| View from the county admin building |
The Goochland Board of Supervisors conducted routine
business at its afternoon meeting on November 6. Some highlights follow.
Did you know?
Since assuming the CEO role of the county in June, County
Administrator Dr. Raley highlights the
accomplishments of the people who make the county function. Each month, he
offers a glimpse into some of the many moving parts of local government.
·
Elections—For the November 4 election, Goochland
had 7,504 early in person voters; 1,377 mail in absentee voters; and 8,077 in
person voters on election day for a total of 16,942 out of the total of 24,225 registered
voters in the county. This 70 percent turnout, while robust, made Goochland
only second in the Commonwealth. Shenandoah County, at 78 percent, was first.
Raley offered a debt of gratitude for the great work done by our electoral board,
registrar, and their staff, election workers, county staff and volunteers who
made collecting and tabulating these ballots over a 45-day period possible.
·
Parks and recreation’s eight-person ground crew
led by Carl Lacy maintains 347 acres of public parkland, sports fields, and
county facilities. Raley thanked them for their good work keeping Goochland
beautiful.
County employee quarterly awards
This summer, county administration and department heads
developed an employee recognition program to celebrate the accomplishments of
“Team Goochland” to celebrate accomplishments in five categories: employee,
team, rookie, leader, and customer service star.
The first awards for the first quarter of the fiscal year,
July through September, went to:
·
Employee of the Quarter: Elliot Waugh, IT
Analyst, Information Technology
·
Team of the Quarter: Department of Public
Utilities
·
Rookie of the Quarter: Sheriel Means, Custodian,
General Services
·
Leader of the Quarter: Jennifer Brown,
Commissioner of the Revenue
·
Customer Service Star of the Quarter: Lindsay
Tucker, Customer Service/Building Inspection
Board Chair Tom Winfree, District 3, said that the morale,
competency, knowledge, and ability of these folks is second to none and that
Goochland is blessed to have such quality employees working for Goochland.
Reports
Broadband-expansion activities continue in the
county. There were 1,720 active locations as of September 30. Please see the
board packet pages 43-59 for details.
Agriculture-the summary included legislative issues
critical to farming to be voted on at the Virginia Farm Bureau convention to be
held in Williamsburg in December and shared with the General Assembly. These
include removal of local control over siting of solar facilities in places that
would negatively impact farming and forestry operations; changes to tax and
inheritance policies to assist current and aspiring to access land; and support
for grants and scholarship incentives for large animal veterinarians at the
university level.
The HG Meat Packing Plant on Old Fredericksburg Road, which
will be the only UDA certified meat processing plant in the area, hopes to hold
a soft opening in the weeks after Thanksgiving.
Budget calendar- the supervisors approved the budget
calendar for the FY27 fiscal year. This includes a capital improvement project (CIP)
work session in December; two supervisor workshops in January; joint workshops
with the supervisors and school board. Raley will present his recommended
budget on February 17, 2026, at which time the board will authorize tax rate advertisement.
A public hearing on the budget will be held on April 7. Tax rates will be set
on April 14. The budget and CIP for FY27 will be approved in May.
Chickahominy Health District oversees the Goochland
Health Department. Its director Tom Francks grave a brief overview of the
services offered and invited all to an open house on November 13. The mission
of his organization, said Francks, is to improve the health of the community by
precenting disease, promote healthy lifestyles, and protect people from
environmental and other hazards.
Goochland General Services under the direction of
Scott Foster handles facility maintenance totaling more than 263,000 square
feet. This includes convenience centers; project management; security and key management;
fuel management; non-public safety renovations; street signs; voting machine
delivery and pickup; and pole banners like those celebrating 63 local veterans.
Foster explained that his department uses cloud-based software to use best management
practices to provide a clean and safe environment in all government facilities.
Foster reported that the Commonwealth requires localities to
recycle 25 percent by weight of solid waste annually. Goochland recycles 58.6
percent, helped by curbside recycling used by 2,227 homes. Foster said that dealing
with both aging infrastructure and new spaces coming online will be a challenge
for his department.
Parks and Rec Director Tom Cocke said that there are
a lot of fun things going on in his department and urged everyone to visit the
department on the county website and access the QR code to participate in the survey
used to craft the upcoming refresh of the parks and rec master plan.
Cocke reported that the real time online parking lot updates
for the Fourth of July fireworks worked well and were viewed 4,967 times.
The P&R grounds crew volunteered to renovate the ball
field at the privately held Goochland Rec Center. Special events like the
concert series at Tucker Park, Ag Fair, and Fall Festival have seen increasing
attendance, as did his department’s summer camps.
The P&R department supported the 5k sponsored by the Goochland
250th Commission at Elk Hill on October 4.
After school and programs for senior citizens have been well
received. Use of athletic fields and other recreational spaces, including the
gym behind the administration building is robust. Traffic counters placed at some
outdoor facilities indicated that 50,426 vehicles visited Goochland parks from July
to September. Cocke contended that the number is probably higher because counters
were not deployed at all locations.
This was the first year that Parks and Rec operated the
Tuesday afternoon Farmers Market, which attracted more than 6,000 visitors and
30 vendors for the 22 weeks from May to September. Cocke thanked sponsors Farm
Bureau, Renewal by Anderson, Advertising Connections, and Smallwood Renovations
for their support. The farmers market in Centerville, which was privately owned
and held on private property, ceased operation when its owner retired. Supervisors
commented that the Centerville market brought in sales tax dollars from Henrico
and expressed interest in finding a new location in eastern Goochland for
another farmers market location. One supervisor requested more data on the county’s
return on investment in the farmers market operation to see if it “broke even”.
Upcoming events include the Thanksgiving Turkey Trot, and
Tree lighting on December 5 in the field near the roundabout at the intersection
of Fairground and Sandy Hook Roads.
Updates on the P&R master plan, which has been in the
works for most of this year, will be shared with the supervisors in a one-on-one
format and presented to the planning commission at its December 18 meeting.
New District 5 planning commissioner appointed.
Duane Cosby who was appointed District 5 planning
commissioner in 2024, resigned in October. District 5 Supervisor Jonathan Lyle
explained that Cosby’s departure is career related. He is a pastor whose
bishop recently assigned him to increased responsibilities that require
significant travel outside Virginia, which would have made it difficult to put
in the work required of a planning commissioner. “He did an exceptional job as
a planning commissioner,” Lyle said.
Martin Dean was appointed to succeed Cosby. Dean, a
volunteer fire captain with Manakin Fire-Rescue Company 1, and former executive
director of the Goochland Volunteer Fire-Rescue Association, is well acquainted
with Goochland. Lyle said that Dean will continue to represent District 5 in
the same exceptional manner as Cosby.
| Martin Dean |
2 comments:
I substitute teach, and last week, Dr. Raley stopped in to visit the 4th grade class I was helping with at Randolph Elementary and read them a book about flying beavers. It was a true story about relocating beavers who were creating damage in Idaho, to wild country in the northern part of the state. They dropped them from airplanes in boxes with parachutes! It worked.
If the County Admin thing doesn't work out, he'd make a great book reader!
It’s Duane Cosby not Dwayne Yancey
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