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City receives 15 submissions in response to Diamond District request for interest

The deadline for interested developers to send Request for Interest (RFI) submissions for the Diamond District redevelopment closed on February 15. The Evaluation Panel has received 15 submissions from the following teams (listed alphabetically):

  • 4Most Sport Group
  • Acquest Realty Advisors, Inc.
  • Diamond District Gateway Partners
  • Diamond Legacy Partnership
  • Edgemoor-Gotham Ballpark Partners
  • Jair Lynch Real Estate Partners
  • MAG Partners
  • Metropolitan Virginia VIII, LLC
  • Richmond Community Development Partners
  • Rising Tide RVA, LLC
  • RVA Diamond Partners
  • Turnbridge Equities
  • Urban Atlantic
  • Vision300 Partners, LLC
  • Weller Development Company and LMXD

The short list of invited RFO respondents will be announced publicly on www.rva.gov/economic-development/diamond.

About the Diamond District project

The Diamond District project is just one aspect of Richmond 300: A Plan for Growth, which has been awarded the 2021 Daniel Burnham Award for a Comprehensive Plan by the American Planning Association. The plan provides a detailed roadmap to ensure “Richmond is a welcoming, inclusive, diverse, innovative, sustainable, and equitable city of thriving neighborhoods, ensuring a high quality of life for all.”

About the Diamond District Evaluation Panel

The Evaluation Panel is comprised of 10 members, including City Council members, city administrative staff, and VCU administrative staff. The panel will be assessing each of the submissions based on the evaluation criteria laid out in the RFI document. The criteria can be grouped into four categories:

  • Development team qualifications – financial capability, years of experience, diversity of team, and more;
  • Experience with urban mixed-use projects – experience with urban mixed-use redevelopment projects and proven capacity to deliver project requirements;
  • Equitable development benefits – employment opportunities, affordable housing, sustainability, resiliency, and more; and
  • Project understanding & financing approach a solid understanding for accomplishing the city’s goals, having provided a financing approach that minimizes public investment.

After evaluating each submission against the criteria, the Evaluation Panel will select the top-scoring teams for their short list. The short list is anticipated to be released to the public in March 2022. This short list of teams will then be invited to respond to the Request for Offers (RFO) with more detailed information on their submissions.

Communication with the Panel: Members of the public can send comments/questions to the Diamond District Evaluation Panel by using this form. This form is publicly posted on the project page. Do not email the Evaluation Panel members, facilitator, or advisors about the Diamond District project (emails sent directly to the Evaluation Panel about this project will not be read). Comments/questions will be reviewed every other week and distributed to the Evaluation Panel during the evaluation process.

Evaluation Panel Members

  1. James P. Duval – Investment and Debt Portfolio Manager, Finance Department
  2. Sharon L. Ebert – Deputy Chief Administrative Officer, Planning and Economic Development
  3. Karol Kain Gray – Senior Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer, Virginia Commonwealth University
  4. Katherine Jordan – Council Member, Second District
  5. Ann-Frances Lambert – Council Member, Third District
  6. J.E. Lincoln Saunders – Chief Administrative Officer
  7. Leonard L. Sledge – Director, Department of Economic Development
  8. Caprichia Smith Spellman – Interim Director, Office of Community Wealth Building
  9. Robert C. Steidel – Deputy Chief Administrative Officer, Operations
  10. Stephen M. Willoughby – Director of Emergency Communications

Evaluation Panel Facilitator: Maritza Mercado Pechin, Deputy Director, Department of Planning and Development Review, is the Project Manager for the Diamond District redevelopment process and will run the evaluation panel meetings, coordinate logistics, and serve as the official point of contact between the evaluation panel and the RFI/RFO respondents.

Evaluation Panel Advisors: These individuals will attend evaluation panel meetings and offer expertise as needed.

  • Matthew A. Welch – Policy Advisor, Planning and Economic Development Portfolio
  • Lynne S. Lancaster – Deputy Director, Department of Public Works

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Three-Alarm Fire at William Fox Elementary School

RICHMOND, VA The Richmond Fire Investigations Unit is working to determine the cause and origin of a three-alarm fire at William Fox Elementary School in the Fan District.

At approximately 10:35 p.m. on Friday, February 11, 2022, crews responded to Fox Elementary School at 2300 Hanover Avenue for the report of a building fire. Once on scene, they encountered heavy smoke and flames coming from the top floor above the main entrance. The fire was quickly spreading across the top of the structure.

