Submitted by RefrigeratorRater t3_zu9po8 in rva

Everything is smooth in Short Pump and the west end but in the city I’m whipping side to side dodging meteor strikes in the ground. What gives? Is it a difference in tax funding or a difference in tax usage?

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55V35lM t1_j1htfle wrote

The City of Richmond isn’t good at administering much… to include roads

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potatocross t1_j1hqwro wrote

Henrico is one of a few counties in the state that maintains its own roads. They get funding from the state, but all the work is contracted by them. So the difference is it’s not VDOT maintaining the roads.

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RulerOfTheRest t1_j1hugre wrote

The only other county in the Commonwealth is Arlington, and these two counties not only are able to select their own contractors, but have the equipment to do the work themselves for many projects...

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Prestigious_Laugh300 t1_j1ol7ot wrote

> but have the equipment to do the work themselves for many projects...

They did a sewer repair near my house, a truck rolled in with Henrico stickers hauling a paver thing. Could have been a henrico-only road contractor who just bought the stickers but it looked like county vehicles.

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RulerOfTheRest t1_j1xnupt wrote

The county does own several pieces of road paving equipment, you can seem them sometimes coming out of our going into the DPW facility off of Woodman. They'll also use their backhoes, front loaders, and other heavy equipment to clear the roads after a snowstorm. When they installed the new sewer system in Lakeside though, they contracted that out and the company that did it did not have any Henrico stickers on their vehicles, and the paving equipment was different than what I've seen the county use. The contractor did, however, manage to pave over each of the manhole covers, which the county had to come out and fix with their trucks...

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lunar_unit t1_j1i6ij3 wrote

>The only other county in the Commonwealth is Arlington,

Whut? This isn't accurate. There are 95 counties and 38 independent cities in Virginia.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cities_and_counties_in_Virginia

Each one of those counties has its own county seat and county government. Independent cities are equivalent to counties and also have their own governments, budgets, courthouses and city managers/government. And they all maintain their own stuff.

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fusion260 t1_j1i6uw9 wrote

I think they're saying "the only other county in the Commonwealth [that maintains their own roads] is Arlington"

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lunar_unit t1_j1i7keb wrote

Again, whut? Am I missing some subtle English syntax here?

Counties and independent cities in Virginia maintain their own stuff, not VDOT.

Fairfax country maintains it's own roads. Rockbridge county maintains its own roads, etc, etc, as is done across the state.

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fusion260 t1_j1iarrx wrote

Ah, now I see what you mean.

My understanding is that VDOT is responsible for maintaining all roads across the Commonwealth, including in counties, except in Henrico and Arlington and independent cities (like Richmond) and towns.

I only recall seeing "End of VDOT Road Maintenance" (maybe in slightly different wording) when I enter Henrico County from the surrounding areas.

At least from this page on VDOT's "Report a Road Problem" page, it says (emphasis mine):

>Note: VDOT does not maintain roads in cities, towns, or in Henrico and Arlington counties, except for interstates and major primary roads.
>
>VDOT does not maintain all sidewalks, or pedestrian or bike paths. Some may be maintained by localities.

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FromTheIsle t1_j1ig9uk wrote

Chesterfield doesn't maintain its own roads. VDOT does.

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lunar_unit t1_j1ik07i wrote

It seems to depend on the road, and perhaps where it is within the county, vs town inside the county. Looking at their street projects, some are funded by VDOT, others by CVTA, some are grants from federal funding, and some is paid for by the county.

https://www.chesterfield.gov/579/Road-Projects

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FromTheIsle t1_j1ildv9 wrote

From my past reading on the CVTA, that money is just granted to the county and many of the other towns/cities/counties in the central Virginia area. Chesterfield I think is one of the largest recipients. But still it's not really given in a management capacity, it's considered revenue on the county budget. Interestingly VDOT maintenance isn't accounted for in the budget, which is something I've been trying to learn more about. Like how does VDOT allocate money per county and what is the invisible expense that isn't on the county ledgers because they fall under VDOT discretion?

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chasetwisters t1_j1kavpt wrote

The counties can all fund their own projects but they have to be accepted by VDOT (other than Henrico and Arlington).

The only exception is VA and US routes in Henrico are still VDOT maintained.

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ValidGarry t1_j1iku4c wrote

Roads are first built with funding then adopted for maintenance. That's VDOT for most of the state other than the 2 x counties mentioned.

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Freseper t1_j1jz7d4 wrote

This is not true. Due to the Byrd Road Act of 1932, the vast majority of roads in Virginia are maintained by the state directly.

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lunar_unit t1_j1kc91t wrote

Very interesting read. Thank you for the clarification.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byrd_Road_Act

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WikiSummarizerBot t1_j1kcajg wrote

Byrd Road Act

>The Byrd Road Act was an Act of Assembly passed in February 1932 by the Virginia General Assembly. Named for former Governor Harry F. Byrd, the legislation was originally presented as measure to relieve the financial pressures of the Great Depression upon the counties, as the state offered to take over responsibility and control of most county roads, creating the Virginia Secondary Roads System. Under state auspices, much was accomplished in improving the state's roads, most of which were not hard-surfaced when the system was created.

