Howardena Pindell exhibit at VMFA B2
Richmond Free Press © 2018 Paradigm Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.
VOL. 27 NO. 34
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
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Lady Clubber tees up for celebration B1
august 23-25, 2018
‘Deeply disappointing’ RPS superintendent reacts to city SOL scores showing 2 of every 5 students unable to pass one or more tests
School Board member James “Scott” Barlow, right, welcomes more than 60 volunteers Tuesday at Carver Elementary School to help clean and spruce up the school through RPS Shines!
By Jeremy M. Lazarus
Ronald E. Carrington/Richmond Free Press
RPS Shines! spiffs up schools
Plumbers and professional craftsmen volunteering their services will be handling the bathroom fix-ups at Carver and other Richmond’s Carver Elementary School was turned into a haven schools, officials said. Carver’s bathrooms have new sinks and of help Tuesday as more than 60 volunteers, many of them from “are ready to go,” said Shadae Thomas-Harris, RPS’ chief enlocal colleges and high schools, picked up a bucket and cloth gagement officer. and helped put a polish on the Leigh Street school. Carver’s new assistant principal, Frenishee Smith, greeted The effort was part of RPS the corps of enthusiastic workers ‘We want (students) to come back in the school lobby, where she led Shines! , a weeklong blitz involving nearly 1,000 volunteers of all ages them in a Carver chant followed to a beautiful and welcoming sprucing up 22 of the city’s public by a high kick. environment so they can have a schools before students arrive for the Mr. Kamras also offered words first day of classes on Sept. 4. of thanks and encouragement, shook great school year’ — Robin Dalton Students from nearby Virginia the volunteers hands and posed for Union and Virginia Commonwealth universities, the Maggie L. pictures with several groups before the work started. Walker Governor’s School and Henrico County joined School “RPS Shines! harkens back to a time when entire communiBoard member James “Scott” Barlow, Superintendent Jason ties took care of neighborhood schools to help keep them in Kamras and other Richmond Public Schools administrators to Please turn to A4 clean baseboards, windows and outdoor areas at Carver. By Ronald E. Carrington
The good news: More than half of Richmond’s public school students passed one or more state Standards of Learning tests in 2018 and are meeting state objectives in the core subjects of reading, writing, math, science and history/social studies. The bad news: At least two of every five students were unable to pass one or more of those tests, keeping RPS ranked near the bottom among Virginia school divisions for student academic achievement. Mr. Kamras Ms. Page “I am not going to sugarcoat it. These scores are deeply disappointing,” Richmond Schools Superintendent Jason Kamras stated after reviewing student results from the spring round of SOL tests that were released Wednesday by the Virginia Department of Education. He noted that the percentage of students passing SOL tests Please turn to A4
Funeral arrangements announced for ‘Queen of Soul,’ Aretha Franklin Free Press wire reports
Aretha Franklin, the glorious “Queen of Soul” whose music became the backdrop for a generation and a theme song for both the civil rights and women’s movement, will be laid to rest Friday, Aug. 31, at Woodlawn Cemetery in Detroit. The beloved recording artist died at her
Special tribute on B6 Detroit home on Thursday, Aug. 16, 2018, after waging a quiet battle with pancreatic cancer. She was 76. Her entombment at a family gravesite alongside her father, the Rev. C.L. Franklin, brother Cecil Franklin and sisters Carolyn and Erma Franklin will follow a two-day public viewing Tuesday, Aug. 28, and Wednesday,
Aug. 29, at the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History in Detroit, followed by a funeral on Thursday morning at Greater Grace Temple. Attendance at the service will be limited to family and friends, relatives announced last week through a publicist. Blissful on “(You Make Me Feel Like) a Natural Woman,” despairing on “Ain’t No Way” and up front on “Respect,” few performers were so universally idolized by peers and critics as Ms. Franklin and so exalted and yet so familiar to their fans. Ms. Franklin’s fans couldn’t get enough, nor could the music industry honor her enough. She won 18 Grammy Awards and, in 1987, became the first woman inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Please turn to A4
Regina H. Boone/Richmond Free Press
Last glorious days of summer Deondre McKnight Williams, 9, frolics in the cool waters and bubbles of a “Foam Pit” set up last Friday at the Byrd Park Round House for Playground Day, hosted by the Richmond Department for Parks, Recreation and Community Facilities. Youngsters everywhere are fitting in the last days of fun before the new school year starts Sept. 4.
Monument rally peaceful as neo-Confederates met by counterprotesters By George Copeland Jr.
“Tear these racist statues down!” Those words, shouted by about 40 counterprotesters on Monument Avenue, drowned out attempts by about 15 neo-Confederates on Sunday to speak in support of keeping the statue of Confederate President Jefferson Davis on the tree-lined street. The rally, held at the Davis statue at Monument and Davis avenues, was organized by the Virginia Task Force of Three Percenters, also known as the Dixie Defenders. It was the fourth such rally in the last year by neo-Confederate groups in support of the five statues honoring slave-owning losers of the Civil War. Sunday’s rally was called in response to the Monument Avenue Commission’s recommendation in July to Richmond Mayor Levar M. Stoney that the statue honoring the Confederate president be removed because, the commission stated, it is “most unabashedly Lost Cause in its design and sentiment.” The commission also recommended that contextual signs be added to the other statues. Several of the neo-Confederates
Regina H. Boone/Richmond Free Press
Mary Atkins, 73, takes her argument to stop the hate directly to the group of about 15 neo-Confederates, several carrying military-style weapons, who staged a rally Sunday to call for keeping the statue of Confederate President Jefferson Davis on Monument Avenue. Counterprotesters, who want the statues honoring Confederates to be removed, arrived early and took over the space directly at the foot of the monument.
were visibly armed Sunday with military-style weapons. Some were dressed in combat gear. They also included members of the Tennesseebased group, CSA II: The New Confederate States of America, who had served as the driving force behind the previous protests. While the rally was to start at noon at the foot of the Davis statue, the neo-Confederates were beat to the spot by roughly eight counterprotesters who apparently arrived before 8 a.m. Sunday and set up their signs and cases of water. The neo-Confederates then were forced to set up across from the statue on a median strip. About 17 uniformed Richmond Police officers already were on site and patroling both groups and the passing vehicle traffic. Despite a brief verbal confrontation between the two groups, the day was peaceful with no arrests. The only clash came from the sounds of music both groups pumped from personal speakers. Richmond Police Chief Alfred Durham, who was on Monument Avenue monitoring the situation, explained the decision to leave the streets open as a Please turn to A4
A2 August 23-25, 2018
Richmond Free Press
Local News
New regulations to help people with sickle cell anemia
It’s official. Sickle cell anemia sufferers now can get high doses of potentially addictive pain medications without any limitations in Virginia. The treatment exemption for people who live with the pain from the genetic blood disorder — mostly African-Americans — became effective when the state Board of Medicine’s new regulations governing physician use of opioids were published in the Virginia Administrative Code earlier this month. The final regulations, aimed at limiting doctors from overprescribing pain medications, were published Aug. 8, replacing emergency regulations that went into effect in early 2017. Richmonder George H. Carter of Sickle Cell Virginia led the fight to win approval from the state board and government officials to exempt treatment of sickle cell from the regulations. He is one of an estimated 4,000 Virginians who live with the hereditary disease. Mr. Carter Gov. Ralph S. Northam approved publication of the regulations June 15, but the state provides for a waiting period during which objections can be filed. Mr. Carter expressed relief that there were none. “Finally, it’s the law,” he said. In arguing for the exemption, he and others cited the dreadful pain that sickle cell can cause. With the disease, bone marrow creates rigid, crescent-shaped red blood cells that can get stuck in small arteries and veins, limiting the flow of blood and oxygen. The pain from the blockage of blood flow often requires hospital treatment where people can get transfusions and high levels of pain medication to gain relief. Before the exemption, doctors and hospitals were limiting the dosages of pain medicine for patients with sickle cell, including young children. The new regulations also exempt patients with cancer, those under treatment for life-threatening illnesses or injuries, in palliative care and the terminally ill who are in hospice. — JEREMY M. LAZARUS
Sandra Sellars/Richmond Free Press
Cityscape Slices of life and scenes in Richmond
A towering crane’s reflection almost looks like a staircase rising up the side of this 20-story Downtown building under construction for Dominion Energy in the block bounded by 6th, 7th, Canal and Cary streets. Crews and cranes have been at the site since work began last year. The building will be known as 600 Canal Place when it opens next year. Dominion Energy has presented plans to a construct a second building to replace its 21-story Virginia headquarters, One James River Plaza, located next door at 701 E. Cary St.
Plan collapses for South Side Design competition homeless shelter and services center open to re-imagine Monument Avenue
How would you re-imagine Monument Avenue? That’s the question behind a new design competition called “Monument Avenue: General Demotion/General Devotion.” The nonprofit Storefront for Community Design and mObstudiO at Virginia Commonwealth University launched the competition amid the ongoing debate over the future of the five Confederate statues on Monument Avenue. The two entities have issued an open international invitation for teams of planners, architects, artists or anyone else who wants to submit formal design ideas on Monument Avenue by the Dec. 15 deadline. Participants must register and submit a $75 fee by Sept. 15. Up to $10,000 may be awarded in prizes. Participants are asked to “reconsider Monument Avenue, its role as a historic urban boulevard, its viability as 5.4-mile interurban connector, its presence in Richmond given the city’s emergence as a diverse and progressive city and its significance.” The VCU studio and SCD made it clear in the announcement that it is an academic exercise aimed at generating ideas and constructive discussion, but with little prospect of being implemented. The invitation was first issued in April, well ahead of the in July release of a report by Mayor Levar M. Stoney’s Monument Avenue Commission calling for the removal of the Jefferson Davis statue and the addition of “context” signs to the other four Confederate statues. According to the published call for entries, submitted designs are to be exhibited at The Valentine, the Downtown museum of Richmond history. Except for information on the entry forms, the designs are not to include any identifying information, the organizers stated. An exhibition featuring the entries is to open on Feb. 14, Valentine’s Day, and run through Dec. 1, 2019. Awards are to be announced Nov. 20, 2019, following a review of the entries by a panel of expert jurors. A People’s Choice honoree also is to be selected based on reviews by exhibition visitors. Details: http://monumentavenuegdgd.com/ — JEREMY M. LAZARUS
Public meeting Sept.13 on Boulevard renaming A two-hour community meeting will be held next month to allow city residents to give their views on a proposal to rename the Boulevard as Arthur Ashe Boulevard to honor the Richmondborn tennis great and humanitarian who died in 1993. City Councilwoman Kim B. Gray, 2nd District, announced the meeting will be 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 13, in the theater of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, 200 N. Boulevard. Ms. Gray said she plans to introduce legislation to change the street’s name at the City Council meeting on Monday, Sept. 10.
By Jeremy M. Lazarus
It’s back to the drawing board for City Hall and Commonwealth Catholic Charities in seeking a new space for a shelter and resource center for the homeless in Richmond. A CCC proposal to transform a former South Side church into a space that could provide shelter and an array of other services has collapsed. The charity, which operates the city’s winter overflow shelter at the city’s former Public Safety Building near City Hall and provides other services in the 500 block of West Grace Street, failed to meet a purchase deadline to buy the historic property at 1101 Bainbridge St. in the up-and-coming Manchester neighborhood. “We simply could not accomplish the necessary steps to purchase the property within the time constraints of the existing agreement,” Jay Brown, director of CCC housing services, acknowledged in a statement. That virtually ensures that the old Public Safety Building will continue to house the
homeless on nights when temperatures are 40 degrees or below — although city officials have said they and CCC are continuing the hunt that began four years ago to find another location before Oct. 1 when the shelter can open. CCC has looked at 36 other buildings since 2014 when it became the shelter operator, and began focusing on the Bainbridge Street site after it came on the market. Officials described it as the first space that offered a realistic prospect for a combination shelter, feeding center and a health and program services operation. But the charity, which signed a purchase agreement in April, lost out on the building when it failed to complete the purchase by last week. The owner, Community Bainbridge Baptist Church, terminated the deal and quickly inked a new sales agreement with Corinthian Construction, a residential developer in the Manchester neighborhood. The church already has relocated to the former Southampton Baptist Church about 5 miles west of its former home. The church also wanted to sell in order
to relocate its religious school that soon will begin classes. The city assessed the property that includes the church, a parsonage and a basketball court at $742,000. The property was advertised at $1.4 million. Councilwoman Ellen F. Robertson, 6th District, who represents the area, had not endorsed the CCC proposal, despite lobbying from Mayor Levar M. Stoney and the administration. Her concern was magnified after business owners and residents opposed the plan at an Aug. 9 community meeting, although some did offer support. The CCC and the city appear to have written off the old Public Safety Building at 501 N. 9th St. as an option for the homeless services center, in part, because it is targeted for redevelopment under a plan that includes construction of a new Coliseum. However, several City Council members privately indicated that the building should be considered based on its proximity to Virginia Commonwealth University’s medical campus and its central location to government and nonprofit services.
Signs of 2019 shutdown for Coliseum By Jeremy M. Lazarus
The 47-year-old Richmond Coliseum could go dark next year even in the face of continuing uncertainty about a private group’s proposal to tear it down and replace it with a new $220 million arena. The Free Press has learned that the Coliseum’s management company, SMG/ Johnson, is telling promoters that it cannot confirm any dates for 2019 and beyond. The Harlem Globetrotters have booked the arena for two shows on Saturday, Dec. 29, and their entertaining games could be the last event staged at the Coliseum until the future of the aging venue is settled. Dolly Vogt, Coliseum manager, did not respond to a Free Press request for comment. However, a promoter who inquired about booking several dates for concerts next year showed the Free Press an email he received from a Coliseum staff member telling him the venue would not confirm any dates after December. Online ticket sellers, such as Ticketmaster, also show no events scheduled for 2019. More evidence has come from sports operations. The Atlantic 10 Conference announced Tuesday that it will move its 2019 women’s basketball tournament from
the Richmond Coliseum to Duquesne University because the Richmond Coliseum will not be available. Earlier this summer, the Richmond Roughriders arena football team that has played for the past two years at the Coliseum, announced it was searching for an affordable venue either in the Richmond area or in another city. The team has not yet announced a new location for its upcoming season from March through June, but the ownership has indicated there is little prospect for returning to the Coliseum. The future of the 13,500-seat Coliseum that opened in 1971 has been in question since city officials opened negotiations with a group that wants to replace the building with a new, larger version. The NH Foundation, led by Dominion Energy Chief Executive Officer Thomas F. “Tom” Farrell II, and its development planning arm, NH District Corp., has advanced a plan to replace the aging Coliseum with a 17,500-seat arena. The Farrell group proposals calls for repaying the debt using taxes generated from a potential $1.2 billion in development that other entities would build on nearby city-owned land, including a new
hotel, 2,500 new apartments, four new office buildings and retail operations. The Farrell group would not provide any of the investment dollars but, instead, wants the city to give it control of the land so it could manage the development. City Hall officials confirmed this week that Mayor Levar M. Stoney has pulled back from introducing the proposal to City Council in early September. That evaporates hopes that City Council could evaluate and vote on the proposal by its December meeting. At least seven members of the council would need to support the proposal because it would involve the transfer of municipal property. The city’s team and the NH District team have yet to reach a deal, though negotiations are continuing. One key issue is the percentage of lower-rent apartments that would be included, insiders said. The Farrell group is proposing 10 percent, while Mayor Stoney wants a higher percentage. Another issue involves the city’s ability to develop a new building for the Richmond Department of Social Services and allow its current site on 9th Street across from City Hall to be redeveloped for apartments and a bus transit station, insiders said.
