Party Problems

From WTVR news:

Richmond police broke up a graduation party of over 150 people Saturday night, after neighbors say the party was getting out of control.
No one was arrested and no damage was reported, but as graduation week approaches for several local colleges and universities, some police departments are focused on keeping parties orderly.
VCU Police Chief John Venuti told CBS 6 his force increases the number of officers on-duty at certain points in the year, including the weeks close to graduation.
“I think if you’re throwing a party, it’s got to be your responsibility to keep people in check,” said Isaiah, who lives in Oregon Hill where the graduation party was held. “That’s just the way it is and sometimes people lose sight of that.”

Neighbors Working On Pleasants Park

Several neighbors took time yesterday to do some badly needed volunteer yard work on Pleasants Park.

Why is it called Pleasants Park?

From the Richmond Friends website (click here for link):

Robert Pleasants, who was born at Curles in Henrico County, Virginia in 1723 and died in 1801, was one Virginia’s most noted Quaker abolitionists. As one of the founders of the Virginia Abolition Society in 1790, he served as president. In 1782 he successfully lobbied for the Manumission Act, which, within one decade, was responsible for freeing over ten thousand slaves in Virginia. In 1792 Mr. Pleasants submitted a petition to the U.S. Congress from the Virginia Abolition Society calling for the end of the slave trade. Mr. Pleasants went to court repeatedly to free hundreds of slaves. He wrote to Virginia leaders such as George Washington and Patrick Henry, asking that slavery be abolished.
Several of these documents are contained on this website.

In 1784, two years after manumitting his slaves, Mr. Pleasants founded the Gravelly Hill School, the first school for free blacks in Virginia, and set aside 350 acres of land to maintain the schools. Henrico Parks and Recreation will dedicate a historic maker on the Gravelly Hill Site in 2003.

The Oregon Hill Neighborhood Association successfully petitioned the Richmond City Council in 2003 to name Pleasants Park at 401 South Laurel Street for Robert Pleasants.

This is history that is not part of the new Liberty Trail.

Water Rate Debate ‘Takes Backseat’

Excerpt from Times Dispatch article, “$24M ISSUE:
Utilities’ payments to Richmond take backseat in water/wastewater rate debate
Richmond has utilities make special payments into general fund”
:

Historically, the council has been reluctant to tackle the payments to the city that are a built-in component of water, wastewater and gas bills.
According to Richmond’s City Charter, the city’s public utilities, with the exception of the stormwater utility, are required to pay into the city general fund “taxes not actually accruing but which would have accrued had the utility not been municipally owned.”
All told, the so-called payment in lieu of taxes, or PILOT, for the water, wastewater and gas utilities will account for nearly $24 million of the $760.5 million general fund in the proposed budget for the fiscal year that starts in July. That’s an increase of 7.4 percent from the prior year. And for the fiscal year that starts in July 2014, it’s expected to grow to $25.6 million.
For decades, the PILOT provision has been interpreted to mean that the city is entitled to collect payment for virtually any tax the utility would be required to pay if it was privately owned. That includes real estate, personal property, gross receipt and even income taxes, which the city does not collect from private businesses.
The water and wastewater utilities, for example, will pay nearly $3.3 million in income taxes into the city’s general fund this year.
According to a city marketing campaign to promote the new rate structure, which has cost utility customers more than $23,400 in newspaper and television advertising since March, the PILOT accounts for 14 percent of the base charge for water and wastewater.
Scott Burger, a longtime member of the Falls of the James Sierra Club and a former president of the Oregon Hill Neighborhood Association who has pushed for lower water bills for years, most recently as a member of the Better Government for Richmond watchdog group, said dropping the charges without addressing the PILOT doesn’t deal with a core problem.
“In a sense it’s a step forward. It’s still basically gouging people on water,” Burger said. “I don’t think it’s totally clear to people what’s going on.”
Through the Freedom of Information Act, Burger polled seven other sizable Virginia cities on their municipal utilities.
“What came back is that no other peer city has utilities that pay into their general fund in lieu of federal income tax,” Burger said, adding that he has contacted state legislators about addressing the issue. “Why does Richmond?”
City Councilman Parker C. Agelasto, whose 5th District includes Oregon Hill, has asked the city attorney to give an opinion on whether the city can collect payments in lieu of income tax and wants to take steps to reduce or eliminate the PILOT.
“I think it would be hard to disagree that if everybody in the city’s water bill went down $5 a month, then that would be a good thing for everybody in the city,” Agelasto said.
Agelasto, elected in November to his first term on the council, has also introduced an amendment to the proposed budget that would require more analysis of the cost of service study, which the Department of Public Utilities commissioned for nearly $201,000 and used to compile the new rate structure, in an effort to lower water rates further.
Agelasto said his amendment wouldn’t affect the new rates included in the proposed budget, noting that utilities department staff members had months and the benefit of a study to help them make their case for the new structure.

More background to click through here, here, here, here, and here.

Breaking Down The Water Bill

From press release:

Better Government Richmond, a citizen advocacy organization, is pleased to announce the release of a new video about the City of Richmond Water Utility Charges and Rates. Better Government members produced this video in order to inform the public about the Mayor’s proposed plan that is under review by City Council. Better Government mentioned a study of the water utility by paid consultants as one of its top issues in its first press release in February.

The 9-minute video includes information regarding the consultants’ study as well as an explanation of charges on a sample City of Richmond utility bill. It has been made available online at Vimeo.com as well as on Better Government Richmond’s website and Facebook page. Supporters are asked to share with their neighbors and contacts.

The Vimeo.com url is http://vimeo.com/64618134

See also:

www.bg-us.org
www.facebook.com/BetterGovernmentRichmond