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July 28, 2020 <br /> <br />38. I never thought I would be embarrassed to live in Portsmouth. Louise Lucas should <br />be recalled for her ordering the police and other law enforcement to stand down when <br />the rioters decided to deface and tear down the statue. SHE SHOULD BE <br />RECALLED. SHE DOES NOT AND NEVER HAS BEEN BIPARTISAN AND ONLY <br />SERVES THOSE WHO SHE THINKS SHE WILL GET VOTES FROM. IF THERE <br />ARE A FEW PEOPLE THAT WANT THAT REMINDER OF PEOPLE WHO FOUGHT <br />TO KEEP THIS COUNTRY FREE, THEN THEY SHOULD HAVE TO PAY FOR THE <br />REMOVAL NOT THE PUBLIC TAXPAYERS. NOT EVERYONE WANTS IT <br />REMOVED. IT IS A CRIME TO DEFACE OR DESTROY PUBLIC PROPERTY. <br />ANYONE WHO PARTICIPATED IN THIS CRIME, INCLUDING LUCAS, SHOULD BE <br />PROSECUTED TO THE FULLEST EXTENT OF THE LAW. <br /> <br />Voicemail <br /> Regarding removing the confederate monument statue in Portsmouth, I think the <br />people who want it removed should have to pay to have it removed. Those that <br />desecrated it should be arrested including Louise Lucas for standing down the police. <br />That’s a public property and as far as I know, the defacement of public property is a <br />federal crime in our city and our country. I think you should uphold the law. Otherwise, <br />we will look like Seattle and Portland. Someone needs to stand up and uphold the <br />law. <br />Trena, 3806 Turnpike Rd <br />39. I write to oppose your approach to settling the fate of the Portsmouth Confederate <br />Monument. Although I support its eventual relocation to a cemetery that already <br />houses the remains of Confederate soldiers, I have three objections to the manner in <br />which you are currently proceeding. The first is that taking up this matter in a virtual <br />meeting of city council does not comply with Attorney General Herring's guidance in <br />the Sullivan Opinion regarding the legal limitations to which such meetings are subject. <br />As I have pointed out on prior occasions regarding other items of council business, <br />this matter does not qualify as "keeping the lights on in city hall" during the pandemic. <br />Unlike the items to which I previously objected for the same reason, 20-188 likely will <br />elicit a strong reaction from members of the public unhappy with whatever you may <br />decide, resulting in legal action to overturn the decision. I ask you not to invite yet <br />another court battle for the city. <br />My second objection is that under Virginian Code subsection 15.2-1812, you have a <br />choice between conducting a public hearing on the disposition of the monument or <br />holding an advisory referendum. Council has elected to forego the referendum in <br />preference to the public hearing, a choice with which I disagree. To the best of my <br />knowledge, no one has done any public opinion polling on this question. so we have <br />no accurate indication as to what "the will of people" is in this case. As our elected <br />representatives, you should want to know that on every occasion, but most especially <br />on matters that elicit such strong opposing responses from constituents. In dealing <br />with controversies of this type, the electorate will surely judge you not only for the <br />decisions you make but, as importantly, by the perceived fairness of the process that <br />produced the decisions. Please note that with an advisory referendum, council still <br />gets to be "the decider"; you just decide with a clearer idea of what the public desires. <br />Regarding my third objection, with council having selected the public hearing <br />approach, what the city has advertised does not, in my view, constitute a public <br />hearing. Virginia Beach, in determining what to do with its confederate monument held <br />an in-person hearing in their convention center so as to maintain the desired "social <br />distance" among the participants. In contrast, Portsmouth has offered our citizens <br />merely a choice of submitting written or oral comments in advance of the virtual <br />meeting. It's not as though we have no venue for holding a safe meeting: we could do <br />so responsibly in a high school gym, cafeteria, or auditorium. In a true public hearing, <br />speakers can listen to each other, and those coming later in the sequence can <br />reinforce or dispute points made by their predecessors. Interested parties attending <br />the meeting who may have been on the fence about signing up to speak can decide <br />on the spur of the moment to join in, offering arguments pro and con that others have <br />not. On the other hand, those filing comments beforehand have no way to know what <br />their neighbors' concerns were until well after the fact. An in-person public hearing, <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />