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City sets up $6M eviction assistance plan to aid during COVID-19

Janice Lacy had a job she loved transporting elderly and disabled people. But then COVID-19 hit and she was laid off in mid-March after the state of emergency was declared.

Who should be on Monument Avenue?

Who should go on the pedestals along Monument Avenue once the Confederate statues are removed?

City attorney cautions officials against any emergency order to remove Confederate statues

Calls for City Hall to remove the last three city-owned Confederate statues on Monument Avenue before people are injured or killed trying to pull them down appeared to die this week after Interim City Attorney Haskell C. Brown III cautioned …

City Council starts process to rename Lee Bridge and other Confederate memorials

Legal tangles continue to block removal of state-owned statues honoring Confederate Robert E. Lee on Monument Avenue and in the State Capitol.

Juneteenth being recognized as state, city holiday

On June 19, Virginia will see the first steps of a new celebration for the Commonwealth.

Booted out

A year ago, new Richmond Police Chief Will Smith was extolled as the best thing since sliced bread when it came to leading 754 sworn officers in the fight against crime.

Court hearing Thursday on Confederate statue removal

Can Gov. Ralph S. Northam use his authority to remove the huge, state-owned statue of traitorous and slavery-defending Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee from Monument Avenue?

LGBT activists see had work ahead despite U.S. Supreme Court victory

LGBT rights activists are elated by a major U.S. Supreme Court victory on job discrimination, and hope the decision will spur action against other biases faced by their community despite Trump administration efforts to slow or reverse advances.

RPS to review relationship with Richmond Police, consider reopening options

Two Richmond School Board members urged the administration to dissolve the school system’s relationship with the Richmond Police Department, eliminating the school resource officers who patrol the city’s high schools, middle schools and alternative school.

Young people advocate for bigger goals and lasting change

Downtown echoed with the sound of cheers last Saturday as more than a hundred young people and their families gathered for the RVA Youth Rally at the Maggie L. Walker statue and shared their ideas for building a better future.

COVID-19 testing

The Richmond and Henrico County health districts are offering free community testing for COVID-19.

VSU facing possible $26M deficit, enrollment drop

Virginia State University has become a prime example of the financial hits historically black colleges and universities are taking because of the coronavirus.

City voter registrar to host June 22 ‘Drive Up, Drop Off!’

Early voting in Richmond is jumping in popularity ahead of the Tuesday, June 23, party primary, and city Voter Registrar Kirk Showalter is taking an extra step to ensure mail-in ballots get counted.

40 candidates throwing hat in ring for City Council, School Board seats

Contests are shaping up in Richmond for seven City Council seats and six School Board seats.

SCC bans most utility cutoffs until Aug. 31

Virginians who have fallen far behind in paying their electric bills have gained a two-month reprieve from disconnections.