Candidate Forums and Meets

The next two months are going to be a whirlwind of political activity because of the General Assembly elections and the special 5th District Richmond City Council election. More candidate forums have been announced and at least one previously scheduled candidate meeting has been rescheduled. Here’s just a few to consider for your calendar…

Another big one is the Richmond City Council, 5th District Candidate Forum on Thursday, September 12, 2019 at 6:30 p.m. at Patrick Henry School for Science and Arts (3411 Semmes Ave., Richmond, Va 23225). All eight registered candidates have confirmed attendance.
Civic leadership from the 5th District neighborhoods, including Carytown, the Fan, Maymont, Oregon Hill, Randolph, Woodland Heights, and local Sierra Club Falls of the James Group members, have organized the non-partisan forum. The event will be moderated by Dawn Rosenberg. All Fifth District residents are invited to attend.

The ‘meet’n’greet’ with City Council candidate Stephanie Lynch has been re-scheduled from September 10 to October 1.

Can’t make a candidate forum? There’s also an online Richmond For All 5th District questionnaire that asks candidates if they will follow the lead of organizations like the Movement for Black Lives and a National Network of teachers’ unions by recognizing the role of community-first school governance in ensuring students the education they deserve. The deadline for candidate responses is Sept 13th

Don’t Fall For The Local Corporate Propaganda

As expected, with Councilperson Agelasto’s removal, here comes the special election with a major question- who is running who will stand up to the Tom Farrell/VCU-backed “Navy Hill” coliseum scheme? Of course there are other important questions for the district that need to be asked, but as I have stated previously, the major backstory to ALL Richmond politics right now is this new corporate welfare/white elephant being pushed on the public.

Some of the local television stations have be pretty one-sided in their coverage, but the Times Dispatch is really taking the cake by launching a full-on editorial press. The “lay of The land” by Chris Gentilviso was laughable. It was full of the the ol’ ‘neglected’ land/great opportunity schtick that longtime Richmonders know all to well. Remember when Jack Berry waxed poetic about the ‘weed-strewn’ parking lots of Shockoe Bottom while pushing for a Shockoe Stadium? Of course, Sunday’s editorial did not mention the purposeful neglect/deliberate abandonment of the area.

And then today, the ‘Times Disgrace’ serves up a column from C.T. Hill and Pamela Royal: ‘Prioritize schools and a new downtown’. Again, longtime Richmonders have seen this baloney before, with the push for the Center Stage. Remember when Ukrops and supporters lined City Council chambers with school kids and told everyone that “It’s for the children”? At the time, citizens who questioned the meals tax increase and the sketchy deal were dishonestly labeled as ‘anti-art’ and ‘anti-human potential’. Never mind the broken promises and tax bail-outs that followed, never mind that despite these ‘we can chew gum and walk at the same time’ claims, school building maintenance was once again deferred for yet another ‘downtown project’ and attention had again been stolen from civic needs for the aristocracy’s wants, the ‘top’ had told the ‘bottom’ to shut up.

Right now there are boosters who claim that Farrell is being unfairly targeted for his role in the coliseum scheme (never mind all the pipeline building, fossil fuel exporting, and political lobbying that he does with his monopoly). They say it’s ridiculous to be suspicious about how Farrell inserted himself into Richmond school board politics before launching the coliseum scheme. They continue to gloss over his and others’ previous roles in Center Stage and other boondoggles. They refuse to acknowledge how Farrell “misconstrues” (how he lies):

“The chairman of CenterStage’s parent group, Dominion Resources Chief Executive Tom Farrell, told City Council that CenterStage is “probably the only public performing arts center in the country that pays for itself because of the way it’s been operated.”
In fact, the organization that he heads receives $500,000 annually from the city to support operating costs. The city also contributed millions of dollars to the renovation of both theaters the group operates, most recently $14 million for the renovation of the Altria Theater.”

