Bring One For The Chipper

City of Richmond VA Public Works
Please save the date for our next E-Cycle Event:
Bring One for the Chipper
Saturday, January 8, 2022 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
1710 Robin Hood Road (Arthur Ashe Blvd & Robin Hood Road)
The event includes:
• Christmas Tree Recycling (remove all decorations, ornaments and tinsel)
• Document Shredding (up to five (5) boxes of documents. Be sure to remove all binders, staples and clips)
• Electronics (various fees apply)
• Pesticides, Herbicides and Oil-based Paints (bug spray, rodent poison and herbicides (Roundup, Weed B Gon etc.)
Note: Latex and water based paints will NOT be collected. These items can be left in open paint cans until they have dried out and then put in with regular curbside trash pick-up.

OHNA Meeting Tomorrow Night

From email announcement:

Good morning OHNA members,

I look forward to seeing everyone Tuesday at 7pm for our monthly OHNA meeting.

We will be meeting in St. Andrew’s Church — they have kindly allowed us to meet in their chapel. St. Andrew’s has asked that all participants remain masked during the meeting and remain socially distanced.

We are also providing a Zoom link provided for those who wish to join remotely. This should allow for remote participation, including the ability to ask questions remotely — those in person won’t be able to see remote participants, but we should be able to hear them. Please be patient –between masking and spreading out, it might be a little more of a challenge to hear clearly. We will do our best to make sure that those who join us remotely can hear and be heard.

Two items to highlight for your consideration:
1. Dominion is holding a tour of their new solar array at the Dominion energy Office at 120 Tredegar Street on Wednesday 5 January at 3:00pm and 6:00pm. If you would like you mist RSVP by 30 December with your full first and last name to:
Felix.Sarfo-Kantanka@dominionenergy.com

2. Below is a draft resolution for consideration to request that the Public Art Commission — at its January 2022 planning meeting — include in its budget funds for a mural along Belvidere, and involve Oregon Hill residents in the process:
The Oregon Hill Neighborhood Association (OHNA) requests that the Public Art Commission add to its 2022 work plan a request for funding to support the design and creation of a mural to revitalize the brick wall that forms the eastern boundary of the neighborhood, along Belvidere Street.

This request comes from a desire to refresh the wall with some contemporary murals that will replace the outdated bike race mural, which was, unfortunately, not completed for the 2015 bike race; it remains incomplete. Our hope is to source artists local to Richmond Virginia, who will create art that is more reflective of our diverse neighborhood, and speaks in some form to the history and people of Oregon Hill. We also hope that residents of Oregon Hill will be included in the selection committee for the project.

I have attached to this email
1. the agenda for the 28 December meeting (also pasted in below),
2. the minutes for the November meeting,
3. invitation to view the Dominion Energy solar array at 120 Tredergar Street.

We look forward to seeing everyone tomorrow evening.

Thanks,
Bryan

Location: St. Andrew’s Church
Topic: OHNA December 2021 Meeting
Time: Dec 28, 2021 07:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)

Join Zoom Meeting (Editor’s note: Zoom info redacted; please email OHNA at ohnarva@gmail.com if info needed)

St. Andrew’s Church has kindly allowed us to use the church for this meeting.

They ask that all participants remain masked and socially distanced during the meeting.

We ask that invited guests limit their presentations to no more than 5 minutes.
We ask that questions, comments, and suggestions be kept to no more than 3 minutes.
This meeting will be recorded.

Welcome
• Treasurer’s Report

Community Updates:
1. Lt. Brian Robinson, City of Richmond Police Section Lt, 4th Precinct

2. Officer Luke Schrader, Police Liaison, VCU

3. Mr. Tito Luna, VCU Liaison

4. Ms. Stephanie Lynch, 5th District Councilperson

5. Ms. Colette McEachin, Richmond Commonwealth’s Attorney

Updates
1. Proposed all-way stops on South Pine Street at its intersection with China Street (at Open High School) and South Pine Street at its intersection with Albemarle Street
• The paper has been submitted.

2. Proposed Amendments to the Richmond 300 Land Use Plan / Neighborhood Coalition Update
• Move Oregon Hill from Neighborhood Mixed Use to Residential land use category (Randolph is in this category).
• If Planning will not move Oregon Hill to Residential, then change the maximum height in the Neighborhood Mixed Use category from four stories to two stories.
• Remove the clause that allows taller buildings along major streets.
o Idlewood and South Laurel between VCU and Idlewood are designated major streets
o The amendments were continued by Land Use Committee. City Planning staff have recommended that no amendments be adopted.
o It was continued, yet again, to Tuesday 16 November 2021.

3. New SUP, 617-719 China Street
• We should see this at our January 2022 meeting.

4. Dominion is holding a tour of their new solar array at the Dominion energy Office at 120 Tredegar Street on Wednesday 5 January at 3:00pm and 6:00pm. If you would like you mist RSVP by 30 December with your full first and last name to:
Felix.Sarfo-Kantanka@dominionenergy.com

Continued Business
1. Sculpture for Pleasant’s Park, by local artist Mickael Broth
• The sculpture will be installed in Pleasant’s Park.
• The sculpture has been purchased
• Met with Public Art Commission staff, and told that we have to go through the process of donating it to the City, not through Urban Design Committee as we had been told
• If approved, we will begin the process of location approval with Parks & Recreation and the Urban Design Committee.

2. VCU student party issues
• There have been several large, loud parties in the last few weeks. There are problematic, repeat issues in the 200 block of South Laurel, and the intersection of South Laurel and China streets.
• Report issues to both RPD and VCU. Keep track of: date, time, location, fraternity / sorority affiliation, names of individuals involved, names of landlords, etc.
• OHNA is setting up an online form to track problem party locations, so that we may follow up with RPD and VCU. We will keep a spreadsheet of problematic locations and fraternity / sorority locations, and regularly report this information to VCU.

