Quantcast

Show advanced options

All results / Stories / Jeremy M. Lazarus

Tease photo

City housing director, church leaders discuss shelter options

$3M on the table for homeless

Ninth District City Councilman Michael J. Jones hopes a network of churches can be developed to provide shelter for the homeless during inclement weather, particularly during winter cold.

Tease photo

City OKs plan for toothless commission to keep tabs on utilities

Also, owning big cats, reptiles, bears and wolves is a ‘no’

City Council is on track to create the city’s first Public Utilities & Services Commission to review issues involving public utilities and pass a modified ban on lions, tigers, alligators and other “exotic or wild animals.”

Tease photo

Former City Councilman Chuck Richardson tells all in new book, ‘Cease Fire! Cease Fire!’

He was the man called Chuck when he served on Richmond City Council.

Tease photo

Richmond area toy drives and distribution

Christmas drives are underway to try to ensure that children in struggling families receive gifts.

Tease photo

Nicole Jones appointed as Michael Jones’ interim replacement on City Council

Richmond School Board member Nicole Jones has received a big boost to her campaign for the 9th District City Council seat.

Tease photo

RRHA reviewing new sites to relocate Fay Towers

The Frederic A. Fay Towers once again seem to be upholding the city housing authority’s reputation for slow-moving development projects. Instead of breaking ground last summer as promised, the Richmond Redevelopment and Housing Authority is still struggling to determine the site where it will build a replacement for the aging high-rise in Gilpin Court, just north of Downtown.

Tease photo

Woodland, Evergreen cemeteries for sale

A Richmond foundation is pursuing the purchase of two historic, but privately held African-American cemeteries, the Free Press has learned.

Tease photo

New Church Hill grocery gets green light

Richmond City Council cleared the way Monday for a variety of new developments, including a new grocery store in Church Hill, after listening to activists lobby for expanding a slavery memorial site in Shockoe Bottom.

Tease photo

Several candidates support larger park plan

The small Lumpkin’s Jail site could be expanded into a larger memorial park remembering Richmond’s role in slavery after Mayor Dwight C. Jones leaves office, according to advocates for the expanded site.

Tease photo

Developer interest in Coliseum and Downtown persists despite claims

Developer interest in the vacant Richmond Coliseum and Downtown real estate near it appears to be alive and well.

Tease photo

City Council votes to expand bulk and brush pickup

Richmond residents can now dispose of used mattresses, old sofas, broken chairs and worn-out kitchen tables, along with brush and tree limbs from their yards, at no additional charge. A divided Richmond City Council voted 5-4 Monday night to expand the bulk and brush program to include items that previously were banned.

Tease photo

38-year-old scientist crosses into the realm of preserving historic African-American cemetery

Woodland Cemetery, the burial place of humanitarian and tennis great Arthur Ashe Jr. and thousands of other African-Americans, is looking spiffier, thanks to the dogged persistence of one man, John William Joseph Slavin.

Tease photo

State backs Dominion Energy plan for electric school buses by 2030

Gov. Ralph S. Northam announced Tuesday that the state would contribute $20 million to help replace diesel-powered school buses with cleaner, but more expensive electric buses in Richmond and across the state.

Tease photo

Conservancy turns up small, Black family cemetery on protected land

Nine years after the Civil War and his enslavement ended, Abraham Truman scraped up the money and bought a 40-acre farm plot for his family in the historically African-American Gravel Hill community in Eastern Henrico.

Tease photo

Teen shootings raise questions about school attendance

Another shooting involving Richmond students has once again focused attention on the high level of truancy the city schools experience.

Tease photo

Take them down

The UR Black Student Coalition is demanding the University of Richmond remove names of racists from two buildings on West End campus

The University of Richmond is facing accusations of supporting white supremacy as the result of its plan to keep a building named for its slave-holding first president and another named for a newspaperman who championed segregation and Black oppression.

Tease photo

Environmentalist Dr. Charles K. Price dies at 82

Dr. Charles Kemper Price, who led the effort to transform an ignored North Side area long used as a dumping ground into a walking and biking trail and spearheaded efforts to preserve natural areas in Richmond, has died.

Tease photo

City wins $11M grant from Mellon Foundation for heritage center

Richmond has scored an $11 million grant to help launch the long-stalled Shockoe Heritage Campus, whose key purpose is to remember Richmond’s role as a center of the slave trade before the Civil War.

Tease photo

Operation Streets founder calls recreation programs the key to ending youth violence

On the campaign trail, Richmond Mayor Levar M. Stoney promised to beef up after-school programs and recreational opportunities for youths.

Tease photo

New development, residents behind city’s housing value jump

The value of property is climbing in Richmond, most notably in areas such as Church Hill, Blackwell and Highland Park that were once stigmatized as less desirable because they were predominantly African-American and low income.