Public Forum on Racial Justice to feature John Moeser and Anne Holton

From RPEC announcement:

On Tuesday, September 21 the Richmond Peace Education Center (RPEC) will sponsor a public forum entitled Overcoming Richmond’s Racial Divide, featuring presentations by Dr. John Moeser, former Virginia first lady Anne Holton and Iman Shabazz. The program will be held at 7 p.m. at Fifth Baptist Church of Richmond, 1415 West Cary Street. This event is free and open to the public. The panel will examine the continuing racial inequality in our metropolitan region and its political, social and economic causes. The program will include an opportunity for interaction among audience members, and a question and answer period.

SynerGeo potluck supper, Richmond Zine Fest benefit movies on Monday

message from SynerGeo:

Hey Oregon Hill,

SynerGeo and I would like to invite you to our monthly community dinner. It’s this Monday, September 20th at 6PM. We like for our neighbors to come, share food and conversation. It’s potluck style, so we encourage everyone to bring a dish, but you won’t be turned away if you are unable to bring one.

Hope to See You There,
Mary Beth

From Flying Brick Library blog:

The RVA Zine Fest will be October 16th, and we’re raising money to help defray the costs of putting on the Fest. Come to the Flying Brick and watch DIY documentaries “Grrrlyshow” and “Girls Rock” Monday night at 7pm! A short discussion about how to do a rock camp for girls will follow the screening. Snacks will be provided. Donate what you can, but even if you have no cash, we want you there! Come out and support the Zine Fest and enjoy two fantastic films in the yard at our favorite radical lending library!

This is a sober event, so please do not bring or consume alcoholic beverages or other substances.

About “Grrrlyshow”: http://www.wmm.com/filmcatalog/pages/c522.shtml

About “Girls Rock”: http://www.girlsrockmovie.com/

‘the best new restaurant in town’

Style magazine’s Don Baker gives a glowing review of the new Pescados restaurant on China Street in Oregon Hill.

After half a dozen visits — far more than duty required, but which pleasure demanded — I feel confident in saying this is the best new restaurant in town in a long time. The food is exemplary, the presentation innovative, the service knowledgeable and the atmosphere relaxing. Chef and owner Todd Manley, whose Midlothian location has been dishing up award-winning Latin cuisine since 2002, and his new business partner, Bob Windsor, welcome customers like old friends.

The Canadian-born executive chef, Loretta Lane, a graduate of New York’s French Culinary Institute, cooked at Bacchus and Edible Garden before joining Pescados a year ago in Midlothian; that restaurant remains open under another Manley protégé.

The China Street menu is a seafood-oriented mix of Caribbean and Latin flavors. Fish arrive daily from suppliers in North Carolina and Hawaii, and in addition to crab, shrimp, oysters and other staples, daily specials may be blue marlin caught by trolling. Specials cost as much as $30, with most entrees in the $20s.

Standing tall, literally, among the regular fare is a whole fried one-and-a-half-pound Cancun red snapper, erect as a soldier, served with saffron potato cakes and grilled zucchini, seasoned with lemon, rosemary and a mélange of chili peppers, herbs and vinegar. Dig beneath its crispy pink skin and be rewarded with a succulent treat, firm and flavorful.

Many dishes exude an elegant touch. Paella (peas, clams, mussels, shrimp and chorizo) luxuriates in a saffron-tomato infused risotto; a roll of Alaskan halibut sits atop scalloped potatoes; corn tortillas are crammed with mahi-mahi, and lobster tail and claw, grilled to perfection, can be doused with avocado-lemon-grass butter and are accompanied by grilled sweet potato and watermelon salad.

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Locating in Oregon Hill is a homecoming of sorts for Manley, who was attracted to the eclectic neighborhood as a student at Virginia Commonwealth University in the ’90s, where a Spanish professor, Luis Diaz, introduced him to the food, passion and culture of the Caribbean. It took more than a year to renovate the building, once the site of a notorious bar. As a result, while Pescados has an attractive bar, co-owner Windsor emphasizes, “We are not a bar.”

The venture has been successful enough that Manley and Windsor are preparing to seek city approval to add an outdoor kitchen on the adjoining back lot, for roasting whole pigs and creating 6-foot paellas with the potential for outdoor dining. To address demand, they say, Sunday brunch hours are coming this fall.

St. Andrew’s School Library Dedication

Although I don’t think it is open to the public, I did want to take note of the St. Andrew’s School new library unveiling and dedication scheduled for tomorrow evening. Students and their families are invited to come to the dedication in honor of Mary Thrower Wickham who was the Head of St. Andrew’s prior to its current Head of School, Dr. Cynthia Weldon-Lassiter. Mary Wickham will be there to say hello and help celebrate the new library.

Oregon Hill electric grid to be updated

There have been previous posts on some of the electric grid issues that have plagued the neighborhood. Unfortunately, some portions of the neighborhood saw more brownouts this summer, including the new Pescados restaurant on China Street. Thankfully there have been some temporary solutions, but after more inquiries by the Oregon Hill Neighborhood Association to the State Corporation Commission, Dominion Power is now actively working on a more permanent update to the grid structure.

From a letter to the neighborhood association:

In response to the inadequate service provided by Dominion Virginia Power (“Company”) due to load growth within the Oregon Hill neighborhood, the Company has designed a project that will split the neighborhood’s load in half. The project will consist of installing set of step-down transformers, a new terminal pole, and a 1/0 underground primary conductor as indicated in the pictures below. The voltage will then be stepped down to 2.4 kV. This will essentially take half of the neighborhood off of the current stepdown.

The Company is currently in the process of obtaining the permits and underground easements required for this project. The Company will provide a more specific timeframe for completion once all the permits and easements have been acquired.

Now that the electricity service is being addressed, maybe we can take another look at the internet service…stay tuned!

Signs for 5th District Community Day (?) Tomorrow

A sign appeared near Open High, with a duplicate at Holly Street playground:

It says there is a ‘5th District Community Day’ tomorrow, but I do not recall seeing any prior notice or mention of this event. I looked around on other community blogs and did not see mention of this event either (though I did see this interesting post on Byrd Park’s. I am guessing the signs are primarily directed towards school students and parents, given their locations. I am not sure if this is related to the Councilperson’s office or the School Board, though I also saw a campaign sign for our current School Board representative this morning: