Downtown
Weekly Food News: New restaurants, international nods, swine on the move, and weekend food festivals
Richmond restaurants received a number of national and international nods this past week. This, plus details on two new restaurants, another on the move, and weekend food festivals.

Dinner in the Field ranked among best outdoor dining events worldwide
A local outdoor dining experience picked up some major accolades from an international publication. Jetsetter Magazine named Dinner in the Field, a local dinner series set under the stars featuring fresh local ingredients, as one of the “top 10 most amazing outdoor dining experiences” in the world.
Karri Peifer with the RTD has the full story.
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Shagbark named a top new restaurant to visit this fall
Elsewhere in Richmond, Shagbark, the recently-opened, southern-focused restaurant from former Lemaire chef Walter Bundy, got some recognition from USA Today. The newspaper named Shagbark to its list of “20 New Restaurants to Try This Fall.” Located in the Libbie Mill shopping center near the former home of Southern Season, Shagbark features locally-sourced ingredients from Richmond and the surrounding area.
View the full list of ranked restaurants here.
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USA Today highlights Richmond’s best restaurants, craft cocktail scene
Finally, USA Today also compiled a great profile on Richmond’s restaurant scene and latest offerings in a piece entitled “Made in Virginia: Flavors only found in Richmond.” In it, contributor Mary Winston Nicklin explores the likes of Metzger, The Roosevelt, Sub Rosa, Dutch & Company, Heritage, Shagbark, and Rappahannock. She notes the explosion of Richmond’s craft cocktail scene while opining our best years, culinarily, are ahead of us:
And in Richmond, the best is yet to come. After making it big with smaller neighborhood restaurants, local chefs are striking out with larger, more ambitious ventures (like the soon-to-open Brenner Pass from Metzger’s Brittanny Anderson and Saison’s James Kohler) — without forgetting the local communities who first embraced them.
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Laura Lee’s feels right at home in Woodland Heights
Richmond restauranteur Kendra Feather’s latest spot south of the river, Laura Lee’s, opened this past weekend. The Woodland Heights spot, formerly home to White Horse Tavern, serves up creative fare in a homey atmosphere, as our own intrepid reporter Richard Hayes found when he got a sneak peek last Friday:
Above we compared the experience to being welcomed by an old friend, to keep that analogy going we’ll definitely be stopping back by after they open to see how our “old friend” is doing and what new dishes they have up their sleeve.
Check out the full article and photos here.
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Matchbox striking up woodfired pizza beginning tonight
A Washington, D.C. pizza chain is making a foray into the Richmond market with the opening of a location in Short Pump this evening. Matchbox is a two-story, 7,000-square-foot restaurant featuring wood-fired artisan pizzas, burgers, sandwiches, and signature wines. Built on the site of the former Short Pump Chili’s, Matchbox sits at the entrance of Short Pump Town Center.
Richmond Magazine’s Stephanie Breijo has all the details on what to expect and some great photos.
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Cultured Swine on the move
The Cultured Swine, a Jackson Ward eatery known for its inventive barbecue, tamales and more, is making moves to the Museum District, the restaurant announced via its Facebook page this week, saying in part:
The Cultured Swine is very excited to announce that we are moving! Our new location will be in the Museum District in the Grindstone Community Kitchen on Kensington Avenue.
Our 2nd Street location will close on September 16th, and we’ll reopen in the Museum District in early 2017. In the meantime, we’ll be focusing on our food cart and catering, so you can still get all the Swiney goodness you’re craving.
We’ll be adding a number of new menu items at our new location, from expanding our traditional BBQ options to adding more vegetarian and vegan options. We’ll also have new operating hours, which we’ll announce at a later date.
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Southern Season auctioning off commercial kitchen equipment
If you’re in the market for restaurant-grade kitchen equipment or fixtures, Southern Season’s assets will soon be auctioned off, the RTD reports:
Iron Horse Auction Co. of Rockingham, N.C., will be selling the assets from two closed Southern Season gourmet food stores, including the former location in the Libbie Mill-Midtown development in western Henrico County.
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Armenian, German fare on the menu at local festivals
Finally, if you’re into German or Mediterranean food, culture, or just a good time in general, two festivals this weekend should be right up your alley. St. Benedict’s Oktoberfest kicks off tomorrow night and runs through Sunday in the Museum District. Get all the details on food, music, and check out the impressive selection of over 47 beers right here.
Just down the road, the Armenian Food Festival also takes place this weekend. If you love the Greek or Lebanese Food Festivals held in the spring, you’ll love the Armenian Food Festival. Expect food, music, wine, beer, dancing in a relaxed atmosphere in the Near West End. Get all the info you need to know and check out the menu here.

