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All results / Stories / Jeremy M. Lazarus

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Tax cut ahead?

City Council to decide

With his highly controversial stadium plan still on hold, Mayor Dwight C. Jones is now seeking to boost his popularity with a familiar politician’s ploy — a tax cut.

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Richmond Christian Center auctioned to Henrico church

The building that housed the bankrupt Richmond Christian Center is going to remain a worship center.

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School Board questions its role in Ashe Center’s site plans

Another battle appears to be looming between City Hall and the School Board.

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New names recommended for Fort Lee, Fort A.P. Hill and Fort Pickett Army bases

The names of slavery-defending Confederate military leaders who fought to destroy the U.S. government could finally start disappearing from military installations.

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System failure

RPS loses thousands of laptops

Richmond Public Schools wasted millions of federal support dollars buying 20,000 extra Chromebook laptop computers it didn’t need after going virtual during the pandemic, an internal audit has found.

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Strategist suggests Richmond voters will support casino funds earmarked for schools

Political strategist Paul Goldman sees a path for Richmond to recover from the stinging political defeat it has suffered at the General Assembly after a bipartisan coalition rejected the state capital city’s plans for a second vote to bring a $565 million casino-resort to South Side.

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Proposed city budget includes help for aging mobile homes and examination of real estate taxes

For the first time, Richmond will help pay for fixing up aging trailers and mobile homes.

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Richmond Ambulance Authority sounds funding alarm

A sea of red ink. That is what the Richmond Ambulance Authority warns it is facing.

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How many homeless people will be sheltered this winter remains unclear

Finding adequate space also an issue, city officials say

City Hall is moving forward in trying to find nonprofits or churches and other faith-based groups with available space to house homeless people, at least during the winter.

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Conservancy turns up small, Black family cemetery on protected land

Nine years after the Civil War and his enslavement ended, Abraham Truman scraped up the money and bought a 40-acre farm plot for his family in the historically African-American Gravel Hill community in Eastern Henrico.

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Marijuana justice groups criticize legalization bill passed by General Assembly

Just wait three years. That’s the message the General Assembly sent after finally passing a bill to legalize recreational marijuana use for those 21 and older.

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Trailblazer

Bettie Elizabeth Boyers Cooper’s actions spurred City’s full school desegregation

Bettie Elizabeth Boyers Cooper, who helped end Richmond and Virginia’s determined efforts in the 1950s to maintain racially segregated public schools, has died.

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City approves funds to temporarily house homeless

The first major cold snap is forecast to hit Richmond this weekend, but City Hall is still struggling to provide shelter for the homeless who have no where to go.

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Collective bargaining vote delayed again

There will be a City Council vote to settle whether to allow city workers to engage in collective bargaining. The only mystery is when it will happen.

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World premiere musical ‘Gabriel’ portrays the statewide insurrection led by a slave

Finally, the long-awaited world premiere of a musical focusing on Gabriel and the slave rebellion he almost pulled off in Richmond 222 years ago is set to go at the Firehouse Theatre next week.

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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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Mayor’s revised police review board proposal gains support

Richmond appears to be moving closer to establishing an advisory Civilian Review Board to make recommendations in cases of alleged police misconduct that result in residents being killed, injured or suffering unwarranted physical or verbal abuse.

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City Council approves creation of Civilian Review Board

Richmond Police officers hit with complaints could soon have a civilian panel reviewing the details. Monday night, City Council capped two years of debate by voting unanimously to approve the creation of a Civilian Review Board, rejecting calls for delay from advocates disappointed at the limited role the eight-member group will have.

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Study shows Richmond and Petersburg can each support a casino

Richmond and Petersburg could both support casinos.

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Creation of police oversight panel among 3 critical items City Council to consider

Richmond City Council is heading to decision time on three significant items on its agenda—creation of a civilian review board to oversee police discipline, collective bargaining for employees and redistricting.