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Wilder sets his own agenda
Mayor's agresssive stance angers
allies, but he still commands respect
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by Richard
Foster
for Virginia Business
April 2006
In his first year as Richmond’s mayor, former
Gov. L. Douglas Wilder hired a new police chief who
went to work on changing the city’s longtime,
troublesome rap as one of the country’s most
murderous cities. Arrests were made in 70 percent of
the city’s murders, compared to 49 percent the
year before.
True to his campaign promises, Wilder also took a broom to City Hall. He replaced
top officials and formed advisory committees with representatives from local
businesses to suggest ways of improving everything from regional cooperation
to mass transit. But what does the typical Richmonder
remember from the headlines about Wilder’s
first year? The very public battle Wilder waged over a proposed $112 million
performing arts center, which had been backed by many business leaders as a centerpiece
in the revival of downtown Richmond.
Making a long story short: The Virginia
Performing Arts Foundation, chaired by supermarket and banking magnate James
E. Ukrop, started raising money to build the center on Broad Street downtown
before Wilder took office. City Council had approved giving tens of millions
of dollars collected from meals taxes to the foundation if it met fund-raising
goals, but it didn’t.
Wilder stepped in, called the whole
thing a mess and said in the newspapers that Ukrop,
who had contributed $5,500 to Wilder’s
mayoral campaign, didn’t “own” him. The fight ended with the
foundation’s executive director resigning and the Wilder administration
essentially sending the arts center plans into limbo.
"Who’s surprised?” asks University of Virginia political pundit
Larry
Sabato, who closely followed Wilder’s historic 1990-94 term as the nation’s
first elected black governor. “Wilder’s in his 70s, and that old
dog isn’t going to learn a whole lot of new tricks.”
After all, this is the same Doug Wilder whose nasty, long-running feud with a
fellow Democrat, former Sen. Charles S. Robb, culminated with Wilder briefly
running as an independent against Robb in 1996.
TIMELINE:
WILDER'S FIRST 15 MONTHS
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2005
Jan. 2: Wilder inaugurated.
March 17: Wilder
questions Virginia Performing Arts Foundation’s
plans for a $112 million downtown music and theater
complex.
June 20: Shockoe Bottom ballpark developers present plans to Wilder’s advisory
committee for the district.
July 19: Wilder blasts Richmond schools as too dangerous. He begins a school
oversight committee.
Aug. 12: City orders work stopped on the performing arts center site (a former
Thalhimers department store) saying contractors have not asked for required inspections.
Aug. 23: Wilder wants the project scaled back to renovating the existing Carpenter
Center theater.
Oct. 13: Brad Armstrong, executive director of the arts foundation, announces
his resignation, effective at year end.
Nov. 2: Wilder endorses Timothy M. Kaine for governor.
Nov. 5: Paul Goldman, a top Wilder aide, receives a $15,000 fee from the Kaine
campaign. He is suspended in late December for political consulting without permission
and resigns in February.
Nov. 17: Wilder and the arts center foundation agree to renovate the Carpenter
Center while allowing a committee appointed by the mayor to decide what to do
with the Thalhimers site.
Dec. 29: Developers of the proposed Shockoe Bottom stadium confirm that the project
is dead.
2006
Jan. 10: Wilder announces $250 million five-year plan for the city.
Feb. 24: Wilder orders a city investigation in the death of two bears at Maymont
Park. The bears were killed and tested for rabies after one of them bit the hand
of a 4-year-old child. |
Even though Sabato calls the arts
center tiff “the biggest scar on Wilder’s
record so far” as mayor, the political expert adds that “it’s
relatively minor,” a can-opener slice to the finger, not an appendectomy
scar. Sabato believes the incident will not alienate Richmond’s business
community.
“That doesn’t mean they have to love him or even like
him, but they’re going to work with him. … He’s an enormous
plus for Richmond and the whole region. There is literally no one else in the
state who has that much clout, with both the governor and the Republication
legislature.”
Since Wilder was elected in a landslide
in 2004 as Richmond’s first strong
mayor in more than 50 years, all eyes have been on him, as observers wonder how
his policies will affect the Richmond region. And while the public tends to concentrate
on Wilder’s grandstanding moments, like his assertion of power against
the arts center, the majority of his work happens quietly behind the scenes as
he focuses on fixing Richmond’s long-term problems like crime and education.
His efforts appear to be paying dividends.
Confidence in the city is growing around the region
because of Wilder’s leadership, says Jim Dunn, president
of the Greater Richmond Chamber of Commerce. “Leaders, they all have their
own individual styles and certainly Doug Wilder has his style, and it’s
not new,” says Dunn. “Those who have followed him in his career know
he can be very aggressive in taking on people or assumptions. I think what he’s
trying to say is: ‘The buck is now stopping at my desk, and I need to make
sure what’s going on here and how the taxpayer dollars are being utilized.’”
