ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: TUESDAY, March 12, 1991                   TAG: 9103120403
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: B1   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: JOEL TURNER MUNICIPAL WRITER
DATELINE:                                 LENGTH: Medium


CITY SEEKS PACT WITH CRANWELL

Roanoke will extend an olive branch to Del. Richard Cranwell, the Roanoke County legislator who has been at odds with the city frequently on several issues in the past decade.

Councilman David Bowers, chairman of the city's Legislative Committee, wants city officials to try to develop a closer working relationship with Cranwell now that the consolidation issue has been settled.

Cranwell opposed consolidation of the city and county, although he did not take an active role in last fall's campaign. County voters rejected merger by more than a 2-1ratio while city voters approved it by nearly the same margin.

The legislative committee will seek a meeting with the Vinton Democrat, one of the most powerful state legislators and a likely candidate for speaker of the House of Delegates. The committee includes Mayor Noel Taylor and Councilmen James Harvey, William White and Bowers.

Bowers said Cranwell could help the city with its legislative requests in the General Assembly. He said the city's legislators - Sen. Granger Macfarlane and Dels. Vic Thomas and Clifton Woodrum - have been effective and won approval of 21 of the city's 28 legislative proposals during the recent session. But Roanoke sometimes needs Cranwell's assistance on legislative issues, he said.

In a letter to be sent to Cranwell, Bowers wrote:

"We look forward to developing a cordial and working relationship with you as the majority leader in the House, because we believe that cooperation among all area legislators and the city will be in everybody's interest."

Cranwell said Monday he would welcome such a meeting because he agrees that Roanoke Valley officials need to work together.

"I have felt that the healing process after consolidation needs to get started - now that everybody understands how things are going to be," he said.

Cranwell said he thought he already had a good working relationship with city officials, but he would be happy to meet with the legislative committee.

"If there is a problem, I think it is more one of perception than anything else," he said. He said he has tried to expedite the city's legislative proposals that have come before his committees.

Cranwell said he has told City Manager Robert Herbert that he would be willing to work with the city on the proposal for a convention center. He said he has worked with the city and Virginia Tech on the proposed conference center and renovation of Hotel Roanoke.

In recent years, Cranwell and city officials have clashed over the creation of the Roanoke Regional Airport Commission.

Some city officials claim that the legislator threatened to withhold $6 million in state money for a new terminal unless the city agreed to establish a commission with the county to operate the airport.

City Council members also have often complained about the Vinton legislator's role in revising state law in the late 1970s to bar Roanoke and other major cities from annexation.



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