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Lawmakers Opt For Study Over Elimination of Jail, Prison Fees

Incarcerated people and their loved ones will continue to pay fees that advocates and some lawmakers say are too stiff. Senate Bill 581, introduced by Sen. Joseph Morrissey, D-Richmond, initially proposed to eliminate jail fees related to the costs of an inmate's...

Black and Brown Centered Placemaking Rooted in Identity & Ownership

As a Black woman who grew up in New York and has now lived in Virginia for 18 years, I’ve seen racial differences written into every landscape of my life for as long as I can remember. I began to notice these differences when I was around 8 years old. As I rode through my working-class Black and Latino community in Hempstead, NY into Garden City...

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Seeking The Next Step

An Afghan family who left their home country years ago and resettled in Virginia attempt to help family members still stuck in Kabul, and grapple with the unavoidable question: With the US military gone, what happens to those attempting to leave Afghanistan now? Bahar serves paratha and tea in her Richmond, Va. home, as she recalls the first time...

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An End Of An Era

This morning, over 130 years after it was installed, the Commonwealth of Virginia finally removed the statue of Confederate general Robert E. Lee from Monument Avenue. RVA Mag's John Donegan and Branden Wilson were on hand to see history being made. Robert E. Lee, former commander of the Confederacy, awoke atop his bronze horse today to clamoring...

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Virginia Universities Reckon With Confederate Symbols

In the wake of last summer's protests and the pulling down of Confederate monuments around the state, universities within the commonwealth are dealing with the remnants of the Confederacy and of systemic racism that remain on their campuses today. Virginia universities in the former heart of the Confederacy are reckoning with their past as...

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Glass Ceiling on Statewide Offices Remains for Black Women

Over 30 years after Virginia's (and the nation's) first Black governor, L. Douglas Wilder, was elected, a Black woman has still not been elected governor anywhere in the nation. Four candidates currently campaigning for governor of Virginia are attempting to change that. Four Black women have entered the 2021 Virginia gubernatorial race. If any...

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Virginia Public Transit Grapples With Reduced Ridership, Zero Fare

As we prepare for a post-pandemic world, GRTC and other public transit operators around the commonwealth have some questions. Primarily: will riders come back? But also: should they start charging fares again? Virginia public transit systems from Northern Virginia to Hampton Roads are looking for a path forward after losing riders and revenue...

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