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Personality: Kristin DuMont

Spotlight on co-leader of Richmond Moms Demand Action

Kristin DuMont became involved with Richmond Moms Demand Action, a local volunteer group committed to ending gun violence in the community, in 2017. She says the work of reaching out to local and state officials did not come naturally to her.

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Conducting the future: Burrs holds the baton at UR, Petersburg

Naima Burrs grew up surrounded by music. The Richmond native’s mother is renowned soprano Lisa Edwards-Burrs. Her father, Stacy L. Burrs, is a former CEO of the Black History Museum and Cultural Center, a former director of Venture Richmond and a jazz aficionado.

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Immigration drove white, Asian population growth in U.S. last year

Harris County, Texas gains largest number of Black residents

Without immigration, the white population in the U.S. would have declined last year. Immigration also propelled the expansion of the Asian population, which was the fastest-growing race or ethnic group last year in the U.S., while births outpacing deaths helped propel growth in Hispanic, Black, tribal and Hawaiian populations. Population estimates released June 22 by the U.S. Census Bureau show what drove changes in different race, ethnic and age groups last year, as well as since the start of COVID-19’s spread in the U.S. in April 2020. The country had grown to 333.2 million people by the middle of last year, a 0.4% increase over the previous year, according to the 2022 population estimates.

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Why do so many Black women die in pregnancy?

One reason: Doctors don’t take them seriously

Angelica Lyons knew it was dangerous for Black women to give birth in America.

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A history of abuse, neglect and torture surrounds Black women’s maternity and mortality

For decades, frustrated birth advocates and medical professionals have tried to sound an alarm about the ways medicine has failed Black women. Historians trace that maltreatment to racist medical practices that Black people endured amid and after slavery.

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Good jobs will come from a cleaner economy, by Ben Jealous

My father’s family once operated woolen mills in New England. Those factories no longer exist, across America like 63,000 factories that have shuttered since the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) was passed three decades ago.

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Thousands more prisoners across the US will get free college paid for by the government

The graduates lined up, brushing off their gowns and adjusting classmates’ tassels and stoles. As the graduation march played, the 85 men appeared to hoots and cheers from their families. They marched to the stage – one surrounded by barbed wire fence and constructed by fellow prisoners.

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Leveling up

Monacan’s Olivia Woodson settles in at Auburn

Finally, area high school goalkeepers can take a deep breath. Soccer sensation Olivia Woodson is moving on.

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Angela Bassett to receive honorary Oscar

Angela Bassett may have gone home empty handed at the Oscars in March, but the two-time nominee will be getting a golden statuette this year after all — and in very good company too.

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Hanover residents hopeful after Virginia Supreme Court’s Wegmans ruling

A recent decision by the Virginia Supreme Court means residents are being given a second chance to make their case against a Wegmans distribution center — even though construction on the 1.7 million-square-foot facility located in Ashland is nearing completion.

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Aird defeats Morrissey

Winning 13th Senate District, November’s general election likely a shoo-in

Call it a special birthday present. Just two days before turning 37, Lashrecse D. Aird celebrated in advance Tuesday by putting an election whipping on maverick Democratic state Sen. Joseph D. Morrissey in their head-to-head contest.

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Personality: Larry Williams

Spotlight on 6th Annual Black Pride RVA Weekend planning committee co-chair

An end of college trip in 2014 with a former partner brought Larry Williams to Richmond, but the Black Pride community he found here made him stay.

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Dennis Parker Jr.’s ascension to N.C. State fueled by academics, athletics, family ties

John Marshall High School’s Dennis Parker Jr. ranks among the most talented and decorated basketball players in Richmond history.

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Political newcomer Rae Cousins upsets opponents for House bid

Rae Cousins, a lawyer and fourth-generation Richmonder, handily won Tuesday’s primary in Richmond to become the Democratic nominee for the 79th House of Delegates District. Ms. Cousins, 43, bested 3rd District City Councilwoman Ann-Frances Lambert, 47, and criminal justice crusader Richard Walker, 65, in the their contest in the L-shaped district that is anchored in the East End and takes in portions of South Side and North Side. The district is one of three that includes portions of the city and the only one in which there was a party nomination contest. Incumbent Delegate Betsy B. Carr is unopposed in her bid for

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Swansboro Elementary names auditorium for music teacher

For Wallesa Diane Coleman Jones, teaching elementary schoolchildren to appreciate music has been a labor of love.

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No more drama

The collective sigh of relief sweeping through the newly redrawn state 13th Senate District on Tuesday was palpable.

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Empathy for families with ‘difficult days ahead’

To the Richmond community: My condolences and empathy to families as they face the difficult days ahead without their loved ones.

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Six key points from the scathing report on Minneapolis Police after George Floyd’s killing

The Justice Department on June 16 issued a scathing assessment of Minneapolis Police, alleging that racial discrimination and excessive force went unchecked before George Floyd’s killing because of inadequate oversight and an unwieldy process for investigating complaints.

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A Black preacher, ‘no longer at war with her body,’ on connecting flesh with the divine

Lyvonne Briggs describes herself as “a Black woman spiritual leader who is no longer at war with her body.” Her mission, in her new book, “Sensual Faith,” is to help other women stop being at war with their bodies too.

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Richmond Free Press founders receive City Hall honor and recognition

Black-owned weekly saluted for its ‘leadership, service, dedication and prominence in the community’

Jean P. Boone and the late Raymond H. Boone, founders and publishers of the Richmond Free Press newspaper, received recognition from City Council on Monday night to honor their journalistic contributions to the city.