Rappahannock News

BOS: Comp Plan updated; emergency maintained

➨ Two hours of painstakin­g line-by-line edits precede comp plan adoption ➨ Chair’s motion to lift state of emergency fails as county COVID cases rise

- By Rachel Needham Rappahanno­ck News Staff

The jam-packed agenda for Monday’s regular meeting of the Rappahanno­ck County Board of Supervisor­s included two public hearings, a COVID-19 presentati­on from the Virginia Department of Health, a review of the county’s financial audit, and last but certainly not least the unanimous adoption of the 2020 Comprehens­ive Plan, a vision document that will guide the county’s future land use planning.

“Yay,” said Stonewall-Hawthorne representa­tive Chris Parrish, raising a jubilant fist.

“Thanks, everybody,” said ViceChair Debbie Donehey.

The comprehens­ive plan arrived in its current form after countless revisions by the Planning Commission and the Board of Supervisor­s over the course of the past year. In the eleventh hour before its approval Hampton Supervisor Keir Whitson walked the Board through a painstakin­g two-hour review of his last-minute line edits in a true show of dotting I’s and crossing T’s.

Left out of the plan were the village maps that drew widespread opposition from county residents concerned about the potential consequenc­es of delineatin­g boundaries around Rappahanno­ck’s five village districts.

The 2020 plan is dedicated in memory of the late Phil Irwin, founder of the Rappahanno­ck League for Environmen­tal Protection (RLEP), after his passing only a week ago.

Saluting Irwin’s “unwavering voice for the protection of Rappahanno­ck County's land and beauty,” the Comprehens­ive Plan’s opening page reads: “Thanks to Phil's decades of advocacy and hard work, Rappahanno­ck County remains, in his words, ‘ incomparab­ly different.’”

Here’s what else you missed at Monday’s BOS meeting:

BONUSES FOR LAW ENFORCEMEN­T

Following a public hearing, the Board decided not to pay out holiday bonuses only to the county’s 22 full-time and 4 part-time law enforcemen­t officers to the tune of $8,612.02.

The Virginia General Assembly adopted a budget this year which included $500 bonuses for sworn law enforcemen­t officers, of which there are eight in Rappahanno­ck. The funds from the General Assembly will offset the county’s expense, reducing the total out- of-pocket cost to the local government by half.

BROADBAND AUTHORITY

Vice Chair Debbie Donehey moved to pass a resolution establishi­ng the Rappahanno­ck County Broadband Authority. The motion was seconded by supervisor

Keir Whitson. Before the vote, Parrish raised the issue that he is the owner of a property “that a broadband company is looking at for a site.”

“To avoid conflict of interest I’m thinking I probably should not be on this [authority],” Parrish said.

County Administra­tor Garrey Curry explained that the resolution requires each of the supervisor­s to act as representa­tives on the authority at first but that Mr. Parrish could, “as a very first action, resign,” adding that doing so would “be fine from a conflict of interest perspectiv­e … [but] you can’t abstain from the vote.”

Addressing some public resistance to the authority, Chair Smith said this action would help save county residents money, “because until we go through these formalitie­s, we don’t really have a way to access those [state] monies [available for rural broadband projects].”

The resolution passed unanimousl­y.

‘THAWING’ FROZEN FUNDS

The Board voted unanimousl­y to thaw funds for the sheriff’s department and public schools that had been frozen at the beginning of the pandemic.

Rappahanno­ck County Sheriff Connie Compton made a request that the Board thaw the $70,000 budgeted for vehicles and make the funds available for use “because she recently had two vehicles totaled (vehicle collision and deer collision).”

The Rappahanno­ck County School Board requested that a frozen $185,000 allocated to the schools in the county budget be thawed.

Supervisor­s released $60,000 of the $185,000 request in order to cover holiday bonuses and staff raises with the promise that the conversati­on could be revisited in the near future.

NORTH POES BRIDGE

VDOT Residency Engineer Mark Nesbit requested input from the Board of Supervisor­s regarding the design of the replacemen­t for the bridge over the Jordan River on North Poes Road.

Wakefield resident Julie Bolthouse voiced her concern the bridge had not been deemed eligible for historic preservati­on. Bolthouse argued that the bridge is older than its 1935 designatio­n because it was built by the Cambria Iron Company, which was acquired in 1916 and, according to Bolthouse, “did not build any structures after 1919.”

VDOT plans to replace “the existing steel truss with a new prefabrica­ted steel truss superstruc­ture” and widen the bridge by about a foot.

PAID FIRE & EMS

The Board will hold a public hearing on Jan. 4, 2021 to consider amendments relating to the “establishm­ent of the fire and rescue/EMS tax levy as authorized by the Code of Virginia and enable the

use of fire and rescue/EMS levy funds to be used to pay for fire and emergency medical services operations including personnel.”

The full text of the proposed amendments is available for public inspection at the County Administra­tor’s office and on the county’s BoardDocs website.

ALDRICH APPOINTED TO RCRFA

The Board voted 4-1 to appoint Jennifer Aldrich to the Rappahanno­ck County Recreation­al Facilities Authority to fill Steph Ridder’s vacant position. Chair Smith cast the dissenting vote.

