Community Movie Night This Friday: ‘The Natural’

From announcement:

(This Friday at 7pm) join us in Pleasants Park for the final movie of our 24th season of our Oregon Hill Community Movies for a showing of Robert Redford’s The Natural.
The Natural is a 1984 American sports drama film starring Robert Redford as Roy Hobbs, a gifted, but troubled, baseball player. Directed by Barry Levinson and based on the 1952 novel by Bernard Malamud, the movie is known for its mythic, romanticized portrayal of baseball and its dramatic, feel-good ending.
As always, free refreshments served: grilled hotdogs, sides, desserts, and beverages.

Editor’s note: Actor Robert Redford, a true ‘movie star’, passed away earlier this month. He will be remembered for a magnificent body of work, but he will also be fondly remembered for 1) his environmentalism, 2) his support for young and emerging movie talent.

OregonHill.net T-Shirts for sale


Only comes in blue color for right now. Available in M, L, XL, and XXL.

Map on back of the shirt is based on U.S. Coast Survey, 1864.
https://www.loc.gov/resource/g3884r.cw0645600/?r=0.047,0.04,0.857,0.506,0
Keeps some of the history and mystique of the neighborhood (which are bigger than any old map).

Want one? PayPal at least $25 to scottburger@mac.com (or in person). Please include size and address.
May or may not include shipping.

Two things:

No, I can’t promise that money from t-shirt sales will go directly to an established nonprofit charity. However, I will say that money will likely be reinvested into another community-oriented project.

Secondly, in this day and age of media consolidation, in these fascist times, truly independent media can use all the help it can get. And yes, that includes this neighborhood blog/community news site, which has been online since 2007.

‘Rise and Click’ This Sunday


Large Atlantic Sturgeon Breaching, Osborne Boat Landing, James River. With Mike Ostrander, Discover The James Tours, Monday Afternoon, September 22.

When you are making your weekend plans, don’t forget Oregon Hill neighbor and photographer Bill Draper’s ‘Rise and Click’ photography workshop/tour this coming Sunday. You may not see a sturgeon, but you will definitely get a new appreciation for the natural beauty and history around us. Learn more and RSVP at www.hollywoodcemetery.org/visit/events

Oregon Hill Neighborhood Association Meets Tuesday Evening

Oregon Hill Neighborhood Association is meeting this Tuesday at 7:00 pm.

From email announcement:

Monthly Meeting Agenda
Tuesday 23 Sept 2025
PINE STREET BAPTIST CHURCH
(enter from Albemarle St)

Zoom option for those who can’t attend in person (Editor’s note: redacted, email ohnarva@gmail.com for this information)

Welcome

Approval of Minutes (Scott Racette)

Community and local Officials: Del. Carr, RPD/VCU Police, VCU liaison, Commonwealth’s Attorney, Councilmember Lynch, RVA neighborhood liaison, etc

Committee reports: Zoning, FoOHP, RvaPB, Bylaws, Traffic safety

Announcements: Join committees; upcoming events;

Updates and Continued Business:

Amphitheater discussion
Zoning discussion: What are the concerns? How to add comments? (Bryan Green or Charles Pool)

New Business:
Apply to put historical plaque in Pleasants Park (John Bolecek)
FOOHP: Approve Community Garden application & insurance (Phaedra Hise)


Oregon Hill Neighborhood Association
Valerie L’Herrou, President
Bryan Clark Green, Co-Vice President
Jennifer Hancock, Co-Vice President
Susan Hill, Co-Vice President
Harrison Moenich, Co-Vice-President
David Shannon, Co-Vice President
Scott Racette, Secretary
John Bolecek, Treasurer
JOIN OHNA: https://forms.gle/joCpHqcPrShu8qf86
See events and more: https://ohnarva.org/

Trash/Recycling Pickup Tomorrow Morning

Tomorrow is a “Red Wednesday”, which means trash and recycling pickup.
Please go over what can be recycled.

NOTE: CVWMA (Central Virginia Waste Management Authority) has announced that all curbside recycling must now be INSIDE the CVWMA containers with lid closed. Items beside the container or on top of it will not be collected. In fact, incorrect setouts may not be collected at all. This is new as of July 1 for all our curbside recyclers, with the exception of townhomes/condos still using small bins. (And yes, this also applies to flattened cardboard boxes.)

Ideally, rolling recycling containers are stored and deployed in the back alleys along with trash cans. Please make sure you pick up containers after pickup tomorrow night. More CVWMA information can be found at this link:
https://cvwma.com/cvwma-locations/richmond/

In order to take your recycling to the next level, read this: 10 ways to improve your recycling.

In recycling news, a regional trash hauler is seeking 25-year pickup contracts from cities and counties in the southeastern area. It is also finalizing negotiations with a disposal company that uses AI and robotics to sort trash. Southeastern Public Service Authority (SPSA) is asking South Hampton Roads cities and counties to renew their trash contracts for 25 years instead of an upcoming 10-year extension.

