term Ward is named for. But there are strategy to ensure racial equity others, including Confederates, and empowerment in the city’s that people believe the district is named after, and Dr. Moon is approach to its own legacy. “Illuminating Legacies: working to uncover that part of Giles B. Jackson Day” will be the neighborhood’s story. The JXN Project also aims to held 6 to 10 p.m. in Jackson rename Jackson Ward’s streets Ward, featuring a series of “socially distanced activations,” from those of slavers and their including tours, art activities and sympathizers to honorary desigprojections throughout Jackson nations for notable Black RichWard that can been seen while monders connected to Jackson walking or driving through the Ward, such as Maggie L. Walker and John Mitchell Jr. community in Downtown. The JXN Project also has Guided tours via trolley, tuk petitioned for increased repretuks and on foot begin on the 3rd Street side of the Greater sentation of Black people on city Richmond Convention Center commissions and committees. With Jackson Ward, Dr. and will be guided by Gary Moon believes Richmond has Flowers of The Gary Flowers Show; Benjamin Ross, historian the opportunity to confront longat Sixth Mount Zion Baptist standing problems and to chart Church; Janine Bell of the a better future. Meet a leader in rethinkElegba Folklore Society; and Ana Edwards of the American ing Richmond history and this week’s Personality, Dr. Sesha Civil War Museum. Details about Saturday’s Joi Moon: event are at https://thejxnproject. No. 1 volunteer position: Cocreator of The JXN Project. com/jxn-events. VR Downtown Ph3 Ad FREEPRESS Half 01 Moizelle 0412 HIGHREZ.pdf The celebration will be fol- Date and place of birth: Sept.

Spotlight on co-creator of The JXN Project

20 in Richmond. Where I live now: Northern Virginia. Education: Bachelor’s degree, Virginia Commonwealth University; master’s degree, VCU; and Ph.D., Old Dominion University. Occupation: Director of diversity, equity and inclusion at the National Institute of Standards and Technology. Family: Spouse, Janice Pritchett; father, August Moon; mother, Michon Moon; sister, Enjoli Moon; nephew, Jonah Hodari; and puppy, Benji. The JXN Project goals: The JXN Project aims to celebrate the 150th anniversary of Jackson Ward through a yearlong sesquicentennial celebration beginning on Saturday, April 17, with “Illuminating Legacies: Giles B. Jackson Day” and culminating with “Unveiling the 1 4/12/21 12:08 PM Vanguard” during the 2nd Street

Festival. The JXN Project is grounded in Richmond. However, as 1 in 4 Black Americans can retrace their roots to its riverfront, JXN endeavors to guide other communities along the journey in using research to reconcile fact and folklore in the recovery of their respective origin stories. Where is Jackson Ward: Within a historical context, Jackson Ward was established as a gerrymandered political boundary onApril 17, 1871, which originally extended from 18th Street to Leigh Street along the corporation toward the northern neck of the city. How Jackson Ward got its name: The origin of the name “Jackson Ward” has been in contention since as early as 1902 and generally is attributed to one of the following: Col. Giles Beecher Jackson, James Jackson of the Beer Garden, President Andrew Jackson or Confederate Gen. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson. While the origins of the name of the ward may have been a debate for the last 150 years, The JXN Project endeavors to ensure that it’s not in dispute for the next 150 years because no other “Jackson” is more deserving than Giles B. Jackson. Richmond and Jackson Ward’s complex relationship: Jackson Ward is a microcosm of Richmond, as both the birthplace and blueprint of both the concept of American Whiteness and Blackness. The ward has not only been gerrymandered, redlined and gentrified — at times only looking like a shell of its former

self as the “Harlem of the South” and/or “Black Wall Street” — but its actual name, as well as its surrounding streets, show that the stains of the Confederacy bleed far beyond Monument Avenue. Importance of knowing history: The JXN Project is working to honestly and accurately capture the pivotal role of Richmond in the evolution of the Black American experience. The research that undergirds this project has revealed that the history of something as seemingly simple as a name extends far beyond the monuments and can be traced to the gerrymandered origins of the city’s northern neck, better known as Jackson Ward. Jackson Ward is a community steeped in culture and rich in history, a history whose multiple layers have yet to be unearthed. In truth, the origins of Jackson Ward are complex and ugly. Often under-told, the ward was founded on exploited labor and was shaped over centuries by systems designed to oppress its residents — an impact still felt today. Also felt, however, especially when understanding the urbanized slavery system, is the pride that the legacy of Jackson Ward conjures up for the Richmond community, particularly Black Richmonders who, as residents, have built a legacy rooted in ambition, creativity, resilience and the sheer will to create a better life for themselves, their families and their city. How I start the day: In the wake of COVID-19, I am much more intentional with starting my day, first, by thanking the Creator for seeing another day, followed by a prayer of protection and peace for my loved ones.

Three words that best describe me: A walking contradiction. Best late-night snack: Ranch sunflower seeds and sparkling water. How I unwind: Running. What I have learned about myself during the pandemic: Two things — first, that I absolutely love therapy. And second, that I would become a great dog mom and fall head over heels in love with my wife’s and my mini cockapoo, Benji Pritchett-Moon. Something I love to do that most people would never imagine: It would be a tie between my obsession with Bravo, especially “Real Housewives,” or my fascination with YouTube, especially mukbangs. Quote that I am most inspired by: “The most disrespected person in America is the Black woman. The most unprotected person in America is the Black woman. The most neglected person in America is the Black woman.”— Malcolm X At the top of my “to-do” list: This, too, is a tie that I’m going to answer within the context of what’s top of the list when the pandemic passes — either going to a Beyoncé concert or going to an amusement park, both of which are two of my favorite pastimes. Best thing my parents ever taught me: “If you don’t stand for something, you’ll fall for anything.” But beyond that, the next best thing that they taught me is to be proud to be Black and to be proud to be from Richmond. Person who influenced me the most: It would be unfair to name just one person because who I am is influenced by so many people. I have been blessed with a really inspirational tribe. Book that influenced me the most: “Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry” by Mildred D. Taylor. What I’m reading now: “Life After Death” by Sister Souljah.