This is the same Farrell gang that think they have a right to run roughshod over citizens and they are not shy about using the daily paper and other local corporate media as their mouthpiece in doing so. From a journalistic perspective, what’s probably more damning is how the ‘Times Disgrace’ is once again revealing its ongoing problems with the concept of disclosure. We have seen these previously with its coverage of VCU, Center Stage, and other matters, but more recently, Jason Roop of Style Magazine fame noted:

As you read new editorials from the Richmond Times-Dispatch, keep in mind that it has added the paid public relations spokeswoman and head of marketing and communications for the Chamber RVA — Bryanna Johns — to its Community Advisory Board.

As opinion page editor Pamela Stallsmith announced yesterday (August 24), the paper will rely on this board to help craft opinions for its editorials. This alignment isn’t completely out of left field — the Times-Dispatch is a “Partner Level Member” of the Chamber.

As you may recall, the Chamber was a staunch supporter of the Navy Hill project nearly instantaneously — many months before information was made available to the public and before the mayor presented his plan to City Council. The Times-Dispatch published a Chamber editorial pushing for the project without disclosing that more than 15 percent of the Chamber’s executive board stood to gain financially from the project.

While new Richmond arrivals may look askance at all these local goings-on and commentary, longtime Richmond citizens keep hoping we will see real political and media reform.
Many citizens pray that Goldman’s ‘Put School First’ movement and referendum can save the day, despite the corporate hegemony.

OHNA Meeting Announcement/5th District Candidate Forum/Dangerous Chemical In Monroe Park

OHNA President Todd Woodson sent out an email that announces this coming Tuesday’s Oregon Hill Neighborhood Association (OHNA) meeting. It is very full of additional information, including some information about an upcoming candidate forum for 5th District City Council seat and chemical spraying in Monroe Park.

Good morning Friends and Neighbors

Our monthly OHNA meeting will be this Tuesday August 27th at 7pm at St Andrews.

There are some events coming up that I encourage you to be a part of including 5th District City Council candidate meet and greets and a fundraiser for the 14th Annual Halloween Parade *YES! Its happening again in Oregon Hill this year! Lets make it the coolest ever!:

* Wednesday August 28 Jer’Mykeal McCoy will have a meet and greet at Little Mexico restaurant at 1328 W Cary st 6-8 pm. Refreshments will be served. Please RSVP to: staff@mccoyforrva.com contribution levels go from $25-1000.

* Tuesday, September 10 There will be a meet and greet for Stephanie Lynch at the home of Ruth Twiggs, 329 1/2 S Pine St from 6-7:30. Refreshments will be served and special guest is Ghazala Hashmi, candidate for 10th District State Senator. Please RSVP to Catherine Travers at electstephanielynch@gmail.com

* Thursday, September 12 at 7pm at Patrick Henry Charter School Auditorium there will be a candidates forum for all 8 candidates vying for our 5th District City Council Seat, currently held by Parker Agelasto. This is sponsored by many neighborhood associations including Oregon Hill , Randolph, Woodland Heights, Byrd Park as well as the Sierra Club Falls of the James Chapter. I am doing publicity for this event so will be reminding everybody. Each neighborhood can submit 3 questions for the candidates, so please email me your questions. It is important that we hear the candidates so we can make a wise choice to keep up the high standards provided by Councilman Agelasto.

* 14th Annual Halloween Parade Fundraiser!!! will be held (ironically) on Friday the 13th of September from 7-11 at 2718 Bainbridge St 23225. There will be MUSIC and PUPPETS and DANCING!

Our OHNA meeting will include all the usual updates from police and VCU and our councilman and the only current agenda item is a presentation by a VCU group to promote a writers group.

In other announcements, OHNA has been awarded a Community Roots Grant that will provide 10-12 street trees for our neighborhood! I’ve placed the priority on trees that will positively impact Open High and St Andrews School, but other wells will get trees as well. We will need volunteers to help plant the trees and to participate in watering for the first 2 years. Email me if interested.

Finally, I ask that you be careful if visiting Monroe Park, especially with pets and small children. A lady and her dog from the area were recently in the Park as they were spraying chemicals on trees and her dog collapsed from a seizure, presumably from the exposore. She incurred a $300 Vet bill. One of the chemicals sprayed was an RTSA Horticultural Oil which is listed as a category 1 substance in the Aspiration Toxicity Category by the government. If you get enough of this in your body, it will KILL YOU. I just received the lengthy FOIA Request yesterday and will have more information soon. These chemicals were sprayed by a company hired by VCU.