Area back-to-school giveaways scheduled With the new school year less than two weeks away, several free events are scheduled to provide shoes and school supplies to Richmond area students. Henrico resident Marsha Witherspoon is hosting her 4th Annual Labor Day Back to School Bash at 3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 1, at 4501 McGill St. in the East End. Parents can come with their children and their school supply list and pick out a backpack and supplies, Ms. Witherspoon said. There is no residency or age requirement. “It’s for whoever is in need,” Ms. Witherspoon said. “It’s a time for kids to have fun before school starts.” The event also will feature music, games, a bounce house, face painting, characters and food. The rain date is Sunday, Sept. 2. Details: Ms. Witherspoon, (804) 615-2306 or marshawither-
spoon@yahoo.com. Students from kindergarten through 12th grade can start school with a new pair of shoes from the 13th Annual Labor Day New Shoes for Back to School, a program started by a women’s ministry at Third Street Bethel A.M.E. Church in Jackson Ward. Two distribution sites will be open from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Labor Day, Monday, Sept. 3, for the first-come, first-served event — Third Street Bethel A.M.E. Church at 614 N. 3rd St. and George Wythe High School’s gymnasium, 4314 Crutchfield St. in South Side. “The ministry has become an unofficial part of school opening,” said project founder Rita Willis. “Each year since 2006, more than 4,000 pairs of shoes have been available” for students.
The shoe giveaway is a partnership that has grown to include 16 churches and a synagogue. A parent or guardian must accompany youngsters. Details: www.thirdstreetbethel.org/new-events First Baptist Church of South Richmond will hold Super Saturday, a family festival that will include backpack and school supplies giveaways, 2 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 8, at its North Chesterfield campus, 6201 Ironbridge Road. Backpacks will be distributed beginning at 5 p.m. The event will include music, face painting, a Zumba class, flag football games, 3-on-3 basketball, voter registration, health vendors and food, followed by movie night. Families are encouraged to bring lawn chairs. Details: First Baptist Church of South Richmond, (804) 233-7679.
Richmond Free Press
August 23-25, 2018
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Richmond Free Press
A4 August 23-25, 2018
News
RPS superintendent reacts to city SOL scores showing 2 of every 5 students unable to pass Continued from A1
for writing, math and history declined from 2017, while the percentage of students passing reading and science tests essentially remained unchanged. The RPS overall pass rates in the five core subjects trailed state averages by 23 percentage points. High school students who do not pass at least one SOL test in each of those subjects — known as a verified credit — cannot receive a diploma, according to state guidelines. Mr. Kamras, who took over as superintendent in February, will start his first full school year in two weeks when the 201819 school year begins. He said students who did not pass the SOLs are capable, but “as a system, we’re failing them right now. But that’s going to change. “With our new strategic plan, we will be taking a number of steps to make sure our students experience exciting and rigorous instruction every single day,” he stated in a message that was filled with the same enthusiasm and optimism of past superintendents who arrived promising to usher in change. And like them, he also added a cautionary note: The “work will be challenging, and it will take time.” For more than six years, RPS and the state have poured resources into hiring consultants and paying for training to help principals and teachers usher in a turnaround at many of the city schools, but there is little evidence that any formula has worked. Boushall and Elkhardt-Thompson middle schools, for example, have been targets of such efforts. At both schools, fewer than half the students passed SOL tests in reading, writing, math and science, the new data show. Only 47 percent of Boushall students passed an SOL reading test, a drop of 10 percentage points from 2016, while only 40 percent passed the SOL reading test at Elkhardt-Thompson. Only about one-third of students at both schools passed the
math test. A review of RPS data at the division and school level clearly identifies one of the problems: Many of Richmond’s students leave elementary school unable to read properly. The division level data show that 53 percent of RPS thirdgraders passed the SOL reading test in 2018, a 5 percentage point decline from 2017 and a 9 percentage point slide from 2016 results. Third-graders who read at grade level are four times more likely to graduate, studies show. East End elementary schools exemplify the seriousness of the problem. According to the data for Bellevue Elementary, which had the best showing among East End schools on reading, only 50 percent of students passed the reading test in the third, fourth or fifth grades. That means one in two students did not. At Chimborazo Elementary, 45 percent of students passed the reading test, meaning 55 percent of students there are not reading on grade level. The results were worse at Fairfield Court Elementary, where only 38 percent of students passed the reading test. That’s far below the glowing 80 percent pass rate the school reported two years ago. Woodville Elementary was at the bottom, with only 36 percent of students passing the reading test. The inability of East End students to read at grade level shows up at the nearly brand new Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School, where 32 percent of students passed the SOL reading test in the spring, and only 17 percent passed the SOL writing test. The lack of academic success at the lower levels is reflected also at Armstrong High School, which can trace its founding to post Civil War Richmond in the 1860s and once ranked as a proud beacon of education for African-American students. Its list of graduates includes former Gov. L. Douglas Wilder, the nation’s first African-American elected governor.
RPS Shines! spiffs up schools Continued from A1
good shape,” Mr. Kamras told the School Board on Monday. “We are all responsible for our schools. And the idea of all of Richmond pitching in to help beautify bathrooms, hallways and exteriors is a return to what was previously normal for communities.” Later this week, Mr. Kamras will roll up his sleeves and join RPS Shines! volunteers at John Marshall High School in North Side and Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School in the East End. The volunteers at Carver received pails, spray bottles and cleaning cloths to complete the day’s tasks that were spread throughout the brick building erected in 1951. “This beautification project is based on new Principal Tiawana Giles’ input and where they wanted the most help,” Ms. Thomas-Harris explained. Mr. Barlow, who represents the city’s 2nd District where Carver Elementary is located, arrived ready to work. Dressed in a blue G.W. Carver T-shirt, shorts and blue cleaning gloves, he sprayed cleaning solution and scraped excess paint and other grime from the baseboards and floors. “This is awesome,” Mr. Barlow said. “I was glad to see so many people from partnering universities coming to help prepare Carver for the coming year.” Several VUU freshmen going through their own orientation walked from their nearby Lombardy Street campus to help at Carver Elementary. Among them was Ramsey Savage of Woodbridge, who said he wanted to give back to the community because things were done for him as he grew up. “Community service really helps you find out who you are as a person,” he said.
Ronald E. Carrington/Richmond Free Press
Buckets, latex gloves and cleaning supplies are lined up in the front lobby of Carver Elementary for distribution to the volunteers helping with Tuesday’s cleanup.
“It is good to return the blessings.” Several of the VCU students are a part of the university’s ASPiRE program, Academic Scholars Program in Real Environments. It is a living-learning program for students to turn awareness into action. The program partners with Carver Elementary. “Our students are Carver Promise mentors and work as assistants in various classrooms,” said Nannette Bailey, ASPiRE’s community partnership coordinator. “It gives our students an opportunity to become engaged with their community and exposes Carver students to the university.” ASPiRE students are planning a backto-school rally for the Carver students’ first day at school, she said. The Wooden family from Henrico County worked together on the school’s
second floor. They said they wanted to get involved in community service and do something positive for Richmond’s schoolchildren. The family included mom Stephanie Chow, son Zack Wooden, a freshman at the Maggie L. Walker Governor’s School, and daughter Natalie Wooden, an 11-year-old at Moody Middle School in Henrico County. “Our family wanted to help because we wanted Carver students to have a good clean school to come back to,” Zack and Natalie said. “It’s always good to have a nice place to learn and it smells good.” “What we are doing systemwide is all about our students,” said Robin Dalton, a hearing officer with RPS. “We what them to come back to a beautiful and welcoming environment so they can have a great school year.”
Just 54 percent of Armstrong High students passed the state SOL test in reading, while 35 percent passed the writing test. Three of every five Armstrong students did not pass SOL tests in math, science and history/social studies. While the data can identify such problems, it cannot explain why more students succeed at one school and fewer at another. For example, at Barack Obama Elementary in North Side, 75 percent of students passed the SOL reading test, while just 57 percent of students from almost identical backgrounds passed the reading test at Overby-Sheppard Elementary, about a mile further east. That same disparity shows up at two of the newest elementary schools in South Side. At Oak Grove/Bellmeade Elementary, 41 percent of the students passed the reading test, while at overcrowded Broad Rock Elementary, 78 percent of students passed. It is unclear why only 39 percent of students at Greene Elementary passed the reading test, while 68 percent passed at Redd Elementary. The data also shows that the city’s middle schools are not educational success stories. Citywide, data shows that among all eighth-graders, 48 percent did not pass the SOL reading test; 56 percent did not pass the writing test; and 58 percent did not pass the math test.
Rally peaceful Continued from A1
way to avoid inconveniencing “the rest of the motoring public or the residents in their own community.” That the two groups chose to self-separate and remain orderly made that decision easier for police to maintain. “There’s always the chant I hear, ‘This is what democracy looks like,’ and I believe today this is what it looks like,” Chief Durham said. He also characterized the number of officers present, including three on horseback, as part of the price of ensuring the safety of everyone involved. Past protests collectively have cost Richmond taxpayers more than $500,000 for police resources. The fact that state laws protecting the monuments may prevent Mayor Stoney and city officials from following through on the commission’s recommendations didn’t deter the neoConfederates. A man who identified himself as president of the Three Percenters but would not provide his name placed the reason for calling the rally and the blame for its eventual cost to taxpayers on Mayor Stoney and his actions threatening the monuments’ future. “I don’t see this as racial or white supremacy. I see this as history, ancestral values and heritage. That’s all it is,” he said. “None of my group are white supremacists. We have plenty of black friends. We hate neo-Nazis. We hate KKK. We don’t stand with them. We don’t tolerate them. They’re not welcome.” The Davis statue, he contended, “was put here for a memorial for the Confederates and for the South. Period.” Counterprotester Jay Tubb of Richmond said he was a witness to the deadly rally in Charlottesville by white supremacist and neo-Nazi groups in August 2017 in which a white supremacist drove his car into a crowd of counterprotesters, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer and injuring dozens of other people. He assessed neo-Confederate groups as “really misguided and ignorant.” “I believe that this uprising of the CSA is thinly disguised racism and treason,” Mr. Tubb said, noting the Confederacy’s origins as an attempt to preserve slavery by seceding from the United States. “These statues are a monument to that system. ‘Heritage not hate’ is their spin on their intolerance.” Goad Gatsby, a resident of the neighborhood, was critical of the protesters, Richmond City Council’s inaction and the Virginia General Assembly for not allowing localities greater autonomy to deal with monuments to Confederates. “I think it’s going to be a long-term, cost-effective strategy to move (the Confederate statues) sooner than later,” Mr. Gatsby said. About 3 p.m., an hour before the rally’s planned end, the neo-Confederates packed up and left. The counterprotesters were left to have the final word Sunday, with some quickly moving to occupy the median strip where the neo-Confederates had been. They cheered and posed for photos before eventually dispersing. Already there are plans for a fifth rally on Sept. 15, led by CSA II, calling for preservation of all the Monument Avenue statues.
Funeral arrangements announced for Aretha Franklin Continued from A1
But her status went beyond “artist” or “entertainer” to America’s first singer, as if her very presence at state occasions was a kind of benediction. She performed “God Bless America” at the inauguration of President Carter in 1977, sang at pre-inaugural festivities for President Clinton in 1993 and at the dedication of the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial in Washington. President Clinton awarded Ms. Franklin the National Medal of Arts in 1999 and President George W. Bush awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, in 2005. But Ms. Franklin’s best known appearance with a president was in January 2009 when she sang “My Country ’Tis of Thee” at President Obama’s first inauguration. She wore a gray felt hat with a huge, Swarovski rhinestone-bordered bow that became an internet sensation and even had its own website. In 2015, she brought President Obama and many others in the audience to tears with a triumphant performance of “Natural Woman” at a Kennedy Center tribute for the song’s co-writer, Carole King. Her voice transcended age, category and her own life. Born March 25, 1942, in Memphis,
Tenn., the talented preacher’s daughter grew up in Detroit after moving there with her family from Buffalo, N.Y. It was at Detroit’s New Bethel Baptist Church, where her father was pastor, that Ms. Franklin learned the gospel fundamentals that would make her a soul institution. She got her start as a singer touring with her father’s gospel caravan when she was a teenager. Rev. Franklin was among the most prominent Baptist ministers of his time. He recorded dozens of albums of sermons and music and knew such gospel stars as Marion Williams and Clara Ward, who mentored Ms. Franklin and her sisters Carolyn and Erma. Both sisters sang on Ms. Franklin’s records, and Carolyn also wrote “Ain’t No Way” and other songs for Ms. Franklin. Music was the family business and performers from Sam Cooke to Lou Rawls were guests at the Franklin house. In the living room, the shy young Aretha awed friends with her playing on the grand piano. Lifelong friend and musical compatriot Smokey Robinson said in an interview that he met Ms. Franklin when she was just 5 or 6 years old and heard her sing and play the piano “almost like she did as an adult.” In 1956, she released a gospel album through J-V-B Records. Four years later, she signed with Columbia Records,
File photo
Aretha Franklin performing at the Richmond Coliseum in October 1998.
recording several albums and a handful of minor hits. Franklin knew Motown founder Berry Gordy Jr. and considered joining his label, but decided it was just a local company at the time. Her breakthrough came in 1967, when she signed with Atlantic Records and was backed by the now famous Muscle Shoals rhythm section. She recorded the horn-led “Respect” with its “sock-it-to-me” chorus. It rocketed to become her first No. 1 hit and her eternal signature song. Becoming an anthem for the civil rights and women’s movements, the song was so profound that Ebony Magazine called 1967 the year of “ ’Retha, Rap and Revolt.” “In black neighborhoods and white
universities, in the clubs and on the charts, her hits came like cannonballs, blowing holes in the stylized bouffant and chiffon Motown sound,” Gerri Hirshey wrote in “Nowhere to Run,” a history of soul music that was published in 1984. From 1967 to 1985, Ms. Franklin had 20 No. 1 hits — from “I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You),” “Chain of Fools,” “Call Me” and “Bridge Over Troubled Water” to “Spanish Harlem,” “Until You Come Back to Me,” “Jump to It” and “Freeway of Love.” She recorded more than 40 studio albums during her lifetime, the most recent, “A Brand New Me,” released in 2017. Ms. Franklin was named one of the 20 most important entertainers of the 20th century by Time magazine, which celebrated her “mezzo-soprano, the gospel growls, the throaty howls, the girlish vocal tickles, the swoops, the dives, the blue-sky high notes, the blue-sea low notes. Female vocalists don’t get the credit as innovators that male instrumentalists do. They should. Franklin has mastered her instrument as surely as John Coltrane mastered his sax.” Ms. Franklin endured the exhausting grind of celebrity and personal troubles dating back to childhood. The mother of two boys by age 16 — she later had two more — she struggled
with her weight, family problems and financial setbacks. Her strained marriage in the 1960s to then-manager Ted White was widely believed to have inspired her performances on several songs, including “Since You’ve Been Gone,” “Think” and “Ain’t No Way.” Her second marriage, to actor Glynn Turman in 1978, also ended in divorce. Producer Jerry Wexler nicknamed her “Our Lady of Mysterious Sorrows.” Since her death, Ms. Franklin has been lauded for her support of a variety of causes, including the Civil Rights Movement, AIDS research, Special Olympics, childhood diabetes research and anti-hunger initiatives. In addition to performing in support of advocacy organizations, Ms. Franklin also reportedly helped Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. meet payroll for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference when financial backing waned after he spoke in opposition to the Vietnam War. Ms. Franklin’s autobiography, “Aretha: From These Roots,” came out in 1999. But she always made it clear that her story would continue, and that she would sing it. “Music is my thing. It’s who I am. I’m in it for the long run,” she told The Associated Press in 2008. “I’ll be around, singing, ‘What you want, baby I got it,’ having fun all the way.”
Richmond Free Press
August 23-25, 2018
A5
IT’S WORTH REPEATING:
THANK
YOU,
THANK
YOU. We’ve been named a #1 hospital in Richmond, again. While we are incredibly grateful for the recognition, we will not be beating our chest. Instead, we’ll give a lot of people pats on the back. Thanks to the thousands of dedicated physicians, nurses and staff at VCU Medical Center — collaborating with community providers — we’ve been named a best hospital in Richmond, again. Together, we’re making life better, by design.
