Axios Richmond

September 19, 2023
It's Tuesday. Thanks for joining us.
- π° Today's edition zooms in on the looming city casino referendum (early voting starts Friday).
βοΈ Today's weather: Sunny, with a high near 81.
π Happy birthday to our Axios Richmond members Lee Anne Fuller and Chip Trebour!
Today's newsletter is 951 words β a 3.5-minute read
1 big thing: π° Casino cash floods in
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Get ready to hear a lot of pro-casino messages.
What's happening: The developers behind a proposed casino in south Richmond have dumped a record $8.1 million into this year's referendum campaign.
Why it matters: It's an astonishing amount of money to spend on any campaign in Virginia, let alone a local ballot measure.
- The fat bankroll gives casino supporters more than enough money to saturate the region in advertisements and mailers between now and election day.
- Developers also hinted at an extensive canvassing campaign.
What they're saying: "We're engaging in real, two-way conversations with Richmonders in every neighborhood in the city, which requires resources, but it's worth it to make sure citizens know the positive impacts of this new project and the many citywide benefits it will deliver," said Michael Kelly, a spokesperson for the project.
Of note: The donations funding the pro-casino PAC are the largest single corporate contributions in Virginia history, per campaign finance records compiled by the Virginia Public Access Project.
- Urban One, which won the contract to develop the project, contributed $3.9 million last month.
- And Churchill Downs, now a partner in the development, contributed $3.1 million.
Context: The total contributions so far are more than three times the $2.6 million casino supporters spent during the 2021 referendum.
- That also dwarfs the cost of successful casino campaigns in other Virginia cities, where spending ranged from nearly $167,000 in Danville to a little more than $1 million in Bristol, per VPAP.
Meanwhile, the leading anti-casino PAC, No Means No Casino, raised just over $142,000 so far, per VPAP.
- Nearly all of that was contributed by local philanthropists Jim and Barbara Ukrop.
Opponents of the development expressed exhaustion at the prospect of having to organize a second time against a well-funded corporate opponent.
- "This time around my fear is that the grassroots interests won't have the resources and energy to put up the same kind of fight, but the moneyed interests and politicians do," David Dominique, who helped lead opposition during the 2021 campaign, told Axios.
- "That's why I see this as an unfair fight."
2. Flashback: π The 2021 vote

Of five Virginia cities authorized to hold gambling referendums, Richmond is the only one to have ever voted an initiative down.
What happened: The project lost the 2021 referendum by about 1,500 votes or just under two percentage points in a vote that was sharply divided by race and geography.
- The more white voters in a given city precinct, the more no votes the project received, an Axios analysis found.
- Meanwhile, majority-Black neighborhoods in the immediate vicinity of the project overwhelmingly supported the proposal.
The bottom line: "White progressives are really at odds with where a lot of the African American community are on this," veteran political commentator Bob Holsworth told Axios.
3. β¨ Developers bet on a rebrand
The proposed casino along I-95 in south Richmond. Renderings: Courtesy of Richmond Grand
Casino developers are hoping a new name will change some votes this year.
What's happening: Urban One, the lead developer and one of the country's largest Black-owned entertainment companies, is taking its name off the project.
- Instead of calling it "One Casino and Resort," the project is being pitched as "Richmond Grand Resort and Casino."
Between the lines: A message of Black uplift was front and center in the 2021 campaign, with Urban One and other supporters emphasizing that this would be the only Black-owned casino in the country.
- So far, that messaging has been absent this time around.
When developers were poll-testing new names and advertising slogans last month, they specifically asked respondents whether it should include Urban One's brand identity, per Holsworth, who told Axios he received and participated in the survey.
What they're saying: Developers told Axios the new name reflects local pride as well as the involvement of Churchill Downs as a 50-50 partner in the project.
- "The Richmond grand name just helps better connect the project to the city it's going to be in," Kelly, the spokesperson for the project, told Axios.
π Of note: Aside from the new name and new renderings, the only other substantial change to plans for the facility is a promise to include pickleball courts in a 55-acre park surrounding the venue.
Mayor Levar Stoney is also taking a new tack to try to shore up votes.
- He's proposing committing all new tax revenue from the project to fund preschools and early childhood education initiatives.
Flashback: The first time around, city leaders didn't campaign with a specific earmark for new tax revenue in mind.
- And an aborted 2022 proposal would have tied approval to a 2-cent reduction of the city's real estate tax.
Go deeper: What casino opponents are saying
4. The Current: π News from around the state
Illustration: Brendan Lynch/Axios
Gov. Glenn Youngkin directed VMI to accept a 32-foot-tall Confederate monument that the Army ordered removed from Arlington National Cemetery. (Washington Post)
- The college plans to put it at its Civil War museum in New Market, pending resolution of a lawsuit contesting the move.
π Northern Virginia Congresswoman Jennifer Wexton said she won't seek reelection next year after being diagnosed with progressive supranuclear palsy, "a kind of 'Parkinson's on steroids.'" (Axios)
π° The Department of Forestry is collecting acorns and nuts through Oct. 16 to help reforest Virginia. (WRIC)
πΎ The city shelter announced that a large donation from a longtime volunteer will cover the cost of spaying and neutering pets for Richmonders in need. (Facebook)
A new career is waiting for you
πΌ Check out who's hiring now.
- Assistant Attorney General, Antitrust Unit at Virginia Office of the Attorney General.
- Director of Financial Reporting and Analysis at Saur Brands.
- Vice President of National Accounts at Interior Logic Group.
Want more opportunities? Check out our Job Board.
Hiring? Use code FIRST50 for $50 off your first job post.
5. βΎοΈ Squirrels head to the playoffs
The team celebrating when they learned last week they'd be in the playoffs. Image: Courtesy of Flying Squirrels
The Richmond Flying Squirrels are in the Minor League Baseball Eastern League playoffs for the second year in a row.
What's happening: Game 1 is tonight at The Diamond, and the only one of the possible three games to take place in Richmond.
- The Squirrels are once again up against the Erie SeaWolves.
- Game time is 6:35pm; tickets start at $10 and there will be a post-game "In-Your-Face Fireworks" show.
Keep reading for the Parney special
π³ Karri wants to know who in Richmond is renting a house for $10,000 a month.
- Especially one that rented for $8,000 a month in the spring and $2,400 last summer.
π² Ned has been riding his bike everywhere since things cooled off a little and is loving it.
This newsletter was edited by Fadel Allassan and copyedited by Steven Patrick.
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