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The Agenda: Local government briefs for 7.12.21
BizSense file)
Proposed technology zone would include city BPOL tax exemptions
The Richmond City Council’s Finance and Economic Development Standing Committee will consider a proposed technology zone for the city at its 1 p.m. meeting Thursday.
Requested by Councilmembers Andreas Addison and Ann-Frances Lambert, the zone is aimed at fostering development and location of tech businesses in the city by exempting qualified businesses from paying the city’s Business, Professional and Occupational License tax for up to five years. The zone would cover the whole city and mirror a similar zone adopted in Norfolk.
CURT SYNNESS
For the Independent Record
Frank Hopkins of âHidalgo,â a movie about a 3,000-mile horse race across the Persian desert, meet your replacement: Ava Depizzol.
Well, not really. Although the Helena Middle School sixth-grader is off to a good start in the equine sport of Endurance Riding. Sanctioned by the American Endurance Riding Convention, this sport entails competing on horseback on trails over distances of 25 miles (6 hours to complete), 50 miles (under 12 hours) or 100 miles (under 24 hours).
Depizzol, 12, is the daughter of Ann Morberg and Jason Depizzol, and already has a pair of AERC 25-mile races under her belt. Last year she competed at the Autumn Sun Endurance ride, in Gooding, Idaho. Riding with her coach (and chaperone) Julie Gillespie, and aboard a friendâs horse âTed,â Ava placed 10th, competing against adults.
Vos: Prodigy: Israel Sheldon
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Recently, the Washington Court of Appeals denied a Spokane homeowner’s request to strike racist language from his home’s deed. This language specifies that “[n]o race or nationality other than the white race shall use or occupy” this property (except those employed as staff by the owner). The goal of this “racially restrictive covenant” was to prevent people of color from owning homes in the Comstock neighborhood and other Spokane neighborhoods with similar restrictions. Even though this racist restriction has long been illegal, a coalition of supporters in Spokane has rallied around the lawsuit to remove the language. They see these obsolete racial covenants as “monuments” to American racism and White supremacy. This effort to modify property deeds seems commendable, yet it risks overshadowing the larger historical significance of racial covenants and their consequences, which still shape Spokane today.
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