Specialties Ranked in the Top 50 Nationally Urology | Diabetes and Endocrinology Nephrology (two-way tie) | Orthopedics
VCU4985-1_USNewsRanking-RFP_11x21.indd 1
8/16/18 12:43 PM
Richmond Free Press
Liriope in Downtown
Editorial Page
A6
August 23-25, 2018
Bad seed, bad fruit “By their fruits you shall know them.” — Matthew 7:20 We hope that Tuesday’s courtroom dramas in New York and Northern Virginia opened the eyes of those who blindly back President Trump and will push Republicans in Congress out of their tacit support for a fascist who is destroying our country. The plea deal by Michael D. Cohen, Mr. Trump’s former personal lawyer, in federal court in Manhattan, and the conviction of Paul Manafort, Mr. Trump’s former campaign chairman, in federal court in Alexandria, proves that disciples of Mr. Trump also have produced bad fruit. Mr. Cohen told the judge when he pleaded guilty to eight felonies involving tax evasion, bank fraud and campaign finance laws that Mr. Trump sowed the criminal seeds when Mr. Trump directed him to pay hush money to two women during the 2016 campaign to keep them quiet about their alleged affairs with Mr. Trump. According to Mr. Cohen, Mr. Trump authorized the $130,000 payment to porn star Stormy Daniels to silence her, and $150,000 through the National Enquirer to former Playboy playmate Karen McDougal for the rights to her story so it wouldn’t be published. Mr. Cohen told the judge he participated in the deal “for the purpose of influencing the election.” By helping to cover up two potential sex scandals, Mr. Cohen helped ensure Mr. Trump’s presidential bid could remain unscathed. As Mr. Cohen was pleading guilty on Tuesday, a jury announced that it found Mr. Manafort guilty of eight counts of financial fraud. The jury found Mr. Trump’s man had hidden a fortune in foreign accounts with the goal of evading U.S. taxes on the millions of dollars he was paid serving politicians and oligarchs allied with the Kremlin. When his work and money began to dry up, he lied to obtain millions in bank loans in the United States. One of the chief witnesses against Mr. Manafort was Rick Gates of Richmond, who served as Mr. Manafort’s deputy on the Trump campaign. Mr. Gates also was a top adviser to Mr. Trump, particularly during the transition to the White House following the election. Mr. Gates, who disclosed to the jury his own avarice and thievery from Mr. Manafort during that time, already had pleaded guilty to conspiracy and making false statements. Mr. Gates is cooperating with special counsel Robert S. Mueller, who is investigating Russia’s interference and influence in the 2016 election to get Mr. Trump in the White House. We believe Mr. Manafort and Mr. Cohen will start singing to Mr. Mueller — if they haven’t already — in an effort to reduce the amount of prison time they will receive. Already, Michael Flynn, Mr. Trump’s former campaign adviser and his first national security adviser, has pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about contacts he had with Russian officials. He, too, reportedly is cooperating with Mr. Mueller on the Russia probe. These latest court actions serve to confirm what we have long believed — that Mr. Trump needs to be impeached for colluding with the Russians and criminally conspiring to manipulate the election’s outcome. Republicans in Congress need to stand up and disavow this man who has been a national aberration as he continues to cozy up to Russian President Vladimir Putin and a regime that continues to threaten our basic democracy by hacking our elections. We can tell who Mr. Trump is by the rotten fruit he surrounded himself with. It is long past time for the White House and our government to be rid of him.
White supremacists and the American way Neo-Confederates returned to Richmond last Sunday to once again show their support for keeping the statues of their slaveowning, inhumane traitorous leaders on Monument Avenue. And as in their last three rallies in Richmond, their paltry Confederate flag-waving, gun-toting contingent was outnumbered by counterprotesters who believe the monuments to white supremacists should be taken down. We are relieved that no violence broke out, but are bracing ourselves for their widely advertised return for a fifth time on Sept. 15. The nagging question is this: How long are city officials willing to spend thousands of taxpayer dollars and police time on protecting a Lost Cause? Last year alone, the city spent more than $500,000 on rallies called by these latter-day rebels who wrap themselves in a worn-out mantra that it’s all about heritage, not hate. Wrong. If it’s about heritage, then let’s go ahead and move the statues to the contextual places where they belong — on federally preserved Civil War battlefield sites in Virginia where the war took place or at the privately owned birthplaces and homes of these vanquished secessionists who chose to shed the blood of thousands of people rather than free black people from bondage. Don’t be fooled. Just because the number of neo-Confederates turning out for the recent rallies in Richmond and Washington is low doesn’t mean their message of white supremacy has lost its virulence or traction. On the contrary, it exists all around us — in the policies from the White House that authorize immigrant children to be snatched from their parents and kept in cages; in the protocol of Virginia public schools that harshly and disproportionately suspend African-American students from classrooms while at the same time failing to provide adequate resources for education; and in the practices of Richmond area police who target African-American males for warrantless searches and harassment with false claims of smelling marijuana. The fight against racism and white supremacy will continue to take place on Monument Avenue as long as the statues honoring Confederates remain. And the fight will continue at City Hall, at the School Board, in the General Assembly, in Washington — and at the ballot box — as long as bigoted policies exist.
Sandra Sellars/Richmond Free Press
Brazile brings experience to Howard U. Howard University, just blocks from the White House and Capitol Hill, announced Monday the appointment of influential political strategist Donna Brazile, former chair of the Democratic National Committee and the campaign manager for Hillary Clinton in her 2016 presidential run, as its Gwendolyn S. and Colbert I. King Endowed Chair in Public Policy. It is a one-year post. Ms. Brazile, who has a long history of advising politicians and speaking in public, “will develop and host a five-part series designed to engage the Howard community on a variety of subjects, including politics, voting, criminal justice reform and civility,” the university stated in the announcement. The appointment of Ms. Brazile, a high-profile political rocket, comes as students and teachers across the nation ready for national, state and local elections. On college campuses,
student groups have started to drum up interest among their ranks. “We are at a pregnant moment in our national dialogue around politics and public policy,” Howard President Wayne A. I. Frederick said. “The nature of that discourse unfortunately
Reginald Stuart isn’t allowing for a discussion of substance. (Ms. Brazile) can now bring all that experience and wisdom to bring a bipartisan discussion to these critical issues.” During her tenure, Ms. Brazile will focus on the theme, “The Future Is Now,” and explore several public policy areas. Her first event, on Sept. 4, will be to demystify the political process and discuss how public policy is made in “Finding Your Seat at the Table.” The New Orleans native and graduate of Louisiana State University said she is “thrilled” to make Howard University her “first chair position at a historically black college or university, particularly during such an
important political year.” Journalists, who have reported on Ms. Brazile’s extensive work for years, noted her selection. “I think she brings a wealth of experience,” said USA Today Washington correspondent Deborah Barfield Berry. “She’s been at the table with national leaders. But, more importantly, she has been in the trenches, in the community knocking on doors, talking to people.” Indeed, Ms. Brazile has covered much ground since her college days as a volunteer in the presidential campaign of former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter. In the years since, she worked tirelessly in the presidential campaigns of the Rev. Jesse Jackson and Missouri Congressman Richard Gephardt. She was campaign manager for former U.S. Sen. Albert Gore Jr., when he ran for president and for Mrs. Clinton. In the process, Ms. Brazile has accumulated a “golden Rolodex” of political contacts throughout the nation of all political persuasions and has visited nearly every city in the country. She could memorize a
Ready for driverless cars? Shortly after the first automobile arrived in the small but grandly named village of Ohio City, Ohio, an old story goes, someone brought a second car to town — which soon collided with the first. This stor y, w h i c h I learned growing up in another Ohio town, provided such an excellent example of M u r p h y ’s Law — “Anything that can go wrong will go wrong” — that I was very disappointed to hear that the story was not true. In fact, the first recorded auto accident in history did occur in Ohio City, Ohio, in 1891, according to the Ohio History Central website. But it only involved one car, a single-cylinder, gasolinepowered “horseless carriage” driven by inventor James William Lambert. It collided with a tree root, careened out of control and smashed into a hitching post, a twist that must have amused the town’s horse fans as a form of poetic justice. Yet the two-car version of the story endures, perhaps as an outward expression of our collective anxieties as humans about trusting new technologies. More than a century after those early cars hit the road, similar apprehensions have boiled up again in the national debate over a new vehicular innovation — driverless cars. On one hand, the rise of selfdriving automobiles holds great promise. Computerized driving can reduce fuel consumption and air pollution by maximizing efficiency in accelerating, braking and reaccelerating. Driverless cars can be safer because
they don’t get drunk, sleepy or distracted by texting or other dangerous temptations. But seriously, are we ready for this? As much as I, for one, love my smart phone, tablet and other
Clarence Page new wave gadgets, I’m too “old school” as a driver to trust even my car’s cruise control button for more than a few miles. After all, I came up in a generation for whom a car is more than just a ride. From Chuck Berry’s red Cadillac — now displayed at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture — to the Beach Boys’ “Little Deuce Coupe” and beyond, Americans have embraced their cars like members of the family. As a high school buddy of mine used to say, when times get tough, “you can live in your car, but you can’t drive your house.” Our cultural car love may be the most under-appreciated reasons why most Americans in a Pew Research Center poll last year expressed more worry than enthusiasm for driverless cars. Only 39 percent said they felt “enthusiastic” or “very enthusiastic” about them and 56 percent said they definitely were not ready to ride in one. I expect our mixed feelings will warm up over time, just as new technologies tend to be embraced more eagerly by younger generations. But for now, those mixed feelings help to explain why two bills to regulate self-driving vehicles, the SELF DRIVE Act passed by the U.S. House of Representatives and the AV START Act pending in the U.S. Senate, appear to be
stalled amid other election-year politics. As various states have created a complicated patchwork of regulations across the country, the industry eagerly seeks the consistency of federal laws. Yet consumer advocates and safety experts say the feds should tap their brakes until the new vehicles have been more thoroughly tested. The public is with them on that, according to a new poll released recently by Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety, a 29-year-old alliance of safety, consumer, public health and insurance organizations. It found that 69 percent of Americans said they were “concerned” about their safety when sharing the road with driverless vehicles as motorists, bicyclists and pedestrians. And an even larger majority of Americans, 84 percent, support the organization’s push to delay acting on driverless car legislation until the National Transportation Safety Board can complete its investigations of at least seven crashes, including four fatalities, and other failures that already have occurred with self-driving vehicles in the past three years. They include a May 8 accident in which two teenagers died in the fire that resulted from the crash of a Tesla Model S into a wall in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Another driver died on March 23 in a Tesla Model X that struck a safety barrier in Mountain View, Calif. On March 18, an Uber test vehicle struck and killed a pedestrian walking a bicycle in Tempe, Ariz. We’ve come a long way since James Lambert’s horseless carriage hit that tree root. But if we’re still a long way from seeing fleets of safe driver-free cars on the road, I can wait.
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road map before Google was invented. She is a familiar face and voice on television and radio and is widely quoted in news stories across the country. People generally familiar with endowed chair appointments at universities said the selection of Ms. Brazile was consistent with an institution of Howard’s stature to go for a high-profile person with rich experience. Ms. Brazile becomes the seventh person to hold the King Chair, which was funded by a $1 million gift in 2008 from the couple who are both Howard University graduates. As an endowed post, Ms. Brazile’s position likely will pay above six figures, said several people familiar with endowed chair compensation. The position was last held by former FBI Director James Comey, who was fired in May 2017 by President Trump.
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Richmond Free Press
August 23-25, 2018
A7
Letter to the Editor
Omarosa and coming back home Omarosa Manigault Newman is taking the media by storm and captivating the nation with the tell-all revelations in her book, “Unhinged,” which provides insights into the machinations of the most reckless, ruinous, racist and retrograde administration in the history of this country — that of the infamous “Orange Man,” President Trump. My dear friend Earl Ofari Hutchinson recently wrote that Omarosa deserves “cheers” for her exposure of the innerworkings of this disastrous administration. He went on to commend Omarosa as a “great American hero.” Indeed, there does appear to be growing sentiment in that direction. Sorry to be the contrarian, but I emphatically beg to differ with Earl and others who are cheering and heaping praise on Omarosa. First, it is important to say that no human being deserves to be called a “dog” by the president of the United States. No matter what her critique of her former boss was/is, his response is uncivilized, but not uncharacteristic. That’s who the Orange Man is. The most important question was and is, why did Omarosa join forces with President Trump in the first place? Now that she’s out, having been fired, she’s furious and firing verbal bullets at her former
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boss and associates in the White House. But, her outrage must not obscure the fact that Omarosa unapologetically, uncritically, enthusiastically embraced the Orange Man. She became an avid political evangelist, urging black folks to be saved by this unsavory character. That’s the point that Omarosa needs to answer to black people. Despite warnings by numerous people, this writer included, Omarosa made a self-serving, self-aggrandizing choice to join forces with someone who had a record of racist behavior. Advancing her career as a “star” on “The Apprentice” television show
was one thing. Going beyond that to cast her lot with an egomaniacal narcissist who launched the “birther” movement by relentlessly berating former President Obama was all Omarosa needed to know to refuse to join his campaign and administration. Now this brilliant, selfconfident individual claims she was “mesmerized” by President Trump and wanted to be like him, to emulate his “success.” Really? Omarosa betrayed the interests and aspirations of black and brown people, immigrants, women, LGBTQ persons, workers, poor people and environmentalists to pursue her
career with a candidate whose agenda was/is antithetical to all these constituencies. She conveniently flipped from being a Democrat supporting the moderate-centrist Hillary Clinton to further endear herself to a candidate and political party vigorously promoting a destructive agenda for her people. She claims she was on the inside to protect the interests of black people, but can anyone recall a single instance where she spoke truth to power out loud to protest the savage behavior of the Orange Man and the white nationalists who openly inhabited the White House with her? No! But the Lord works in
mysterious ways. Omarosa’s irate revelations and the tapes she possesses may well destroy the demon she danced with, thereby reaping a positive outcome from opportunistic, negative and unnecessary embrace of the Orange Man. I believe in forgiveness and redemption, so there should be a path for Omarosa to come back home. But it must be based on accountability for her unrighteous behavior. Omarosa must first openly and unequivocally confess to the original sin of betraying black people, ask for forgiveness and do penance in terms of public service. Then all should be forgiven, if not
forgotten. I’m not holding my breath waiting for that to happen. The more likely outcome is for folks to fall for the distraction as Omarosa basks in the glory of burnishing her brand and career as a reality show personality. Therefore, I will be jeering, not cheering, until she humbles herself and takes the appropriate steps to come back home. DR. RON DANIELS The writer is president of the Institute of the Black World 21st Century and distinguished lecturer emeritus of York College of the City University of New York.
