by Jon Baliles
The Richmond water crisis on January 6th immediately and obviously grabbed everyoneโs attention because it came on suddenly and left city residents without safe water for six days. People were scrambling for water long before the city even notified the public that afternoon. The cityโs Finance Department has had challenges for years, but lately, it better resembles the flooded water plant the morning of the meltdown because it has been inundated and can not effectively deliver what it is supposed to.
Sheila White has been the director since Mayor Stoney put her in charge four years ago, and it has been one deluge after another of mistakes and stories, from the meals tax fiasco, to 66,000 personal property tax bills sent in error, and now the inability to issue one-time real estate rebate checks (they even mailed 156 checks to addresses that donโt exist). There have been stories about poor work conditions, lack of training, et al, but former Mayor Stoney maintained last summer the department was in great shape and running like a Swiss watch.
It is beyond time for Mayor Avula to wake up and stop believing the staffers from the Stoney administration that are still in City Hall who are telling him everything is fine. Avula needs to find someone who can come in and raise the Titanic, put the airplane back together, and has the skill to fix the Finance Department by breaking it down and building it back up again to a functioning department.
After last weekโs issue that spotlighted how Finance incorrectly canceled some of the checks that were actually written correctly and then bounced when property owners tried to cash them and also sent some checks to people who bought their houses in 2024 and were ineligible for a rebate. Skip forward a few days and Keyris Manzanares at VPM News had a forensic analysis of the latest debacle. He spoke with Daniel Wavering, who got a letter from the cityโs Finance Department that he thought was a scam (which is a big hint something is wrong).








