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Jeremy M. Lazarus

Stories by Jeremy M.

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Youngkin announces affordable housing loans

The state will lend more than $18 million to create 10 affordable, income-restricted housing developments in the Richmond area, Gov. Glenn A. Youngkin has announced.

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Bon Secours opening new South Side health clinic

Bon Secours is opening a new community health clinic in South Side to serve uninsured children and adults, although new nonprofits already operate similar clinics nearby.

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Enrichmond groups may receive City Hall funding

City Hall has tucked $250,000 into that proposed 2023-24 budget that could help dozens of nonprofits groups that lost money when the Enrichmond Foundation collapsed last year.

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Gandy name may be eliminated by Hanover School Board

The Hanover School Board is moving to eliminate the name of John M. Gandy, the only Black person for whom a county school is named.

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Richmond jazz legend has new release

William F. ‘Bill’ McGee has performed with The O’Jays, Fred Wesley, Patti LaBelle and more

Richmond-based jazz legend and civil rights leader William F. “Bill” McGee is releasing his latest CD, “Tree of Life,” Friday, March 17, through music streaming services and the website he owns and operates, 804jazz.com.

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Bettye Jean Branch Bragg, former Head Start aide, dies at age 80

Bettye Jean Branch Bragg touched the lives of hundreds of Richmond children during her 34 years as a teacher’s aide in Head Start, a program to prepare 3 and 4-year-olds for kindergarten and higher grades.

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Special education troubles continue for Virginia

VDOE labeled ‘deficient’ in its efforts to curtail learning loss

The Virginia Department of Education continues to shirk its responsibility to ensure students with mental and emotional disabilities secure a free, appropriate public education, or FAPE in educational jargon, according to the U.S. Department of Education.

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City Council approves solar program grant

A nonprofit group that has sought to prepare people to work in the burgeoning solar power field has gained financial help from City Hall.

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Richmond city attorney to retire

City Attorney Haskell C. Brown III will immediately leave City Hall’s top legal post in the wake of his arrest for drunken driving, the Free Press has learned.

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RRHA’s eviction rate increases

Housing unit applies ‘tough love’ to collect tenants’ back rent

Richmond’s public housing landlord continues to proceed more slowly than private landlords in seeking to oust residents who have built up large, unpaid rent balances.

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Malinda S. Jones, who worked to spread faith, dies at 88

For 24 years, Malinda Smith Jones organized weekly revivals in Richmond in church parking lots and other open spaces from June through August.

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Council members link truancy to increased violence involving city youths

Richmond Public Schools needs to do more to ensure students are in class rather than roaming the streets, according to concerned members of City Council.

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Richmond Fire Department blazing through recruiting

When it comes to recruiting, the Richmond Department of Fire and Emergency Services stands head and shoulders above the rest of the city’s public safety departments.

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Janet Rainey retires after 47 years of keeping records vital

Keeping records of the births, deaths, marriages and divorces that occur in Virginia may seem like dull work. Don’t tell that to Janet M. Rainey.

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Stoney’s $3B proposal

Funding designed to make Richmond more liveable, despite increased gas, water bills

Record pay increases for Richmond city employees, along with hikes in spending on youth programming, affordable housing, public education and street paving.

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American Federation of Government Workers union officials removed

Turmoil in the 2,500-member union representing workers at the Richmond Veterans Administration Medical Center in South Side is offering a cautionary tale for city employees who are now in the process of unionizing.

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Henrico woman’s invention provides clearer thermometer reads

Where do ideas for inventions come from? For Henrico County resident Casaundra L. Pugh, the eureka moment came during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic.

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DPU expects to soon restart disconnection of services

Thousands of Richmond families could lose water service, sewerage and/or natural gas service in the coming months for failing to pay their bills.

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Karl E. Bren, housing advocate, dies at 78

Tennessee transplant Karl Ellis Bren is being remembered for his influence and impact on affordable housing, environmental policy and homelessness during his 38 years in Richmond.

