
“The amendment [to UVA coach Tony Bennett’s contract] was obtained by The Daily Progress through a Freedom of Information Act request.”
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A $1.4 billion proposal to replace the Richmond Coliseum and redevelop a broad swath of downtown remains secret as Mayor Levar Stoney’s administration enters its 14th month of negotiations with the nonprofit group that pitched the plans. Reporters and residents have turned to the Virginia Freedom of Information Act to squeeze information out of the city about what Stoney has said could become the biggest economic development project in the city’s history. But those requests have met resistance. The Stoney administration has responded with a carve-out under the state open records law meant to protect from public disclosure documents pertaining to negotiations that could hurt its bargaining position. The exemption is discretionary, meaning the city does not have to deploy it, but is choosing to, even after the mayor endorsed the plans in November. Now, one of Stoney’s most persistent critics is challenging the city to defend its use of the provision in Richmond Circuit Court. On Thursday, Paul Goldman filed a petition arguing the city cannot use the provision to shield the legal structure of NH District Corp., a nonprofit entity led by Dominion CEO Thomas F. Farrell II that submitted the lone response to the city’s request for proposals. He is asking the court to force the city to release the information. Late last year, his administration fended off a separate legal challenge stemming from a Freedom of Information Act request that it denied. A resident asked for a copy of the full proposal; the city said releasing it would hurt its bargaining position. A Richmond General District Court judge sided with the Stoney administration at a hearing in December, but the resident who brought the challenge is appealing the decision.
Richmond Times-Dispatch
Portsmouth has agreed to pay more than $300,000 to settle a pair of defamation lawsuits lodged by the city’s fired auditor, ending years of legal wrangling over comments that council members made about his job performance. Jesse Andre Thomas had sought $1.5 million apiece in the claims he filed two years ago against Elizabeth Psimas and Bill Moody. James Cales III, an attorney hired by the city to defend Psimas and Moody, declined to comment other than to say “the settlement is without any admission of wrongdoing on the part of either of our clients.” A Norfolk jury sided with Thomas in Psimas’ case last November, ordering her to pay $775,000 in damages. But a judge decided in January that amount was excessive and should be slashed by more than 80 percent to $150,000. In court records, Thomas’ lawyer cited an interview with a WAVY-TV reporter in which Psimas “intended to suggest that Thomas had done nothing since he had been hired as the city auditor.”
The Virginian-Pilot
The suggestion made this week by Portsmouth city staff and council members was serious: that millions were unaccounted for from the school district’s coffers. “I can’t answer where the $11 million is,” City Manager Lydia Pettis Patton told the council. That amount is the difference between end-of-year balances listed by the school district in two different financial reports it files annually. The truth, as it so often seems to be, was far less dramatic: a quirk of bookkeeping.
The Virginian-Pilot
Virginia men’s basketball coach Tony Bennett’s contract is scheduled to be extended one additional year May 1, per the terms of an amendment agreed upon by Bennett and the Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia signed June 6, 2017. The amendment was obtained by The Daily Progress through a Freedom of Information Act request. Bennett’s most recent employment agreement, agreed upon on in May 2015, stated his employment as lasting through April 30, 2021, with automatic one-year extensions on May 1, 2016, May 1, 2017 and May 1, 2018. The amendment added a one-year extension for May 1, 2019, adding a total of four years to the original terms if Bennett is at Virginia on that date. The amendment also, effective July 1, 2017, bumped Bennett’s annual base salary from $400,000 to $500,000 and his annual supplemental compensation from $1.7 million to $2.5 million.
The Daily Progress
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