
by James A. Bacon
I’ve made no secret of my disdain for former Levar Stoney’s track record as mayor of Richmond between 2017 and 2025. His only tangible accomplishment, I’ve said, was tearing down Confederate statues. But perhaps I was too harsh. If we’re to believe Governing magazine, a national trade publication that covers state and local policies, Stoney should share the credit for cutting the city’s poverty rate almost in half: from 27% in 2014 to 17.1% in the most recent American Community Survey.
That’s a major accomplishment, if warranted.
I’m a bit skeptical of the case laid out by Governing’s former executive editor Christopher Swope. The policy mix detailed in the article seem too pedestrian — job and financial-literacy training, after-school programs, free transit programs, new recreation facilities — to account for the change. But Swope cites a forthcoming paper by University of Richmond professor Thad Williamson, which finds that local policies and programs made a โmeaningful contributionโ to the reduction in poverty. So, who knows, maybe there’s something to the claim.
In the meantime, you can be sure that Stoney will use Swope’s column to burnish his credentials as an anti-poverty champion during his campaign to win the Democratic Party nomination for lieutenant governor. Given the scandalous maladministration of city government, culminating with the week-long interruption of water service barely a week after his term ended, he’ll need something to run on.
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