MEET ROBERT CHARLES, SR. Robert Charles, Sr. joined the industry at age 13, trained through the ranks, and is the patriarch of Moizelle’s Cleaners & Launderers, a family-owned business at 410 N. 1st Street in Jackson Ward. He’s joined here by his daughters, Theresa Ramey (left) and Sandra Harvey-Taylor (right). During his 70+ years in the business he says, “I remember when the streets were so busy, there were as many as nine cleaners in Jackson Ward alone.” With more people working from home recently, Moizelle’s business has decreased; still, the team remains committed to Downtown and their beloved Jackson Ward community. Downtown has hundreds of small businesses, non-profits, and cultural institutions that are open! For more information visit VentureRichmond.com.

venturerichmond.com

|

#MeetMeDowntown


Richmond Free Press

B2 April 15-17, 2021

Happenings

Rapper DMX dies at 50 Free Press wire report

Regina H. Boone/Richmond Free Press

Several members of the Victory 7 Mustang Club show off their cars last Saturday outside the Fairfield branch of the Henrico County Public Library in preparation for the 57th birthday of the iconic car. They are, from left, Melody Chase, black 1985 Mustang GT; Tony Chase, white 1991 Mustang LX; Jack Glass, red 1992 Mustang GT; Greg Johnson, white 2012 Mustang GT; Janet Spencer, blue 2019 Mustang GT; and Jackie and Thomas Victory, founder of the club, yellow 2005 Mustang GT.

Mustang Club revs engines to mark classic car’s 57th birthday, service award Free Press staff report

Thomas Victory and the Victory 7 Mustang Club are celebrating a birthday on April 17 — the 57th birthday of the Ford Mustang. The pony car premiered in 1964 at the World’s Fair in New York and has been a part of Mr. Victory’s life for more than four decades. “I’m excited,” Mr. Victory said of the Mustang’s big day that will be celebrated around the nation. At 9 a.m. Saturday, a parade of 15 Mustangs driven by members of the Victory 7 Mustang Club and their families will gather at Meadowview Park behind Arthur Ashe Elementary School in Eastern Henrico, where they will be presented with a certificate of appreciation for their many volunteer efforts by Frank Thornton, the Fairfield District representative on the county Board of Supervisors. The club twice has won the national Eagle One Golden Rule Award for outstanding community service by a car club in the nation. On Saturday, the public is invited to come and see the cars, said Mr. Victory, who will be driving his “screaming yellow” 2005 Mustang GT. It is one of five

Mustangs Mr. Victory owns. He still has his first, an Acapulco blue 1968 Mustang that he bought used right out of high school in 1972. “I worked three jobs to earn the $1,500 to buy it,” he recalled. “And I still had to have a co-signer” on the loan, he laughed. The Victory 7 Mustang Club was founded in 1985 by Mr. Victory, the club president, and several family members. The club got its name because seven of his family members owned Ford Mustangs at the time, he noted. Since then, the club has grown to more than 100 members from Virginia, North Carolina, Washington, D.C., and Maryland. Membership automatically includes family members. The club’s mission is to promote the Ford Mustang while providing community service to others. Since the mid-1980s, members have exhibited their Mustangs at car shows to raise money for various charities. Members also have gone to schools, churches and community events to talk about their cars and how to maintain them. “When our volunteers take time to visit schools and other events at no charge, we impress upon students to stay in school, keep their grades up and, most

importantly, no drinking and driving,” Mr. Victory said. A retired social worker and former president of the Urban League of Greater Richmond, Mr. Victory stresses the club’s work in giving back to the community. The club has distributed more than 10,000 books to kindergarten through 12th-grade students in area schools and helped families with a variety of basic needs. “In 2017, the club collected 5,000 bottles of water and sent them to Flint, Mich., to help during the water crisis,” Mr. Victory said. The Mustangs were left at home. “One of the members drove the water to Flint in a van,” he said. Every year since the club’s founding, members have donated food for Thanksgiving and Christmas gifts and toys to homeless people and families served by HomeAgain, a nonprofit that provides emergency shelter and transitional housing. Mr. Victory has served on the board of the organization. “If someone joins our club, we ask that they contribute canned food, a turkey and other items to the shelter,” he said. For information on joining the club, contact Mr. Victory at TJVictory7@ gmail.com.

‘Bridgerton’ heartthrob leaves show, breaks hearts Free Press wire report

Simon’s presence onscreen, but he will always be a part of the Bridgerton family.” According to media reports, Mr. Page had only a one-season deal and completed his contractual obligation to the drama produced by Shonda Rhimes. However, the latest scuttlebutt out of Hollywood claims that Mr. Page was not returning

Twitter account, using a statement penned in the style and words of the show’s mysterious lead, Lady Whistledown. The statement read: “Dear Readers, while all eyes turn to Lord Anthony Bridgerton’s quest to find a Viscountess, we bid adieu to Regé-Jean Page, who so triumphantly played the Duke of Hastings. We’ll miss

News that “Bridgerton” heartthrob Regé-Jean Page would not be returning to the Netflix hit show for season 2 set the internet aflame recently. Netflix announced April 2 that Mr. Page, who played Simon Basset, the Duke of Hastings, was leaving on its

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because of “creative differences” with Ms. Rhimes and her team. A c cording to media Mr. Page reports, Mr. Page wasn’t happy that his character would have been a guest star in three to five episodes of season 2 — at a reported $50,000 an episode — but would not have been the focal point of the drama, which was watched by a record 82 million households globally. Instead, season 2 will focus on Anthony Bridgerton, played by Jonathan Bailey, with Phoebe Dynevor, Mr. Page’s on-screen wife and the sister of Anthony Bridgerton, helping her brother navigate the upcoming social season. The plan was in line with the vision of the producers that each season will focus on a different one of Julia Quinn’s best-selling novels upon which the series is based. The British-Zimbabwean actor made his U.S. debut in History’s 2016 remake of “Roots.” The young star played Chicken George in the limited series, which also featured Laurence Fishburne, Forest Whitaker, Anika Noni Rose and Malachi Kirby as Kunta Kinte. Before “Bridgerton,” Mr. Page starred in the Shondaland series “For the People,” which ran for two seasons on ABC. Since “Bridgerton,” he has secured roles in “The Gray Man,” a Netflix spy thriller starring Ryan Gosling and Chris Evans. He also landed a role in “Dungeons & Dragons,” a film adaptation of the popular role-playing game.

NEW YORK DMX, the iconic hip-hop artist behind the songs “Ruff Ryders’ Anthem” and “Party Up (Up in Here)” whose distinctively gruff voice and thoughtful messages in his rhymes made him one of rap’s biggest stars, has died, according to a family statement Friday, April 9, 2021. He was 50. The Grammy-nominated performer died after suffering “catastrophic cardiac arrest,” according to a statement from the hospital in White Plains, N.Y., where he died. He was rushed there from his home on April 2. His family’s statement said DMX, whose birth name was Earl Simmons, died with relatives by his side after several days on life DMX support. “Earl was a warrior who fought till the very end. He loved his family with all of his heart, and we cherish the times we spent with him,” the family said, adding that his music “inspired countless fans across the world.” DMX — who rapped with a trademark raspy delivery that was often paired with growls, barks and “What!” as an ad-lib — built a multiplatinum career in the late 1990s and early 2000s, but he also struggled with drug addiction and legal problems that repeatedly put him behind bars. “His message of triumph over struggle, his search for the light out of darkness, his pursuit of truth and grace brought us closer to our own humanity,” his record label, Def Jam Recordings, said in a statement, describing him as “nothing less than a giant.” He released seven albums, earned three Grammy nominations and was named favorite rap/hip-hop artist at the 2000 American Music Awards. Along with his musical career, DMX made his mark as an actor. He starred in the 1998 film “Belly” and appeared in 2000′s “Romeo Must Die” with Jet Li and Aaliyah. DMX and Aaliyah teamed up for “Come Back in One Piece” on the film’s soundtrack. Survivors include his 15 children and his mother.

