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Public forum praises Black History Month programming and urges smoother board-supervisor relations
Summary
At the April 30 Henrico County School Board meeting, public commenters praised the district's Black History Month programming and urged better cooperation between the school board and Board of Supervisors; speakers also described student engagement events connecting students with elected officials.
During the public forum at the Henrico County School Board's April 30 meeting, multiple residents commended the district's outreach and urged improved intergovernmental cooperation.
Bill Pike, a retired educator, said he was "worrying" about public bickering between the school board and the Board of Supervisors and warned that such posturing could harm relationships at a critical time. Pike said, by his account, "how many school boards in Virginia would sell their souls to the devil for a $971,000,000 budget?" and urged relationship-building over public conflict.
Representing the Henrico NAACP educational committee, Frank Callahan thanked the board for three years of Black History Month programming and highlighted expanded student engagement this year, including video conferences with state elected officials and an in-person presentation at Fairfield Middle School. L. Frances Brown, secretary of the Henrico NAACP, presented a certificate recognizing Alicia Atkins for her commitment to ensuring Black history is acknowledged across the division.
Chair (speaker 1) reminded speakers that staff will follow up with commenters and that the board will not respond during the forum. The public forum proceeded under the meeting's three-minute time limit for registered speakers.

