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City Council to consider design funding for new George Wythe on Feb. 28

Despite meeting on Valentine’s Day, Richmond City Council passed on an opportunity to end its feud with the Richmond School Board over the size of the proposed replacement for the aged and decrepit George Wythe High School.

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HOME to receive $1.1M from landmark multimillion-dollar bias settlement with Fannie Mae

It took six years, but a national mortgage company has finally agreed to accept responsibility for its racial bias in handling foreclosed property.

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Move toward collective bargaining for city employees on pause

Richmond City Council hit the pause button on collective bargaining Monday in a bid to gain answers to questions about the potential cost.

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State of the City

Mayor Levar M. Stoney outlines plans to boost public safety, health, affordable housing, job creation, violence prevention to improve the quality of life for Richmonders

Bigger investments in public safety – including the creation of a gun buyback program as part of a strategic effort to quell the surge in gunfire and violence.

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The Rev. Charles Williams Jr., director of the Office for Black Catholics, dies at 70

The Rev. Charles Williams Jr., who led the Catholic Diocese of Richmond’s Office for Black Catholics for three years, has died.

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Confederate pedestals out

Grass and landscaping to soon replace dead soldiers

Richmond’s streets and parks will soon lose virtually all vestiges of the white-supremacist Confederate statues and monuments that once loomed so large.

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Richmond attorney Rhonda K. Harmon, who challenged Nationwide's redlining policies, has died

Rhonda Michelle King Harmon, a former attorney who helped overturn racist insurance policies that prevented Black homeowners in Richmond and elsewhere from gaining standard coverage for their property, has died.

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Without federal, state dollars, city residents may pay higher sewer bills

Richmond residents could potentially see their bill for sending wastewater to the city’s treatment plant skyrocket to $170 a month or more in the coming years, officials with the city’s Department of Public Utilities are warning.

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RRHA will meet with groups opposed to evictions

So help us. That is Stacey Daniels-Fayson’s response to critics of the Richmond Redevelopment and Housing Authority’s resumption of the eviction process for hundreds of public housing residents who have fallen behind in rent payments.

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Double down

City Council's yes vote is still a gamble for South Side casino

If at first you don’t succeed, ...

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Eyeing state title, John Marshall's Justices rule the courts

John Marshall High’s basketball Justices likely held a winning hand without any outside help this season.

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A vote may soon come on George Wythe High School contract design

The Richmond School Board is poised to award a design contract for a new 1,600-student building to replace aging George Wythe High School in South Side, the Free Press has learned.

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Bonuses arriving for bypassed city employees

Pandemic bonuses of up to $3,000 apiece are on the way to Richmond city employees who were excluded from the first round.

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Housing authority suspends evictions for now

The board of the Richmond Redevelopment and Housing Authority has temporarily halted its administration from filing eviction lawsuits before its next scheduled meeting Feb. 16.

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Fort Lee barbers win strike for full pay

Unionized barbers at Fort Lee and Fort Pickett are again providing military haircuts after winning a prolonged strike that began in July.

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Turning back time

Thousands of people attended last Saturday’s inauguration of Virginia’s new GOP leaders – Gov. Glenn A. Youngkin, Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears and Attorney General Jason Miyares

“The spirit of Virginia is alive and well,” Glenn Allen Youngkin declared as after being sworn in as Virginia’s 74th governor.

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Rayford L. Harris Sr., longtime educator, policymaker, adviser and GOP activist, dies at 97

Rayford Lee Harris Sr., who touched the lives of untold thousands of Virginia students as an educator and policymaker, has died.

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Judge rules pastor improperly fired church trustees, finance committee chair

A Richmond judge ruled Tuesday that the pastor of historic but embattled Fourth Baptist Church in Church Hill acted without proper authority when he fired six members of the church’s Trustee Board and the chair of the Finance Committee 19 months ago.

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Inmate receives conditional pardon by former governor, freeing him after 15 years of inequitable sentence

“Free at last, free at last, thank God Almighty, we are free at last.” For Henry C. Brailey, those words have real meaning after his release from prison a week ago.

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RRHA re-starts eviction process, impacting hundreds of families

More than 700 families now living in Richmond’s public housing communities could be facing eviction in the coming months.