‘Emancipation’ project leaves Georgia over voter suppression laws Free Press wire report

NEW YORK Will Smith and director Antoine Fuqua have pulled production of their runaway slave drama “Emancipation” from Georgia over the state’s recently enacted law restricting voting access. The film is the largest and most high-profile Hollywood production to depart the state since Georgia’s Republican-controlled state legislature passed a law that introduced stiffer voter identification requirements for absentee balloting, limited drop boxes and Mr. Smith Mr. Fuqua gave the State Election Board new powers to intervene in county election offices and to remove and replace local election officials. Opponents have said the law is designed to reduce the impact of minority voters. In a joint statement, Mr. Smith and Mr. Fuqua — who are both producers on the project — said they felt compelled to move the production out of Georgia. “We cannot in good conscience provide economic support to a government that enacts regressive voting laws that are designed to restrict voter access,” Mr. Smith and Mr. Fuqua said. “The new Georgia voting laws are reminiscent of voting impediments that were passed Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Get rid of debts that you can’t pay. at the end of Reconstruction to prevent many Americans from “Get A Fresh Start” voting.” Keep paying on your house and car “Emancipation” had been as long as you owe what they are worth. scheduled to begin shooting in Also Chapter 13 “Debt Adjustment” STOPS FORECLOSURES, June. Apple Studios acquired GARNISHMENTS AND the film last year in a deal HARASSING PHONE CALLS reportedly worth $130 million. OTHER LEGAL SERVICES PROVIDED: The film is based on a true Divorce, Separation, Custody, story and stars Mr. Smith as Support, Home Buy or Sell an enslaved man who flees a Start with as little as $100 Louisiana plantation and joins the Union Army. Hollywood’s response to the Georgia law has been closely watched because the state is a major hub of film production and boasts generous tax incentives. Some filmmakers Call Rudy McCollum have said they would boycott, at (804)218-3614 24-7. Talk to an attorney for free including “Ford v. Ferrari” and get legal restrictions, fees, costs and payment terms. director James Mangold. But Rudolph C. McCollum, Jr., Esq. major studios have so far been McCollum At Law, P.C. largely quiet. Mail to: P.O. Box 4595, Richmond, VA 23220 422 E. Franklin St., Suite 301, In 2019, a Georgia antiRichmond, VA 23219 (Franklin & 5th Sts.) abortion law, which later was We are a federally designated Debt Relief declared unconstitutional, Agency under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code and we help people file for bankruptcy. prompted studios to threaten to cease production in the Web Address: McCollumatLaw.com E-mail: rudy@mccollumatlaw.com state.

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Richmond Free Press

April 15-17, 2021 B3

Faith News/Directory Andrea Peyton Sharpe, bookkeeper, dies at 73

Restoration work at John Jasper Monument

By Jeremy M. Lazarus

Brothers Jerry F. “Jay” Sharpe Jr. and Devron N. Sharpe run very different businesses in the Richmond area. But the one person each trusted to keep their books was their mother, Andrea Peyton Sharpe. “My mother was a bookkeeping whiz, but she also was loving and kindhearted,” said Jay Sharpe, who designs and produces Mrs. Sharpe unique jewelry. Her integrity and people skills stood her in good stead in her three decades of work at the long-closed Bethlehem Center that was once a mainstay of social services in North Side and for a state agency. Mrs. Sharpe, who struggled with health issues for two years, died Tuesday, April 6, 2021, Mr. Sharpe said. The Mechanicsville resident was 73. A celebration of Mrs. Sharpe’s life will be held 3 p.m. Friday, April 16, at the Scott’s Funeral Home Chapel, 116 E. Brookland Park Blvd. The officiant will be Dr. A. Lincoln James Jr., pastor of Trinity Baptist Church, where Mrs. Sharpe was a longtime member. A Richmond native and 1965 graduate of Maggie L. Walker High School, Mrs. Sharpe began her working life as a secretary. In 1969, she joined the then-thriving Bethlehem Center as a clerk-typist. Over time, she became well known for her energy, positive outlook and competence. Along with assisting people, Mrs. Sharpe also rose to handle the center’s administration and was serving as the acting executive director when the center closed in 2001, Mr. Sharpe said. She later worked part time for about 10 years in the payment office of the Virginia Department of Fire Programs. Mr. Sharpe, who has been in the jewelry business for 31 years, said his mother played a key support role as his bookkeeper. His brother, Devron, a mechanic who has owned and operated Anytime Anywhere Truck & Trailer Repair since 1999, also relied on her skills in maintaining financial records. Mrs. Sharpe also served as second vice president of the Maggie L. Walker High School Class of 1965 alumni group and was a member of the kitchen ministry at Trinity Baptist where she helped prepare food for special events, Mr. Sharpe said. She also belonged to the church’s Daughters of Ruth and participated with other committees and activities, he said. During the administration of Gov. L. Douglas Wilder, Mr. Sharpe recalled that his mother was among the cadre of volunteer greeters who welcomed guests to the Governor’s Mansion. Along with her two sons, survivors include her husband, Jerry F. Sharpe Sr.; her mother, Elizabeth Stone Peyton; two brothers, Donald Peyton and Timothy Peyton; and two grandchildren.