Community
Library of Virginia Honors Deaf History Month With a Talk and Exhibition on the History of a Shenandoah County Deaf Village and Shared Signing Community
Between 1740 and 1970, Lantz Mills, Virginia, was home to many families with a mix of hearing and deaf parents and at least one or more deaf siblings.

In honor of April as Deaf History Month, the Library of Virginia will present a talk on April 22 and a traveling panel exhibition running April 1–30 on the history of the Lantz Mills deaf village and shared signing community in Shenandoah County, Virginia. Both are free.
Between 1740 and 1970, Lantz Mills, Virginia, was home to many families with a mix of hearing and deaf parents and at least one or more deaf siblings. When both the hearing and deaf members of a locality use a shared visual language to communicate, that is known as a shared signing community. Those familiar with deaf culture may know that Martha’s Vineyard, the island off Massachusetts, was home to a shared signing community where 25% of the population was deaf. But few know that Virginia had a deaf village and shared signing community in Shenandoah County.
The Lantz Mills Deaf Village panel exhibition has appeared at Shenandoah County Public Library and the Northern Virginia Resource Center for Deaf and Hard of Hearing People. It will visit the Eastern Shore Public Library in June. The exhibition is available for display at public libraries and other cultural facilities. For more information, contact Barbara Batson at [email protected] or 804.692.3721.
The talk and exhibition are made possible in part with federal funding provided through the Library Services and Technology Act administered by the Institute of Museum and Library Services. For more information about the commonwealth’s deaf culture, visit the Virginia Deaf Culture Digital Library at https://deaflibva.org.
DEAF HISTORY MONTH TALK | The Lantz Mills Shared Signing Community
Saturday, April 22, 2023 | 10:00–11:00 a.m. | Free
Place: Lecture Hall, Library of Virginia, 800 East Broad St., Richmond, VA 23219
Registration suggested: https://lva-virginia.libcal.com/event/10478065
In honor of Deaf History Month, the Library presents a talk exploring the history of the Lantz Mills deaf village in Shenandoah County, Virginia, by deaf historian and advocate Kathleen Brockway, who is also a Lantz Mills deaf village descendant.
DEAF HISTORY MONTH PANEL EXHIBITION | Lantz Mills Deaf Village
April 1–30, 2023 | Monday–Saturday, 9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. | Free
Place: Lobby & Pre-function Hall, Library of Virginia, 800 East Broad St., Richmond, VA 23219
In honor of Deaf History Month, the Library presents a panel exhibition exploring the history of the Lantz Mills deaf village in Shenandoah County, Virginia. This six-panel traveling exhibition features the history of prominent deaf villagers such as the Hollar and Christian families, deaf members’ involvement in local businesses, and even a budding romance within the community. Each panel includes a QR code that links to ASL interpretation of the text featured. A booklet about the topic written by deaf historian and Lantz Mills deaf village descendant Kathleen Brockway will be available to exhibition visitors while supplies last.
Downtown
Feds identify ‘significant’ ongoing concerns with Virginia special education
After failing to meet federal requirements to support students with disabilities in 2020, the Virginia Department of Education will remain under further review by the federal government after continuing to fall short in monitoring and responding to complaints against school districts, according to a letter from the U.S. Department of Education.