WRIC Reports “Richmond residents demand greater community voice in city’s ‘Code Refresh’”

Local television station WRIC covered last night’s “Code Refresh” meeting:

On Tuesday, Sept. 9, during a public meeting Tuesday night, Mayor Danny Avula and city Councilmembers Katherine Jordan and Stephanie Lynch met with residents from the 2nd and 5th districts to discuss the upcoming rezoning project, which could reshape how businesses operate, where homes are built and how neighborhoods develop across Richmond.

While city leaders emphasized the importance of the initiative, many residents voiced concern about the makeup of the Zoning Advisory Council — the group responsible for shaping zoning decisions under the new plan.

Click here to read more.

This Friday’s Community Movie Night: Fly Away Home

From FaceBook event page:

Join us for our Outdoor Movie in Oregon Hill’s Pleasants Park. We will be showing “Fly Away Home.”After Amy (Anna Paquin) loses her mother in a car accident, she must uproot her life and move to Canada to live with her father, Thomas, (Jeff Daniels), an oddball inventor with whom she has no relationship. She initially struggles to find her her place in her new home, but things change when she stumbles upon a collection of abandoned goose eggs. When the eggs hatch, Amy and her dad work together teaching the motherless birds to fly south for the winter, and their relationship blooms.
As always free refreshments served: Grilled hotdogs, sides, desserts, and beverages.
Note New Start Time: 7:00 PM

Newspaper Coverage And ‘LTE’s’ Bring Strong Calls For Government Reform

While local television stations bandied ongoing amphitheater concerns and new signs (more on those at a later time), Richmond Times Dispatch reporter Samuel Parker examined the details in regard to another City Hall threat against the neighborhood- rezoning.

Oregon Hill residents have been contemplating on this matter from the beginning- going back to the original ‘Richmond 300’ meetings on land use and calling foul on the narratives that came forth from them. City Hall brushed off the heartfelt complaints by neighbors and in what has become a horrible pattern, self-congratulated itself and celebrated dubious awards. The City government did the same thing with its water utility even as the water plant failed, something that surprised even longtime critics, exposing the real rot underneath.

Thankfully, in the last week or so, Mr. Parker, in a few in-depth newspaper articles, focused on who City’s Planning Department officials really are and brought significant light to conflicts of interest and tenures that should have ended decades ago.

Laurel Street neighbor Charles Pool wrote a well-written and complimentary Letter To The Editor (LTE) in gratitude for Parker’s work and the Times Dispatch newspaper published it this past Saturday morning. Pool’s correspondence also served to underscore the result of Planning Department problems- “an illegitimate process with a bonanza of new zoning proposals by developers, for developers”, that have more to do with profiteering than City’s well-being or affordable housing. Pool also described some of the disastrous impacts of these current proposals on this historic neighborhood and strongly called for immediate reform.

(By the way, also see the poignant LTE (“Correspondent Of The Day”) from the president of Chesterfield’s NAACP, Nicole Thompson-Martin, on Dominion’s dirty fossil fuel ambitions – “Letter: Clean energy isn’t just cheaper, it’s more equitable”)

Cherry Street neighbor and former president of the neighborhood association Todd Woodson re-posted Pool’s letter on social media and further challenged the City government.

I’ve been civically active in Richmond, Virginia for 25 years because I love our historic City and recognize the amazing progress we can and must make to ensure equity and prosperity in all corners. That said, I have seen it so damn corrupt here in the past that the FBI has had to intervene, sending lawless developers and City Councilors to jail.
If you care about our community, please read this LTE in today’s Times Dispatch. We are on a precipice of destroying much of what’s good and beautiful in Richmond because the developer “foxes are in the henhouse”. Our Department of Planning and Review has acknowledged paying for and using compromised data to implement terrible zoning changes in our historic neighborhood. Oregon Hill was appropriately rezoned to R7 in 2002. R7 maintains the character of this family oriented enclave (which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places) while at the same time promoting a dense fabric of reasonably affordable housing.
I call on Mayor Avula and City Council to DO THE RIGHT THING! Remove the bad leadership from our Planning Commission and Department , scrap the current Code Refresh abomination and start from scratch with the added voices of environmentalists , social activists, historians and other grassroots community members. If it aint broke dont fix it. The current Code Refresh is simply Urban Renewal 2.0 and only benefits the greedy that are currently wielding power.

Mr. Parker does deserve gratitude and laurels for bringing more attention to longstanding problems with Richmond’s Planning Department, and citizens and residents are both cheering and adamant. Will Mayor Avula and City Council represent the citizens and residents of this city, or will they continue to cowardly adhere to developer money? (And yes, this does include issues with the new corporate amphitheater as well as debate over the future of public housing).