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Richmond fireman Rodney Jermaine Coles, 49, dies

The Richmond Fire Department has announced the death of a 15-year veteran, Rodney Jermaine “Cup” Coles.

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16th Annual Richmond Folk Festival comes alive virtually Oct. 9 through 11

The 16th Annual Richmond Folk Festival, a celebration of music and culture from around the globe, will take place virtually Oct. 9 through 11.

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Secure health info profiles can help first responders in emergencies

Richmond residents can create a digital health profile that paramedics and other emergency personnel can access after a health emergency strikes, the city Department of Emergency Communications has announced.

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Capital City Kwanzaa festival to go virtual beginning Dec. 26

Like many other holiday events, the Richmond area’s largest Kwanzaa festival is going virtual and also will provide evening shows online during the full seven days of the holiday that begins Saturday, Dec. 26, it has been announced.

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City police, firefighters seek $8.9M for simpler, more competitive pay plan

The Richmond Fire Department is so short of trained manpower that it plans to impose mandatory overtime later this month to ensure adequate coverage for fires and medical emergencies, firefighters told Richmond City Council on Monday night.

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Prison gerrymandering hurts black poliical power by Marc H. Morial

“When districts with prisons receive enhanced representation, every other district in the state without a prison sees its votes diluted. And this vote dilution is even larger in the districts with the highest incarceration rates. Thus, the communities that bear the most direct costs of crime are therefore the communities that are the biggest victims of prison-based gerrymandering. The Census Bureau’s decision to count incarcerated people in the wrong place interferes with equal representation in virtually every state.” — Prison Policy Initiative, The Prison Gerrymandering Project

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Coliseum project expected to be key in mayor’s State of the City address

The currently stalled $1.4 billion plan to have Richmond taxpayers build a new and bigger Richmond Coliseum as a way to attract new development to blocks near City Hall is anticipated to be a centerpiece of Mayor Levar M. Stoney’s second State of the City speech.

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Free students from burden of college debt

Columnists

The reaction — shock, joy, disbelief, euphoria — revealed the importance of billionaire Robert F. Smith’s stunning gift, when he announced unexpectedly that he would pay off the college debts of Morehouse College students graduating this year. His gift literally changed the prospects and the lives of the vast majority of those 396 graduates.

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Work begins in Creighton Court

Work is finally underway to restore heat in 12 buildings in the Creighton Court public housing community, a failure of a basic service that has come to symbolize the deteriorating state of Richmond’s “public housing stock.”

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Operation Bold Blue Line

Youngkin plans to reduce homicides, shootings with more police, higher pay

What’s the solution to the spate of shootings and violence that appears to be on the upswing in Richmond and across the state?

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Changing the trajectory

RRHA ushering in new initiatives for jobs, health and safety

Steven B. Nesmith promised to transform the operation of Richmond’s public housing and the opportunities for residents when he assumed leadership of the authority last fall.

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Coffee shop business grinds to a halt

A combination coffee and bike shop was supposed to be a first step in breathing fresh life into a neighborhood business strip in North Side. But four months after the ceremonial, high-profile ribbon-cutting, only the nonprofit bike shop remains in operation at 10 E. Brookland Park Blvd. — and just a few days a week.

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Hurricanes and public policy

Hurricane Harvey did everything people said it would do and more. It either drowned or swallowed everything it touched in Corpus Christi, Houston and Beaumont, Texas, the Gulf Coast of Louisiana and a bunch of other places. Already, estimates say that Harvey may be our nation’s costliest disaster to date, costing at least $190 billion, or about 1 percent of our gross domestic product. 

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Court moves closer to declaring Va. law unconstitutional linking court fines to driver’s license suspensions

For more than two decades, people who cannot pay court fines and costs in Virginia automatically have had their driver’s licenses suspended.

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New boss at VSU

Hampton provost to take reins

Pamela V. Hammond is on track to become the first woman to lead Virginia State University in the school’s 132-year history, the Free Press has learned.

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$2.1M federal grant to help acquire new riverfront parkland

City Hall and a regional conservancy group are on track to receive a $2.1 million grant to support the expansion of park space along the James River.

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Housing group acquires Church Hill property for project

A former church social services center known as Citadel of Hope is to be the centerpiece for a new affordable housing development in Church Hill.

1 vendor? ‘This is ridiculous!’

Re “Only 1 black-owned food vendor at NFL training camp,” Free Press July 27-29 edition: Only one black food vendor at the NFL training camp in Richmond? This is ridiculous!

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FDA finalizes rule expanding availability of abortion pills

The Food and DrugAdministration on Tuesday finalized a rule change that broadens availability of abortion pills to many more pharmacies, companies.

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City electoral board recruiting 200 new election officers

In anticipation of the November elections, the Richmond Electoral Board is recruiting 200 people to increase the number of sworn officers of election at city polls.