Candidates styling and smiling at St. Catherine’s
Yesterday, the five men running for mayor of Richmond appeared at St. Catherine’s School to answer questions from high school seniors from 17 schools, both public and private. My coverage of the forum at Richmond.com. Asked about regional mass transportation, Robert J. Grey, Jr., claimed the counties will participate if we first “clean up City Hall.” […]
Yesterday, the five men running for mayor of Richmond appeared at St. Catherine’s School to answer questions from high school seniors from 17 schools, both public and private. My coverage of the forum at Richmond.com.
Asked about regional mass transportation, Robert J. Grey, Jr., claimed the counties will participate if we first “clean up City Hall.” Councilman William J. “Bill” Pantele said he is “passionate about the issue.”
Goldman summed up with, “Somebody’s got to pay for it, and right now there’s no money.” styling
How would the five who would be mayor bring middle class families back into the city?
Jones said, “Improve the educational system.”
Pantele disagreed with the premise of the question, “Richmond’s population has been growing.”
That, while Lawrence E. Williams talked about Arthur Ashe when he was a child. Then Williams added, “The baseball diamond will someday be Short Pump Central.”
With no follow-ups allowed, those in the room who were slightly confused by that answer were left to wonder what Williams meant.
Click here to read the entire report/analysis.
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