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC OF THE PETITION OF VIRGINIA ELECTRIC AND POWER COMPANY FOR APPROVAL AND CERTIFICATION OF TWO UTILITY SCALE SOLAR PROJECTS IN VIRGINIA AND FOR APPROVAL OF A RATE ADJUSTMENT CLAUSE CASE NO. PUR-2018-00101 On July 24, 2018, Virginia Electric and Power Company (“Dominion” or “Company”) filed with the State Corporation Commission (“Commission”) a petition (“Petition”) for approval and certificates of public convenience and necessity (“CPCNs”) to construct and operate two utility scale solar photovoltaic generating facilities: (i) the Colonial Trail West Solar Facility (“CTW Solar”), an approximately 142 megawatt (“MW”) (nominal alternating current) facility located in Surry County; and (ii) the Spring Grove 1 Solar Facility (“SG1 Solar”), an approximately 98 MW AC facility located in Surry County (collectively, “US-3 Solar Projects” or “Projects”). The Company requests approval of and a CPCN for each of the US-3 Solar Projects pursuant to §§ 56-46.1 and 56-580 D of the Code of Virginia (“Code”) and the Filing Requirements in Support of Applications for Authority to Construct and Operate an Electric Generating Facility. Through its Petition, the Company also requests approval of a rate adjustment clause, designated Rider US-3, pursuant to Code § 56-585.1 A 6 (“Subsection A 6”) and the Rules Governing Utility Rate Applications and Annual Informational Filings. Dominion filed a Motion for Entry of a Protective Order and Additional Protective Treatment, as well as a proposed Protective Order with its Petition. Dominion maintains that the US-3 Solar Projects are needed, economic, and will provide ongoing capacity, energy, and environmental benefits for its customers and the Commonwealth of Virginia. The Company states that the newly enacted Grid Transformation and Security Act, among other things, promotes the construction of new utility-owned and -operated solar or wind generation facilities and amends Subsection A 6 to provide that 5,000 MW of solar is in the public interest. According to Dominion, beginning construction before December 31, 2019, will allow the Company to maximize the federal investment tax credits available for solar facilities, which will result in an approximately $56 million reduction to overall customer costs. Dominion indicates that it is proposing the US-3 Solar Projects in connection with its experimental, voluntary companion tariff, designated Schedule RF, which the Commission recently approved in Case No. PUR-2017-00137. The Company states that Scout Development LLC, a subsidiary of Facebook, Inc. (“Facebook”) has committed to purchasing the environmental attributes, including renewable energy credits (“RECs”), associated with the proposed Projects at a fixed price under Schedule RF. Dominion maintains that it intends to sell the RECs produced by the US-3 Solar Projects to Facebook, and to credit the associated revenue to all jurisdictional customers through Rider US-3. Dominion represents that in conjunction with its efforts to expand its portfolio of renewable and carbon free resources, the Company issued a request for proposals (“2017 RFP”) designed to identify potential acquisition projects to review and potential power purchase agreements to purchase, and provide a third-party market alternatives test. The Company asserts that its 2017 RFP meets the Subsection A 6 requirement to consider and weigh alternative options, including third party market alternatives, in selecting proposed generating facilities. As proposed, the Projects would include ground-mounted, single-axis tracking solar panel arrays with an expected operating life of 35 years. If approved, Dominion expects CTW Solar to be in service by December 2019, and SG1 Solar to be in service by October 2020. The Company states that the Projects will provide direct and indirect economic benefits to the Commonwealth of Virginia of approximately $115.9 million, which will support 721 jobs on a cumulative basis from 2018 to 2021. The Company proposes an initial rate year for Rider US-3 of March 1, 2019, to February 29, 2020 (“Rate Year”), and represents that the three key components of the revenue requirement for the US-3 Solar Projects are the Projected Cost Recovery Factor, the allowance for funds used during construction (“AFUDC”) Cost Recovery Factor, and the Actual Cost True-Up Factor. Dominion states that the Projected Cost Recovery Factor consists of the projected financing costs on invested capital for the Rate Year, plus income taxes on the equity component of the return and projected operating costs of the plant(s) during the post-commercial operations date portion of the Rate Year, as applicable. The Company indicates that the AFUDC Cost Recovery Factor consists of the recovery of AFUDC projected to be accrued on the Company’s books for the US-3 Solar Projects. Dominion states that it did not include a true-up amount in this proceeding. However, if initiated in 2020 as expected, Dominion represents that the Actual Cost True-Up Factor will either credit to, or recover from, jurisdictional customers the difference between actual revenues recovered through Rider US-3 for calendar year 2019 compared to actual costs. The Company indicates that the total revenue requirement requested for the Rate Year for Rider US-3 is $10,365,000. If the proposed Rider US-3 is approved, the impact on customer bills would depend on the customer’s rate schedule and usage. The Company asserts that implementation of the proposed Rider US-3 on March 1, 2019, will increase the monthly bill of a residential customer using 1,000 kilowatt hours per month by approximately $0.21. Interested persons are encouraged to review the Petition and supporting documents for the details of these and other proposals. TAKE NOTICE that the Commission may apportion revenues among customer classes and/or design rates in a manner differing from that shown in the Petition and supporting documents and thus may adopt rates that differ from those appearing in the Company’s Petition and supporting documents. The Commission entered an Order for Notice and Hearing that, among other things, scheduled a public hearing on December 18, 2018, at 10 a.m., in the Commission’s second floor courtroom located in the Tyler Building, 1300 East Main Street, Richmond, Virginia 23219, to receive testimony from members of the public and evidence related to the CPCN portion of Dominion’s Petition from the Company, any respondents, and the Commission’s Staff. Any person desiring to testify as a public witness at this hearing on the CPCN portion of Dominion’s Petition should appear fifteen (15) minutes prior to the starting time of the hearing and contact the Commission’s Bailiff. The Commission also scheduled a public hearing on March 6, 2019, at 10 a.m., in the Commission’s second floor courtroom located in the Tyler Building, 1300 East Main Street, Richmond, Virginia 23219, to receive testimony from members of the public and evidence related to the RAC portion of Dominion’s Petition from the Company, any respondents, and the Commission’s Staff. Any person desiring to testify as a public witness at this hearing on the RAC portion of Dominion’s Petition should appear fifteen (15) minutes prior to the starting time of the hearing and contact the Commission’s Bailiff. The public version of the Company’s Petition, as well as the Commission’s Order for Notice and Hearing, are available for public inspection during regular business hours at each of the Company’s business offices in the Commonwealth of Virginia. Copies also may be obtained by submitting a written request to counsel for the Company, Lisa S. Booth, Esquire, Dominion Energy Services, Inc., 120 Tredegar Street, Richmond, Virginia 23219. If acceptable to the requesting party, the Company may provide the documents by electronic means. Copies of the public version of the Petition and other documents filed in this case also are available for interested persons to review in the Commission’s Document Control Center, located on the first floor of the Tyler Building, 1300 East Main Street, Richmond, Virginia 23219, between the hours of 8:15 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding holidays. Interested persons also may download unofficial copies from the Commission’s website: http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case. On or before December 11, 2018, any interested person wishing to comment on the CPCN portion of Dominion’s Petition shall file written comments on the Petition with Joel H. Peck, Clerk, State Corporation Commission, c/o Document Control Center, P.O. Box 2118, Richmond, Virginia 23218-2118. Any interested person desiring to file such comments electronically may do so on or before December 11, 2018, by following the instructions on the Commission’s website: http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case. Compact discs or any other form of electronic storage medium may not be filed with the comments. All such comments shall refer to Case No. PUR-2018-00101. On or before February 27, 2019, any interested person wishing to comment on the RAC portion of Dominion’s Petition shall file written comments on the Petition with the Clerk of the Commission at the address above. Any interested person desiring to file such comments electronically may do so on or before February 27, 2019, by following the instructions on the Commission’s website: http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case. Compact discs or any other form of electronic storage medium may not be filed with the comments. All such comments shall refer to Case No. PUR-2018-00101. On or before October 2, 2018, any person or entity wishing to participate as a respondent in this proceeding may do so by filing a notice of participation. If not filed electronically, an original and fifteen (15) copies of the notice of participation shall be submitted to the Clerk of the Commission at the address above. A copy of the notice of participation as a respondent also must be sent to counsel for the Company at the address set forth above. Pursuant to Rule 5 VAC 5-20-80 B, Participation as a respondent, of the Commission’s Rules of Practice and Procedure (“Rules of Practice”), any notice of participation shall set forth: (i) a precise statement of the interest of the respondent; (ii) a statement of the specific action sought to the extent then known; and (iii) the factual and legal basis for the action. Any organization, corporation, or government body participating as a respondent must be represented by counsel as required by Rule 5 VAC 5-20-30, Counsel, of the Rules of Practice. All filings shall refer to Case No. PUR-2018-00101. On or before November 6, 2018, each respondent may file with the Clerk of the Commission, and serve on the Commission’s Staff, the Company, and all other respondents, any testimony and exhibits by which the respondent expects to establish its case on the CPCN portion of Dominion’s Petition, and each witness’s testimony shall include a summary not to exceed one page. If not filed electronically, an original and fifteen (15) copies of such testimony and exhibits shall be submitted to the Clerk of the Commission at the address above. In all filings, respondents shall comply with the Commission’s Rules of Practice, including 5 VAC 5-20-140, Filing and service, and 5 VAC 5-20-240, Prepared testimony and exhibits. All filings shall refer to Case No. PUR-2018-00101.
Call Rudy McCollum at (804)218-3614 24-7. Talk to an attorney for free
and get legal restrictions, fees, costs and payment terms.
Rudolph C. McCollum, Jr., Esq. McCollum At Law, P.C.
Mail to: P.O. Box 4595, Richmond, VA 23220 422 E. Franklin St., Suite 301, Richmond, VA 23219 (Franklin & 5th Sts.) We are a federally designated Debt Relief Agency under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code and we help people file for bankruptcy.
On or before January 30, 2019, each respondent may file with the Clerk of the Commission, and serve on the Commission’s Staff, the Company, and all other respondents, any testimony and exhibits by which the respondent expects to establish its case on the RAC portion of Dominion’s Petition, and each witness’s testimony shall include a summary not to exceed one page. If not filed electronically, an original and fifteen (15) copies of such testimony and exhibits shall be submitted to the Clerk of the Commission at the address above. In all filings, respondents shall comply with the Commission’s Rules of Practice, including 5 VAC 5-20-140, Filing and service, and 5 VAC 5-20-240, Prepared testimony and exhibits. All filings shall refer to Case No. PUR-2018-00101. All documents filed with the Office of the Clerk of the Commission in this docket may use both sides of the paper. In all other respects, all filings shall comply fully with the requirements of 5 VAC 5-20-150, Copies and format, of the Commission’s Rules of Practice. The Commission’s Rules of Practice may be viewed at http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case. A printed copy of the Commission’s Rules of Practice and an official copy of the Commission’s Order for Notice and Hearing in this proceeding may be obtained from the Clerk of the Commission at the address above. VIRGINIA ELECTRIC AND POWER COMPANY
Web Address: McCollumatLaw.com E-mail: rudy@mccollumatlaw.com
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Colonial Trail West
Richmond Free Press
A8 August 23-25, 2018
Sports Stories by Fred Jeter
Richmonders write headlines in MLB Richmond native Jackie Bradley Jr. is in the front seat of what promises to be a record ride by the Boston Red Sox. While still far from the finish line, Boston is challenging baseball’s all-time, regular season record for most victories in a season. But before Bradley, there was another swift, left-handed hitting centerfielder with Richmond ties who made big league headlines. That was Alex Cole Jr., who was so fast that a franchise changed its outfield fence dimensions to better maximize his talents. It’s safe to say that Cole and Bradley are the most accomplished baseball players in the last half century to hone their skills in Virginia’s capital city. First, some background on Bradley: Born in Richmond to Alfreda and Jackie Bradley Sr., Bradley and his father are named after soul singer Jackie Wilson. Bradley’s father was a bus driver with GRTC. Bradley and his mother later moved to Prince George County. Young Bradley played baseball
early on with the Metropolitan Junior Baseball League. He went on to sparkle at the University of South Carolina, where he was named the Most Valuable Player of the 2010 College World Series. Considered among the game’s premier defenders, Bradley has been a fixture in Boston’s lineup since 2013. The Red Sox (88-36 as of Aug. 19) are chasing the all-time record for most wins — 116 — that currently is shared by the 1906 Chicago Cubs and the 2001 Seattle Mariners. Cole was born in Fayetteville, N.C., where his father, Alex “Fuzzy” Cole, played football at Fayetteville State. The family moved to Richmond where young Cole enrolled in public schools and hooked up with the MJBL. Cole played for Jefferson-HuguenotWythe High School and Manatee Junior College in Florida before entering pro ball as the St. Louis Cardinals’ second round selection in 1985. Later traded to the Cleveland Indians, Cole stole 40 bases in just 63 games as a Cleveland rookie in 1990. He applied that same skill to center-
field, where he was a dazzling fly-ball chaser. That ability to “go get ’em,” as they say in baseball, led Cleveland to move the fences back 20 feet, allowing Cole more ground to glove long drives. After two years in Cleveland, Cole was traded to the Pittsburgh Pirates where he played beside left-fielder Barry Bonds in the Pirates’ outfield. Pittsburgh won the Central Division title in 1992 before falling to the Atlanta Braves 4 games to 3 in the National League Championship series. It was the Pirates’ last hurrah for many seasons. Cole was traded to the Colorado Rockies. Bonds opted for the San Francisco Giants. And Pittsburgh didn’t enjoy another winning season until 2013. Cole’s Major League Baseball career ended with a short stint with Boston in 1996. It’s fitting one left-handed Richmonder willed his “Red Sox” to another southpaw Richmonder, who just happens to play the same position at Fenway Park.
Alex Cole Jr.
Jackie Bradley Jr.
Born: Aug. 17, 1965, Fayetteville, N.C.
Born: April 19, 1990, Richmond
Schools: Jefferson-HuguenotWythe; Manatee Junior College, Bradenton, Fla.
Schools: Prince George High School; University of South Carolina
Draft Day: 1985, second round, by St. Louis Cardinals
Draft Day: 2011, first round, by Boston Red Sox
Big leagues: Cleveland Indians, 1990 to 1991; Pittsburgh Pirates, 1992; Colorado Rockies, 1993; Minnesota Twins, 1994 and 1995; Boston Red Sox, 1996.
Big leagues: Boston, 2013 to present.
Career statistics: 573 games, 2,012 plate appearances, 493 hits, .280 average, 217 walks, 148 stolen bases, 26 triples.
Career statistics (as of Aug. 18): 636 games, 2,372 plate appearances, 496 hits, .236 average, 215 walks, 42 stolen bases, 68 homers.
QB ‘Taylor made’ for VUU
Virginia Union University quarterback Darius Taylor carries the ball during Saturday’s Media Day event at Hovey Field.
Darius Taylor was Virginia Union University’s surprise package a year ago. From someone who wasn’t even on the 2017 opening day roster, the Washington native emerged practically out of nowhere as one of the CIAA’s most prolific quarterbacks. Now as a senior, Taylor is fired up and primed for an encore under the Panthers’ firstyear Coach Alvin Parker. “It’s my second year here. I’ve worked out and trained hard. I think I can show a lot more,” said Taylor, 22, a 6-foot5 criminal justice major. Taylor proved to be rustproof last autumn. He’d been away from the gridiron for two years and was nearly ready to hang up his shoulder pads when VUU called. “I was almost done,” he said. “Really, it was mostly
a couple of my old friends from D.C. who were at Union who talked me into giving it another try.” You might say Taylor took the scenic route from Calvin Coolidge High School in Washington to VUU’s Lombardy Street campus. He had a solid 2014 season at Monroe College in the Bronx, N.Y., alternating at quarterback for the junior college program. Then he dropped out of Monroe and returned home, sitting out both the 2015 and 2016 seasons. Taylor arrived at VUU last season under Coach Mark James. But eligibility questions kept him off the roster until the second game of the season. He didn’t dress for the team’s opening loss at Long Island University. Once questions were cleared
up, he took off, wearing the No. 10 jersey for the maroon and steel. There were big cleats to fill. Former VUU quarterback Shawheem Dowdy had passed for 4,500 yards and 42 touchdowns in 2015 and 2016 combined under Coach James. The quarterback position was open last fall and the Washington transfer was “Taylor made” for the opportunity. In nine games, Taylor was 135-for-263 for 1,953 yards and 22 touchdowns. He had eight interceptions. “Darius has a huge arm,” Coach Parker said. “He’s capable of big plays.” Coach Parker, a native of Washington, added, “He comes highly recommended. His high school coach was my youth league coach in D.C.” Taylor is cool under pres-
James Haskins/Richmond Free Press
CIAA welcomes Claflin University this fall The CIAA has extended its southern footprint to the state of South Carolina. Claflin University in Orangeburg, S.C., becomes the historically black athletic conference’s 13th member this fall and will compete in the CIAA Southern Division. The privately endowed school of some 2,000 students previously was affiliated with the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association, or SIAC. The CIAA addition from the Palmetto State will make for some lengthy bus rides. It is 382 miles from Richmond to Orangeburg. It is more than 600 miles from Orangeburg to the CIAA’s northern-most member school, Lincoln University in Lincoln., Pa. Claflin is 136 miles from CIAA headquarters in Charlotte, N.C. Charlotte also is the site of the CIAA annual men’s and women’s basketball tournaments. Nicknamed the Panthers, Claflin University does not compete in football. It joins the CIAA with five men’s and six women’s programs. In men’s sports, Claflin will compete in CIAA
basketball, cross country, indoor and outdoor track and baseball. The CIAA needed another baseball playing member to regain its NCAA automatic qualifier. Claflin’s women’s teams will compete in CIAA basketball, bowling, cross country, indoor and outdoor track and volleyball. The women’s volleyball squad will travel to Virginia Union and Virginia State universities this September for the CIAA Roundups. The South Carolinians have excelled in men’s basketball. Last winter, the Claflin Panthers posted a 26-7 overall record while advancing to the second round of the NCAA Southern Regional in Atlanta. Coach Ricky Jackson’s Panthers won the SIAC Tournament title in Birmingham, Ala., to earn
Former VUU guard Ray Anderson to play with German team Ray Anderson is taking his considerable basketball talents to Germany. The former Virginia Union University guard has signed to play with WWU Baskets Muenster of Germany’s Pro-B League. Anderson was the CIAA Player of the Year in 2017 under Coach Jay Butler. In four seasons with the Panthers, he totaled 1,895 points, 456 rebounds and Ray Anderson 307 assists. The 6-foot-3 athlete from Wilmington, Del., is VUU’s fifth all-time scorer behind Mike Davis, A.J. English, Jamie Waller and Charles Oakley. Anderson was best at using his quickness and savvy to drive to the hoop. That resulted in him taking 547 career free throws, hitting 72 percent. Anderson played briefly last winter for Tequise in the Spanish pro league. In Germany, Muenster’s season runs Sept. 22 to Feb. 23. Coincidentally, Anderson will be joined in Germany by one of his childhood friends. Among his teammates will be 6-foot-8 Malcolm Delpeche, a Wilmington native who starred at Bates College in Maine.
an automatic qualifier in the NCAAs. Coach Jackson is a former assistant coach
at Shaw University. Claflin plays basketball on campus in the 3,000seat Edward Tullis Arena. Claflin is one of two historically black colleges in Orangeburg. The other is South Carolina State University, a member of NCAA Division I MEAC. The CIAA was founded in 1912 as the nation’s first historically black athletic conference. Original members were Howard, Hampton, Lincoln, Shaw and Virginia Union universities. Until Claflin came aboard, the most recent addition to the CIAA was Chowan University of North Carolina in 2009. There are now CIAA affiliates in Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina.