3. Bulletin board for Pleasant’s Park

New Business
1. Resolution of support for the creation of a new mural on the brick wall along Belvidere.
• We met with Public Art Commission staff and were told if we sent them a proposal for their January 2022 planning meeting, we could be considered for sponsorship for such a mural.
• If accepted, the Public Art Commission would sponsor the process to select an artist (with neighborhood input) and pay the artist for the work.

2. Holly Street Playground cleanup is scheduled for 15 January 2022, from 10am to 4pm. We are trying to put together a date, and will let everyone know once it is settled. We will focus on clearing brush just beyond the south and west fence lines.

3. Pleasants Park – unleased dog-related issues
• When the City was petitioned to add gates, the intent was to make it safer for both dogs and kits, with the idea that the park would be shared.
• Complaints about unleased dogs have gone to Parks and Recreation.
• City requires that all dogs in city parks be leashed at all times – this is not something that we as a neighborhood can change
• The only way that a dog park – an area for unleased dogs – can be created is to go through the City process for creating them. It involves requesting use of city land, creating a non-profit organization that covers the cost of the fencing, regular maintenance, and maintains liability insurance for the area. A portion of Linear Park might be a potential location. This is now Barker Field, near the Carillon, was created and is maintained. Any volunteers to head this up?

Bryan Clark Green, President
David Cary, Co-Vice-President
Jennifer Hancock, Co-Vice-President
Chris Hughes, Co-Vice-President
Harrison Moenich, Secretary
John Bolecek, Treasurer

Trash/Recycling (Might Be) Tomorrow

This Wednesday is a “Red Wednesday”, which hopefully means trash and recycling pickup. I say hopefully, because the Central Virginia Waste Management Authority has struggled to maintain its schedule due to a shortage of workers and has missed some pickups recently and had to reschedule. That said, as neighbors, we should do our best to help.

One tool that might help ameliorate the situation if pickup does not come is this online form:
https://cvwma.com/programs/residential-recycling/recycling-service-request-form/

Please go over what can be recycled. 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.

If you have not done so already, don’t forget to sign up for your Recycling Perks.
In order to take your recycling to the next level, read this: 10 ways to improve your recycling.

In recycling news…Hampton Roads is mulling changes in its recycling program. Glass remains an issue.

YWCA’s Sprout School To Have Oregon Hill “Outpost”

RichmondBizSense.com reports on the YWCA’s plans for expanding its childcare program.

The nonprofit’s Sprout School, a full-day and year-round early childhood education program, is expected to open a downtown Richmond location in spring 2022 and an Oregon Hill location in winter 2023.

The Oregon Hill outpost will be located at St. Andrew’s School at 227 S. Cherry St. The school and nonprofit have already signed an agreement to open the location, Tissiere said.

Train Horn Wakes Neighborhood And Then Some

Around 4 am this morning, Oregon Hill residents were woken up by a train horn. Now, since the neighborhood is very close to CSX train tracks that are along the Kanawha Canal on the old tow path, the neighborhood is very used to trains sounds and hearing a train horn or two. Usually, folks just roll over and go back to sleep. But this horn kept going off pretty much nonstop. Some called 911, fearing another emergency along the tracks.

But the neighborhood was not alone. Evidently the horn kept going for the train’s entire journey, as Fulton neighborhood residents and Williamsburg, VA residents were reporting it this morning also.

Unofficial reports say that an air valve was stuck and that is why the horn kept sounding.

Between this and the early morning trash trucks, expect a lot of bleary eyed neighbors today.

Trash/Recycling (Might Be) Tomorrow

This Wednesday is a “Red Wednesday”, which hopefully means trash and recycling pickup. I say hopefully, because the Central Virginia Waste Management Authority has struggled to maintain its schedule due to a shortage of workers and has missed some pickups recently and had to reschedule. That said, as neighbors, we should do our best to help.

One tool that might help ameliorate the situation if pickup does not come is this online form:
https://cvwma.com/programs/residential-recycling/recycling-service-request-form/

Please go over what can be recycled. 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.

If you have not done so already, don’t forget to sign up for your Recycling Perks.
In order to take your recycling to the next level, read this: 10 ways to improve your recycling.

In recycling news…The Virginia Mercury had a recent story about how state agencies are attempting to comply with Governor Northam’s executive order to phase out single-use plastics with an ultimate goal of eliminating their use by the end of 2025, while manufacturers and chemical companies are pushing back against regulation.

Meanwhile on the national level, as reported by Inside Climate News, President Biden’s infrastructure bill includes money for recycling, but the debate over plastics rages on – The industry sees bipartisan support for “sustainable” plastics, while environmentalists call that an oxymoron and say the funding will have limited impact.

Getting back to the local level, W. Cary Street and Belvidere Street have seen an increase in plastic litter as more fast food businesses have moved into the neighborhood. In other parts of the City, neighborhoods are directing parking permit money towards anti-litter programs.

The James River Association recently released 2021 State of the James, a biennial report card examining the status and trends of eighteen separate indicators across two categories, River Health and River Restoration Progress, that are interconnected and build on each other to achieve a healthy James River.
The overall health of the river has received a grade “B-” with a score of 61%. Although the grade for the James has remained in the B- range since 2015, the overall score dropped one point from 2019 and two points since the recent high of 63%.
Plastic pollution is the most common type of marine litter worldwide and a problem for Virginia’s rivers and streams including the James, threatening native wildlife and our marine ecosystems. Plastic does not biodegrade. Instead, it breaks down into smaller and smaller pieces that persist in the environment and can work their way up the food chain to the fish that we eat. Virginians deserve plastic-free waterways, and we all have a role to play in accomplishing that goal.