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Drive-thru order comes with $4,500

The surprising story of Richmonder James “J.J.” Minor and the Bojangles’ fried chicken chain now is circulating everywhere the English language is read, thanks to the Internet and social media.

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College student feels new confidence with guide dog

La’Teia Randolph is extra thankful this year. The blind Richmonder now has a guide dog to help her get around — Della, a 2-year-old female Labrador retriever.

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We shall overcome

Charleston church massacre spurs removal of racist symbols

Charleston church massacre spurs removal of racist symbols

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Another Barbara Johns?

Open High students plan citywide walkout to protest lack of funding

Imagine all 5,600 high school students in Richmond walking out to protest the physical conditions of their buildings. Then imagine them overflowing the Richmond City Council chambers a few hours later to bring their concerns to the nine-member governing body.

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Pressure mounts on city voter registrar to resign or be fired

J. Kirk Showalter continues to lead the voter registration operation in Richmond, just as she has for 25 years.

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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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On the way out

Gov. Ralph S. Northam orders removal of 40-foot granite pedestal that held Confederate Robert E. Lee’s statue on Monument Avenue, and for the land to be turned over to the city

When the giant monument of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee went up 131 years ago, fiery Richmond Planet editor John Mitchell Jr. described it as monument that would hand down to future generations “a legacy of treason and blood.”

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RPS officials offer free bus service in bid to boost preschool enrollment

Free bus transportation. That’s the carrot the Richmond School Board is offering in a bid to boost enrollment in its shrinking preschool program called the Virginia Preschool Initiative, or VPI.

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Shift in city procurement practice hurt black-owned businesses

After nearly a decade of using its own pricing list to purchase supplies from local companies and save money, Richmond City Hall last year shifted to using the state’s electronic purchasing system, known as eVA, after Mayor Levar M. Stoney took office.

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Businessman and civic activist Anson L. Bell, 69, dies

Anson Lloyd Bell, a Richmond contractor and businessman who was active in community affairs, has died. Mr. Bell, who crusaded for Black inclusion in city contracts and on other issues, died Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2022. He was 69.

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A resurrection story

Richmond Christian Center climbing back from bankruptcy with entrepreneurial efforts

Richmond Christian Center climbing back from bankruptcy with entrepreneurial efforts

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Possible deal for new horse stable for Richmond Police

New life apparently is being breathed into a plan to build a new stable for the four horses of the Richmond’s Police Department’s Mounted Unit, thanks to an anonymous private donor.

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Sen. Lucas flip-flops in Va. Supreme Court battle

Judge Rossie D. Alston Jr. is still one Senate vote short of winning a General Assembly election that would move him from the Virginia Court of Appeals to the state Supreme Court.

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Council defeats proposal to change how Richmonders vote in elections

Ranked-choice voting — aimed at ensuring that election winners have majority support — has been booted from Richmond.

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Cathy’s Camp razed, but people keep coming during pandemic

Homeless people keep coming despite the destruction last week of Cathy’s Camp, the tent community in Shockoe Valley, and the relocation of its residents to area motels and hotels.

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After winning 2 court cases, Henrico tenant may face a third

‘I pay my rent like clockwork every month. I don’t know why they won’t let me alone.’

Donald J. Garrett is a rare figure among the sea of Richmond-area residents being hauled into court for eviction proceedings.

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Re-entry training program locked out of former school building

The shutdown has come for a Richmond-based program that linked people released from jails and prisons to training for construction jobs.

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Hundreds to benefit from payday loan settlement

Hundreds of low-income Richmond area residents will benefit from the settlement of a lawsuit challenging the lending practices of Advance ‘Til Payday, a company that charges up to 960 percent interest on loans of $100 to $300. The settlement will result in the dismissal of at least 50 garnishment actions and 800 judgments that Advance ‘Til Payday had obtained in court against borrowers who defaulted on the loans, according to Jay Speer of the Virginia Poverty Law Center, which brought the suit.

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Spotty CARE van service leaves riders in limbo

Roderyck Bullock has somewhere to go almost every day, but he doesn’t always make it. His ride sometimes arrives late. Occasionally, it doesn’t show up at all.

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City employees expected to receive 2.5% bonus

City employees are about to be awarded a 2.5 percent Christmas bonus. Richmond City Council is expected to unanimously vote Monday, Dec. 11, to approve the bonus payments. Mayor Levar M. Stoney and his administration also support the bonuses to be paid Friday, Dec.15.