Season opener College football, and all the pageantry surrounding it, is returning to Richmond’s North Side on Saturday, Sept. 1. The Virginia Union University Panthers, led by new Coach Alvin Parker, will open the season at 1 p.m. at Hovey Field against Seton Hill University of Greensburg, Pa. Nicknamed the Griffins, Seton Hill is a Roman Catholic school that was 0-11 last season. It is a member of the NCAA Division II Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference.
sure and quick-footed enough to avoid the initial pass rush. His best games in 2017 came against the CIAA divisional champs. He was 24-for-35 for 383 yards and five touchdowns against CIAA Southern Division champ Fayetteville State University. He threw for 330 yards and four touchdowns in the season finale against Northern Division champ Virginia State University. Taylor is a classic late bloomer. At Coolidge High School, he was 5-foot-3 as a freshman and still just 5-foot-11 as a senior. Recruiting was light. “I’ve grown about six inches since high school,” he said. “When people see me for the first time in a long while, they say, ‘What in the world?’ ” Then after nearly calling college and football quits, he arrived at VUU “just a couple of weeks before classes,” he recalled. It just goes to show it’s never too late.
Armando Bacot headed to UNC
Armando Bacot
Armando Bacot is the latest Richmond area basketball standout to say “yes” to the University of North Carolina’s historically successful program. In a video tweet Aug. 16, the 6-foot-10 Bacot announced he would enroll as a freshman in 2019 at the ACC juggernaut in Chapel Hill. Earlier this year, Bacot was named Richmond Metro Player of the Year. He was playing for Trinity Episcopal School on Richmond’s South Side, but will spend his senior year at IMG Academy in Bradenton, Fla. Bacot is ranked by ESPN as the 26th best high school basketball player at any position among the Class of 2019 and the seventh best center. Bacot had narrowed his impressive list of college choices to UNCChapel Hill, Duke University, University of Georgia, Oklahoma State University and Virginia Commonwealth University. In the past, at least five area players have chosen UNC, a program that has won six NCAA champions and had 20 NCAA Final Four entries. Local players preceding Bacot to UNC: • John Kuester, Benedictine, UNC 1973 to 1977. • Keith Valentine, Thomas Jefferson High School, UNC 1975 to 1976; transferred to Virginia Union University. • Kenny Harris, Petersburg High School, UNC 1989 to 1991; transferred to VCU. • Ed Davis, Benedictine, UNC 2008 to 2010; helped UNC to 2009 NCAA title. • Kenny Williams, L.C. Bird High School, UNC 2016 to present; helped UNC to 2017 NCAA title. VCU is still in the hunt for a highly regarded big man in the Class of 2019. Quadus Wahab, a 6-foot-10 rising senior at Flint Hill Academy in Oakton in Northern Virginia, is being courted by Rams Coach Mike Rhoades.
August 23-25, 2018 B1
Section
B
Richmond Free Press
Happenings
Personality: Margie R. Booker Spotlight on chair of Top Lady Clubbers’ 20th Anniversary Banquet Golf is considered a metaphor for life. It challenges you to be the best you can be as you work daily on your personal skills. This is how Margie Booker, a member and parliamentarian for the Top Lady Clubbers, approaches the game and her life. She has been playing golf since she started lessons in summer 1997 with a girlfriend. Her girlfriend dropped out. Ms. Booker continued. She finds the game “stimulating, exciting, electrifying, exhilarating, gratifying, interesting and enjoyable,� she says. And when an interest group started among African-American women in April 1998, Ms. Booker was a part of it. She became vice president under the president and founder, the late Marie Moore. Ms. Booker also served as president in 2000. On Saturday, Aug. 25, the 20-member Top Lady Clubbers is celebrating its 20th anniversary with a banquet. Ms. Booker is the volunteer chair. Lillian Lambert, a Richmondbased entrepreneur, author and golfer, is the keynote speaker. The golfers will use the anniversary to pay tribute Ms. Moore, its founder. The Lady Clubbers also will host the Marie Moore Memorial Member/Guest Golf Tournament on Sunday, Aug. 26, at Jefferson Lakeside Country Club. When the group was started, there was no organization in the Richmond area supporting women wanting to learn the game, Ms. Booker says. Through the Top Lady Clubbers, she has enjoyed not only playing golf, but the fun, exercise and relationships she has established with other women golfers. Her golfing partners call her “Fairway Margie� because she is not the best driver but keeps her ball on the fairway. “I play straight and don’t try to outdo people,� she says. “I keep the ball on the green.� Her bottom line: The game should be fun, especially for women. Her advice to new players: “You may not be the best player, but it’s important to play your own game. It is also important to understand, when playing in a tournament, golf is then a team sport and players contribute to the team.� Meet golf lover and Top Lady Clubbers anniversary banquet chair, this week’s Personality Margie R. Booker: No. 1 volunteer position: Chair of the Top Lady Clubbers’ 20th Anniversary Banquet.
Occupation: Retired director of grants and contracts accounting and effort reporting at Virginia Commonwealth University.
What: Top Lady Clubbers 20th Anniversary Banquet, a tribute to the club’s late founder, Marie Moore.
Date and place of birth: May 16 in Wilson, N.C.
When: 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 25, at Jefferson Lakeside Country Club, 1700 Lakeside Ave.
Current home: Henrico County.
Speaker: Lillian L. Lambert, entrepreneur, author and golfer.
Want to go?
Why I am excited about Top Lady Clubbers: The quality of play has improved significantly
Â
The person who influenced me the most: My mother. She was my role model.
Additional events: Marie Moore Memorial Member/ Guest Golf Tournament, Sunday, Aug. 26, at Jefferson Lakeside Country Club. 12:30 p.m. shotgun start. Tickets: $65.
Family: Daughter, Monica.
Why association was founded: The golf club was founded to respond to the needs and aspirations of African-American women in ways that existing golf clubs did not. It was the intent to provide a nurturing, learning, non-threatening and fun-filled environment as the members learned the game of golf. It was decided that Top Lady Clubbers would be an entertaining club with a relaxed agenda, not imitating any other social organization. The focus was to learn to play golf with lots of gratification along the way.
Kindergarten taught me: How to be a team player as well as being capable of doing things independently.
Cost: $50.
Education: Bachelor’s degree, Virginia Union University; MBA, Virginia Commonwealth University. Mission of Top Lady Clubbers: To operate a nonprofit association to promote sportsmanship and competition among its members, to sponsor league play and to hold tournaments and other events. Also to cultivate fellowship, promote membership and recruit women age 21 and older who are interested in the game of golf.
by: “No matter where you’re headed, your journey begins right where you are standing.� — Patricia RussellMcCloud.
Book that influenced me the most: “Who Moved My Cheese?� by Dr. Spencer Johnson.
Details: Margie R. Booker, banquet chair, mrasbooker@ aol.com
vorite. Tiger Woods was my favorite for many years. in the 20 years. Members play at various skill levels, yet no one appears to be intimidated by the more skillful players. I am also excited about the way the group welcomes new golfers with such supportive and warm attitudes. Why I play golf: I started playing golf when I discovered that tennis probably would not be my game of choice during my retirement years. I continue to play because of the relationships established with other golfers, the exercise, relaxation and the challenges I face to minimize the number of strokes to make a good score. Favorite course: Belmont Golf Course in Henrico County. Favorite male golfer: Dustin Johnson currently is my fa-
Favorite female golfer: Annika Sorestan from Sweden. She has won 10 majors. She autographed my Kings Mill golf cap and I have not used it yet.
week. Perhaps, I would even take a few short trips just to play a relaxing 18 holes of golf. A quote that I am inspired
How I start the day: I try to start with a positive attitude. I read Bible scriptures to strength my faith. Then I read selections from one of my TV ministers’ books. I then review my agenda for the day for needed changes.
What I’m reading now: “Camino Island� by John Grisham. Next goal: To improve my handicap by working more on my putting.
DiamonDs • Watches JeWelry • repairs
î ľ 19 East Broad strEEt richmond, Va 23219 (804) 648-1044
If I had more time, I would: Consider playing golf twice a
www.wallErjEwElry.com
The Commonwealth Links and Beta Gamma Lambda Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha are Recruiting High School Males The Commonwealth (VA) Chapter of The Links, Incorporated and the Beta Gamma Lambda Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Incorporated are recruiting males, grades 9-12 who aspire to pursue higher education after graduation. We are seeking males who attend local and surrounding schools in the Richmond-Metropolitan area to participate in a mentoring, cultural and educational enrichment program, as well as fun activities. The program will be held at a local college twice a month. The program is limited to 20 males who aspire to excel throughout life.
encouraged to apply, specially underserved males. Please return the application, via email or mail, no later than August 30, 2018. We will accept applications until the 20 slots are filled.
Males
Grades 9-12
Return to: mrasbooker@aol.com; or mail to: Young Achievers, 9055 Wallo Road, Henrico, VA 23231.
It is free to the selected participants Contact number: 804 795-2421. and all interested males are
Hopkins Road/Kingsland Road Intersection Improvements Chesterfield County Design Public Hearing Wednesday, August 29, 2018, 5 7 p.m. Meadowdale Library 4301 Meadowdale Blvd. Richmond, VA 23234
Find out about the proposed improvements at the intersection of Hopkins Road (Route 637) and Kingsland Road (Route 611) in Chesterfield County. The proposed project will replace the traditional intersection with a roundabout to improve both safety and operation. The meeting will be held in an open forum style from 5 7 p.m. This format will provide the flexibility to allow participants to meet and discuss the proposed project directly with project staff members. Review the project information and National Environmental Policy Act # ond District Office located at 2430 Pine Forest Drive in Colonial Heights, 23834-9002, 804-524-6000, 1-800-367-7623 or TTY/TDD 711. Please call ahead to ensure the availability of appropriate personnel to answer your questions. In compliance with the National Historic Preservation Act, Section 106 and 36 CFR Part 800, information concerning the potential effects of the proposed project on properties listed in or eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places is provided in the environmental documentation. Give your written or oral comments at the meeting or submit them no later than September 8, 2018 to Jason Zhang, P.E., project manager, Virginia Department of Transportation, 2430 Pine Forest Drive, Colonial Heights, VA 23834-9002. You may also email your comments to jason.zhang@vdot.virginia.gov ! " 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. *In the event of inclement weather on August 29, this meeting will be held on Wednesday, September 5 at the same time and location above. State Project: 0637-020-S20,P101, R201, C501 Federal Project: HSIP-5A27(397), OC-5A27(407), OC-5A27(408) UPC: 106197
Richmond Free Press
B2 August 23-25, 2018
Happenings
Courtesy of Howardena Pindell and Garth Greenan Gallery
“Night Flight,” 2015-2016, mixed media on canvas.
Courtesy of Howardena Pindell and Garth Greenan Gallery
“Untitled #5B (Krakatoa),” 2007, mixed media on paper collage.
Garth Greenan Gallery
“Autobiography: India (Lakshmi),” 1984, mixed media on board.
Howardena Pindell exhibit opening at VMFA By Kesha Williams
Chicago. “It is important to understand that most of the If the 50-year plight of a female artist’s career through dominant narratives in museums exclude many of the a life of racial and gender disparities was never the artists who were and still are engaged in the develtopic on the fall school reading list, the season is prime opment of many significant moments in the history to learn from Howardena Pindell’s life story. of art. Howardena Pindell is one such artist,” Ms. “Howardena Pindell: What Remains to Be Seen,” Cassel Oliver said. “She is significant to the narraa new exhibit opening Saturday, Aug. 25, at the Vir- tives around contemporary art.” ginia Museum of Fine Arts, reveals Ms. Pindell’s work has appeared an incredible trail of personal and in dozens of exhibitions and is in professional accomplishments for permanent collections around the Ms. Pindell. United States and abroad, among The 104-piece show, which runs them the Metropolitan Museum of through Nov. 25, features a range of Art, the Museum of Modern Art and Ms. Pindell’s work, including figurathe Whitney Museum of American Art tive paintings, abstract and concepin New York; the Smithsonian Mutual works, chromogenic prints and seum of American Art and National collages, film and performance art. Gallery of Art in Washington; and the Infused with unconventional mateHigh Museum of Art in Atlanta. Yet, rials such as sewing thread, glitter her storied career is anchored more and dots made from a hole punch, by dedication and determination than her work addresses issues such as celebrity status. racial and gender discrimination, war, Anative of Philadelphia, Ms. Pindell Ms. Pindell starvation, apartheid, diversity and earned an undergraduate art degree equity. One piece, “Free, White and 21,” is a filmed from Boston University in 1965 and master’s in fine performance based on her experiences of racism. arts from Yale University in 1967. She moved to New “I am happy people will see work that they have York and worked as an exhibition assistant and, later, never seen before,” the 75-year-old art professor an associate curator at MoMA from 1967 to 1979. at Stony Brook University in New York said in a She has taught at Stony Brook University since telephone interview. 1979. Valerie Cassel Oliver, the VMFA’s Sydney and As the struggle for civil rights flooded news Frances Lewis Family Curator of Modern and Con- headlines in the 1960s, Ms. Pindell noted the arts temporary Art, co-curated the exhibit with Naomi offered African-American artists little reprieve from Beckwith of the Museum of Contemporary Art, the suppressive employment trends occurring across
America. Neither nationally recognized museums nor regionally acclaimed museums regularly displayed the work of African-American artists, she said. She also recalled her work being rejected by some African-American art professionals because they refused to accept her abstract paintings as black art. Through the decades, Ms. Pindell participated in organizations that promoted social justice and advocated recognition for excluded artists. In several instances over the years, she said, her activism resulted in disagreements with or isolation from colleagues who did not recognize racial disparities in the arts as a problem, including a lack of women and AfricanAmericans on juries responsible for selecting work for exhibitions. She credits knowledgeable mentors and a few resourceful art dealers with helping her increase the number of museums exhibiting her work. Many of the social issues that touched her life are reflected in her work. Ms. Pindell said her role as an artist expanded when she joined a college faculty and became responsible for guiding and educating the next generation of artists. “Academia is complicated,” she said. “In a university, you must produce your art and you must teach. When you are a young faculty, they lean heavily on you for extra service to your department and the university,” she said. “It is different now. I have a huge pedigree and I have spoken at Harvard University and at Yale University. Yes, 50 years of hard work,” Ms. Pindell said. “Some people ask, ‘How did you do that?’ I didn’t give up. I just didn’t give up.”