Even a former member of the arts
foundation board, Beverly W. “Booty” Armstrong,
has tactful praise for Wilder’s leadership. Armstrong is vice chairman
of CCA Industries in Richmond, which owns The Jefferson Hotel. After the arts
foundation scaled back its plans, he resigned in November as treasurer and canceled
a pledge estimated to range from $250,000 to $1 million. Armstrong gives Wilder
an “A minus,” with points off for his rancorous relationship last
year with City Council. Nonetheless, Wilder “has put a lot of things into
motion, most of which are good,” says Armstrong. “I think it will
take time to see what comes out on the other end…There are so many problems
in the city that I think that even he was surprised at how serious they are.
You can’t expect everybody to agree with you and do everything right.”
Wilder, 75, began his second year in office with a call for a $250 million-plus
debt-financed plan to build schools and make citywide infrastructure improvements,
such as upgrading technology in city libraries. But some observers worry that
he may have expended too much political capital in battling the arts center.
Privately, friends of Ukrop (who would not comment for this story) say that he
feels betrayed by Wilder, whom the businessman backed for mayor.
Wilder denies feuding with Ukrop,
saying he didn’t mean to single out the
businessman when he said that no one will own him or tell him what to do as mayor. “It
was anyone!” says the mayor.
Wilder appears unconcerned that his
brusque management style might rub the business community
the wrong way. In a City Hall interview, he rhetorically
asks the people
gathered in his office what the region’s business leaders had done to
revitalize the city before his mayoral election. The room is quiet. Wilder
makes his point
without saying a word.
Wilder, in fact, may not be as concerned
about economic development as many business leaders
would like. He is passionate about projects like the
mixed-use Rocketts
Landing development along the James River, the Cordish Co.’s riverfront
entertainment project downtown and Philip Morris’ $300 million research
and development center under construction in the city’s Virginia BioTechnology
Research Park. But those projects were all under discussion before Wilder took
office.
Likewise, the state government, not
the city, gets credit for recruiting MeadWestvaco Corp.,
a Fortune 500 packaging company that will move its
headquarters to the
Richmond region later this year. But, says William Harrell, the city’s
chief administrative officer, the Wilder administration is aggressively lobbying
the company to put its permanent headquarters inside the city.
Some say, however, that Wilder hasn’t been particularly development-friendly,
pointing out the mayor’s cool reception to plans for a new Richmond Braves
ballpark in the city’s Shockoe Bottom area. Dirk Graham, a former Wilder
supporter who owns the popular Bottoms Up Pizza restaurant in the Bottom, says
the ballpark would have been a shot in the arm for businesses still recovering
from an August 2004 flood caused by Tropical Storm Gaston.
Wilder dismisses such criticism,
saying that the ballpark promoters didn’t
attract the investors that they needed. The Braves don’t want to stay
at The Diamond, the 20-year-old ballpark in North Richmond, but the mayor thinks
the city has found an alternative at the site of the former Fulton Hill Gas
Works
near Church Hill. Nonetheless, Wilder and the Braves have squabbled over the
site, with the team saying that the mayor has failed to answer its concerns
about costs and road access.
Yet if Wilder isn’t necessarily focused on splashy development projects,
where is his attention? He says it is aimed at basic problems that have dogged
Richmond for decades. “Education and crime: You fix those things, economic
development follows,” he says.
His solutions include a pilot mixed-use, mixed-income neighborhood that would
be built around one of the new schools proposed in his plan. Laura
Lafayette,
a former official from Wilder’s term as governor, co-chairs a commission
looking at the idea, which would involve for-profit developers, the city and
the Richmond Redevelopment and Housing Authority. She anticipates the development
being completed in the next four years, although no location has been proposed.
Wilder’s regional cooperation
commission also is looking at other revitalization
efforts such as revamping decaying, corridors that
overlap the city and surrounding
counties, such as Jefferson Davis Highway and Laburnum Avenue.
His proposals have been well received
by regional counterparts. Henrico County Manager Virgil
Hazelett says Wilder “is making changes in the
city which will be to the betterment of the city and
I think to the region.”
Wilder hopes to have his agenda complete, or at least well on its way, before
he leaves office. “It’s my desire to be able to have everything where
I’d like to see it and I could go back to the river,” to his estate
in Charles City County.
But when will that be? If Wilder
runs and serves another four-year term as mayor, he
would be well into his 80s. He says he hasn’t decided yet, then adds
with a hearty laugh, “…For those who bet on waiting me out, it’s
not a good bet.”
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