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RRHA transfers 204 apartment units to private company

The city’s housing authority is launching a new phase of its plan to turn over all of its public housing to private ownership.

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Petersburg meltdown averted with short-term loan

Petersburg’s once bleak financial situation is starting to brighten. Banking giant Wells Fargo provided a $6.5 million, short-term loan to the city last week that has eased the city’s financial crunch, enabled it to meet payroll through the end of the budget year on June 30 and ensured payment of current bills.

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Confederate rally in Richmond exceeds $500,000 in police spending

“The cost of monitoring First Amendment assemblies is not cheap.” That’s the view of Richmond Police Chief Alfred Durham. And that certainly proved true for Richmond, which spent $570,000 on crowd control and other services on the Sept. 16 protest over the city’s Confederate statues, according to figures the city reported last Friday. Chief Durham was the biggest spender.

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$15M repaving effort underway in city

Cityscape: Slices of life and scenes in Richmond

The promised extra money is starting to flow into repaving streets across the city.

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Gold rush

Urban One wins nod to operate a casino-resort in South Richmond with a contract based on high expectations and promises of payouts

As the Virginia General Assembly considered legislation in winter 2020 to authorize casino gambling in Richmond and four other cities, Alfred C. Liggins III spent time buttonholing House and Senate members.

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Inmate receives conditional pardon by former governor, freeing him after 15 years of inequitable sentence

“Free at last, free at last, thank God Almighty, we are free at last.” For Henry C. Brailey, those words have real meaning after his release from prison a week ago.

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Local screenwriter hopes next stop will be Academy Awards

Henry K. Myers is realizing the dream of every amateur screenwriter – to see his words turned into a film.

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License plate campaign pays homage to Richmond Planet

Reginald L. Carter is within striking distance of scoring another victory for his campaign for Black history and racial justice.

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From gridiron to president

Willard Bailey shaping minds at new college

Willard Bailey, the CIAA legendary college football coach, has a new role in higher education. He has jumped from the gridiron to college president.

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New program helps youths with jobs

Billie Brown knows about youth unemployment. As the founder and owner of a temporary staffing agency that she began almost 16 years ago, she regularly sees young adults who cannot get work because they lack skills, have a felony record or never earned a high school diploma. Dismayed at how little was being done to help them, Ms. Brown and her company, Excel Management Services, have teamed with Saint Paul’s Baptist Church to try to make a dent in the problem.

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RPS employee shot in building slated for closure

Delays in closing the A.V. Norrell school buildings in North Side may have helped put Richmond Public Schools staff who work there in harm’s way Monday.

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3 team up to find new home for Squirrels in Boulevard area

Public pressure to keep baseball on the Boulevard appears to be having an impact. In a new effort, Mayor Dwight C. Jones is teaming up with the Richmond Flying Squirrels and Virginia Commonwealth University to find a site for a new ballpark near The Diamond, but not on the 60 acres of public property the city wants to redevelop.

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City plans public awareness campaign about trash fee exemption

Christine Page rents a house in the 1700 block of North 19th Street, and her monthly utility bill has always included $23.79 for trash and recycling collection. She was surprised to learn that she could apply to the city to remove the fee from the bill without any impact on her service.

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Sources: Mayor Stoney to advance Coliseum project for Downtown

The grand, but still stalled $1.4 billion plan to replace the now-closed Richmond Coliseum and potentially create thousands of new jobs is supposed to include development of nearly 3,000 affordable and market- rate apartments.

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What’s in a name?

Efforts to rename the Lee Bridge rise again, bounded by slave-holding ties

Instead of a slavery-defending general, a key bridge over the James River could soon bear the name of a plantation where enslaved people labored.

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City Council to consider design funding for new George Wythe on Feb. 28

Despite meeting on Valentine’s Day, Richmond City Council passed on an opportunity to end its feud with the Richmond School Board over the size of the proposed replacement for the aged and decrepit George Wythe High School.

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Trammell to introduce collective bargaining ordinance at next City Council meeting

Richmond is poised to consider expanding collective bargaining to city employees.

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City Council OKs expensive NFL training center refinancing

Taxpayers cannot escape paying for the Washington pro football team’s summer training camp, a reluctant Richmond City Council has decided.

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Upset: Challenger ‘Joe’ Morrissey garners Petersburg support to handily beat incumbent Sen. Rosalyn Dance in Tuesday’s primary

Challenger Joseph D. “Joe” Morrissey, proving tougher and more resilient than his critics anticipated, cruised Tuesday to a surprisingly easy victory over incumbent state Sen. Rosalyn R. Dance of Petersburg in a Democratic primary election.

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‘Tomorrow can be better’

Gov. Ralph S. Northam is sworn in as Virginia’s 73rd chief executive

“Virginians didn’t send us here to be Democrats or Republicans. They sent us here to solve problems.” So said Ralph Sherer Northam on Saturday after he was sworn in as Virginia’s 73rd governor with his wife, Pam, and children beside him.