See you Tuesday, Todd

Councilmember Parker C. Agelasto’s 5th District Meeting Thursday

REMINDER The 5th District Meeting is this Thursday, August 22 at 6:30pm at Ephesus SDA Church, Richmond (3700 Midlothian Turnpike). The agenda is list below.
AGENDA
• Back to School Drive
Please bring school supplies for donation to students of Richmond Public Schools
• Richmond Public Schools Updates for the 2019-2020 School Year and School Rezoning Process for the 2020-2021 School Year
• Proposed Richmond Navy Hill Development Project: Presentation with Questions & Answers
Sharon Ebert, Deputy Chief Administrative Officer, Richmond Department of Economic and Community Development
• Richmond Central 5th Voter District Updates
The Honorable Parker C. Agelasto, Councilmember, Richmond City Council, Richmond Central 5th Voter District
• Questions & Answers

***Another reminder that the next community cleanup will be Saturday, September 14 at 9am.

Legal Attempts To Force Councilperson Agelasto From Office Fail

The Times Dispatch has an article that reports that legal bids to make Councilperson Agelasto leave office after he moved his residence out of the district have not been successful.

Judge William R. Marchant declined to issue a declaratory judgment deeming Agelasto’s seat on the City Council vacant after his move last year. Seeking the judgment was former Councilman Henry “Chuck” Richardson, who is among a field of candidates vying to replace Agelasto on the nine-member council in a special election scheduled for November.

A separate challenge by another former councilman, Sa’ad El-Amin, also encountered a procedural stumbling block earlier this summer. El-Amin resubmitted his challenge in July, but no hearing has been scheduled on his new filing to date.

In April, Agelasto announced his plan to resign at the end of November, 13 months before his term expires. He has served as the council’s 5th District representative since 2013.

Mayor Stoney Dismisses 15,000 Richmond Citizens

Remember what’s been written previously about “Richmond leadership that has been hostile to public demands”.

Yesterday, at his press conference on his proposed 1.5 (was previously 1.4) billion dollar coliseum scheme, Mayor Stoney was asked by a reporter about the ‘Put Children Before Costly Coliseum’ referendum, which over 15,000 City of Richmond voters have signed. His response was curt and dismissive:
“The project’s moving forward either way. I don’t have time to worry about political stunts.”

Its very clear that the Mayor and other leaders who ran and were elected on ‘Education’ platforms now champion the Tom Farrell/VCU coliseum plan IN SPITE OF the Put Schools First movement. They don’t care what citizens think. They don’t care about public ownership. They certainly don’t care about public schools. They just want their coliseum, period. And they are willing to skirt the law and use ‘fait accompli’ tricks to do it. This is straight from former VCU President Trani’s playbook.

Richmond’s citizens should be asking themselves and others how much public money and attention have already been wasted on just ‘the planning’ around the coliseum scheme? How many times have Richmond leaders broken promises surrounding these giant projects? Richmond citizens have heard the same sales pitch for years and years on project after project- they have all resulted over and over again in deferred maintenance for PUBLIC schools and parks while PRIVATE corporate welfare projects abscond with the taxpayers’ money. We now have the Put Schools First movement, which says enough is enough, invest in schools first, yet Richmond leaders dismiss it and continue to jam the same sales pitch down our throats.

This is the ugly, top-down, oppressive, corporatist culture of Richmond politics. It is anathema to true progress. Many Richmond residents keep hoping that new arrivals from other locales will recognize it and work to change it, instead of being indifferent and then eventually leaving. Citizens should unite in condemning this Mayor’s statement and actions.

Presidential Candidate Visits Tomorrow Evening

Dario Hunter, Presidential candidate and member of the Youngstown, OH Board of Education, visits Richmond, VA to talk about his plan to build a greener and fairer America as well as the strategy to grow the Green Party through the 2020 race and beyond.

He will be at the Main Richmond Public Library on Franklin Street at 6 pm tomorrow.

Disclaimer: This event is not sponsored or endorsed by the Richmond Public Library.