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Bagby wins ‘firehouse’ primary in quest for Senate seat

Henrico Delegate Lamont Bagby has made a fast start in his quest to succeed Jennifer L. McClellan in the state Senate.

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Embattled RPS employee continues fight for her job

A 14-year Richmond Public Schools teacher and social worker is battling a second attempt to fire her — this time for failing to show up to work in a position that apparently never was offered to her.

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All adjourned

Lawmakers end session with lean budget and no mention of casino

Richmond casino advocates rejoiced as the General Assembly adjourned without blocking the city’s authority to hold a second referendum in November on whether the state’s capital city should host a casino-resort.

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Emergency communications graduates 13 dispatchers to improve services

More dispatchers have joined Richmond’s 911 staff, reducing vacancies in a critical element of public safety.

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Council raises percentage of vehicle tax owners must pay

Richmond vehicle owners can expect to see bigger personal property tax bills for their cars and trucks this year.

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Environmental Film Festival multiple showings, venues

The RVA Environmental Festival will feature 21 feature films during its upcoming two-week run, with all films free and open to the public.

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Labor unions ready to represent City employees

City Hall is closer to having four unions represent employees — although two unions are now facing off in a bid to represent the city’s 475 labor and trades workers.

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City names new HR director

City Hall has named Tyrome Alexander director of human resources as part of efforts to rebuild the department and rev up efforts to recruit and retain employees. Mr. Alexander, director of human resources for Toledo, Ohio, for the past four years, will take over Monday, Feb. 27.

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North Side health hub planned

A nonprofit pharmacy and offices for medical specialists and behavioral health and job development services could be coming to a former Bank of America building in North Side.

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Delegate Jeff Bourne to leave legislature

After six years in the legislature, Delegate Jeffrey M. Bourne wants to spend more time with his family rather than run for a fourth two-year term in the House of Delegates or seek a Richmond state Senate seat.

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House Republicans kill two historic resolutions

Two resolutions expressing profound regret for past wrongs to Black people in Virginia have been killed in the Republican-dominated House of Delegates.

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Victory

Jennifer L. McClellan elected Virginia’s first Black congresswoman

“I’m ready to fight for you in Congress for as long as you’ll have me,” State Sen. Jennifer L. McClellan declared Tuesday night.

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Lucille A.B. Roane, voting proponent, former detective, dies

Richmond voter advocate and former city police detective Lucille Aurelia Brown Roane has died. Mrs. Roane, who was the first Black president of the Richmond Metropolitan Area Chapter of the League of Women Voters and the third Black woman to serve on Richmond’s police force, succumbed to illness Wednesday, Feb. 8, 2023. She was 94.

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Leroy Mason, a voice for prison reform, dies at age 83

Leroy Mason is being remembered for helping to change the Virginia prison system where he spent most of his adult life and for helping other prisoners make a successful transition after their release.

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Approval of budget amendments before state lawmakers adjourn still uncertain

For the first time in two decades, the Virginia General Assembly could adjourn Saturday, Feb. 25, without approving amendments to the current two-year budget, a potential boon for Richmond’s casino backers.

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3 candidates vie for McClellan’s seat

The race to replace Congresswoman-elect Jennifer L. McClellan in the state Senate could be decided this weekend, with a quick Democratic firehouse primary or convention to choose between three candidates. Details were unsettled at Free Press deadline.

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Wilson A. Seaborn succumbs at 76

Wilson Alexander “Bopper” Seaborn loved being an educator.

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City’s annual financial report shows $35 million surplus

City Hall has completed its annual financial report, although it comes three months behind schedule and the first to come in late since 2016.

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Enrichmond’s remaining assets headed for receivership, sources say

A deal that could resolve issues related to the collapsed Enrichmond Foundation is in the works, the Free Press has learned.

