City News

The Mayor's Office

Mayor Stoney hands over keys to three new schools in Richmond’s East End and Southside

After a tour of the new Cardinal Elementary School, Mayor Levar Stoney was joined by Superintendent Jason Kamras and members of the Richmond School Board and City Council to present keys to the principals of Cardinal Elementary, Henry Marsh Elementary and River City Middle.
 
The three new schools were funded using revenue from the 1.5 percent increase in the meals tax that the Stoney administration proposed to pay for badly needed school infrastructure improvement. That meals tax increased passed Richmond City Council with seven votes in 2018. The mayor thanked the Richmond community for eating at local restaurants, which ultimately paid for the new schools.
 
“This is a community investment,” said the mayor. “And it represents our shared belief that no matter their zip code, family income, race, religion, gender identity, ethnicity, first language or learning style, every single student in RPS deserves the same opportunity to learn in a healthy, safe environment.”
 
Once students return to school in person, the buildings will provide space for 3,250 students from Richmond’s East End and Southside to learn and grow. The total project cost for building all three new schools totals approximately $146 M.
 
All three buildings are LEED certified.
 

School

Square Footage

Student Capacity

Cost

Unique Features

Cardinal Elementary

116,460

1,000

$42 M

Classrooms with project-based learning areas, speech room, calm down room, dedicated art and music rooms, computer lab

Henry Marsh Elementary

99,967

750

$40.1 M

Dedicated science classrooms, laboratory, 750-person auditorium with balcony, dance studio, technology and continued education rooms, video production room, gymnasium with space for two basketball courts

River City Middle

183,759

1,500

$63.9 M

Classrooms with project-based learning areas, dedicated exceptional education classrooms, speech, day treatment and reflection rooms, dedicated art and music rooms, computer lab

The mayor thanked the members of Richmond City Council who supported the funding for schools, the Richmond School Board Members for their continued leadership, Superintendent Kamras and his administration for their tireless advocacy and partnership and the city administrative team.
 
The mayor also thanked AECOM, RRMM Architects, Branch Builds, SB Ballard and Howard Shockey and Son, among other contractors and subcontractors who, despite a global pandemic, worked hard to complete the schools on deadline.
 
In the context of this summer’s civil unrest and his decision to remove the confederate monuments on Monument Avenue, the mayor emphasized the progress these schools represent for Black and brown Richmonders.
 
“I am very proud we had the courage to take down the monuments to the confederate cause, but I am even prouder of what we have built here today. We have built a brighter future for our children,” said Mayor Stoney.

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City launches RVA.gov, new web platform to replace richmondgov.com

The City of Richmond is in the third week of a soft launch of the new municipal web platform, RVA.gov, the first new official web presence in the city in more than 15 years.  
 
“In the 21st Century, a helpful, intuitive and innovative website is a key step in making sure local government is responsive to its citizens,” said Mayor Stoney of the site. 
 
With the launch of RVA.gov, Richmond is now one of only two cities in the country with a three-letter URL, alongside New York City with NYC.gov. The short URL is easier to remember and refer residents to, making the site more accessible. All content can be translated into 36 different languages.
 
The city’s new platform differs markedly from the current site, richmondgov.com, both in appearance, accessibility, capacity and functionality. RVA.gov features mobile compatibility, an automated content management system, Global Information System integration (GIS), video on demand and interactive social media.  
 
The site features Virtual City Hall, where residents can easily pay taxes or fines, apply for benefits or licenses and solicit frequently requested services. The Socials and RVA-TV pages provide an unprecedented level of social media and video content integration, centering the city’s public information effort in one accessible space.
 
News and announcements from City of Richmond departments scroll on a ticker on every page, ensuring residents stay up to date on new opportunities and important city deadlines. Content managers for each department will be able to update their information in real time.
 
Over the coming months, RVA.gov will phase in and eventually replace richmondgov.com as residents’ official online source of information on city services, news and other developments. In accordance with best practices, richmondgov.com will be available for the foreseeable future as residents familiarize themselves with the new site.
 
The city contracted with Tech Dynamism, a website development firm stationed in Charlottesville, to develop the site and Acquia, a web content management platform, to house web content on a cloud database to ensure increased capacity and speed on the new platform regardless of traffic.
 
“I want this platform to best serve the residents of this city and present an inviting digital welcome for those seeking to visit or interact with city government,” said the mayor. “Start exploring RVA.gov today and help us make this soft launch as thorough as possible.”
 