Happy Birthday

Dolson Barne� Anderson, Jr. April 15, 1948

Regina H. Boone/Richmond Free Press

Broad Rock Baptist Church 5106 Walmsley Blvd., Richmond, VA 23224 804-276-2740 • 804-276-6535 (fax) www.BRBCONLINE.org

“Due to the Corona Virus Pandemic, Services Are Cancelled, until further notice; but, please join us, by visiting BRBCOnline.org or YouTube (Broad Rock Baptist Church).” Pastor Kevin Cook

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Join the family for a Memorial celebrating his Life and Legacy Saturday, April 24th at 11 a.m.

via ZOOM at www.westwoodbaptist-va.org

Good Shepherd Baptist Church 1127 North 28th St., Richmond, VA 23223 s Office: (804) 644-1402 Dr. Sylvester T. Smith, Pastor “There’s A Place for You”

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“The Church With A Welcome”

ance with Reverence Relev

Rev. Dr. Joshua Mitchell, Senior Pastor ❖

Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic All regular activities have been suspended until further notice. Please join us on

10:30 a.m. Sundays 7:00 p.m. Wednesdays-Bible Study

500 E. Laburnum Avenue, Richmond, VA 23222 www.sharonbaptistchurchrichmond.org (804) 643-3825 Rev. Dr. Paul A. Coles, Pastor

Langston R. Davis email: ldavis@davisbrotherscc.com

Atlanta, Ga. Office: s &AX

Langston R. Davis Jr. email: ldavisjr@davisbrotherscc.com

St. Peter Baptist Church $R +IRKLAND 2 7ALTON 0ASTOR

Worship Opportunities Join us for online streaming this Sunday at 10 AM. Visit our WEBSITE, look under “/NLINE 3ERVICES,” and access the “0ASTOR S -ESSAGE.” Bible Study Opportunities Thursdays: Virtual Bible Study session via Zoom, every Thursday at 7 PM. Email request to spbcoffice@stpeterbaptist.net; A new Meeting ID and password will be emailed weekly. Tithing Opportunities Download the Tithe.ly giving app for Apple and Android devices. Your gift is safe/secure and goes directly to our church. -OUNTAIN 2OAD s 'LEN !LLEN 6IRGINIA /FlCE s &AX s WWW STPETERBAPTIST NET

2IVERVIEW

Sunday School – 9:45 AM Sunday Services – 11:00 AM Via Conference Call (515) 606-5187 Pin 572890# Also Visit Us On Facebook Sunday Service – 11:00 AM

See you there!

Moore Street Missionary

"APTIST #HURCH 823 North 31st Street Richmond, VA 23223 (804) 226-0150 Office

3HARON "APTIST #HURCH

Corporate Office Richmond, Va.: s &AX

(near Byrd Park)

(804) 359-1691 or 359-3498 Facebook Fax (804) 359-3798 sixthbaptistrva www.sixthbaptistchurch.org

Facebook or YouTube

Due to the COVID-19 Corona Virus All regular activities have been suspended until further notice. Visit https://youtu.be/qqzhnIEQyQc for inspirational messages from Pastor Smith

SUNDAYS Morning Worship 10:00 AM Drive-In Service in our Parking Lot

400 South Addison Street Richmond, Va. 23220

Thirty-first Street Baptist Church

In lieu of flowers the family has asked that donations be made to Westwood Baptist Church to the “Dolson Barne� Anderson, Jr. Media Ministry” in his memory.

Submi�ed by the Family

Come worship with us!

Twitter sixthbaptistrva

Rev. Dr. Yvonne Jones Bibbs, Pastor

Building Churches for over 100 years. Est. 1908

We Embrace Diversity — Love For All! Sunday Service will not be held in our sanctuary. Join us for 11:00 AM Worship by going to our website www.sixthbaptistchurch.org

Dolson was a loving, kind and gentle man. His kindness is sorely missed.

BUILDING OR RENOVATING A CHURCH IN THE FUTURE? Contact Davis Brothers Construction Company, Inc.,

“MAKE IT HAPPEN”

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From left, Daniel Castro, Wilson Zelaya and Jose Hernandez complete work last Friday on a new foundation for the John Jasper Monument at Woodland Cemetery on Magnolia Road in East Highland Park. Rev. Jasper, who was born into slavery in Fluvanna County, founded Sixth Mount Zion Baptist Church in Jackson Ward after his own emancipation following the Civil War. A renowned orator, Rev. Jasper died in March 1901 and was interred in Mechanics Cemetery in Richmond’s Barton Heights, according to church history. The church installed the obelisk at his gravesite in 1905. According to church history, Mechanics Cemetery became overgrown and the city threatened to sell the land and have all of the bodies moved. The church then moved the graves of Rev. Jasper and his wife, Mary, and the monument to Woodland Cemetery in April 1918. The foundation around the monument’s base “was showing signs of age,” said Benjamin Ross, a historian for Sixth Mount Zion Baptist Church, who volunteers to help maintain about 20 gravesites in Woodland Cemetery, including that of Rev. Jasper and his wife. The nonprofit Woodland Restoration Foundation, led by founder Marvin Harris, purchased the 30-acre privately owned cemetery last year with donations, including from Henrico County. “They are moving past the cleanup and into restoration of gravesites,” Mr. Ross said. Restoration work has begun on the cemetery’s fountain, chapel and entry gates. In addition to Rev. Jasper and others, the historic cemetery is the final resting place for tennis great and humanitarian Arthur Ashe Jr.

2604 Idlewood Avenue Richmond, Va. 23220 (804) 353-6135 www.riverviewbaptistch.org Rev. Dr. Stephen L. Hewlett, Pastor Rev. Dr. Ralph Reavis, Sr. Pastor Emeritus

Baptist Church

1408 W. Leigh Street · Richmond, Va. 23220 (804) 358—6403

Dr. Alonza L. Lawrence, Pastor

10 a.m. Sunday, April 18, 2021 via Zoom Worship Service

Triumphant

Baptist Church 2003 Lamb Avenue Richmond, VA 23222 Dr. Arthur M. Jones, Sr., Pastor (804) 321-7622 “Due to the Corona Virus all services at Triumphant Baptist Church are suspended until further notice.” Join us on Sundays at 12 noon via Conference Call: 1(503)300-6860 Code:273149#