^([ )^(F.A.Q)^( | )^(Opt Out)^( | )^(Opt Out Of Subreddit)^( | )^(GitHub)^( ] Downvote to remove | v1.5)

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Bogeys4Days t1_j1kezdi wrote

Henrico & Arlington maintain their own secondaries. VDOT maintains primaries such as US 250 (W Broad St) and Rte. 33 (Staples Mill Rd.). Primaries are route numbers under 600.

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lunar_unit t1_j1i6573 wrote

VDOT maintains interstates and state routes. Most streets (and schools, government, infrastructure) inside a town or city are maintained by the county or city in which they exist.

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turnipmeatloaf t1_j1i94ug wrote

According to VDOT, they maintain secondary roads for all counties except Henrico and Arlington

https://www.virginiadot.org/about/vdot_hgwy_sys.asp

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lunar_unit t1_j1iaj4i wrote

Interesting. Today I learned.

However VDOT also states that they don't maintain roads in cities and towns (town are inside counties, and most Virginia cities are independent, thus responsible for their own stuff (like the City of Richmond.)

>Note: VDOT does not maintain roads in cities, towns, or in Henrico and Arlington counties, except for interstates and major primary roads. VDOT does not maintain all sidewalks, or pedestrian or bike paths. Some may be maintained by localities. Please submit a separate report for each request.

>https://my.vdot.virginia.gov/#0

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I_Enjoy_Beer t1_j1hv7b5 wrote

Several factors. Newer roads in the Short Pump area, designed and built in the last 20ish years, compared to city roads that were built a century or more ago. Henrico's overall infrastructure is newer, and without digging up budgets, I'd hazard a guess Henrico thus doesn't need to spend as much money in water/sewer/drainage maintenance and can focus more on road maintenance, whereas the city has to maintain a dense and aged infrastructure network.

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FromTheIsle t1_j1igpe4 wrote

Density makes it cheaper to maintain actually. Sprawling roads like the ones in Henrico normally mean less tax dollars per mile for funding. Richmond overall has far more services to maintain, is massively disorganized, and also struggles to maintain its tax base.

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turnipmeatloaf t1_j1iilc8 wrote

Richmond also has more concentrated poverty than the surrounding counties which isn’t really something easy or cheap to fix

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FromTheIsle t1_j1ij5jo wrote

Ya its just alot of issues that Henrico doesn't really have to even think of. Henrico and other surrounding counties also don't have to really think too much about how to draw in people because RVA does that for them. The counties score big time on just having to focus on basic services while Richmond is tasked with heading regional efforts to maintain tourism, population growth, transport, etc. Henrico, Chesterfield, Powhatan, and Hanover can all just aboard the revenue stream that is Richmond.

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JustDyslexic t1_j1j5pyn wrote

This is also why we are setting up regional tax for transportation. Tourism is also handled at the regional level

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UniversityAny755 t1_j1jy0ls wrote

A lot of the city is also made up of state government and VCU, which don't pay taxes and minimal service fees.

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bkemp1984Part2 t1_j1hy5am wrote

A lot of suburbs in the U.S. are going to be facing economic issues as sprawly infrastructure starts to get old, decline, and have less people per unit of area paying in. They'll never face the issues you mentioned with services systems being older than most people alive, but it's going to get interesting for them, especially as many run out of space to be able to keep the growth cycle going.

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KDRadio1 t1_j1ieina wrote

Very true. I moved here recently and came from a city with lots of huge suburbs. Even just replacing the sprinkler system in the 3 parks were blowing the budget apart. Let alone a bunch of other common area issues that are cropping up.

Many cities have fully banked on the associations to do maintenance and code enforcement so it’s not like they can just come in and fix things either. Should be interesting to watch at least.

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Prestigious_Laugh300 t1_j1okpa9 wrote

> compared to city roads that were built a century or more ago

It seems like they just pave asphault over the cobblestone, right?

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Charlesinrichmond t1_j1ijmpk wrote

because Henrico votes for a competent goverment and still has the city manager system Doug Wilder got rid of in Richmond because it was holding him back from being a complete disaster

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[deleted] t1_j1i2z6u wrote

Richmond doesn’t get their taxes despite most of them working in the city.

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RefrigeratorRater OP t1_j1i55p2 wrote

What about the buildings that people are working in, does the city get property taxes from those?

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lunar_unit t1_j1i5sn8 wrote

Yes, but not from any State property, including all of VCUs and and state governments holdings.

But our city roads are bad because of years of neglect and mismanagement. Believe it or not, they're somewhat improved over what they used to be just a few years ago.

