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All results / Stories / Jeremy M. Lazarus

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A.V. Norrell to stay open

The A.V. Norrell Elementary School building in North Side, which was slated for closure, likely is going to fill up again with more school employees.

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GRTC official: No money for transfer station proposed by Navy Hil

GRTC lacks the funding to develop and operate the modern transfer center that is part of the $1.5 billion city and Navy Hill District Corp. plan to replace the Richmond Coliseum and develop nearby blocks, according to the bus company.

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Vernon J. Harris Medical and Dental Center to reopen

A mainstay of health care in Richmond’s East End is reopening after being sidelined for a year of renovation.

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Police officers, city settle overtime lawsuit

City Hall has agreed to pay a bit more than $27,000 to four police officers who claimed they were denied overtime pay while assigned to former Mayor Dwight C. Jones’ security detail.

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Chesterfield apartment complex to change rental policy under discrimination settlement

An apartment complex in Chesterfield County has agreed to change its blanket ban on renting to people with criminal records after being hit on June 4 with a federal lawsuit challenging the policy as a violation of the federal Fair Housing Act.

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Hearing on Coliseum referendum petitions set for Sept. 30

The leader of a drive to allow voters to weigh in on the proposed Coliseum-replacement plan will get a chance to prove he submitted enough signatures to get a referendum on the proposal on the Nov. 5 ballot.

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General Assembly ousts Jamison, welcomes McClenney

Birdie Hairston Jamison has just a bit more than 10 months to preside over the Richmond Traffic Court.

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VSU rejects critical state audit

Virginia State University has politely, but firmly rejected many of the findings in a scathing state audit and ignored others in stoutly defending its financial practices.

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City DPW head quits over Harvard dispute

Since he arrived in 2011, James A. Jackson has pushed for change in the Richmond Department of Public Works. Instead of top-down leadership, he has spearheaded a team approach, worked to replaced outdated equipment and sought to address the backlog of citizen complaints about services.

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Councilwoman Gray crafting new plan on severance pay

Remember the $166,000 in severance packages former Richmond Mayor Dwight C. Jones awarded to four members of his staff as his term ended last December and the $77,000 City Council awarded to three outgoing employees? Remember the vows of incoming council members to reform the way the city handles severance and end-of-service pay for departing employees?

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Trouble doubles

Petersburg’s creditors lining up, suing to get paid

Dironna Moore Belton is counting on a flood of money pouring into Petersburg’s treasury in coming days from residents paying their first quarter property tax bills.

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Petersburg shake-up nets new chief operating officer

Amid crumbling finances, the City of Petersburg has shaken up its government leadership. After firing City Manager William E. Johnson III last week, the seven-member Petersburg City Council handed executive authority to three of its members, including Mayor W. Howard Myers, Ward 5, the city’s titular leader. The shuffle is the City Council’s latest effort to deal with millions of dollars in unpaid bills, a multimillion-dollar revenue shortfall and a malfunctioning water billing system.

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Turnout may prove key in Va. gov. race

Now it’s up to the voters. Tuesday, Nov. 7, is Election Day — when ordinary citizens will troop to polls in Richmond and across Virginia to decide who will become the commonwealth’s 73rd governor and succeed the current chief executive, Democrat Terry McAuliffe. The main choices: Democrat Ralph S. Northam, 58, a pediatrician who specializes in children’s nerve diseases, a military veteran and the current lieutenant governor; and Republican Ed Gillespie, 56, a corporate lobbyist and former Republican Party chairman.

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Dr. Delores R. Greene, longtime educator and former VUU and VSU dean, dies at 86

Dr. Delores Ann Richburg Greene felt the call to be a teacher when she was just 4 years old and in pre-school. She would play school in the backyard of her Petersburg home, where she would provide instruction on reading to her neighborhood friends. From that beginning, Dr. Greene would follow her dream. In a career that spanned 57 years, she rose from a classroom teacher to become a dean in the College of Education at Virginia State University, her alma mater.

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Lee statue removed in U.S. Capitol; injunction remains keeping Monument Avenue statue

The statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee was removed with ease Monday from the U.S. Capitol, but the towering statue of the slavery-defending general will remain on Monument Avenue for now, courtesy of a Virginia Supreme Court ruling.

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Gilpin Court community to undergo major change

The city’s housing authority has begun a search for a master developer to transform Gilpin Court.

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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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GRTC driver John Thrower dies of COVID-19

GRTC is mourning its first death from COVID- 19.

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Timeline outlined for disposal of city-owned Confederate statues

Richmond City Council could vote to dispose of the city’s collection of Confederate statues at the Monday, June 14, meeting, according to a tentative plan for action.

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City utility field technicians miffed about exclusion from city bonuses

Field technicians from the Richmond Department of Public Utilities are upset that City Hall failed to include them among the first responders, such as police officers and firefighters, who received pandemic bonuses of up to $3,000 each during the holidays.