Quantcast

Show advanced options

Select all Clear all

Story
Tease photo

'Yes in God's Backyard' to use church land for affordable housing

Faith congregations across California are responding to the state’s housing crisis by sharing their parking lots with people living in their cars, providing mobile showers for the homeless and joining their neighbors in calling for rent control in their communities.

Story
Tease photo

Trump decries anti-Semitism, racism after D.C. museum visit

President Trump called anti-Semitic violence “horrible” and vowed on Tuesday to take steps to counter extremism.

Story
Tease photo

Henrico DMV office moves to Ashland

A new, larger DMV office is about to open in Ashland, replacing the service center at 9015 Brook Road in Henrico County, which will shut down on Saturday, April 22, it has been announced.

Story
Tease photo

Virginia Children’s Festival May 18

Arts, crafts, storytelling and other activities will highlight the Virginia Children’s Festival from 3 to 7 p.m. Saturday, May 18, at the historic African Burial Ground, 15th and Broad streets, it has been announced.

Story
Tease photo

Justice Center brings technology to inmates

Computer tablets are making it easier for families and inmates at the Richmond Justice Center to stay connected.

Story
Tease photo

Serena Williams not done yet; wins 1st match at U.S. Open

Serena Williams is not ready to say goodbye just yet. Nor, clearly, are her fans.

Story
Tease photo

Michael Moore got last laugh in midterm elections, by Clarence Page

When filmmaker-activist Michael Moore, a Democrat, went against the conventional wisdom that was expecting a Republican “red wave” sweeping the midterm elections, I feared he had become unmoored.

Story
Tease photo

Michigan officials face charges in Flint water crisis

Michigan prosecutors on Tuesday charged four former government officials in Flint, including two city emergency managers, with conspiring to violate safety rules in connection with the city’s water crisis that exposed residents to dangerous levels of lead.

Story
Tease photo

Virginia House-Senate disagreement threatens proposed minimum wage hike

One of the biggest fights in the waning days of the General Assembly involves raising the minimum wage from the current federal $7.25 an hour.

Story
Tease photo

Enrichmond Foundation now owns East End Cemetery

Twenty months after buying historic Evergreen Cemetery with state assistance, a city-created charity has taken ownership of a second neighboring African-American burial ground, East End Cemetery.

Story
Tease photo

City demands East End church pay delinquent taxes

Nearly 30 years ago, Mount Olivet Church went on a buying spree and acquired 12 properties adjacent to the church in the 1200 block of North 25th Street in the East End.

Story
Tease photo

Water consumption is down but not the cost

Why is the cost of drinking water going up?

Story
Tease photo

Personality: Wanda S. Hunt

Spotlight on founder and coordinator of ‘Purple Sunday’ Alzheimer’s awareness program

During the months of June, July and August, Alzheimer’s disease education will be part of church services at congregations around the state.

Story
Tease photo

‘Golden girls’

U.S. women bring home top medals from the Olympics

Red, white and blue added up to a treasure chest of gold at the Tokyo Olympics. Let’s meet the “Golden girls.”

Story
Tease photo

Fade to dark

What a week. From failing test scores to another vigil for a young Black person to yet another police chief’s resignation. So much bad news within just a few days leaves many of us cynical, fearful, speechless and definitely exhausted.

Story
Tease photo

Jury decides 2014 document found in Aretha Franklin’s couch is a valid will

A document handwritten by singer Aretha Franklin and found in her couch after her 2018 death is a valid Michigan will, a jury said Tuesday, a critical turn in a dispute that has turned her sons against each other.

Story
Tease photo

In wake of terror attacks

Kaine: Will you hold on to your principles, faithfulness?

Religious leaders and community members of various faiths exchanged smiles, hugs and well wishes as they made new acquaintances Sunday at Congregation Beth Ahabah near Virginia Commonwealth University. Several hundred people gathered at an event designed to promote religious tolerance and nonviolence. Many wore the head coverings of their religions — Muslim women wearing hijabs, Sikh men in turbans and some Jewish men wearing kippahs. The occasion was the first “Standing Together” faith unity gathering organized by the Virginia Center for Inclusive Communities.

Story
Tease photo

Remembering Coretta Scott King

Coretta Scott King died on Jan. 30, 2006. Yet her legacy is very much alive as a coalition builder, a strategist and a moral voice that confronted detractors but insisted upon nonviolent approaches, such as dialogue, protests and economic boycotts, with the end goal of peaceful reconciliation.

Story
Tease photo

Rudolfo Anaya, ‘godfather’ of Chicano literature, dies at 82

Rudolfo Anaya, a writer who helped launch the 1970s Chicano Literature Movement with his novel, “Bless Me, Ultima,” a book celebrated by Latinos, has died at 82.

Story
Tease photo

City to pay $350,000 settlement in employee overtime lawsuit

City Hall has agreed to collectively pay $57,371 to 11 mostly former city Finance Department employees who alleged they were forced to work overtime without being paid.