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Mr_Boneman t1_j1i7yj9 wrote

I don’t even think we mill the roads when we resurface them in the city. Add in 100 year old infrastructure with all the old pipes and rails and stuff. Along with a virtually non-existent tax base to keep up maintenance for roughly 40 years and a bunch of ass clowns at city hall pissing away the new revenue, you too can have significantly worse roads than your municipal counterparts.

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55V35lM t1_j1itph4 wrote

I can assure you that the city has very existent tax base which has actually been growing in recent years (see the redevelopment and increased property values in the previous wastelands that are now high growth areas - Manchester & Scott’s Addition - as an example). The city has wasted more money swinging for home run big projects (that fail to deliver a return above the investment or never made it beyond the expensive ‘study’ phase) which has reduced funds and oversight available for routine maintenance. Stoney was elected initially with the promise of getting the boring stuff (ie, routine maintenance) done more efficiently - to which he has successfully failed in spectacular fashion.

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Mr_Boneman t1_j1iu1ba wrote

Not for the last 40 years, the last few absolutely, which I mentioned they pissed away spectacularly.

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55V35lM t1_j1iye39 wrote

The last few years is selling it short - since the Great Recession it’s been trending upwards. The mismanagement is the underlying problem- the tax basis excuse is worn out and needs to be retired (the lack of improvement when the basis has been expanding demonstrates it as not being the ‘cause’). Poor leadership in the elected positions (primarily) and bureaucratic positions (secondary) are the both the constants and the causes.

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Mr_Boneman t1_j1izy8h wrote

I agree with you that mismanagement is the problem but you’re missing the nuance of my point while lecturing me on things i’m already keenly aware of. Our poor roads haven’t just been a problem the past few years because of just mismanagement, it’s been an ongoing problem that STARTED with the tax base being crippled and has now continued on as we have elevated our tax base. If you want to nitpick what exact year between 2008-now go for it, but i’m not arguing that the tax base is currently decimated.

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55V35lM t1_j1jfc01 wrote

And your missing my nuance - the tax base started falling when the middle class residents moved out to the counties and industries moved out- that started back in the ~1960s/70s across the country to include Richmond. Cities had to adapt to the changing tax landscape - some did, many did not which includes Richmond. The inability to sufficiently manage the tax revenues that were available to them, irrespective of them being decreasing or increasing, is a management and leadership issue - not a tax base issue. The mismanagement likely cause further erosion to base for that matter. There is but one root cause - the rest are excuses for politicians.

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Mr_Boneman t1_j1ld13j wrote

I agree with you that mismanagement is the problem but you’re missing the nuance of my point while lecturing me on things i’m already keenly aware of. Our poor roads haven’t just been a problem the past few years because of just mismanagement, it’s been an ongoing problem that STARTED with the tax base being crippled and has now continued on as we have elevated our tax base. If you want to nitpick what exact year between 2008-now go for it, but i’m not arguing that the tax base is currently decimated.

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Colt1911-45 t1_j1ipntx wrote

Richmond is spending lots of money to tear up perfectly good intersections to put in brick crosswalks that after a couple years sink and then become speedbumps. But hey they look pretty.

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lafleurricky t1_j1j7gmi wrote

Anyone know when they went in at Belvidere? Those crosswalks have gutters in them that are bad for pedestrians and cars.

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Wendy319 t1_j1k91go wrote

It’s much different at night. There are street lights at major intersections in Henrico but no where else. In Richmond , they are ubiquitous within city limits. Henrico is fine before 5. After 5, Richmond is much easier to get around. If you can’t see the road it doesn’t matter whether there are meteor strikes or not. How do I know …. Uber and Lyft driving.

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Myfourcats1 t1_j1jw4wi wrote

Short Pump development is fairly recent. I remember going to the grand opening of the mall. It’s 20 years old next year. It was super country before that.

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freaknprtorican t1_j1kudr8 wrote

Also apparently depends what side of Meadow you're on. West of Meadow? Paved every year. East of Meadow? Every ten years. Just try driving down Park Ave between Meadow and Harrison.

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sbr___ t1_j1kws0i wrote

Ha! Try biking Park, it’s terrible. Grove gets paid in near west end and fan roads get largely ignored

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csw0528 t1_j1meyfl wrote

You must be new.

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bingowashisnameo3 t1_j1im1qo wrote

There is also an odd wrinkle (or used to be) in VDOT funding where only driven lane miles are apportioned for funding to the localities. Richmond has a much higher portion of the road itself used for parking and therefore not funded by VDOT money.

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CadenVanV t1_j1jiby3 wrote

Richmond city was a mess for the last few decades. Stoney has turned it around a bit, repaving roads, cleaning parks, and building the first schools in nearly a century, but the infrastructure is still ancient and he hasn’t the time or funds to rebuild it

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Dramatic_Barracuda55 t1_j1ips5h wrote

Richmond City is a like a Baltimore Jr. A violent, corrupt, racist of a hovel,

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Vault804 t1_j1iwvj9 wrote

Unpopular but true. City kids like to think Richmond is Austin Jr, but it’s heading much more towards Baltimore.

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