Want to go? W h a t : “ A n E ve n i n g with Howardena Pindell,” a conversation with the renowned abstract, multidisciplinar y ar tist about her life and her work. Leading the talk are Valerie Cassel Oliver of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and Naomi Beckwith of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, co-curators of the exhibit, “Howardena Pindell: What Remains to Be Seen.” Where: Leslie Cheek Theater, Virginia Museum o f F i n e A r t s, 2 0 0 N . Boulevard. When: 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 24. C o s t : $ 8 ; V M FA members, $5. Exhibition catalog signing with the artist free preceding the talk at 5:15 p.m. D e t a i l s : w w w. v m fa . museum/calendar/ ev e n t s / c o n v e r s a t i o n howardena-pindell/ or call (804) 340-1405.
First black Virginia child to be remembered By Jeremy M. Lazarus
In 1624, the newly born William Tucker was baptized in the Anglican Church in Jamestown. What made the event special is that he was the first child of African descent documented as born in the English colony that became the United States. He was the son of Anthony and Isabell, two of the “20 and odd Negroes” who were taken off a storm-blown, Portuguese-flagged ship five years earlier and became servants of Capt. William Tucker, an early settler of Hampton.
While little further record of baby William’s life has turned up, a new effort is being made to recognize him and his birth as Virginia prepares to mark the 400th anniversary of the first Africans in America next year. On Friday, a historic family cemetery in Hampton that is named for William Tucker and his descendants will officially receive legal protection with state support. Gov. Ralph Northam is scheduled to attend an 11 a.m. ceremony at the Tucker Family Cemetery that is to include presentation of a conservation easement designed to ensure the 2-acre burial ground is maintained in perpetuity.
The cemetery is located next to the historic Aberdeen Gardens neighborhood, which was developed and built in 1937 by and for AfricanAmericans. Already involved in protecting historic African-American cemeteries in Richmond, the Virginia Outdoors Foundation in May provided a $100,000 grant to the nonprofit William Tucker 1624 Society to cover the cost of the easement and provide an endowment to maintain the cemetery. The society, based in Chesterfield County and made up of Tucker family members, led volunteer efforts to spruce up the once abandoned cemetery and secured ownership of the property two years ago. At the entry, a granite marker is inscribed “Tucker’s Cemetery, First Black Family 1619.” Tucker family members, who believe they can trace their line back to baby William in 1624, have been buried there for generations along with others. Visible tombstones date to the 1800s in what once was known as the Old
Colored Graveyard. The William Tucker 1624 Society has documented another 105 graves that are unmarked and may predate the graves with tombstones. It is unknown where their original relative is buried, though the VOF speculates along with the society that he might be in the graveyard. “Young William Tucker was counted as one of Capt. Tucker’s 17 servants and may have been buried at the cemetery,” the VOF stated in a project report supporting the grant award. For the past two years, the Tucker society has organized volunteer cleanup efforts to get rid of the trash and overgrown vegetation in the private cemetery. The last burial there was in 2001. The VOF stated in its report that the foundation’s involvement would help the cemetery become a restoration model for at least 60 other neglected cemeteries in Hampton and serve as a “strong and enduring reminder of the role of African-Americans in the development of Hampton, the state of Virginia and the United States.”
16th Annual Happily Natural Day this Saturday Photos by Regina H. Boone/Richmond Free Press
A special down home day
Adwela of Adwela & The Uprising, above left, gets the crowd going during last Saturday’s 28th Annual Down Home Family Reunion. A little rain didn’t dampen the spirits of the crowd that enjoyed music, food, arts and activi-
ties that focused on the historic ties between Richmonders and nations in Africa. Above, the crowd reacts to the sounds of Lady E & the Blues Synsations. The free event was sponsored by the Elegba Folklore Society.
Happily Natural Day returns Kings Apron. this weekend to the site of a Mr. Chavis and Mini Farm large vegetable and berry garden co-founder Randy Minor also in South Side. will lead “Urban Farming The 16th edition of the event Intensive,” a workshop on will be 11 a.m. to 8 gardening indoors p.m. Saturday, Aug. and outdoors. 25, at the 5th District The event also Mini Farm, 2208 will feature music, Bainbridge Street, it garden tours and a has been announced. variety of vendors. The event is open to Mr. Chavis is the public. manager of commuUnder the theme nity engagement at “Blackness AscenLewis Ginter BotaniMr. Chavis dant,” the event will cal Garden, where focus on enabling “people of he hosts a community garden color to take control of their training program. communities through sustainIn a Facebook post, Mr. able agriculture,” stated Duron Chavis stated he began HapChavis, who founded the festi- pily Natural Day after coming val in 2003. across a Richmond-produced Highlights will include two product, now long defunct, that culinary workshops — “Cook- promised to turn black coming With Young Folks,” for plexions white and straighten children 8 and older, offered kinky hair. for $10 per person by Ellen The first festivals focused Victoria Lucky of Victoria’s on celebrating natural hair Kitchen and “Black Vegan Soul and complexions, but urban Culinary Arts Workshop” by gardening has become a bigger Chef Zu of the Atlanta-based focus in recent years to enable
people to start growing their own food. Mr. Chavis has a long track record in urban gardening, including serving as the first director of Petersburg’s Harding Street Urban Ag Center, a farming incubator through the Virginia Cooperative Extension project at Virginia State University that showcases methods of indoor growing. Along with promoting food self-sufficiency, the festival’s larger goal is to enable AfricanAmericans to unite “in the effort to dismantle the inferiority complexes that have developed … due to the ideology of racism/white supremacy,” Mr. Chavis stated. “Happily Natural Day is a celebration of black consciousness whose main purpose is promoting cultural awareness, holistic health and social change,” he continued. Details: Mr. Chavis, (804) 393-6357, https://thenaturalfestival.com/ or Facebook.com/ HappilyNaturalFestival/.
Richmond Free Press
August 23-25, 2018 B3
Faith News/Directory
Lux Church moves into Sharon Baptist Church’s former Jackson Ward home By Jeremy M. Lazarus
Richard Webb/Lux Church
From left, Lux Church Pastor Victor I. “Manny” Peña and his wife, Christine, stand Sunday with Mr. Peña’s parents, Victor M. and Sonia Peña, outside the church’s new home on Leigh Street in Jackson Ward.
Last Sunday was a big day for Pastor Victor Immanuel “Manny” Peña and the 100-member congregation of Lux Church. Bubbling with enthusiasm, the 35-yearold pastor led the rejoicing as church members held their first service in the church’s new home at 22 E. Leigh St., the former home of Sharon Baptist Church. “We now have the room we need to grow,” Pastor Peña said before the inaugural service at the Jackson Ward location. The congregation moved from the 3900 block of Brook Road, where the 19-yearold non-denominational church operated as Destiny City Fellowship. Lux Church completed the purchase on Aug. 13 of the historic former home of Sharon Baptist, which is now located in a former retail space on Laburnum Avenue near the Richmond Raceway.
City records indicate that Lux Church purchased the building for $530,000. Sandy Appelman of Keller Williams Realty represented Sharon Baptist in the sale, and Nathan Hughes of Sperity Ventures Real Estate represented Lux. Sharon Baptist put the building up for sale in 2015 and vacated the premises in 2017 after the congregation, led by the Rev. Paul Allen Coles, moved the church sanctuary and offices to 500 E. Laburnum Ave. “It took time to find someone who appreciated the building and could deal with the lack of off-street parking,” Mr. Appelman said. He had plenty of nibbles. Last February, for example, Ezibu Muntu African Dance Company was working with a private developer who proposed buying and transforming the building into an entertainment space. That proposal ultimately
fell through. Sharon Baptist had occupied the property since 1890, and the main, steepled building on the site dates to 1904. Pastor Peña is the son of the church’s founders, Victor M. and Sonia Peña, who moved from Harlem to Richmond in 1985. The Peñas were associated initially with the Lighthouse Christian Center and then started their own church in 1999 in their home. They relocated the church at least five times before settling in 2003 at 3913 Brook Road in a former gathering place for Jehovah’s Witnesses. That property was sold to the Solid Rock Tabernacle of Faith on Aug. 13 for $330,000, enabling Lux Church to complete its purchase. Pastor Peña has been engaged in ministry with the church since graduating from J.R. Tucker High School 18 years ago. He and his wife, Christine, are the parents of four children.
CITY CHURCH 2018
WO ME N' S CONFERENC E
girl on fire KIM POTHIER
PA S T O R NICOLE BRADLEY
TERRI S AV E L L E - F OY
SEPTEMBER 14TH & 15TH • COST $25.00 R E G I S T E R I N P E R S O N O R O N L I N E AT W W W. R VA C I T Y. O R G / G I R L O N F I R E
Richmond Free Press
B4 August 23-25, 2018
Obituary/Faith Directory
Nobel winner Kofi Annan, the first black African to lead the United Nations, dies at 80 Former U.N. Secretary-General and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Kofi Annan died on Saturday, Aug. 18, 2018, his foundation said, after decades of championing efforts to try to end protracted conflicts in Africa, Asia and the Middle East. Mr. Annan was 80 and the first black African to lead the United Nations. A Ghanaian national, he died in a hospital in Bern, Switzerland, in the early hours, his close associates said. In Geneva, the Kofi Annan Foundation announced his peaceful death after a short undisclosed illness with “immense sadness,” saying he was surrounded in his last days by his second wife, Nane, and his children, Ama, Kojo and Nina. After rising through the ranks of the United Nations, Mr. Annan served two terms as U.N. secretary-general in New York from 1997 to 2006 and retired to live in a Swiss village in the Geneva countryside. His 10-year-old foundation promotes good governance and the transformation of African agriculture. “In many ways, Kofi Annan was the United
Nations. He rose through the saying, “I lost my troops on the ranks to lead the organization way to Damascus.” into the new millennium with “The U.N. can be immatchless dignity and deterproved. It is not perfect, but mination,” U.N. Secretaryif it didn’t exist, you would General Antonio Guterres, have to create it,” he told the whom Mr. Annan had chosen to BBC’s Hard Talk during an head the U.N. refugee agency, interview for his 80th birthsaid in a statement. day in April, recorded at the Mr. Annan and the United Geneva Graduate Institute Nations shared the 2001 Nowhere he had studied. bel Peace Prize for efforts to “I am a stubborn optimist, I reform the world body and was born an optimist and will give priority to human rights remain an optimist,” added Mr. Mr. Annan issues. Annan, who often joked about As head of U.N. peacekeeping operations, having learned from locals to wear earmuffs Mr. Annan was criticized for the world body’s against the freezing cold during his undergraduate failure to halt the genocide in Rwanda in the years at Macalester College in St. Paul, Minn., 1990s. in the United States. As U.N. boss, he was linked to peace efforts to Raila Odinga, Kenyan opposition leader and reunite the divided island of Cyprus, submitting former prime minister, said on Citizen TV: “We a reunification blueprint which was rejected in didn’t expect Kofi to pass that abruptly. Kofi a referendum by Greek Cypriots in 2004. Annan is a man of integrity; a great African, a He staunchly opposed the U.S.-led invasion great leader of the world.” of Iraq in 2003 and later served as the first U.N. Mr. Annan was praised by officials from the envoy at the start of Syria’s war, but quit after United States. world powers failed to fulfill their commitments, Former President Obama described him as
“The Church With A Welcome”
Sharon Baptist Church
500 E. Laburnum Avenue, Richmond, VA 23222 www.sharonbaptistchurchrichmond.org (804) 643-3825 Rev. Dr. Paul A. Coles, Pastor
sunday, augusT 26, 2018 8:30 a.m. ....Sunday School 10:00 a.m. ...Morning Worship Wednesdays/Thursdays Bible Study resumes in September
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Baptist Church 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
To advertise your church events in the Richmond Free Press call 644-0496
SUNDAY SCHOOL - 9:45 A.M. SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICE 11:00 A.M.
H
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Sunday, August 26, 2018
omecoming
and
Revival 11:00am Homecoming Service Pastor W.L. Moody
3:00pm Homecoming Service
Pastor Danny Patterson, Little Elam Baptist Church
Monday, August 27th thru Friday, August 31, 2018 Prayer & Praise 7:00pm - Revival Service 7:30pm
1701 Turner Road, North Chesterfield, Virginia 23225 (804) 276-0791 office (804)276-5272 fax www.ndec.net
NDEC
“Fall Back To School Revival” September 12 - 14, 2018
Bishop G. O. Glenn D. Min., Pastor Mother Marcietia S. Glenn First Lady
Sunday 8:00 a.m. Sunday School 9:00 a.m. Worship Service
Wednesday Services No Noonday or Night Bible Study during the month of August 2018
Saturday 8:30 a.m. Intercessory Prayer
You can now view Sunday Morning Service “AS IT HAPPENS” online! Also, for your convenience, we now offer “full online giving.” Visit www.ndec.net.
7:30 Nightly Guest Preacher: Superintendent Braxton Bowser
d
Dr. Robert L. Pettis, Sr., Pastor
A yearlong observance of the 400th year of African presence in this country begins this Sunday, August 26, 2018, during 10 a.m. worship. Join us on this journey.
Sunday Service 10 a.m. Church School 8:45 a.m. Wednesday Bible Study 7p.m. Transportation Services (804) 859-1985 “Reclaiming the Lost by Proclaiming the Gospel”
Thursday & Friday Radio Broadcast WREJ 1540 AM Radio - 8:15 a.m.- 8:30 a.m.
ChriStiaN aCaDEMy (NDCa) ENROLL NOW!!! Accepting applications for children 2 yrs. old to 5th Grade Our NDCA curriculum also consists of a Before and After program. Now Enrolling for our Nursery Ages 6 weeks - 2yrs. old. For more information Please call (804) 276-4433 Monday-Friday, 9am-5pm
5106 Walmsley Blvd., Richmond, VA 23224 804-276-2740 • 804-276-6535 (fax) www.BRBCONLINE.org
Early Morning Worship ~ 8 a.m. Sunday School ~ 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship ~ 11 a.m. 4th Sunday Unified Worship Service ~ 9:30 a.m. Bible Study: Wednesdays, 11:30 a.m. & 7 p.m. Sermons Available at BRBCONLINE.org
“MAKE IT HAPPEN” Pastor Kevin Cook
Good Shepherd Baptist Church 1127 North 28th St., Richmond, VA 23223-6624 • Office: (804) 644-1402 Dr. Sylvester T. Smith, Pastor “There’s A Place for You” Tuesday Sunday 10:30 AM Bible Study 9:30 AM Church School 6:30 PM Church-wide Bible Study 11:00 AM Worship Service 6:30 PM Men's Bible Study (Each 2nd and 4th) (Holy Communion Thursday each 2nd Sunday) Wednesday (Following 2nd Sunday) 6:30 PM Prayer Meeting
11:00 AM Mid-day Meditation
Serving Richmond since 1887 3200 East Broad Street, Richmond, Virginia 23223• (804) 226-1176
Sunday 9:00 a.m. Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Worship Service
St. Peter Baptist Church Dr. Kirkland R. Walton, Pastor
Worship Opportunities Morning Worship Church School Morning Worship
Sixth Baptist Church Theme for 2018-2020: Mobilizing For Ministry Refreshing The Old and Emerging The New We Embrace Diversity — Love For All!
