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Let’s get it right

Richmonders have railed in recent years against the deplorable conditions in the city’s aged and decrepit school buildings where city public school students are expected to learn despite conditions that hinder education rather than foster it.

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On the battlefield:

City schools, agencies and government work to find strategies to combat gun violence

South Richmond residents are preparing to bury a mother and her infant daughter, two of the latest victims of a spate of indiscriminate violence that has left families devastated and in tears over the unnecessary loss life.

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Rejected casino group threats legal challenge to city selection process

Dennis Cotto has spent much of his adult life fighting legal battles.

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Personality: Navi Johnson

Spotlight on founder of RVA Black Farmers Market

For many, the COVID-19 pandemic has led to difficult times. For Navi Johnson, it was the impetus for a new public space for African-Americans.

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Funeral traditions changed – maybe permanently – by COVID-19

John E. Thomasson was a hero in his hometown. As a member of the Louisa County Board of Supervisors, he was the first African-American elected to public office in the county. Across 98 years, he built a successful realty company, helped to save mortgages, paid for college scholarships and owned the local funeral home for 53 years, where he oversaw the burials of thousands of Virginians. When he died of an age-related illness on July 22, there was hardly anyone in Louisa County who had not been touched by his life. Other than his wife of more than 65 years, the Rev. Christine Thomasson, there is likely no one who knows his impact better than his successor, D.D. Watson Jr., who was handpicked by Mr. Thomasson to purchase and take over his funeral home business in 2004. And yet upon the death of Mr. Thomasson—a businessman, philanthropist, politician and public servant whose life and work was recognized this year in a proclamation from the Virginia Senate—the largest single gathering in his honor held barely 12 people. That’s because of government-imposed safety restrictions on public gatherings because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

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New city voter registrar brings experience, passion to the job

Keith Balmer will make history Monday, May 10, when he is sworn into a four-year term as Richmond’s new voter registrar amid the surge of work for the June 8 Democratic primary.

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New George Wythe may not happen until 2027, Kamras says

The Richmond School Board voted to establish a community advisory board for the construction of a new George Wythe High School in South Side.

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Free COVID-19 testing

Free community testing for COVID-19 continues.

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Hanover Branch NAACP, others file legal challenge to planned Wegmans distribution center

The battle over a proposed $175 million distribution center that Wegmans Food Markets Inc. wants to build in Hanover County is headed to court.

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Documentary details past and present of AME Church

The African Methodist Episcopal Church has released a short film online about its history that includes an interview with the Rev. Clementa C. Pinckney, the pastor killed in a June 2015 racial attack on his historic Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, S.C., church, in which he talks about the historically Black denomination’s significance.

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Olympic dream remembered

When the 2020 Summer Olympics were postponed because of the pandemic, few understood the athletes’ heartache more than John Christian.

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Jamin Davis to be key building block for Washington

For years now, a sturdy defense has been under heavy construction by the Washington Football Team. Jamin Davis becomes the latest building block on site.

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Celtics’ Jayson Tatum scores 60 points in one game

Jayson Tatum has joined the legendary Larry Bird at the top of one of the Boston Celtics’ all-time lists.

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Track and field fundraiser May 8

The West End Striders and East End Lightning are co- hosting a track and field meet Saturday, May 8, at Maggie L. Walker Governor’s School, 1000 N. Lombardy St.

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Actor Hill Harper to launch Black-owned digital wallet

Richmond will be a stop on a national tour seeking to pump up interest in a new Black-owned financial app for cell phones that is to go live June 1.

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Children paying the price for gun violence

Gun reform has been revisited time after time. It is time now for action to be taken. Gun violence has continued to plague Richmond’s African-American community.

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Richmond to get millions under federal American Rescue Plan package

The American Rescue Plan, which provided a $1,400 check to almost every adult in the country, is about to rain even more money on City Hall.

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Families want answers in latest police shootings in Va. and N.C.

Families in North Carolina and Virginia are still demanding answers from law enforcement authorities fol- lowing separate shootings by sheriff’s departments that left one man dead and another fighting for his life in intensive care.

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Price of new Wythe High School skyrockets to $140M

The price tag to replace aging George Wythe High School has jumped to $140 million, a 40 percent hike from the previous estimate of $100 million.

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Personality: Donald S. ‘Don’ Richards

Spotlight on vice chair of Autism Society of Central Virginia

After decades in broadcasting, Donald S. “Don” Richards is gearing up for a new chapter of community advocacy.