At approximately 10:50 p.m., a second alarm was struck. At approximately 11:09 p.m., parts of the roof began to collapse, so all crews were evacuated from the interior. They then focused on a defensive attack from the exterior. At approximately 11:13 p.m., a third alarm was struck. At approximately 2:44 a.m., the incident was marked under control. Crews will be on scene through the morning to monitor hotspots. No injuries have been reported.

Crews from Chesterfield County Fire and EMS and the Henrico County Division of Fire provided mutual aid by backfilling fire stations. Members of the Richmond Police Department provided support on scene with traffic control and stopped vehicles from running over fire hoses in the area.

Mayor Stoney delivers 2022 State of the City address

Annual speech highlights investments in housing, economic growth, public safety initiatives; progress in Equity Agenda and perseverance through the pandemic

A thriving city is boldly meeting challenges and moving forward to advance the quality of life for all Richmonders

Richmond, VA — Despite the challenges of enduring a second consecutive year of the Covid-19 pandemic that continues to impact lives and livelihoods across the world, the City of Richmond showed resilience in the face of adversity and made bold moves to move forward, positioning itself for a brighter future for all of its residents in the coming year.

“I see a Richmond that was bold in the face of adversity and came out stronger,” said Mayor Levar M. Stoney, who delivered his annual State of the City speech before a pandemic-limited audience of administration officials and community leaders at Main Street Station in historic Shockoe Bottom. “I see a community that chose to thrive in spite of the challenges we faced.”

Recognizing the city still faces challenges to create a better quality of life for all of its residents, the mayor said he was hopeful and optimistic that seeds of equity and growth planted in 2021 would yield significant progress in 2022.

The beneficiary of government assistance, from free and reduced lunches in school to student aid enabling him to become the first in his family to attend and graduate college, the mayor summed up his administration’s approach to have a positive impact on the lives of city residents: “We’re about ‘The Fix.’”

Fixing housing involves the work of a retooled city code enforcement team, which will work to identify and address neighborhood safety and code violations, such as ensuring landlords are fixing housing issue and are being responsive to tenants, some of who may be reluctant to complain for fear of retaliation.

“I remember living in an apartment with my grandmother when I was younger, and she would never complain about the things that needed to be fixed because of her fear of retaliation,” the mayor explained. “We are listening. We have your back and we want to help.”

The mayor also highlighted progress in assisting the city’s homeless, with the hiring of a Homeless Services Coordinator and the establishment of a human resource center for residents slated to become operational later this year.

Finally, he highlighted historic investments, from $20 million of American Rescue Plan Act Funds toward affordable housing projects, to $6.8 million for the redevelopment of Creighton Court and $5.5 million for the Highland Grove redevelopment.

“Our goal is not just to have a place for everyone to live in this city,” the mayor said. “It’s to have an affordable, dignified, clean and safe place for everyone to live in this city.”

On the economy, Mayor Stoney hailed Richmond’s impressive growth despite the constraints of the Covid-19 pandemic, noting the city added approximately 1,000 new jobs in fiscal year 2021, dropping its unemployment rate from 5.6% in December 2020 to 3.1% in December, 2021.

He also renewed support for the development of the One Casino and Resort in South Richmond, noting it would create 1,500 good-paying jobs, dedicate $16 million in support to local community organizations, and generate $560 million in capital investment – all without costing the city “a dime.” Upon approval by voters in November, the revenue would allow the city to provide a two-cent reduction in the real estate tax to taxpayers.

“This project is about the people of Richmond,” the mayor said. “It’s about providing security, relief, jobs, and investment which leads to a brighter future for the entire city.”

Beyond the casino development, the mayor also highlighted progress in the development of the former Public Safety Building in partnership with Virginia Commonwealth University, as well as the extended City Center Plan for downtown.

“We’re talking long-term economic advancement and sustainability,” the mayor said. “Jobs, innovation, and opportunity all working together to continue to uplift the people of Richmond.

The mayor also relayed his vision for development of the Diamond District -- as a mixed-income, mixed-use urban village, anchored by a new baseball stadium for the Richmond Flying Squirrels. And he recognized the substantial investment in the city recently announced by the CoStar Group, which is expanding its campus downtown with plans to add 2,000 new jobs as part of a nearly half-billion dollar investment.

“This is huge for Richmond,” the Mayor said. “We’re sending a message to the rest of the country that Richmond is an exciting and attractive place to live, work and prosper…Your government is working, and we are moving forward.”

