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No response from City officials about shelter on North Side

Has City Hall shelved plans to open to additional shelters in North Side for homeless people that would add 90 additional beds for the winter?

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‘Truth Tellers’ chronicles careers of 24 Black women journalists since 1960

A new book calls attention to the Black women editors, columnists and reporters who have brought change since the Civil Rights Movement to the previously mostly male and mostly white newsrooms of mainstream news outlets.

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Hospital donates $30K to Friends of the Homeless

36-year-old food distribution program among city’s largest

Shawnee Hansen knew she had to do something after watching a boy happily eating the meat off a turkey carcass two men had pulled from a trash can to feed him. “I couldn’t bear it,” said Ms. Hansen.

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Climate of fear

Trammell seeks City Jail investigation amid reports of deaths, injuries

As Crishawn Hickman headed to his long-delayed murder trial in the John Marshall Courts Building, deputies escorting him noticed, as one put it, that he appeared to be “walking funny,” the Free Press has been told. A search disclosed why—the 21-year-old had a knife hidden in his underpants that had cut him. The upshot: The trial had to be postponed for two days while he received medical treatment at a nearby hospital.

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Jackson Place, Mosby South advance

A proposal to bring a new hotel, apartments and for-sale townhomes to Jackson Ward now has a green light, as does the redevelopment of another portion of public housing, the 106-unit Mosby South in the East End.

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City reportedly has a $70M general fund surplus

Richmond’s treasury is bulging with unspent dollars, according to two members of City Council.

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2 City-supported shelters temporarily open for homeless

At 80, Gayle Freeland is struggling to keep a roof over her head.

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Juliette Stephens Hamilton, retired nurse, dies at age 104

“Live one day at a time and enjoy that one.” Juliette Stephens Hamilton, one of Richmond’s oldest residents, called that the secret to a long and healthy life.

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New law hopes to quiet loud music, noise

Artist and composer Paul Rucker long has been frustrated by the loud music that blasts into his Downtown residence from nearby clubs. He is among those thrilled that City Council on Monday unanimously approved a major overhaul of the city’s noise ordinance that will allow police officers armed with sound meters to start issuing costly tickets to businesses and residents that are disturbingly loud.

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Matthews, Omega Psi Phi and Armstrong-Walker honored

Joseph E. “Joey” Matthews received City Council’s recog- nition award Monday night for his volunteer efforts to collect and distribute food, clothes and household items to people in Richmond.

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Free van service helps public housing residents get to work

Myra Griffin has found the biggest problem placing people in jobs is transportation.

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‘We can no longer remain silent’

Coalition wants Bon Secours to increase investments in area’s poor communities

Sparked by a New York Times expose, a new coalition hopes to rally the East End community to pressure nonprofit Bon Secours Mercy Health to rebuild critical care services at Richmond Community Hospital and better meet the health needs of low-income communities.

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Midterm elections 2022

Democrats defeat ‘red tide’ forecast by Republicans

The battle for Congress remains up in the air, with vote counting still underway in numerous states and a final determination whether Democrats or Republicans secure a majority in one or both houses potentially still weeks away.

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Voters support abortion rights in several states; legalizing marijuana sees small gains

Voters in three states enshrined the right to an abortion in their constitutions Tuesday night while marijuana legalization won in two more states.

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Trailblazer

Bettie Elizabeth Boyers Cooper’s actions spurred City’s full school desegregation

Bettie Elizabeth Boyers Cooper, who helped end Richmond and Virginia’s determined efforts in the 1950s to maintain racially segregated public schools, has died.

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Report finds profound pandemic impact on Virginia education

Virginia’s teacher workforce is smaller, unhappier and less qualified than before the COVID-19 pandemic, Virginia’s nonpartisan legislative watchdog agency stated in a report Monday that urged the state to boost funding to address the issue.

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City requests applications for Coliseum-area development

City Hall is taking a fresh step in trying to replace the Richmond Coliseum nearly four years after it was shuttered.