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William L. Prentiss Jr., local and regional band director, musician and educator, dies at 58

William Leon “BB” Prentiss Jr., who molded thousands of student musicians as the director of high school marching bands in Richmond, Chesterfield County, Norfolk and four other localities, has died.

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A race to the finish

4th Congressional District voters will choose McClellan or Benjamin on Feb. 21

Jennifer L. McClellan’s campaign to become the first Black woman to represent Virginia in Congress will culminate next week in a special election she is heavily favored to win — and most aptly during Black History Month.

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VUU’s tower sign stays; scooter rentals advance

Virginia Union University can keep its logo shining at night from the top of a historic 60- foot tower on its campus.

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Reapply

Most of City’s HR employees’ jobs no longer guaranteed - ‘We’ve been told our department is the heartbeat of City Hall, but we’ve been left in the dark’

Richmond continues to struggle to fill vacant positions in multiple City Hall departments, ranging from police to finance. The situation could soon be more difficult as the city’s key recruiting and employee services department, Human Resources, undergoes upheaval.

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City seeks to battle climate, continue using fossil fuel

When it comes to battling climate change, Richmond wants to reduce public and private emissions of greenhouse gases while still allowing its natural gas utility to keep pump- ing out fossil fuel to power homes and buildings.

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Senate committee’s ‘no’ vote for Morrissey casino bill may mean ‘yes’ for Richmond

With two weeks to go in the 2023 General Assembly session, Richmond appears to be on track to retain the right to hold a second vote on hosting a casino in November. While it could all change, Richmond gained much needed help from a slim majority of the Senate Finance Committee. Last week, the committee voted 8-7 to kill Petersburg Democratic state Sen. Joseph D. “Joe” Morrissey’s bill to add the Cockade City to the list of cities allowed to have a casino and authorize that city to host a referendum before Richmond made a second attempt to get voters to approve after a majority rejected a casino plan in 2021. If the majority holds in the Senate Finance Committee, the same fate would await an identical bill that Petersburg Repub- lican Delegate Kim Taylor successfully pushed through the House on Tuesday. Petersburg believed it had a good chance to win after sign- ing an agreement with The Cordish Companies of Baltimore to deliver a casino and related developments worth $1.4 bil- lion. Despite the setback, that city is still is likely to hold a November referendum seeking approval from its voters for the Cordish proposal. Richmond is not guaranteed to retain the right to hold a referendum. With Gov. Glenn A. Youngkin seeking to lift up Petersburg, the Free Press has been told that some of those who opposed Sen. Morrissey’s bill in the committee could use the Petersburg casino measure as a bargaining chip when the House and Senate conferees meet to finalize the budget. A year ago, after Sen. Morrissey’s bill appeared to be dead after losing 9-7 in the Finance Committee, budget language re- vived it. The legislature followed Sen. Jennifer L. McClellan’s

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A new George Wythe High School will cost a record $86,111 per student, data show

The cost of replacing George Wythe High School has ballooned to $154.6 million, far more than anticipated.

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City jail deputy shortages continue

“This feels like an emergency situation. It feels like we are in a crisis.”

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Rail agency begins historic cemetery review for estimated 22,000 souls

It took nine months, but the Federal Railroad Administration is keeping its promise to take a fresh look at a historic Black cemetery in Richmond and its potential impact on proposed rail improvements between Richmond and Washington.

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Push for rental inspection program appears to gain traction

Properties yielding high-volume complaints, code violations would be targeted

Maybe the third time is the charm when it comes to a rental inspection program for Richmond.

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Capital of compassion

Mayor Stoney’s upbeat agenda: Increased home ownership, public safety, enhanced learning

As he launched his seventh year in office, Mayor Levar M. Stoney painted a rosy picture of a thriving city “filled with promise and hope ... and purpose” Tuesday in delivering his State of the City address.

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Conservancy buys New Market segment where Black troops attacked Confederates

Another 49-acre parcel of a Civil War battlefield in Eastern Henrico County in which Black troops played a major role is now protected from development.