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Mayor Stoney elected chair of Central Virginia Transportation Authority Finance Committee

At the inaugural meeting of the Central Virginia Transportation Authority (CVTA) Mayor Stoney was elected as chair of the body’s finance committee.
 
The CVTA Finance Committee is charged with reviewing and recommending the annual budget and reviewing revenue estimates, among other financial management tasks.
 
“Richmond fought hard to ensure the CVTA would offer an unprecedented opportunity for regional collaboration,” said the mayor. “The authority is designed to ensure meaningful discourse and cooperation, resulting in a stronger transit network for all of the localities involved.”
 
The City of Richmond, as a central locality represented on the body, has veto power so all of the body’s actions achieve buy in from key players. The city utilized its veto once during this inaugural meeting. 
 
During the meeting, the CVTA accepted the bylaws and guidance documents, established key priorities, approved of an ongoing board meeting schedule, accepted support from Plan RVA and confirmed Frank Thornton (Henrico) as chair and Kevin Carroll (Chesterfield) as vice chair.
 
Background on the CVTA

Established by the 2020 session of the General Assembly of Virginia, the newly created authority provides new funding opportunities for priority transportation investments across the Central Virginia region.
 
The General Assembly voted to impose an additional .7 percent sales and use tax and wholesale gas tax of 7.6 cents per gallon (or 7.7 cents per gallon of diesel fuel) to fund new investments in regional transportation. The body also set a minimum local maintenance standard, ensuring all participating localities continue to invest in their requisite transit infrastructure.
 
To view the meeting record, agenda and other materials, click here.

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Mayor Stoney launches ‘Richmond Recovers’ grants for small businesses and non-profits

The City of Richmond announced the launch of the Richmond Recovers Grant Program for small businesses and non-profit organizations. The program is funded with $3 million from the City’s CARES Act appropriation and will be administered by the Economic Development Authority of the City of Richmond.
 
“Richmond’s small businesses and non-profit organizations have proven resilient through the unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic,” said Mayor Stoney. “They have worked relentlessly to safely keep their doors open and serve customers and clients. The Richmond Recovers grants will provide much needed and deserved financial relief.”
 
Grant amounts for the program will range from $10,000 to $15,000 based on the organization’s number of current active full-time employees. Grant funds can be used to reimburse the costs of employee wages, including the cost of benefits; rent and utilities for commercial workspaces; and working capital.
 

 
Inclusive of the funding for the Richmond Recovers Grant Program, the city has allocated over $4.1 million to support businesses during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Mayor Stoney introduces ordinance to prohibit firearms adjacent to events requiring a permit

Click here to read the ordinance.

At the August 10 meeting of the Richmond City Council, the Stoney administration introduced an ordinance to modify current Richmond City Code section 19-334.1; Carrying Firearms in Certain Places.
 
Currently, the code bans firearms in city-owned and -operated parks and facilities. The newly introduced ordinance would also prohibit the possession, carrying or transportation of any firearms in any public street, road, alley, sidewalk, public right-of-way or any open public space when it is being used by, or is adjacent to, an event that requires a city permit. 
 
This ordinance does not broadly ban firearms in these public spaces. Rather, it bans firearms when a permitted event, or an event that should be permitted, is taking place.
 
The expansion to the existing ordinance is intended to promote the health and safety of event attendees and city residents as a whole.
 
“The City of Richmond proudly hosts hundreds of public events each year, but I believe it’s in the interest of everyone’s safety to take guns out of these spaces when neighbors, visitors and families gather,” said Mayor Stoney. “Under this proposed change, Richmond residents will be able to attend public events with a greater sense of security, knowing that the city is actively prioritizing their safety.”
 
In 2019, the mayor introduced the ordinance that prohibits the carrying of firearms in city-owned and -operated parks and facilities. As soon as the General Assembly adopted legislation granting that authority to localities, the ordinance went into effect.
 
This most recent proposed change is also made possible by a recent amendment by the Virginia General Assembly to the Code of Virginia, which now authorizes localities to prohibit firearms in this instance.
 
“As a city, we must exhaust all possible options to reduce gun violence in our communities and neighborhoods,” said Mayor Stoney. “I’m thankful the state has finally given us a vital tool in building a safer Richmond.”
 
The proposed ordinance, which must be approved by Richmond City Council to take effect, does not apply to authorized military personnel in the performance of their lawful duties, law enforcement officers or security guards contracted or employed by the City of Richmond.

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