Mee�ng ID 886 5847 1991 Call In +13017158592,, 88658471991

Guest Preacher


Richmond Free Press

B4 April 15-17, 2021

City of Richmond, Virginia CITY COUNCIL PUBLIC NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the Council of the City of Richmond has scheduled a public hearing, open to all interested citizens, on Monday, April 26, 2021 at 6:00 p.m. to consider the following ordinances: Ordinance No. 2021-078 To authorize the Chief Administrative Officer to accept $2,067,260.00 from the Virginia Department of Rail and Public Transportation and to appropriate the increase to the Fiscal Year 2020-2021 Special Fund Budget by increasing estimated revenues and the amount appropriated to the Department of Public Works’ Shared Mobility Special Fund by $2,067,260.00 for the purpose of funding the BRT Red-Colored Pavement Program on Broad Street from Willow Lawn to Rocketts Landing. Ordinance No. 2021-086 To authorize the Chief Administrative Officer, for and on behalf of the City of Richmond, to execute a Project Agreement for Use of Commonwealth Transportation Funds Fiscal Year 2021 between the City of Richmond and the Virginia Department of Rail and Public Transportation for the purpose of receiving grant funds in the amount of $2,067,260.00 to fund the BRT Red-Colored Pavement Program on Broad Street from Willow Lawn to Rocketts Landing. (COMMITTEE: Land Use, Housing and Transportation, Tuesday, April 20, 2021, 12:00 p.m.) Ordinance No. 2021-087 To amend Ord. No. 2020049, adopted May 11, 2020, which adopted the Fiscal Year 2020-2021 General Fund Budget and made appropriations pursuant thereto, by re-appropriating a $467,000.00 portion of the Fiscal Year 20192020 fund balance excess identified as an assignment of “Unspent Building Code Fees” in the City’s 2020 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, and to appropriate these funds to the Fiscal Year 2020-2021 General Fund Budget by increasing estimated revenues and the amount appropriated to the Department of Planning and Development Review by $467,000.00 for the purpose of supporting the local building department functions of the Department of Planning and Development Review’s Division of Permits and Inspections in compliance with Va. Code § 36-105. Ordinance No. 2021-088 To authorize the Chief Administrative Officer, for and on behalf of the City of Richmond, to accept a donation from Aramark Services, Inc., trading as Lifeworks Restaurant Group, of coffee and cookies valued at approximately $90,000.00 for the purpose of providing refreshments to all Department of Fire and Emergency Services personnel to express appreciation for the work of first responders and support staff. Ordinance No. 2021-089 To amend Ord. No. 2020-164, adopted Aug. 10, 2020, as previously amended by Ord. No. 2020-191, adopted Sept. 28, 2020, which authorized the Chief Administrative Officer to submit an amended Consolidated Plan and Annual Action Plan to the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) as an application for the receipt of Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) funds, HOME Investment Partnership (HOME) funds, Emergency Solutions Grant (ESG) funds and Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS (HOPWA) funds; accepted funds from the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development in the total amount of $14,956,215.00; and appropriated $14,956,215.00 for various projects, to appropriate $1,362,346.00 in additional CDBG-CV funds received, reallocate $337,654.00 in previously appropriated CDBG-CV funds, and authorize the submission of a further amended version of the amended Consolidated Plan and Annual Action Plan. (COMMITTEE: Finance and Economic Development, Thursday, April 15, 2021, 1:00 p.m.) Ordinance No. 2021-090 To authorize the Chief Administrative Officer to accept $472,500.00 from the Clerk of the Circuit Court of the City of Richmond consisting of funds deposited by the Commonwealth of Virginia for the Virginia Department o f Tr a n s p o r t a t i o n ’ s acquisition of a portion of City-owned property located at 800 North 3rd Street with such funds to be credited to the Reserve Fund for Permanent Public Improvements and, in connection therewith, to execute an Agreement between the City and Continued on next column

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the Commonwealth of Virginia for the purpose of accepting compensation and settling all claims for such acquisition.

Clerk. All comments received prior to 10:00 a.m. on Monday, April 26, 2021, will be provided to Council members prior to the meeting and will be included in the record of the meeting.

properties are situated in an M-2 Heavy Industrial District and B-7 MixedUse Business District. The City of Richmond’s Master Plan designates a future land use category for the subject property as Destination Mixed-Use. Primary uses are retail/ office/personal service, multi-family residential, cultural and open space. No residential density is specified for this land use designation.

Ordinance No. 2021-091 To amend Ord. No. 2020051, adopted May 11, 2020, which accepted a program of proposed Capital Improvements Projects for Fiscal Year 2020-2021 and the four fiscal years thereafter, adopted a Capital Budget for Fiscal Year 20202021, and determined a means of financing the same, by (i) establishing a new project in the City Facilities category called the “Theatre Row Building (730 E. Broad Street) – DJS/ADC Renovations” project and (ii) increasing estimated revenues from the sale of the Public Safety Building and the amount appropriated to the new Department of Public Works’ Theatre Row Building (730 E. Broad Street) – DJS/ ADC Renovations project by $352,000.00 for the purpose of renovating the Theatre Row Building located at 730 East Broad Street for use by the Department of Justice Services and the Adult Drug Court program. Ordinance No. 2021-092 To declare that a public necessity exists and to authorize the acquisition of certain fee simple interests and easements for the public purpose of facilitating the construction of the East Richmond Road over Gillies Creek bridge replacement project. Ordinance No. 2021-093 To declare that a public necessity exists and to authorize the acquisition of certain fee simple interests and easements for the public purpose of facilitating the construction of the East Richmond Road over Stony Run Creek bridge replacement project. Ordinance No. 2021-094 To authorize the Chief Administrative Officer, for and on behalf of the City of Richmond, to execute a Deed of Easement between the City of Richmond and the Commonwealth of Virginia, Department of Motor Vehicles, for the purpose of accepting from the Commonwealth of Virginia, Department of Motor Vehicles, a gas utility easement on, over, under, and across a rightof-way located along 2300 West Broad Street to lay, erect, construct, install, operate, maintain, and repair one or more lines of underground pipes, conduits, and equipment, accessories, and appurtenances necessary for the transportation or distribution of natural gas over the said rightof-way. (COMMITTEE: Land Use, Housing and Transportation, Tuesday, April 20, 2021, 12:00 p.m.) This meeting will be held through electronic communication means pursuant to and in compliance with Ordinance No. 2020-093, adopted April 9, 2020, as most recently amended by Ordinance No. 2020-232, adopted December 14, 2020. This meeting will be open to participation through electronic communication means by the public and closed to in-person participation by the public. Less than a quorum of Richmond City Council will assemble in the Council Chamber on the Second Floor of City Hall, located at 900 East Broad Street, Richmond, Virginia, and most Council members and other staff will participate by teleconference/ videoconference via Microsoft Teams. Video of the meeting will be streamed live online at the following web address: https:// r i c h m o n d v a . l e g i s t a r. com/Calendar.aspx. To watch the meeting’s live stream at the web address provided, find and click the link that reads, “In Progress” in the farthest right hand column entitled, “Video”. The agenda for the Richmond City Council meeting is accessible through the City’s legislative website at the following web address: https://richmondva. legistar.com/Calendar. aspx. To view the agenda at the web address provided, find and click the link that reads, “Agenda” associated with the April 26, 2021 Richmond City Council Formal meeting listed in the calendar. Interested citizens who wish to speak at the Richmond City Council meeting will be given an opportunity to do so by following the “Formal Meeting Citizen Participation Instructions” attached to the April 26, 2021 Richmond City Council Formal meeting agenda. Citizens are encouraged to provide their comments in writing to CityClerksOffice@ richmondgov.com in lieu of calling in. The person responsible for receiving comments in writing is Candice D. Reid, City Continued on next column

Copies of the full text of all ordinances are available by visiting the City Clerk’s page on the City’s Website at https://www.rva.gov/ office-city-clerk. Candice D. Reid City Clerk