In public safety, the mayor addressed the city’s plans to tackle gun violence and police recruitment, retention and accountability, issues that came into sharper focus over the last two years of the pandemic and civil unrest in the summer of 2020.

“Gun violence has plagued our city for far too long,” the mayor said. “…No mother should have to bury her child because we haven’t done enough. Our families deserve better – and I know we can do better.”

The mayor referenced his announcement last Thursday on the city’s hiring of a Community Safety Coordinator, and its partnership with Next Up to serve as fiscal agent to distribute $1 million in ARPA funds focused on community-based youth initiatives aimed at preventing violence, based on the Centers for Disease Control best practices.

In addition to ARPA funding for first responder bonuses, the mayor reiterated his plan to propose salary increases for police officers in his upcoming budget.  He also announced that the city would invest $500,000 for a Gun Buyback Program to incentivize the removal of operational firearms from city streets.

“We are going after the guns and we’re locking up violent offenders,” the mayor stated. “In order to prosper, our city needs to be safe – safe at home, at work, and at school. And that means we have to be tough on violent crime and tough on the root causes of crime.”

Noting that the relationship between police and the community is “a two-way street,” the mayor said the city was moving ahead with plans to establish a Civilian Review Board “that fits the needs of the Richmond,” which will be presented to council in the coming weeks.

Recognizing Covid-19 remains a significant consideration and limitation in the daily life in the city and beyond, Mayor Stoney said: “The people of Richmond are strong…We must resist the mindset of despair and instead remain focused on optimism and hope.”

He encouraged city residents to continue to get vaccinated and boosted, noting roughly 68 percent of adult residents have received at least one dose of the lifesaving vaccine. He hailed the heroic work of over the last year by Dr. Danny Avula and his team at the Richmond City Health District, and said Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s decision to issue an executive order making masks optional in schools goes against the medical community and is “not only wrong, but dangerous.”

Referencing a UNICEF report that estimates income loss of $17 Trillion worldwide for the current generation of students due to pandemic-related school closures, the mayor said, “Richmond has to remain open. Schools have to remain open, and businesses have to remain open. And we stay open by following the science – vaccinations and masks.”

The Equity Agenda, the guiding principle of Mayor Stoney’s second term in office, was also highlighted in the mayor’s annual remarks.

Simply put, it is a call to remove barriers of structural racism that have become embedded in the historical, political, cultural, social and economic systems that have historically denied equal access and opportunity for all Richmond residents.

The mayor highlighted the $5 million set aside for the city’s Health Equity Trust Fund to address not only the pandemic but issues such as mental health and substance abuse in marginalized communities of color.

He also announced plans for the city to join its regional governments on February 14 to declare opioid overdoses a public health crisis. The city will participate in a regional Metropolitan Spike Alert Program, which will notify the public of spikes in opioid overdoses and provide information on local resources for treatment and recovery.

On the issue of equitable transit and mobility, the mayor said the city would paint lanes dedicated for the PULSE Bus Rapid Transit Line red this year and promised that GRTC bus riders in Richmond will ride for free as long as he is mayor.

The mayor said the city is in the final stretch of development of its climate action plan, RVAgreen 2050, which is expected to be finalized this fall.

He also highlighted another success of the past year, with the launch of a guaranteed income pilot program, known as the Richmond Resilience Initiative, which will now continue through 2022.

Other highlights include the significant investment of $81 million in ARPA funding to support children and families with the construction and rehabilitation of four community centers that will serve 100,00 city residents in high poverty areas, all within walking distance, as well as expanding access to high-quality childcare, and laying the groundwork to advance universal Pre-K.

“We know that when we wrap our arms around our families, they succeed,” the mayor stated. “This is really what it’s all about. We want families to thrive in our city. We want to put in the work today, so that when our children grow up, they inherit a city that’s filled with opportunity. Every child deserves the opportunity to achieve in life.”

The city is rising from the challenges of the past and into a new era, filled with hope, compassion and kindness.

“We’re becoming known as inclusive, innovative, thriving, dynamic and diverse,” he said, noting that last year’s removal of the statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee was “one of the most important moments in our city’s history.”

“Today a Black man serve as mayor. A Black woman serve as city council president. An Indian American man directs our health department. And a Jewish man leads our schools.

“We are in the midst of a racial reckoning in this country, and when the history books look back and tell the story of today, it gives me great comfort that Richmond will be on the RIGHT side of history.”

Calling Richmond “one of the best cities in America,” Mayor Stoney pledged city government will remain focused on the fix, and making “bold moves to improve the quality of life for all Richmonders.”