A 21st Century Church With Ministry For Everyone
Come Worship With Us! SunDaY, auguSt 26, 2018 11:00 aM Worship Celebration Message by: Pastor Bibbs New Sermon Series: Message Three Receiving Your Miracle Through Partnership With God
Adult Fitness Class Tuesday’s - 6:30 PM Sponsored by Sports Backers at SBC Twitter sixthbaptistrva
Rev. Dr. Yvonne Jones Bibbs, Pastor
Facebook sixthbaptistrva
Mount Olive Baptist Church Rev. Darryl G. Thompson, Pastor
2018 Theme: The Year of Transition (Romans 8:28-29)
8775 Mount Olive Avenue Glen Allen, Virginia 23060 (804) 262-9614 Phone (804) 262-2397 Fax www.mobcva.org
400 South Addison Street Richmond, Va. 23220
(near Byrd Park)
(804) 359- 1691 or 359- 3498 Fax (804) 359- 3798 www.sixthbaptistchurch.org drbibbs@sixthbaptistchurch.org
Sundays
8:30 a.m. Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Morning Worship
Tuesdays
Noon Day Bible Study
WedneSday 12:00 p.m. Bible Study 7:00 p.m. Bible Study
All ARe Welcome
Sundays:
8 A.M. 9:30 A.M. 11 A.M.
Unity Sundays (2nd Sundays): Church School Morning Worship
Bible Study is now on summer break and will reconvene in September.
8:30 A.M. 10 A.M.
Jesus, Jeans & Jerseys Sunday Sunday, September 2, 2018 Emphasis during both services Representing our diversity, while displaying our unity by wearing apparel that displays our favorite sports teams, school/university, or sorority/fraternity.
Celebration
2040 Mountain Road • Glen Allen, Virginia 23060 Office 804-262-0230 • Fax 804-262-4651 • www.stpeterbaptist.net
Homecoming August 26, 2018
Corporate Worship
9:45AM Meal served immediately following Corporate Worship. Guest Preacher: Dr. Robert G. Murray Senior Pastor, First Baptist Church, Norfolk, VA
Wednesdays
6:30 p.m. Prayer and Praise 7:00 p.m. Bible Study
Rev. Michael R. Lomax, Pastor
915 Glenburnie road, richmond, Va 23226
Office: 804-288-3224 • Church: 804-288-3223 • http://westwoodbaptist-va.org
Agape International Church, Knightdale, NC Tune in on Sunday Morning to WTVR - Channel 6 - 8:30 a.m.
Broad Rock Baptist Church
Mt. Sinai Baptist Church
New Deliverance Evangelistic Church
2006 Decatur Street Richmond, VA 23224 zbcoffice@verizon.net
Monday & Tuesday: Pastor Larry Collins, Mount Calvary Baptist Church Wednesday - Friday: Pastor Otis Lockhart, Jr., Hollywood Baptist Church 200 Old Hundred Rd., Midlothian, VA 23114 Rev. W.L. Moody, Pastor (804) 794-5624 www.mountsinaibaptist.com mtsinaibaptistchurch@aol.com
Zion Baptist Church
“a diplomat and humanitarian who embodied the mission of the United Nations like few others,” while former President George W. Bush called him “a gentle man and a tireless leader.” U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley said, “Kofi Annan devoted his life to making the world a more peaceful place through his compassion and dedication to service. He worked tirelessly to unite us and never stopped fighting for the dignity of every person.” U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein paid tribute to Mr. Annan as “humanity’s best example, the epitome, of human decency and grace.” Mr. Zeid, who has criticized major powers and other countries during his four-year term that ends later this month, said that whenever he felt “isolated and alone politically,” he would go for long walks with Mr. Annan in Geneva. “When I told him once how everyone was grumbling about me, he looked at me — like a father would look at a son — and said sternly, ‘You’re doing the right thing, let them grumble.’ Then he grinned!”
Reuters
Upcoming Events & Happenings
Ebenezer Baptist Church 1858
“The People’s Church”
216 W. Leigh St. • Richmond, Va. 23220 Tel: 804-643-3366 • Fax: 804-643-3367 Email: ebcoffice1@yahoo.com • web: www.richmondebenezer.com
Virginia Union University Day and Health Recognition Day
Sunday Morning Worship Family & Friends Homecoming Celebration Including Fall Revival
Sunday, August 26, 2018 11AM Morning Worship Special Guest Speaker: Dr. Hakim J. Lucas, VUU President
Dr. Wallace J. Cook, Pastor Emeritus
2901 Mechanicsville Turnpike, Richmond, VA 23223 (804) 648-2472 ~ www.mmbcrva.org Dr. Price London Davis, Senior Pastor Weekly Worship: Sundays @ 10:30 A.M. Church School: Sundays @ 9:00 A.M. Bible Study: On Summer Break
Our S
Richmond Free Press
August 23-25, 2018 B5
Legal Notices 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 Tuesday, September 4, 2018 at 1:30 p.m. in the Fifth Floor Conference Room of City Hall and the Council of the City of Richmond has scheduled a public hearing on Monday, September 10, 2018 at 6:00 p.m. in the Council Chamber on the Second Floor of City Hall, located at 900 East Broad Street, Richmond, Virginia, to consider the following ordinances: Ordinance No. 2018-208 To close to vehicular travel North 17th Street between East Franklin Street and East Main Street, consisting of approximately 23,761± square feet, for the purpose of creating an urban plaza centered around the 17th Street Farmer’s Market, upon certain terms and conditions. Ordinance No. 2018-209 To amend City Code §§ 30-504, 30-506—30507.1, 30-509—30-523, and 30-1220; to amend ch. 30, art. V, div. 1 by adding therein new §§ 30-504.01 and 30-504.02; and to amend the fees set forth in Appendix A of the City Code for sections 30-1050.6(a) and 30-1050.6(b), for the purpose of modifying the City’s zoning ordinance to ensure the proper administration and implementation of the City’s sign regulations. To amend and reordain Chapter 30, Article V of the City Code concerning sign regulations in the city of Richmond which will include establishing awning signs and canopy signs as distinct sign types and incorporating design elements related thereto, adjusting maximum sign area in various zoning districts and to Amend and Reordain the fees set forth in Appendix A for City Code §30-1050.6(a) and §30-1050.6(b), for the purpose of amending fees for filing applications for special use permits and amended special use permits related to signage, and other related sections of the Zoning Ordinance to ensure the proper administration and implementation of the Sign Regulations. Ordinance No. 2018-210 To conditionally rezone the properties known as 3 Manchester Road, 3A Manchester Road, and 2 Hull Street from the RF-1 Riverfront District to the B-4 Central Business District (Conditional), upon certain proffered conditions. The properties are located in the RF-1 Riverfront District. These properties were included in the 2009 Downtown Plan, which recommends that they be developed consistent with the Urban Center Character Area. The Urban Center Area is characterized by higher density, mixed-use development, typically arranged on a fine-grained street network, with wide sidewalks, regular tree planting, and minimal setbacks. Ordinance No. 2018-211 To conditionally rezone the properties known as 700 North 3rd Street; 200, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214, 215, 216, 217, and 218 Maggie L. Walker Place; and 701, 703, 705, 707, 709, 723, and 745 North 2nd Street from the R-53 Multifamily Residential District to the B-7 MixedUse Business District (Conditional), upon certain proffered conditions. The properties are located in the R-53 Multifamily Residential District. The City of Richmond’s Pulse Corridor Plan designates the property for Neighborhood MixedUse land use, within the Convention Center Station Area. Neighborhood Mixed-Use areas are recommended to be cohesive districts that provide a mix of uses, but with a larger amount of residential uses than other mixed-use districts. They are an urban, walkable environment with limited neighborhood-oriented uses incorporated along key commercial corridors and at corner sites.
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Attached Residential District. The City’s Master Plan recommends SingleFamily Medium Density land use for the subject property. Primary uses are single-family and two-family dwellings, both detached and attached, at densities of 8 to 20 units per acre. Includes residential support uses such as schools, places of worship, neighborhood parks and recreation facilities, and limited public and semi-public uses. Ordinance No. 2018-213 To authorize the special use of the properties known as 2600 Idlewood Avenue and 309 South Robinson Street for the purpose of a social service delivery use and accessory parking, upon certain terms and conditions. The property is zoned in the R-63 MultiFamily Urban Residential District. The City of Richmond’s current Near West Planning District Land Use Plan designates a future land use category for the subject property as SF-MD (Single Family – Medium Density). Primary uses are single-family and two-family dwellings, both detached and attached, at densities of 8 to 20 units per acre. Includes residential support uses such as schools, places of worship, neighborhood parks and recreation facilities, and limited public and semi-public uses. Ordinance No. 2018-214 To authorize the special use of the property known as 3400 Stony Point Road for the purpose of limited special events, upon certain terms and conditions. The City of Richmond’s Master Plan recommends institutional land use for the subject property. Primary uses for this category include institutional uses, such as places of worship, private schools, universities, museums, hospitals, and other care facilities. The property is currently zoned R-2 Single-Family Residential. Ordinance No. 2018-215 To authorize the special use of the property known as 4410 Kensington Avenue for the purpose of permitting an accessory dwelling unit within an existing detached garage, upon certain terms and conditions. The property is located in the R-5 Singlefamily zoning district. The City of Richmond’s Master Plan designates a future land use category for the subject property as Single-Family Low Density. Primary uses for this category include single-family detached dwellings at densities up to seven units per acre. The proposed density of the parcel would be approximately 12 units per acre. Ordinance No. 2018-216 To authorize the special use of the property known as 200 East Cary Street for the purpose of a single-family dwelling, upon certain terms and conditions. The property is located within the B-3 General Business District. The Pulse Corridor Plan designates the subject property as Downtown Mixed-Use which features high-density development with office buildings, apartments, and a mix of complementary uses, including regional destinations. Higherdensity pedestrianand transit-oriented development encouraged on vacant or underutilized sites; new development should be urban in form and may be of larger scale than existing context. Ordinance No. 2018-217 To authorize the special use of the property known as 5263 Warwick Road for the purpose of a wireless telecommunications monopole and associated equipment, upon certain terms and conditions. The subject property is located in the R-4 Single-Family Residential zoning district. The City of Richmond’s Master Plan recommends Single-Family Low Density land use for the subject property. This category includes schools, places of worship, neighborhood parks and recreation facilities, and limited public and semi-public uses (p. 133). Interested citizens who wish to speak will be given an opportunity to do so. Copies of the full text of all ordinances are available by visiting the City Clerk’s page on the City’s Website at www. Richmondgov.com; the Main City Library located at 101 East Franklin Street; and in the Office of the City Clerk, City Hall, 900 East Broad Street, Suite 200, Richmond, VA 23219, from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. Candice D. Reid City Clerk
Ordinance No. 2018-212 To amend and reordain Ord. No. 93-271-235, adopted Oct. 11, 1993, which authorized the use of the property known as 1133 West Franklin Street for the purpose of conversion and use of the existing building as offices, Sunday school rooms, and meeting rooms accessory to the existing church at 1205 West Franklin Street, and as a single dwelling unit, together with accessory parking, to authorize additional signage, upon certain terms and conditions. The property is zoned in the R-6 Single-Family
VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF
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Divorce
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HANOVER WENDY HINES, Plaintiff v. MCGILL HINES, Defendant. Case No.: CL18002560-00 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 2nd day of October, 2018 at 9:00 a.m. 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
FRANK D. HARGROVE, JR., Clerk I ask for this: Dorothy M. Eure VSB# 27724 8460 Mount Eagle Road Ashland, VA 23005 (804) 798-9667
A L FRE D E D W AR D TUCKER, JR, and SHEILA MAY BALTRIP, have not been located and have not filed a response to this action, that said owners, RICHARD ALVIN TUCKER, and PHYLLIS ANN HUNTER, who have been served by posting and by mailing a copy of the complaint to their last known address, have not been personally 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 by the general description of “Parties Unknown.” IT IS ORDERED that C L ARE N C E T U C KER , DORIS OLIVIA PAIGE, A L FRE D E D W AR D T U C KER , J R , S HEI L A MAY BALTRIP, RICHARD ALVIN TUCKER, PHYLLIS ANN HUNTER, and Parties Unknown, come forward to appear on or before OCTOber 25, 2018 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 804-646-7940
in said property, have not been identified and/or served despite diligent efforts to do so and are defendants to this suit by the general description of “Parties Unknown.” IT IS ORDERED that MARY P. BROWN, upon information and belief deceased, or her heirs, devisees, assignees or successors in interest, PERNELL RICKS, upon information and belief deceased, or his heirs, devisees, assignees or successors in interest, HI N TO N S T I T H , u p o n information and belief deceased, CHARLES H. TAYLOR, ANNE TAYLOR, BLANCHE RICKS, and Parties Unknown, come forward to appear on or before OCTOber 25, 2018 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 804-646-7940
An Affidavit having been filed that said owner, DANIEL BATES, owner per a deed filed in the records of the Henrico Circuit Court at Deed Book 93 page 660 on July 17, 1874, or his 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 by the general description of “Parties Unknown.” IT IS ORDERED that DANIEL BATES, owner per a deed filed in the records of the Henrico Circuit Court at Deed Book 93 page 660 on July 17, 1874, or his heirs, devisees, assignees or successors in interest, and Parties Unknown, come forward to appear on or before OCTOber 25, 2018 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 804-646-7940
VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF HANOVER JACOB BRANCH, SR., Plaintiff v. ELISHIA BRANCH, Defendant. Case No.: CL18002389-00 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 September, 2018 at 9:00 a.m. 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 SHAWANA HALL PORTER, Plaintiff v. BRUCE PORTER, JR., Defendant. Case No.: CL18002336-00 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 September, 2018 at 9:00 a.m. 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: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF HANOVER ADY ORTIZ PACHON, Plaintiff v. OSCAR PEREZ, Defendant. Case No.: CL18002088-00 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 has been served with the Complaint by posted service appear here on or before the 19th day of September, 2018 at 9:00 a.m. and protect his interests. A Copy, Teste: FRANK D. HARGROVE, JR., Clerk I ask for this: Dorothy M. Eure VSB# 27724 8460 Mount Eagle Road Ashland, VA 23005 (804) 798-9667
CUSTODY Virginia: In the Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court for the County of Chesterfield In re: Hope Olivia Allen, Cassie Jenkins, V. Erik Allen, Respondents Case No.: JJ079676-05-01 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to: Modify custody of Hope Olivia Allen (DOB: 5/17/08), whose mother is Cassie Jenkins, and whose father is Erik Allen, pursuant to Virginia code section 16.1-241A3. Erik Allen’s last known address is 3061 Walmsley Blvd, N. Chestefield, Va. It is ordered that the defendant Erik Allen appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 10/01/2018 at 11:00 AM. Virginia: In the Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court for the County of Chesterfield In re: Laprade, joseph david & laprade, Lillieanne marie, Petitioners, v. kenneth & kaylyn laprade, Respondents Case No.: JJ081108-07-00, -08-00, -09-00, -10-00; JJ087748-05-00, -06-00, -07-00, -08-00 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to: Determine custody and visitation of Joseph David Laprade (DOB: 8/20/14 - JJ087748-05-00, -06-00, -07-00, -08-00) and Lillieanne Marie Laprade (DOB: 3/15/13 - JJ081108-0700, -08-00, -09-00, -10-00), whose mother is Kaylyn Marie Laprade, and whose father is Kenneth Vernon Laprade, III, pursuant to Virginia code section 16.1-241A3. Mother and Father’s last known address is Chester Budget Inn (13201 Jefferson Davis Highway, Chester, VA) It is ordered that the defendants Kenneth Laprade, III and Kaylyn Laprade appear at the abovenamed Court and protect his or her interests on or before 10/01/2018 at 11:00 AM.