City of Richmond, Virginia CITY COUNCIL PUBLIC NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the City of Richmond Planning Commission has scheduled a public hearing, open to all interested citizens, on Monday, May 3, 2021 at 1:30 p.m. and the Council of the City of Richmond has scheduled a public hearing on Monday, May 10, 2021 at 6:00 p.m. to consider the following ordinances: Ordinance No. 2021-096 To authorize the special use of the property known as 1301 North Arthur Ashe Boulevard for the purpose of a drive-in theater, upon certain terms and conditions. The property is situated in a TOD-1 Transit-Oriented Nodal District. The City of Richmond’s Master Plan designates a future land use category for the subject property as Destination Mixed-Use. Primary uses are retail/ office/personal service, multi-family residential, cultural and open space. Ordinance No. 2021-097 To authorize the special use of the property known as 1500 North Lombardy for the purpose of four wall signs, upon certain terms and conditions. The property is situated in an I Institutional District. The City of Richmond’s Master Plan designates a future land use category for the subject property as Institutional. Primary uses are institutional, cultural, government and open space. Ordinance No. 2021-098 To authorize the special use of the property known as 2601 Edgewood Avenue for the purpose of two single-family detached dwellings, upon certain terms and conditions. The subject property is located in the R‑5 Single‑Family Residential zoning district. The Richmond 300 Master Plan designates the future land use category for the subject property as Residential. Primary Uses: Singlefamily houses, accessory dwelling units, and open space. Secondary Uses: Duplexes and small multi-family buildings (typically 3-10 units), institutional, and cultural. Secondary uses may be found along major streets. The density of the proposed development is approximately 8 units per acre. Ordinance No. 2021-099 To authorize the special use of the property known as 3008 Garland Avenue for the purpose of a singlefamily detached dwelling and a two-family detached dwelling, upon certain terms and conditions. The current zoning for the subject property is R-6 Single Family Attached Residential. The City’s Richmond 300 Master Plan designates a Residential land use for this property. Primary uses include singlefamily houses, accessory dwelling units, and open space. Secondary uses include duplexes and small multi-family buildings (typically 3-10 units), institutional, and cultural. The density of the proposed development is approximately 16 units per acre. Ordinance No. 2021-100 To authorize the special use of the property known as 3135 West Franklin Street for the purpose of a single-family detached dwelling and a two-family detached dwelling, upon certain terms and conditions. The current zoning for the subject property is R-6 Single Family Attached Residential. The City’s Richmond 300 Master Plan designates this property as Neighborhood Mixed-Use. Primary Uses: Single-family houses, accessory dwelling units, duplexes, small multifamily buildings (typically 3-10 units), and open space. Secondary Uses: Large multi-family buildings (10+units), r e t a i l / o ff i c e / p e r s o n a l service, institutional, cultural, and government. The density of the proposed development is approximately 18 units per acre.

Ordinance No. 2021-102 To rezone the properties known as 300 Oliver Hill Way and 400 Oliver Hill Way from the M-1 Light Industrial District to the TOD-1 TransitOriented Nodal District, and the property known as 510 Oliver Hill Way from the M-2 Heavy Industrial District to the TOD-1 Transit-Oriented Nodal District. The City’s Richmond 300 Master Plan designates the properties as Destination Mixed Use. Primary Uses: Retail/office/personal service, multi-family residential, cultural, and open space. Secondary Uses: Institutional and government. Ordinance No. 2021-103 To rezone the property known as 711 Dawn Street from the M-1 Light Industrial District to the B-7 Mixed Use Business D i s t r i c t . T h e C i t y ’s Richmond 300 Master Plan designates a future land use for the subject property as Industrial Mixed Use. Primary Uses: Retail/office/personal service, multi-family residential, cultural, and open space. Secondary Uses: Institutional and government. The meetings will be held through electronic communication means pursuant to and in compliance with Ordinance No. 2020-093, adopted April 9, 2020, as most recently amended by Ordinance No. 2020-232, adopted December 14, 2020. The meetings will be open to participation through electronic communication means by the public and closed to in-person participation by the public. Less than a quorum of Richmond City Planning Commission members and Richmond City Council will assemble in City Hall, located at 900 East Broad Street, Richmond, Virginia, and most members and other staff will participate by teleconference/ videoconference via Microsoft Teams. The meetings will be streamed live online at the following web address: https://richmondva. legistar.com/Calendar. a s p x . To w a t c h a meeting’s live stream at the web address provided, find and click the link that reads, “In Progress” in the farthest right hand column entitled, “Video”. The agenda for the Richmond City Council meeting is accessible through the City’s legislative website at the following web address: https://richmondva. legistar.com/Calendar. aspx. To view the agenda at the web address provided, find and click the link that reads, “Agenda” associated with the May 10, 2021 Richmond City Council Formal meeting listed in the calendar. Interested citizens who wish to speak at the Richmond City Council meeting will be given an opportunity to do so by following the “Formal Meeting Citizen Participation Instructions” attached to the May 10, 2021 Richmond City Council Formal meeting agenda. Citizens are encouraged to provide their comments in writing to CityClerksOffice@ richmondgov.com in lieu of calling in. The person responsible for receiving comments in writing is Candice D. Reid, City Clerk. All comments received prior to 10:00 a.m. on Monday, May 10, 2021, will be provided to Council members prior to the meeting and will be included in the record of the meeting. Copies of the full text of all ordinances are available by visiting the City Clerk’s page on the City’s Website at https://www.rva.gov/ office-city-clerk. Candice D. Reid City Clerk

Divorce

Ordinance No. 2021-101 To rezone the property known as 103 East 2nd Street from the B-7 MixedUse Business District to the B-4 Central Business District, and the properties known as 104 East 2nd Street, 101 Stockton Street, and 121 Stockton Street from the M-2 Heavy Industrial District to the B-4 Central Business District. The

VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF HANOVER MISTY BUFFUM, Plaintiff v. MATTHEW BUFFUM, Defendant. Case No.: CL21001258-00 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce from the bond of matrimony from the defendant on the ground of living separate and apart without any cohabitation and without interruption for a period exceeding twelve months. It is ORDERED that the defendant, whose whereabouts are unknown,

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Legal Notices Continued from previous column