By Nathaniel Cline
After failing to meet federal requirements to support students with disabilities in 2020, the Virginia Department of Education will remain under further review by the federal government after continuing to fall short in monitoring and responding to complaints against school districts, according to a letter from the U.S. Department of Education.
“We have significant new or continued areas of concerns with the State’s implementation of general supervision, dispute resolution, and confidentiality requirements” of IDEA, stated the Feb. 17 letter from the Office of Special Education Programs.
The U.S. Department of Education first flagged its concerns in a June 2020 “Differentiated Monitoring and Support Report” on how Virginia was complying with the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, following a 2019 visit by the Office of Special Education Programs.
IDEA, passed in 1975, requires all students with disabilities to receive a “free appropriate public education.”
The Virginia Department of Education disputed some of the federal government’s findings in a June 19, 2020 letter.
Samantha Hollins, assistant superintendent of special education and student services, wrote that verbal complaints “are addressed via technical assistance phone calls to school divisions” and staff members “regularly work to resolve parent concerns” by providing “guidance documentation” and acting as intermediaries between school employees and parents.
However, some parents and advocates say systemic problems in how the state supports families of children with disabilities persist. At the same time, a June 15, 2022 state report found one of Virginia’s most critical teacher shortage areas is in special education.
“Appropriate policies and procedures for both oversight and compliance, and their implementation, are crucial to ensuring that children with disabilities and their families are afforded their rights under IDEA and that a free appropriate public education (FAPE) is provided,” said the Feb. 17 letter from the Office of Special Education Programs.
While the U.S. Department of Education wrote that it believes the Virginia Department of Education has resolved some of the problems identified in 2020, including resolving complaints filed by parents and creating a mediation plan, it said it has identified “new and continued areas of concern” and intends to continue monitoring Virginia’s provision of services for students with disabilities.
Among those are ongoing concerns over the state’s complaint and due process systems that “go beyond the originally identified concerns” originally found. The Office of Special Education Programs writes it has concluded Virginia “does not have procedures and practices that are reasonably designed to ensure a timely resolution process” for due process complaints.
The department also said it has concerns over the practices of at least five school districts that are inconsistent with IDEA’s regulations.
The decision comes after the U.S. Department of Education announced in November that Fairfax County Public Schools, Virginia’s largest school district, failed to provide thousands of students with disabilities with the educational services they were entitled to during remote learning at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Virginia is also facing a federal class-action lawsuit over claims that its Department of Education and Fairfax County Public Schools violated the rights of disabled students under IDEA.
Parents involved in the case said the Virginia Department of Education and Fairfax school board “have actively cultivated an unfair and biased” hearing system to oversee challenges to local decisions about disabled students, according to the suit.
Charles Pyle, a spokesman for the Virginia Department of Education, said in an email that “VDOE continues to work with our federal partners to ensure Virginia’s compliance with all federal requirements, as we have since the ‘Differentiated Monitoring and Support Report’ was issued in June 2020.”
The federal government said if Virginia could not demonstrate full compliance with IDEA requirements, it could impose conditions on grant funds the state receives to support early intervention and special education services for children with disabilities and their families.
Last year, Virginia received almost $13.5 billion in various grants linked to IDEA, according to a July 1, 2022 letter to former Superintendent of Public Instruction Jillian Balow, who resigned on March 9.
James Fedderman, president of the Virginia Education Association, blasted Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s administration after the findings were released.
“While the Youngkin administration has been busy waging culture wars in schools, his administration has failed to meet basic compliance requirements with the U.S. Department of Education for students with disabilities,” Fedderman said. “This failure threatens our federal funding for students with disabilities and is a disservice to Virginia families who need critical special needs support.”
Downtown
Richmond 911 callers can soon provide feedback on calls for service via text message
Beginning March 20, those who call 911 with some types of non-life-threatening emergencies will receive a text message within hours or a day after the call with a short survey about the service they received on the call.

Some 911 callers in Richmond will begin to receive follow-up text messages next week asking for their ranking of the service they received and additional information.
Beginning March 20, those who call 911 with some types of non-life-threatening emergencies will receive a text message within hours or a day after the call with a short survey about the service they received on the call.
The Richmond Department of Emergency Communications, Preparedness and Response is using the feedback from callers as another way to ensure that it is continuing to deliver excellent emergency services to Richmond.
“It is very important that those who receive the text message answer the questions as accurately as possible, based on the service they received on the call, not on the response from first responders with different agencies,” said Director Stephen Willoughby. “We use the feedback that callers provide to monitor and improve our 911 services to Richmond residents and visitors, as well as the other measurements of service that we have in place.”
Those who would like to offer feedback, but do not receive a text message, are encouraged to email [email protected] or call 804-646-5911. More information about offering commendations or filing a complaint is on the department’s website athttps://www.rva.gov/911/comments. In addition, the department conducts a full survey of adults who live, work and study in Richmond every two years. More information about those surveys and results are at https://www.rva.gov/911/community-outreach.
The Department of Emergency Communications, Preparedness and Response is using a third-party vendor, PowerEngage, to send the text-message surveys and report the results. Text messages may be sent for other uses in the future.
More information about the text-message surveys, from the news release:
- The answers that callers provide in the text message have no effect on the service provided to that caller.
- Callers who do not want to participate in the text-message survey would simply not respond to the text message. They also may reply STOP to opt out of future text surveys from DECPR.
- Callers should not use the surveys to report any other emergency or request help. They would need to call or text 911 for immediate help. To file a police report or request nonemergency public safety help, call 804-646-5100. For other city services, call 311, visit rva311.com or use the RVA311 app.
- Those who have further questions or would like to request a call-back from a staff member about the survey or their experiences, may email [email protected].
- More information about the after-call survey is at https://www.rva.gov/911/survey.