PROPERTY VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND JOHN MARSHALL COURTS BUILDING CITY OF RICHMOND, Plaintiff, v. Case No.: CL18-3087 CASSANDRA CALENDERRAY, et al, Defendants. ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to subject the property briefly described as 801 North 38th Street, Richmond, Virginia, Tax Map Number E0001552/001, to sale in order to collect delinquent real estate taxes assessed thereon in the name of the owner of record, Cassandra Calender-Ray. An Affidavit having been filed that said owner, CASSANDRA CALENDERRAY, who has been served by posting and by mailing a copy of the complaint to her last known address, has not been personally located and has 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 by the general description of “Parties Unknown.” IT IS ORDERED that CASSANDRA CALENDERRAY and Parties Unknown, come forward to appear on or before OCTOber 25, 2018 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 804-646-7940
VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND JOHN MARSHALL COURTS BUILDING CITY OF RICHMOND, Plaintiff, v. MARVIN A ROBINSON, SR, et al, Defendants. Case No.: CL18-2904 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to subject the property briefly described as 445 West Duval Street, Richmond, Virginia, Tax Map Number N0000210/053, to sale in order to collect delinquent real estate taxes assessed thereon in the name of the owners of record, Marvin A. Robinson, Sr, and Goldie L. Robinson. An Affidavit having been filed that said owners, MARVIN A ROBINSON, SR, and GOLDIE L. ROBINSON, who have been served by posting and by mailing a copy of the complaint to their last known address, have not been personally located and have not filed a response to this action; that STUART L. WILLIAMS, Trustee of for a Deed of Trust filed in the records of the Richmond Circuit Court at Instrument Number 10-6900 on April 22, 2010, or his successor/s in title, 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 by the general description of “Parties Unknown.” IT IS ORDERED that MARVIN A ROBINSON, SR, GOLDIE L. ROBINSON, STUART L. WILLIAMS, Trustee of for a Deed of Trust filed in the records of the Richmond Circuit Court at Instrument Number 10-6900 on April 22, 2010, or his successor/s in title, and Parties Unknown, come forward to appear on or before OCTOber 25, 2018 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 804-646-7940
VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF HANOVER DONALD REDD, Plaintiff v. ANN REDD, Defendant. Case No.: CL16001041-00 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 has been served with the Complaint by posted service appear here on or before the 19th day of September, 2018 at 9:00 a.m. and protect her interests. A Copy, Teste:
VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND JOHN MARSHALL COURTS BUILDING CITY OF RICHMOND, Plaintiff, v. CLARENCE TUCKER, et al, Defendants. Case No.: CL18-3207 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to subject the property briefly described as 118 Lipscomb Street, Richmond, Virginia, Tax Map Number S0000150/018, to sale in order to collect delinquent real estate taxes assessed thereon in the name of the owner of record, Clarence Tucker, Doris Olivia Paige, Alfred Edward Tucker, Jr, Richard Alvin Tucker, Phyllis Ann Hunter, Sheila May Baltrip, and Margaret Delois Paige. An Affidavit having been filed that said owners, C L ARE N C E T U C KER , DORIS OLIVIA PAIGE,
VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND JOHN MARSHALL COURTS BUILDING CITY OF RICHMOND, Plaintiff, v. MARY P. BROWN, et al, Defendants. Case No.: CL18-3917 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to subject the property briefly described as 1007 North 3rd Street, Richmond, Virginia, Tax Map Number N0000088/025, to sale in order to collect delinquent real estate taxes assessed thereon in the name of the owners of record, Mary P. Brown, Pernell Ricks, Hinton Stith, Charles H. Taylor, Anne Taylor, and Blanche Ricks. An Affidavit having been filed that said owners, MARY P. BROWN, upon information and belief deceased, or her heirs, devisees, assignees or successors in interest, PERNELL RICKS, upon information and belief deceased, or his heirs, devisees, assignees or successors in interest, and HINTON STITH, upon information and belief deceased, or his heirs, devisees, assignees or successors in interest, have not been located and have not filed a response to this action; that said owners, CHARLES H. TAYLOR, ANNE TAYLOR, and BLANCHE RICKS, 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
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VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND JOHN MARSHALL COURTS BUILDING CITY OF RICHMOND, Plaintiff, v. JOSEPH W. DOBYNS, et al, Defendants. Case No.: CL18-3447 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to subject the property briefly described as 1505 Perry Street, Richmond, Virginia, Tax Map Number S0000202/010, to sale in order to collect delinquent real estate taxes assessed thereon in the name of the owner of record, Joseph W. Dobyns. An Affidavit having been filed that said owner, JOSEPH W. DOBYNS, upon information and belief deceased, or his 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 by the general description of “Parties Unknown.” IT IS ORDERED that JOSEPH W. DOBYNS, upon information and belief deceased, or his heirs, devisees, assignees or successors in interest, and Parties Unknown, come forward to appear on or before OCTOber 25, 2018 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 804-646-7940 VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND JOHN MARSHALL COURTS BUILDING CITY OF RICHMOND, Plaintiff, v. CEASAR V. COLES, et al, Defendants. Case No.: CL18-3273 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to subject the property briefly described as 1512 West Leigh Street Richmond, Virginia, Tax Map Number N000-0676/032, to sale in order to collect delinquent real estate taxes assessed thereon in the name of the owner of record, Ceasar V. Coles. An Affidavit having been filed that said owner, CEASAR V. COLES, who has been served by posting and by mailing a copy of the complaint to his last known address, has not been personally located and has 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 by the general description of “Parties Unknown.” IT IS ORDERED that CEASAR V. COLES, and Parties Unknown, come forward to appear on or before OCTOber 25, 2018 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 804-646-7940 VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND JOHN MARSHALL COURTS BUILDING CITY OF RICHMOND, Plaintiff, v. DANIEL BATES, et al, Defendants. Case No.: CL18-3828 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to subject the property briefly described as 2101 Phaup Street, Richmond, Virginia, Tax Map Number E0120259/001, to sale in order to collect delinquent real estate taxes assessed thereon in the name of the owner of record, Daniel Bates. Continued on next column
VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND JOHN MARSHALL COURTS BUILDING CITY OF RICHMOND,Plaintiff, v. NEAL KENNEDY, et al, Defendants. Case No.: CL18-112 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this suit is to subject the property briefly described as 1505 North 22nd Street, Richmond, Virginia, Tax Map Number E000-0778/016, to sale in order to collect delinquent real estate taxes assessed thereon in the name of the owner of record, Neil Kennedy. An Affidavit having been filed that said owner, NEAL KENNEDY, who is not a resident of the Commonwealth of Virginia, has not been located and has 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 by the general description of “Parties Unknown.” IT IS ORDERED that N EA L KE N N E D Y, a n d Parties Unknown, come forward to appear on or before OCTOber 25, 2018 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 Continued on next column
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900 E. Broad Street Richmond, VA 23219 804-646-7940
BIDS COUNTY OF HENRICO, VIRGINIA CONSTRUCTION BID ITB #18-1732-8JOK Virginia Home for Boys and Girls Stream Restoration Due: September 19, 2018 at 3:00 p.m. For additional information visit: https://henrico.us/finance/ divisions/purchasing/ solicitations/ COUNTY OF HENRICO, VIRGINIA Request for Proposals (RFP) to provide “A Proposal for Architectural and Engineering Services for Recreation & Parks Sports & Facilities Improvement Projects, Annual Term Contract” Pursuant to RFP #18-1720-7JCK is due by 2:30 p.m., September 14, 2018. The Request for Proposal is available at: http:// www.henrico.us/purchasing/ COUNTY OF HENRICO, VIRGINIA CONSTRUCTION ITB # 18-1724-7CLE – Enterprise Parkway & Broad Street Area (SH-15 PART 1, Phase 1) Sewer Rehabilitation – The rehabilitation of approx. 2,400 LF of 8” diameter sewer and replacement of approx. 5,100 LF of sewer with new 8” and 12” diameter sewer, including a jack and bore steel pipe encasement installation under West Broad Street. Due 3:00 pm, September 18, 2018. Additional information available at: https:// henrico.us/finance/divisions/ purchasing/.
other VIRGINIA: IN THE GENERAL DISTRICT COURT FOR THE CITY OF RICHMOND TAMMY R. LEE-GULLEY, Plaintiff v. DONYELLE WHITEHEAD and ANOITED ONEZ TRUCKING LLC, Defendants. Case No.: GV17038949-00 ORDER OF PUBLICATION The object of this abovestyled suit is to recover for a breach of contract. And, it appearing by affidavit filed according to law that Donyelle Whitehead, one of the above-named defendants, cannot be located, it is therefore ORDERED that the said Donyelle Whitehead needs to appear on October 9, 2018 at 10:00 AM, before this Court, whose address is 400 North 9th Street, Richmond, Virginia 23219 and do what is necessary to protect their interests. An Extract: Teste: SANDRA C. BLOUNT, Clerk Benjamin M. Andrews (VSB No. 77824) AndrewsBrown PLC 5711 Greendale Road Henrico, VA 23228 Telephone: (804) 918-2091 Facsimile: (888) 568-2684
AvAilAble Downtown Richmond first floor office suite 5th and Franklin Streets 422 East Franklin Street Richmond, Virginia 23219
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Richmond Free Press
B6 August 23-25, 2018
Special Tribute
‘Queen of Soul’ Aretha Franklin
Ms. Franklin, wearing a signature hat, performs “My Country ’Tis of Thee” at President Obama’s first inauguration in January 2009 at the U.S. Capitol in Washington.
Ron Edmonds/Associated Press
“America has no royalty. But we do have a chance to earn something more enduring. Born in Memphis and raised in Detroit, Aretha Franklin grew up performing gospel songs in her father’s congregation. For more than six decades since, every time she sang, we were all graced with a glimpse of the divine. “Through her compositions and unmatched musicianship, Aretha helped define the American experience. In her voice, we could feel our history, all of it and in every shade — our power and our pain, our darkness and our light, our quest for redemption and our hard-won respect. She helped us feel more connected to each other, more hopeful, more human. And sometimes she helped us just forget about everything else and dance. “Aretha may have passed on to a better place, but the gift of her music remains to inspire us all. May the Queen of Soul rest in eternal peace. Michelle and I send our prayers and warmest sympathies to her family and all those moved by her song.”
Ricardo Thomas/Detroit News/AP
Ms. Franklin performs at the DTE Energy Music Theater in Clarkston, Mich., on Aug. 25, 2011.
Former President and First Lady Barack and Michelle Obama
Doug Pizac/Associated Press
Ms. Franklin arrives at her Los Angeles hotel wedding reception with her new husband, actor Glynn Turman, and her 8-year-old son, Kecalf, on April 17, 1978.
Isaac Sutton/Ebony Collection/Associated Press Images
Aretha Franklin receives music advice from her father, the Rev. C.L. Franklin, in this undated photo.
Joe Kennedy/Associated Press
Frederick Watkins Jr./Ebony Collection/AP Images
Steven Senne/Associated Press
Left, Ms. Franklin shows off the Grammy Legend Award she received during a ceremony Dec. 5, 1990, at the Theater Royale in New York. Above, the “Queen of Soul” performs with the “Godfather of Soul,” James Brown, at Detroit’s Taboo nightclub in January 1987. The show was taped for airing on HBO. Right, Ms. Franklin acknowledges the cheering crowd as she stands to receive an honorary degree at Harvard University during the May 2014 commencement ceremony.
Jim Wells/Associated Press
Ms. Franklin, second from right, stands with the Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. as he speaks with reporters at the Operation PUSH Soul Picnic in March 1972 at the 142nd Street Armory in New York City. With them are, from left, Betty Shabazz, widow of Malcolm X; PUSH Vice President Tom Todd; South African singer Miriam Makeba; and Congressman Louis Stokes of Ohio.
See more photo coverage on richmondfreepress.com
Legal Notices/Employment Opportunities TransiT sysTem
GRTC TRANSIT SYSTEM EXECUTIVE SEARCH SERVICES REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS The City of Richmond is in the process of preparing its 2017-2018 Consolidated Annual Performance and Evaluation Report (CAPER). From July 1, 2017 to June 30, 2018, $8.22 million were made available to the City by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to implement various housing and community development activities. Community Development Block Grant (CDBG), HOME Investment Partnerships Program (HOME), and Emergency Solutions Grant (ESG) funds were used throughout the city. Housing Opportunities for Persons With AIDS (HOPWA) funds were used throughout the Richmond MSA. The CAPER discusses program progress and outcomes for each of these funding sources. Beginning August 23, 2018, a draft of the CAPER will be online at http://www. yesrichmondva.com/neighborhood-revitalization/Federally-FundedPrograms, or a copy will be available at the Richmond Dept. of Economic and Community Development, 1500 E. Main Street, Suite 400, Richmond, VA 23219. Comments on the draft, preferably written, will be accepted until September 24, 2018 and can be provided to Mr. Yong Hong Guo at the above address, by email to Yong.Guo@ richmondgov.com, by telephone at 804.646.6713, or by facsimile at 804.646.6358.
GRTC Transit System invites all interested parties to submit proposals for providing executive search services. Interested firms may download a copy of RFP# 169-18-05 from GRTC’s website www.ridegrtc.com (menu options: About Us, then Procurement) or obtain a copy by calling Tonya Thompson at (804) 358-3871 ext. 372.
The City of Richmond does not discriminate on the basis of disability status in the admission of, access to or treatment in its federally assisted programs or activities. Virginia Relay Center — TDD users — 711.
216 W. Leigh St. • Richmond, Va. 23220
Richmond Metro Habitat for Humanity is hiring a Construction Project Supervisor. This position will be to supervise the construction of affordable housing Richmond Habitat. This individual should be skilled in all aspects of construction. As the on-site person, you will oversee the actual work being performed by sub-contractors for the specific sites & also perform skilled tasks as required to pass inspections. This position is full-time and includes benefits such as healthcare, retirement, paid time off and use of a company vehicle and cellphone. Send resume and cover letter (please include your reasons why you want to work for the organization) to mdanese@richmondhabitat.org.
There will be no pre-proposal meeting. Responses are due no later than 10:00 am on September 5, 2018. All inquiries pertaining to the request or any questions in reference to the solicitation documents should be directed to:
Greater Anointing Church is seeking a skilled ChurCh musiCiAn fluent in traditional gospel choir music as well as modern contemporary praise and worship to serve during worship services on Sunday mornings. Candidates must be able to play a keyboard and pass a background check. Call 804-292-9393 or email bmurray218@gmail.com or fax resume to (804) 282-5980.
Mobile Crew Worker Greater Richmond ARC has full-time positions available with full benefits at our Westwood Ave location in Richmond, VA. Position consists of cleaning up roadsides while walking around 8 miles a day. To apply, visit our job posting website at richmondarc.hyrell.com or apply in person at 3600 Saunders Avenue, Richmond, VA 23227. EO/AA Drug-Free Workplace
Tonya Thompson Director of Procurement (804) 358-3871, extension 372 Supplier diversity program – “providing equal opportunities for small businesses”
Ebenezer Baptist Church “The People’s Church”
Opening for the Position of Pastor Ebenezer Baptist Church, of Richmond, Virginia, seeks a Pastor, called by God, who will lead, direct and guide the ministry of this historic church. Applicants must have earned the Master of Divinity degree, be a biblical scholar, understand church business principles and be of impeccable character. Contact information and detailed application instructions are found at Ebenezer’s website, www.richmondebenezer.com. The closing date for submitting applications is September 15, 2018
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
Freelance Writers:
Richmond Free Press has immediate opportunities for freelance writers. Newspaper experience is a requirement. To be considered, please send 5 samples of your writing, along with a cover letter to news@richmond freepress.com or mail to: Richmond Free Press, P.O. Box 27709, Richmond, VA 23261. No phone calls.
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Rebuilding Together of Richmond seeks qualified contractors to perform home repairs for senior and/or disabled homeowners. Project will be located in Richmond, Henrico, Chesterfield, Petersburg and Hopewell. Repairs can include, but are not limited to roofing, HVAC repair/ replacement, siding repairs/replacement, plumbing repairs, lead abatement, or other critical repairs for approximately 50 projects over the course of a year. This is a HUD funded project; Section 3 businesses and/or business that employ Section 3 residents are encouraged to respond. There will be a meeting on August 28 at 7:00 a.m. at St. Elizabeth’s Catholic Church, 2712 2nd Ave, Richmond, VA 23222 to learn more details about upcoming projects. All contractors must be registered with the System for Awards Management (SAMS) and must be in good standing to receive a contract. Submit intent of interest, along with current certificate of insurance to info@rebuildingtogetherrichmond.org.
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