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appear here on or before the 24th day of May, 2021 at 9:00 AM, and protect his interests. A Copy, Teste: FRANK D. HARGROVE, JR., Clerk I ask for this: Law Office of Dorothy M. Eure, P.C. Dorothy M. Eure, Plaintiff’s Attorney VSB# 27724 8460 Mount Eagle Road Ashland, VA 23005 (804) 798-9667 VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF HANOVER JENNIFER DODD, Plaintiff v. JEFFERSON ROCK, Defendant. Case No.: CL21001259-00 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce from the bond of matrimony from the defendant on the ground of living separate and apart without any cohabitation and without interruption for a period exceeding twelve months. It is ORDERED that the defendant, whose whereabouts are unknown, appear here on or before the 24th day of May, 2021 at 9:00 AM, and protect his interests. A Copy, Teste: FRANK D. HARGROVE, JR., Clerk I ask for this: Law Office of Dorothy M. Eure, P.C. Dorothy M. Eure, Plaintiff’s Attorney VSB# 27724 8460 Mount Eagle Road Ashland, VA 23005 (804) 798-9667 VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF HANOVER STEVEN LESTER, Plaintiff v. ALICE HANNA, Defendant. Case No.: CL21001117-00 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce from the bond of matrimony from the defendant on the ground of living separate and apart without any cohabitation and without interruption for a period exceeding twelve months. It is ORDERED that the defendant, who is a nonresident, appear here on or before the 24th day of May, 2021 at 9:00 AM, and protect his interests. A Copy, Teste: FRANK D. HARGROVE, JR., Clerk I ask for this: Dorothy M. Eure, Esquire VSB# 27724 Law Office of Dorothy M. Eure, P.C. 8460 Mount Eagle Road Ashland, VA 23005 (804) 798-9667

is to obtain a divorce from the bond of matrimony from the defendant on the ground of living separate and apart without any cohabitation and without interruption for a period exceeding twelve months. It is ORDERED that the defendant, whose whereabouts are unknown, appear here on or before the 19th day of May, 2021 at 9:00 AM, and protect his interests. A Copy, Teste: FRANK D. HARGROVE, JR., Clerk I ask for this: Law Office of Dorothy M. Eure, P.C. Dorothy M. Eure, Plaintiff’s Attorney VSB# 27724 8460 Mount Eagle Road Ashland, VA 23005 (804) 798-9667 VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF HANOVER HEIDI BOYETTE, Plaintiff v. MARK BOYETTE, Defendant. Case No.: CL21001041-00 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce from the bond of matrimony from the defendant on the ground of living separate and apart without any cohabitation and without interruption for a period exceeding twelve months. It is ORDERED that the defendant, whose whereabouts are unknown, appear here on or before the 7th day of May, 2021 at 9:00 AM, and protect his interests. A Copy, Teste: FRANK D. HARGROVE, JR., Clerk I ask for this: Law Office of Dorothy M. Eure, P.C. Dorothy M. Eure, Plaintiff’s Attorney VSB# 27724 8460 Mount Eagle Road Ashland, VA 23005 (804) 798-9667 VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF HANOVER EVAN HARRIS-DILLARD, Plaintiff v. LEON DILLARD, JR., Defendant. Case No.: CL20004669-00 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce from the bond of matrimony from the defendant on the ground of living separate and apart without any cohabitation and without interruption for a period exceeding twelve months. It is ORDERED that the defendant, whose whereabouts are unknown, appear here on or before the 7th day of May, 2021 at 9:00 AM, and protect his interests. A Copy, Teste: FRANK D. HARGROVE, JR., Clerk I ask for this: Dorothy M. Eure, Esquire Law Office of Dorothy M. Eure, P.C. VSB# 27724 8460 Mount Eagle Road Ashland, VA 23005 (804) 798-9667

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF HANOVER FRED OFOSU-ANIM, Plaintiff v. LOUISA ANIM, Defendant. Case No.: CL21000988-00 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce from the bond of matrimony from the defendant on the ground of living separate and apart without any cohabitation and without interruption for a period exceeding twelve months. It is ORDERED that the defendant, whose whereabouts are unknown, appear here on or before the 3rd day of May, 2021 at 9:00 AM, and protect her interests. A Copy, Teste: FRANK D. HARGROVE, JR., Clerk I ask for this: Law Office of Dorothy M. Eure, P.C. Dorothy M. Eure, Plaintiff’s Attorney VSB# 27724 8460 Mount Eagle Road Ashland, VA 23005 (804) 798-9667 ,

by the general description of “Parties Unknown.” IT IS ORDERED that EGLENNA FUQUA, upon information and belief deceased, or her heirs, devisees, assignees or successors in interest, and Parties Unknown, come forward to appear on or before JUNE 11, 2021 and do what is necessary to protect their interests in this matter. An Extract, Teste: Edward F. Jewett, Clerk Gregory A. Lukanuski, Esq. City of Richmond, Office of the City Attorney 900 E. Broad Street Richmond, VA 23219 804-646-7949

COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE COUNTY OF HANOVER HEATHER E. HUNTER-JUSTICE, Plaintiff v. RYAN E. JUSTICE, Defendant. Civil No.: CL21-001163-00 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit, brought by Heather E. HunterJustice is a complaint for divorce. It appearing from an affidavit that the Defendant, Ryan E. Justice, cannot be found, and that due diligence has been used witout effect to ascertain the location of the Defendant; it is hereby ORDERED that the Defendant appear before this Court on or before May 19, 2021 at 9:00 a.m., to protect her interest herein; A Copy, Teste: FRANK D. HARGROVE, JR., Clerk I ask for this: Jason W. Costanzo VSB #87422 Pagano & Marks, P.C. (804) 447-1002 Telephone (804) 562-5924 Fax Counsel for the Plaintiff VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF HANOVER FANTICASIA WALKER, Plaintiff v. MADI CEESAY, Defendant. Case No.: CL21001148-00 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce from the bond of matrimony from the defendant on the ground of living separate and apart without any cohabitation and without interruption for a period exceeding twelve months. It is ORDERED that the defendant, whose whereabouts are unknown, appear here on or before the 19th day of May, 2021 at 9:00 AM, and protect his interests. A Copy, Teste: FRANK D. HARGROVE, JR., Clerk I ask for this: Law Office of Dorothy M. Eure, P.C. Dorothy M. Eure, Plaintiff’s Attorney VSB# 27724 8460 Mount Eagle Road Ashland, VA 23005 (804) 798-9667 VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF HANOVER ROBIN BAILEY-ELLISON, Plaintiff v. ANTHONY ELLISON, Defendant. Case No.: CL21001146-00 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit Continued on next column

VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF HANOVER ATTILA HORVAT, Plaintiff v. CAROLYN HORVAT, Defendant. Case No.: CL21001093-00 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce from the bond of matrimony from the defendant on the ground of living separate and apart without any cohabitation and without interruption for a period exceeding twelve months. It is ORDERED that the defendant, whose whereabouts are unknown, appear here on or before the 7th day of May, 2021 at 9:00 AM, and protect her interests. A Copy, Teste: FRANK D. HARGROVE, JR., Clerk I ask for this: Law Office of Dorothy M. Eure, P.C. Dorothy M. Eure, Plaintiff’s Attorney VSB# 27724 8460 Mount Eagle Road Ashland, VA 23005 (804) 798-9667 VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF HANOVER BRITTNY HATCHER, Plaintiff v. NAKEA HATCHER, SR., Defendant. Case No.: CL20004695-00 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to obtain a divorce from the bond of matrimony from the defendant on the ground of living separate and apart without any cohabitation and without interruption for a period exceeding twelve months. It is ORDERED that the defendant, who is a nonresident, appear here on or before the 19th day of May, 2021 at 9:00 AM, and protect his interests. A Copy, Teste: FRANK D. HARGROVE, JR., Clerk I ask for this: Dorothy M. Eure, Esquire VSB# 27724 Law Office of Dorothy M. Eure, P.C. 8460 Mount Eagle Road Ashland, VA 23005 (804) 798-9667 VIRGINIA: Continued on next column

