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Grant funds to benefit babies, ex-inmates and low-wealth families

City Hall is planning to provide $115,000 to help low-income families gain baby supplies under ordinances that City Council is scheduled to approve next Monday, Jan. 23.

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Youngkin proposes millions in child care subsidies

To the delight of beleaguered day care operations and child advocates, Gov. Glenn A. Youngkin is calling for an investment of $484 million a year into child care— with most going to help parents cover the surging costs.

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His home has become a museum

John W. Bynum Jr. loves Black history so much he’s turned his split-level home in Chesterfield County into a small museum.

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City Council weighs employee pension proposal

City Hall is proposing that new employees be enrolled in the state’s pension system effective Jan. 1, according to a lengthy report City Council received Tuesday.

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City acts to secure local cemeteries

City Hall has quietly signed a letter of intent to take over abandoned, but historic Black cemeteries in the East End and a far smaller and less well known burial ground on Forest View Drive in South Side, the Free Press has learned.

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City to open new temporary shelter

Richmond will have a far bigger temporary shelter if another tropical storm hits or the weather plunges below freezing in the next two months.

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James River Center to offer leading-edge science learning for local youths

Richmond’s riverfront is gaining a new center whose purpose will be to introduce thousands of area schoolchildren to the James River each year.

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Henrico woman’s invention provides clearer thermometer reads

Where do ideas for inventions come from? For Henrico County resident Casaundra L. Pugh, the eureka moment came during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic.

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RRHA’s eviction rate increases

Housing unit applies ‘tough love’ to collect tenants’ back rent

Richmond’s public housing landlord continues to proceed more slowly than private landlords in seeking to oust residents who have built up large, unpaid rent balances.

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Enrichmond groups may receive City Hall funding

City Hall has tucked $250,000 into that proposed 2023-24 budget that could help dozens of nonprofits groups that lost money when the Enrichmond Foundation collapsed last year.

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Youngkin announces affordable housing loans

The state will lend more than $18 million to create 10 affordable, income-restricted housing developments in the Richmond area, Gov. Glenn A. Youngkin has announced.

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Bon Secours opening new South Side health clinic

Bon Secours is opening a new community health clinic in South Side to serve uninsured children and adults, although new nonprofits already operate similar clinics nearby.

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From liberated to liberators

‘March forward in God’s name,’ Rev. A. Lincoln James Jr. proclaims on Emancipation Day

“March forward,” the Rev. A. Lincoln James Jr. told about 125 people at the New Year’s Day program celebrating the issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation, the great Civil War document that took the first big step toward abolishing slavery in this country.

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Policy issues involving machine games, guns and minors to greet General Assembly

Will Virginia continue to raise the minimum wage? Will the sale of marijuana through retail outlets gain approval? Will a ban on “skill” games be replaced by a taxing regime that would allow the machines to be turned on once more in bars and retail stores? Will gun owners be held criminally responsible if a minor takes their weapon and shoots someone?

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Nye, Lambert are new council officers

Kristen M. Nye thanked her City Council colleagues “for your vote of confidence” after being elected the new City Council president.

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Causey to lead Virginia State Bar

Doris Henderson Causey is about to make Virginia legal history. Ms. Causey, 45, will become president-elect in June of the Virginia State Bar’s Executive Council. She will be the first African-American and first legal aid lawyer to fill the top elective post for the VSB, the arm of the state Supreme Court that regulates lawyers.

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RVA Reads gives a book a month to pre-schoolers

A city program is helping to put books into the hands of hundreds of Richmond’s youngest schoolchildren with the goal of exciting them about reading. Called RVA Reads, the program distributes a new book each month to 3- and 4-year-olds, according to Michael Wallace of the city’s press office.

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Washington NFL team shot down by federal court

Can the government ban trademark registration of the racist mascot name of Washington’s pro football team? Yes, a federal judge ruled Wednesday in throwing the team for a big loss in its efforts to defend and maintain the name. The decision is the biggest setback for the defiant team since the Richmond Free Press and other media outlets banned the use of the name. The Free Press took the action in October 2013, after deeming the name on a par with the “n” word for black people.

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Federal appeals court upholds former governor’s conviction

When will former Gov. Bob McDonnell go to prison? That appears to be the only unanswered question in the case of the once powerful and now disgraced Virginia Republican.

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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.