Quantcast

Show advanced options

All results / Stories / Jeremy M. Lazarus

Tease photo

School day care?

Empty public school buildings may be central to city task force plan to help parents with day care as they return to work

Sharonda Robinson hoped against hope that Richmond Public Schools would reopen this fall so her sons, ages 6 and 8, could be in school taking classes while she went to work.

Tease photo

8,000 potential gravesites identified at East End Cemetery using drone and hydrology mapping software

Finding unmarked graves in neglected cemeteries has always been a challenge.

Tease photo

$275K for VSU interim president

Dr. Pamela V. (for Valleria) Hammond is ready to jump into her new role as interim president of struggling Virginia State University.

Tease photo

Ambitious development plan for Diamond District gains city council approval

Done deal. With an 8-0 vote, City Council on Monday approved the projected $2.4 billion Diamond District in North Side that promises a new baseball stadium plus offices, hotels, homes, apartments, retail space, a public park and a gusher of construction and permanent jobs targeted to city residents.

Tease photo

Historic Resources officials make way for Intermediate Terminal building demolition

The state Department of Historic Resources has upheld City Hall’s view that a landmark warehouse in the city’s East End, once a major source of jobs for African-Americans, has no historical value and can be demolished to make way for the modern bistro and restaurant that Stone Brewing Co. wants to build.

Tease photo

Legal weapon

City’s plans for Ashe Center unlikely to win in court, says pro bono lawyer

City Hall would violate state and city laws if it moves to tear down the Arthur Ashe Jr. Athletic Center and sell the site without the permission of the Richmond School Board.

Tease photo

Re-entry training program locked out of former school building

The shutdown has come for a Richmond-based program that linked people released from jails and prisons to training for construction jobs.

Tease photo

Council says ‘no’ to ‘warehouse creep’ proposal

City Council on Monday night rejected a nonprofit housing group’s plan to build a warehouse in South Side to assemble affordable modular replacements for worn-out mobile homes that mostly Latino residents occupy in the city.

Tease photo

RRHA board begins process to redevelop Mosby Court South

Dr. Basil I. Gooden is the new chairman of the Richmond Redevelopment and Housing Authority’s nine-member Board of Commissioners.

Tease photo

Burn notice: Council approves Fire training in park

The Richmond Fire Department won its fight to replace 2 acres of lawn at the Hickory Hill Community Center in South Side with a concrete pad and a fire training facility where recruits can get experience dousing blazes.

Tease photo

Overby-Sheppard Elementary School set for 6-month overhaul

A North Side elementary school is about to get a $4 million overhaul — complementing the housing developments that have begun reshaping the Highland Park community.

Tease photo

Pay them, but not her

RPS spends extra to win bill dispute

The Richmond School Board paid a white law firm $31,000 in legal fees to avoid paying a Black professional’s $27,000 bill for doing consulting work in the case of a disabled student, half of which was to be paid by the state.

Tease photo

Affordable housing for whom?

Next week, City Council plans to declare an affordable housing crisis in Richmond as rents and house prices soar, leaving many with below average incomes unable to afford housing. However, neither the council nor Mayor Levar M. Stoney who has pushed the resolution to be voted on Monday, April 10, plan to mention the ways he and the governing body have quietly reduced funding to support development of housing for families with incomes of $40,000 or less a year.

Tease photo

Republicans file suit to rescind rights restoration to 206,000 Virginians

Democratic Gov. Terry McAuliffe is facing a court fight over his April 22 order restoring voting rights to 206,000 felons who have completed their sentences, including about 40,000 people convicted of violent offenses. In a case filed Monday, Republican leaders in the General Assembly and four voters have asked the Virginia Supreme Court to find the governor acted illegally and to order him to rescind the blanket restoration of rights that allowed the affected individuals to vote, serve on juries and run for office.

Tease photo

HOME to begin eviction diversion program

Richmond’s first ever program aimed at helping people avoid eviction is about to get a home base.

Tease photo

We shall overcome

Charleston church massacre spurs removal of racist symbols

Charleston church massacre spurs removal of racist symbols

Tease photo

Divine sounds: Foote family celebrates gospel radio station's first anniversary

Foote family celebrates gospel radio station’s first anniversary

Richmond radio station WQCN is marking its first anniversary of delivering gospel to fans in the area on 105.3 FM. Better known as “The Choice,” the station is the growing broadcast arm of the 150-member Faith & Love Fellowship Church based on South Side.

Tease photo

City Council recommends big pay raises for city employees

Coming this year: A major pay increase for city employees.

Tease photo

After winning 2 court cases, Henrico tenant may face a third

‘I pay my rent like clockwork every month. I don’t know why they won’t let me alone.’

Donald J. Garrett is a rare figure among the sea of Richmond-area residents being hauled into court for eviction proceedings.

Tease photo

Plans gain steam to rehab old Fulton Gas Works

A four-year-old plan to turn the now vacant Fulton Gas Works in the East End into a modern hub of the city’s gas utility is quietly gaining momentum, although a separate project by Stone Brewing to create a restaurant to complement the company’s beer factory appears to have stalled.