Custody

VIRGINIA: IN THE JUVENILE AND DOMESTIC RELATIONS DISTRICT COURT OF HENRICO COUNTY Commonwealth of Virginia, in re CHAVARRIA GRIJALVA, DULCE N ROSA CHAVARRIA GRIJALVA v. MARVIN ROSIL Case No. JJ107933-01-00 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to: Custody Special Immigrations. It is ORDERED that the defendant Marvin Rosil appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 05/20/2021, at 9:00 AM. VIRGINIA: IN THE JUVENILE AND DOMESTIC RELATIONS DISTRICT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND Commonwealth of Virginia, in re LEILIANA LYNNAE FELIX rdss v. ALBERTO FELIX, JR. Case No. J-97950-05 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to: Terminate the residual parental rights (“RPR”) Alberto Felix, Jr. (Father) of Leiliana Lynnae Felix child, DOB 9/22/2019. “RPR” means all rights and responsibilities remaining with parent after transfer of legal custody or guardianship of the person, including but not limited to rights of: visitation; adoption consent; determination of religious affiliation; and responsibility for support. It is ORDERED that the defendants Alberto Felix, Jr., (Father) to appear at the above-named Court and protect his/her interest on or before 6/11/2021, at 10:20 AM, Courtroom #1. VIRGINIA: IN THE JUVENILE AND DOMESTIC RELATIONS DISTRICT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND Commonwealth of Virginia, in re jamonte cole rdss v. UNKNOWN FATHER nikki cole Case No. J-99157-06-00 J-99157-07-00 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to: Terminate the residual parental rights (“TPR”) of the Unknown Father and Nikki Cole (Mother) of Jamontae Cole DOB 09/04/2020, child. “TPR” means all rights and responsibilities remaining with parent after transfer of legal custody or guardianship of the person, including but not limited to rights of: visitation; adoption consent; determination of religious affiliation; and responsibility for support. It is ORDERED that the defendants Unknown Father and Nikki Cole to appear at the above-named Court and protect his/her interest on or before 09/13/2021, at 9:00 AM, Courtroom #4.

PROPERTY VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND JOHN MARSHALL COURTS BUILDING CITY OF RICHMOND, Plaintiff, v. EGLENNA FUQUA, et al, Defendants. Case No.: CL20-4738 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to subject the property briefly described as 1224 Wallace Street, Tax Map Number W000-0437/053, Richmond, Virginia, to sale in order to collect delinquent real estate taxes assessed thereon in the name of the owner of record, Eglenna Fuqua. An Affidavit having been filed that said owner, EGLENNA FUQUA, upon information and belief deceased, or her heirs, devisees, assignees or successors in interest, have not been located and have not filed a response to this action, and that any heirs, devisees, assignees, successors in interest, successors in title and/or any creditors with a current or future interest in said property, have not been identified and/or served despite diligent efforts to do so and are defendants to this suit Continued on next column

Notice Judicial Sale of Real Estate Notice is hereby given that at least thirty days from the date of this notice the City of Richmond will commence judicial proceedings under the authority of Virginia Code Section 58.1-3965 et seq. to sell the following real estate for payment of delinquent taxes: 1800 North 19th Street E0120282024 28 West 29th Street S0001230008 19 West 30th S0001230032 2401 Alexander Avenue S0080815058 2403 Alexander Avenue S0080815057 3100 Alpine Avenue N0001050014 1300 Bainbridge Street S0000119008 2510 Bells Road S0090064016 2506 Bells Road S0090064017 118 East Broad Street N0000060024 1410 Carter Street W0000788017 4711 Castlewood Road S0090459024 3212 Chamberlayne Avenue N0001233004 416 West Clay Street N0000208028 2306 Creighton Road E0120294004 3143 Dupont Avenue C0091031002 2416 Everett Street S0001220016 3004 Floyd Avenue W0001360024 3135 Griffin Avenue N0001036043 505 Unit L North Hamilton Street W0001704161 3517 Unit A Hanover Avenue W0001604074 2600 Harold Avenue N0000711014 4321 Hopkins Road C0090971042 5216 Hull Street Road C0070176057 3407 Idlewood Avenue W0001588017 4507 Leonard Parkway W0190233004 1410 Lynhaven Avenue S0071229017 1708 East Main Street E0000108032 3914 Marcy Place S0043279078 2301 Maury Street S0000403001 2401 Maury Street S0001220015 223 South Mulberry Street W0001157030 2614 Newbourne Street E0120318010 2006 Parkwood Avenue W0000896019 4199 Richmond Highway S0090224025 4200 Richmond Highway S0090221006 3323 Rosewood Avenue W0001505005 5015 Rear Snead Road C0080660060 3020 Terminal Avenue C0090566006 4511 Walmsley Boulevard C0080829106 3025 Woodrow Avenue N0000978025 The owners may redeem this real estate before the date of a sale by paying all accumulated taxes, penalties, interest and costs. Gregory A. Lukanuski, Deputy City Attorney Office of the City Attorney for the City of Richmond 900 East Broad Street, Room 400 Richmond, Virginia (804) 646-7949

LICENSE NOTICE AKS Virginia LLC Trading as: BP Food Store 2931 Chamberlayne Ave Richmond, Virginia 23222 The above establishment is applying to the Virginia Alcoholic Beverage C ontrol (ABC) AUTHORITY for a Wine & Beer Off Premises license to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages. Amar Singh, Member NOTE: Objections to the issuance of this license must be submitted to ABC no later than 30 days from the publishing date of the first of two required newspaper legal notices. Objections should be registered at www. abc.virginia.gov or 800-5523200. E&W Management Group Corporation Trading as: JR Crickets of Virginia 1509 Chamberlayne Ave. Richmond, VA 23222-5205 The above establishment is applying to the Virginia Alcoholic Beverage C ontrol (ABC) AUTHORITY for a Wine and Beer On Premises & Mixed Beverage Restaurant license to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages. NOTE: Objections to the issuance of this license must be submitted to ABC no later than 30 days from the publishing date of the first of two required newspaper legal notices. Objections should be registered at www. abc.virginia.gov or 800-5523200.


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