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Transit union calls for assaulted GRTC driver to be reinstated

GRTC is facing pushback for firing a driver who subdued a passenger after he refused to don a mandatory mask and hit the driver on the arm when he called for assistance.

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Cary C. Mitchell, clothing designer to athletes and a Richmond legacy sports backer, dies at 62

Top Black athletes found their way to Richmond native Cary C. Mitchell when they wanted to look their best.

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Booker T. Washington National Monument seeking public’s help to unravel mystery

Officials at the Booker T. Washington National Monument outside Roanoke are asking the public for help in unraveling one of its biggest mysteries.

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New book reveals details about Mary Lumpkin and the slave jail that became VUU

The stories of enslaved Black women largely have been erased from American history.

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Fighting the corruption of power, by Ben Jealous

We keep learning more about the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. And we keep learning more about the many schemes former President Trump and his team tried to use to overturn the 2020 presidential election.

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2 more GOP senators to back Judge Jackson for Supreme Court, nearly assuring confirmation

Republican U.S. Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Mitt Romney of Utah say they will vote to confirm Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson’s historic elevation to the U.S. Supreme Court, giving President Biden’s nominee a burst of bipartisan support and all but assuring she’ll become the first Black female justice in the court’s 232-year history.

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Training program for released convicts faces shutdown

Rodney Brown had just served a six-year sentence in prison in 2018 when he found his way to the nonprofit Adult Alternative Program at 4929 Chamberlayne Ave. in the city’s North Side.

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Signs of the times

University of Richmond campus buildings honoring slaveholders and segregationists are getting new names after years of pushing Board of Trustees to make changes

Six buildings on the University of Richmond’s campus are being cleansed of the names of slaveholders and champions of segregation, including a building named in honor of the university’s founding president, the Rev. Robert Ryland.

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Pressure grows for Justice Thomas to recuse himself from cases involving Jan. 6 insurrection probe

Suspicions are growing that the lone Black justice on the U.S. Supreme Court used his

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Cityscape: A home to celebrate

Slices of life and scenes in Richmond

Plenty of reasons to celebrate. That’s the situation for the Richmond Metropolitan Habitat for Humanity, a local nonprofit that works to create more affordable housing.

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City Council rejects turning over design funding for new George Wythe High

Will a new George Wythe High School ever get built?

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Richmond Public Schools moves out of 14th floor in City Hall

Richmond Public Schools is starting to give up floors in City Hall.

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State lawmakers create the Virginia Black, Indigenous and People of Color Historic Preservation Fund

A new state fund could give the Patawomeck Tribe a chance to reacquire tribal land and help protect battlefield sites throughout the state where Black soldiers fought and died.

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Not letting anyone steal our joy, by Ben Jealous

A congressional meeting room might be the last place people would expect to find joy.

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Sheila Hill-Christian named interim CEO of RRHA

In a leadership shuffle, the Richmond Redevelopment and Housing Authority’s Board of Commissioners has tapped Sheila Hill-Christian to serve as interim chief executive officer, effective Friday, April 1, it has been announced.

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Honoring Pocahontas

Chief Anne Richardson, leader of the Rappahannock Indian Tribe, speaks during a ceremony Monday honoring Pocahontas, or Matoaka, the young Native American woman whose influence aided the survival of the English settlers at Jamestown in the early 1600s and bolstered relations with the English when she traveled to England later with her white husband, John Rolfe, and son, Thomas.

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Black Americans and principles of democracy, by Ben Jealous

Anti-democratic authoritarianism is on the rise both around the world and here at home. Sometimes it is easier to recognize overseas.

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The Black Press celebrates 195 years of pleading the cause of African descendants everywhere, by Stacy M. Brown

On March 16, 1827, the Rev. Samuel E. Cornish and John B. Russwurm founded Freedom’s Journal, the first Black-owned newspaper in the United States.

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City Council committee temporarily sidelines citizen review board to investigate complaints against police

A City Council committee hit the pause button Tuesday on a proposal from Mayor Levar M. Stoney to establish a new Richmond civilian review board to investigate complaints against city police.