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All results / Stories / Jeremy M. Lazarus

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Community advocate raises concerns about City’s new Confederate shrine

Even as Mayor Levar M. Stoney and City Council revive a citizen commission to help Richmond eliminate slavery-defending Confederate names from streets and bridges, the city Department of Public Utilities has created a new shrine to fallen Civil War rebels.

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City Council to deal with budget deficit

Mayor Dwight C. Jones wants Richmond City Council to allow him to tap the city’s piggy bank to keep red ink from staining the city’s books.

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Artist William R. ‘Junie Red’ Johnson Jr. succumbs at 70

“Junie Red” cut steel for a living. But in his free time, the Richmond native let his creative juices flow in transforming metal pieces into abstract sculptures and painting a variety of subjects, most notably imagined landscapes of other worlds.

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Free insurance for released inmates

Inmates being released from the Richmond City Justice Center will leave with free health insurance, Sheriff Antionette V. Irving announced Wednesday.

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VUU president accused of fraud

Dr. Hakim J. Lucas was supposed to be the ideal fit when Virginia Union University’s board named the 40-year-old as the historic institution’s 13th president in August.

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Henrico County man fighting eviction will soon have his day in court

Donald J. Garrett could find out within a week whether he will keep the Eastern Henrico apartment he has lived in since 2011.

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New Fulton program helps youths develop skills for jobs, money

As a full-time city recreation specialist, Wyatt Kingston sees plenty of Richmond youths who need and want to make money to help their families.

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Black businesses feeling left out

Too many black-owned businesses are feeling left out of a booming Richmond economy.

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Maggie Walker statue project almost ready to roll

It’s official. No tree will overshadow the future Downtown statue of Richmond civic and business leader Maggie L. Walker. The Richmond Planning Commission this week ended the debate over the rare live oak tree that now stands at Broad and Adams streets and Brook Road.

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SCC bans most utility cutoffs until Aug. 31

Virginians who have fallen far behind in paying their electric bills have gained a two-month reprieve from disconnections.

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Environmental Film Festival multiple showings, venues

The RVA Environmental Festival will feature 21 feature films during its upcoming two-week run, with all films free and open to the public.

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State elections board investigating allegations involving city Electoral Board’s handling of Nov. 3 election

Did theDemocratic-controlled Richmond Electoral Board break state law in trying to produce results after the Nov. 3 election amid challenges from COVID-19?

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Study may help reverse shut out of Black businesses from city contracts

City Hall spends hundreds of millions of dollars a year to buy goods and services and pay for construction and renovation of its buildings, pipelines and other infrastructure. But only a tiny fraction of that money is spent with Black- and minority-owned companies.

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Jennifer McClellan and Lamont Bagby likely contenders for vacant U.S. House seat

Two Richmond-area Democratic members of the General Assembly are preparing to run for the vacant 4th Congressional District seat, the Free Press has learned.

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Essex Village flunks HUD inspection

After years of complaints, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development is finally reacting to the deteriorating condition of Essex Village, the largest subsidized housing complex in Henrico County.

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Thumbs up: Circuit court OKs casino referendum for Nov. 7 ballot

Voters have the power to change South Side’s ‘economic trajectory,’ says Mayor

Richmond voters are all but certain to have a second chance to decide whether the city should host a casino resort.

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New regulations to help people with sickle cell anemia

It’s official. Sickle cell anemia sufferers now can get high doses of potentially addictive pain medications without any limitations in Virginia. The treatment exemption for people who live with the pain from the genetic blood disorder — mostly African-Americans — became effective when the state Board of Medicine’s new regulations governing physician use of opioids were published in the Virginia Administrative Code earlier this month.

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4 contenders in open sheriff’s race

Four months ago, Antionette V. Irving made the headlines with her stunning upset of longtime Richmond Sheriff C.T. Woody Jr. in the Democratic primary.

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National NAACP suspends Frank J. Thornton, Henrico Branch president

In an extraordinary action, national NAACP President Derrick Johnson has suspended for a year the membership of Frank J. Thornton, president of the Henrico Branch NAACP and son of Frank Thornton, chairman of the Henrico County Board of Supervisors.

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Giving sanctuary?

Mayor Stoney stops short of designating Richmond a ‘sanctuary city’

Richmond Mayor Levar M. Stoney is taking a cautious centrist approach in addressing the uproar over national immigration policy.