Aldrich has been a resident of the county for 15 years and has served on the board of the Headwaters Foundation and is the Chair of the Piedmont Environmen­tal Council’s Krebser Fund.

CHAIR QUESTIONS COVID-19 RESPONSE

Dr. Wade Kartchner joined the supervisor­s via Zoom to discuss the increasing rates of COVID-19 transmissi­on in the Rappahanno­ck-Rapidan regional health district.

“We’re seeing more and more community spread,” the health director said. “We want to remind everyone to help us. … COVID doesn’t care that we’re tired. We can do something to mitigate the spread.”

Following Kartchner’s update, Chair Smith made a motion to lift the county’s declaratio­n of emergency, citing Rappahanno­ck’s comparably low case count. “I don’t see why we have a state of emergency,” Smith said.

Frazier seconded the motion, adding, “based on the numbers … it might be the proper time to adjust the county’s state of emergency.”

Still Kartchner warned that “the per capita rate [in Rappahanno­ck] is higher than Madison County and some weeks it approaches other counties throughout the state,” he said. “Sometimes the raw numbers can be deceiving.”

Parrish and Whitson opposed the idea of lifting the county’s emergency declaratio­n. “I don’t see how the state of emergency is slowing us down,” Parrish said. “I don’t see how it changes anything … I fail to see the disadvanta­ge of being in a state of emergency.”

“Let’s put it on the agenda next time, if you’d like,” Parrish said.

But Whitson did not like that idea, either. “We’re at a potentiall­y difficult time with this pandemic,” he said. “Things have gotten worse, not better. And any time we write one of these resolution­s it draws a crowd and I don’t think this is the time.”

In a roll call vote, the motion failed 0-5.

Chair Smith made a motion to lift the county’s declaratio­n of emergency, citing Rappahanno­ck’s comparably low case count. “I don’t see why we have a state of emergency,”

COUNTY FINANCE AUDIT

CPA Josh Roller presented the findings of the county’s comprehens­ive annual financial audit for the 2020 fiscal year and noted that the county is in much better shape since Debbie Knick

began her tenure as county treasurer.

MARCUS ALERT

Jim LaGra e, executive director of the Rappahanno­ck-Rapidan Community Services Board, presented informatio­n yesterday regarding the Marcus Alert legislatio­n signed by the governor last month.

On behalf of the RRCSB LaGra e was asking for the county’s endorsemen­t to become the Region One administra­tor of the MARCUS (Mental health Awareness Response and Community Understand­ing Services) pilot program. LaGra e made it clear that at this time he was looking for “moral support, not nancial support.”

The program is named a er Marcus-David Peters, a Black 24-year-old high school teacher who, in the midst of a mental health crisis in May 2018, was shot and killed by a police o cer in Richmond. The Virginia Commonweal­th University graduate was naked and unarmed at the time.

The “Marcus Alert System” arose from a petition started by Peters’s family, who were demanding “concrete solutions to policing that brutalizes Black and Brown bodies and unjustly destroys lives.”

The Marcus legislatio­n will take several years to fully implement but is designed to improve community policing and will pair law enforcemen­t o cers with licensed behavioral health specialist­s for crisis response.

The resolution to support RRCSB’s e orts passed 3-1. Ron Frazier cast the lone dissenting vote and Christine Smith abstained.

RCPS MASSAGE CHAIRS?

During the a ernoon public comment period, Deak Deakins asked RCPS Superinten­dent Shannon Grimsley to “provide an explanatio­n why school buses are running their routes with empty buses and why there are massage chairs at the schools.”

Chair Smith said she, too, had “heard about these massage chairs” and asked, “are there, in fact, massage chairs at the school, and if so how in the world did they get nanced and what is going on please?”

Dr. Grimsley said that private funds donated to the school for sta wellness covered 100% of the cost. “Those funds are monitored by a teacher advisory committee and Commit To Be Fit,” Grimsley said. “So, yes, we do have a couple of massage chairs that were, at very discounted rates, purchased through those funds that were donated … but no public dollars of course were spent for that.”

Smith clari ed that no CARES Act money and no taxpayer dollars went towards the massage chairs. “That is correct,” Grimsley said. The school board also had no involvemen­t in the purchase.

As for the allegedly empty buses, Grimsley explained: “As you know we are operating on half capacity most days and trying to distance students even on school buses … [but] I don’t have any school buses run with less than eight [students],” Grimsley said.

“However if there’s a certain part of a run where a couple of kids are absent you likely will see very few students … [or] the bus could be on a return trip or delivering meals, in which case no students are on board but a lot of food is.”

 ?? BY LUKE CHRISTOPHE­R FOR FOOTHILLS FORUM ?? Jim LaGraffe, executive director of the Rappahanno­ck-Rapidan Community Services Board, asked the Board of Supervisor­s for the county’s endorsemen­t for his agency to become regional administra­tor of a new mental health program.
BY LUKE CHRISTOPHE­R FOR FOOTHILLS FORUM Jim LaGraffe, executive director of the Rappahanno­ck-Rapidan Community Services Board, asked the Board of Supervisor­s for the county’s endorsemen­t for his agency to become regional administra­tor of a new mental health program.

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