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Video of Mayor Stoney’s 2022 State of the City speech can be found on the City of Richmond Facebook page at fb.me/e/26EsJvIGM  and will be available afterward on the city's YouTube channel.

 

You can find a copy of the remarks here.

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Reduced hours in place at East District Initiative’s finance cash operations counter

Department of Finance customers may make payments on the first and fifteenth of the month; other payment options remain available

Effective Wednesday, February 16, the cash operations counter at the East District Initiative building will be open to the public only on the first and fifteenth of the month from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., when the counter typically experiences the most traffic.

If the first or fifteenth falls on a weekend or holiday, the counter will be open the next non-holiday or weekday.

Altered hours will be in place until further notice. The change is due to short staffing. If you would like to explore the many quality job openings at the city’s Department of Finance, click here.

This does not impact the hours or services of other city agencies operating out of the East District Initiative building.

Customers of the Finance Department can make payments the following ways:

Pay in person: bring your bill and cash, check, money order or credit card to the following locations:

  • Southside Initiative (Free Parking): 4100 Hull Street – Hours: Mon. – Fri. 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • City Hall: 900 E. Broad Street, Room 102 – Hours: Mon. – Fri. 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • East District Initiative: 701 North 25th Street – 1st and 15th of each month from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Please note: If, during the period of reduced hours, the 1st or 15th falls on a holiday or weekend, the counter will be open the next non-holiday or weekday.

Pay by phone or online:

  • Personal Property/Real Estate - You can pay your personal property or real estate online by visiting the Finance page on www.rva.gov or pay by phone by calling 1-866-890-5269. Follow the links to Finance and the Online Payment section. Electronic check/ACH transactions will incur a $.95 credit/debit card transaction fee, based on payment amount. Fees are assessed by third party as outlined.
  • Admission, Lodging and Meals (online only) - You can pay your ALM taxes online by visiting the Finance page on www.rva.gov.
  • Department of Public Utilities – You can pay Department of Public Utilities bills online by visiting the Department of Public Utilities page on www.rva.gov or by pay by phone by calling 804-646-4646. Follow the links to Public Utilities and the Billing section.

Pay at drop box locations: bring your bill and check or money order to the following locations:

  • City Hall: 24 Hours - 900 East Broad Street, on the 10th Street side
  • City Hall: 900 East Broad Street - Outside Room 102
  • East District Initiative: 24 Hours - 701 North 25th Street
  • Southside Initiative: 4100 Hull Street

Pay by mail: make checks payable to City of Richmond and mail check or money order to the address on the stub of your bill.

We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause. If you have questions about how to make a payment at this time, please call RVA311 at 3-1-1 or 804-646-7000.

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New Vehicle Source Exhaust Capture Systems Installed

RICHMOND, VA New vehicle source exhaust capture and removal systems, designed to ensure clean air in the work environment of firefighters, have been installed at several Richmond Fire Department stations (1, 10, 13, and 22) and training to properly use them is underway. The goal is to have these source capture systems installed at all 20 RFD fire stations by May 2022.

 

The RFD received a $640,000 grant through the United States Department of Homeland Security Assistance to Firefighter Grants (AFG) Program to fund this project. Air Specialists of Virginia, Inc. has been contracted to install the Plymovent vehicle source exhaust capture and removal systems in the RFD fire stations.

 

Exposure to vehicle exhaust fumes is a significant cancer health risk for firefighters. The RFD is installing these source capture systems to reduce the risk, create safer working conditions, and control exhaust fumes in the fire stations.

 

How it works for undercarriage exhaust vehicles:

  1. The source capture system features a flexible hose, which follows the vehicle along a high-grade aluminum track and disconnects automatically, with no operator intervention, when firefighters go out on a call.
  2. When firefighters get back, the pneumatic grabber on the system connects to the exhaust pipe in one easy step. A firefighter simply pushes the grabber against the tailpipe and presses a button on the hose to seal the system via an inflatable rubber bladder.
  3. The pneumatic grabber utilizes a positive seal to ensure virtually no diesel exhaust leaks, while the system is in use (virtually 100% source capture).
  4. Hazardous exhaust emissions are then extracted from the apparatus and vented out of the station.

New vehicle source exhaust capture systems installed at Richmond Fire Station 10New vehicle source exhaust capture systems installed at Richmond Fire Station 10Pneumatic grabber on the Plymovent vehicle source exhaust capture and removal systems

 

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