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Richmond Free Press founders receive City Hall honor and recognition

Black-owned weekly saluted for its ‘leadership, service, dedication and prominence in the community’

Jean P. Boone and the late Raymond H. Boone, founders and publishers of the Richmond Free Press newspaper, received recognition from City Council on Monday night to honor their journalistic contributions to the city.

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RPS offers plan to boost student literacy

Nearly half of all Richmond students cannot read proficiently when they enter high school, leading to high dropout rates and a host of other ills, Richmond Public Schools acknowledges.

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City Council gives greenlight to casino project

Richmond easily leaped the first hurdle in its quest to become a casino city — City Council approval.

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Virginia is poised to eliminate the death penalty

The death penalty has been a staple of Virginia law since the first English settlers arrived in Jamestown.

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2nd District surprise

Katherine L. Jordan declared winner of City Council seat after election night miscount

Katherine L. Jordan is in, and Tavarris J. Spinks is out.

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City registrar takes heat for delay in opening satellite voting locations

Keith G. Balmer, Richmond’s new voter registrar, was rushing to start early in-person voting next week at two satellite locations—City Hall in Downtown and the Hickory Hill Community Center in South Side.

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State NAACP, others lodge criticism of proposed redistricting lines

Flawed data and too little assurance of fair representation for Black voters in Richmond, Hampton Roads and other sectors of the state.

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Rev. Clifford B. Chambliss Jr. dies at 81

The Rev. Clifford Boss Chambliss Jr. was just 25 when he was tapped to lead a new job training initiative that more senior Black min- isters were organizing to help people find work and escape poverty.

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Mayor to propose $35M to fix schools

Mayor Dwight C. Jones will propose spending $35 million to pay for major fixes for Richmond’s decaying school buildings when he delivers his two-year budget plan to City Council. While the mayor is keeping mum, Norman Butts, the city’s chief financial officer, disclosed at a City Council committee meeting Mayor Jones’ plan to address school maintenance in the budget he is scheduled to present Friday, March 13. Mr. Butts, who is involved in the budget preparation process, described the impending proposal as “a high priority” for the mayor.

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Election Tuesday

Candidates in final swing

Now it’s time for the voters to speak. Tuesday, Nov. 3, is Election Day.

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Coalition to City Council: Slow your roll on rapid transit

Slow down the rush to install bus rapid transit (BRT) in Richmond and take the time to ensure that the service will not become an expensive boondoggle.

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Chief Durham decries drop in police force

Richmond Police Chief Alfred Durham is tired of hearing he should be doing more to stem the bloodshed in Richmond. He hears that refrain every time there’s another killing — and there have been 52 already this year, up nearly 27 percent from a year ago when 41 people were reported slain.

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Finally — City Council ready to vote on new budget May 15

Veteran Richmond police officers and firefighters are in line for major raises after July 1 in a bid to slow their departure to surrounding localities that pay more.

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City Council continues to wrestle over budget

More than 60 people trooped to the microphone Monday to plead with Richmond City Council not to cut programs they need.

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GRTC board fires CARE van company

Cora J. Dickerson’s complaints about the CARE van service that GRTC provides to elderly and disabled riders have produced unexpected results.

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Unsold food is ‘a godsend’

Boxes of tomatoes, peppers and other fruits and vegetables fill four tables in the basement social hall at Zion Baptist Church on South Side, creating the look of a small grocery store. “This is a pretty small load,” said John Thombs, who had brought the cornucopia to the church at 2006 Decatur St., where his wife, Betty, set it up with a few helpers.

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Meet the Morrisseys

Attorney Joseph D. “Joe” Morrissey took a break last weekend from his campaign to be Richmond’s next mayor to wed Myrna Warren, the young woman he went to jail for 17 months ago.

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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.

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Dr. Oliver W. ‘Duke’ Hill Jr., retired VSU professor, administrator and researcher, dies at 70

While his celebrated attorney father devoted his life to using the law to break down racial barriers, Dr. Oliver White Hill Jr. focused his attention on eliminating racial disparities in education.

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Mayor, Navy Hill officials try to sweeten the pot for $1.5B Coliseum plan approval

Can a series of revisions save the massive $1.5 billion Coliseum replacement and Downtown redevelopment plan that for months has appeared to be headed for rejection by Richmond City Council?