Top Stories America
Resources
Search
Categories

Posts Tagged ‘Richmond’

Original Article: Chesterfield planners say no to landfill changes




Chesterfield County planners tonight unanimously recommended denial of zoning changes that would allow a Chester landfill to use a neighboring quarry to store waste.

With existing capacity dwindling, Shoosmith Brothers Inc. wants to use a section of the adjoining Vulcan Material Co. quarry — on land that Shoosmith Brothers owns and leases to Vulcan — for storage of out-of-state waste.

Ultimately, the Board of Supervisors will decide on the request, which comes before the board next month. Even if approved there, storage in the quarry area would require approval from state and federal agencies.

Several area residents voiced concerns tonight about new traffic, ongoing odor problems and possible groundwater contamination from quarry blasting near landfill liners.

The landfill — at state Route 10 and Lewis Road — is near the Arbor Landing and Highlands subdivisions. It was approved in 1976 and expanded through a conditional-use process in 1997, which was opposed by many in the community for the 200 acres it added and the out-of-state trash it brought.

For more information, see tomorrow’s Richmond Times-Dispatch. — Wesley P. Hester

Five Filters featured article: Headshot – Propaganda, State Religion and the Attack On the Gaza Peace Flotilla. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

Post Footer automatically generated by Add Post Footer Plugin for wordpress.

Original Article: It’s all got to start somewhere

RICHMOND, VA — It’s time to put a high-speed rail line from Richmond to Washington on the fast track, columnist Michael Paul Williams says.

Five Filters featured article: Headshot – Propaganda, State Religion and the Attack On the Gaza Peace Flotilla. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

Post Footer automatically generated by Add Post Footer Plugin for wordpress.

Original Article: UPDATE: Man sought in shooting of two in Richmond




8 p.m.

Richmond police are seeking a man in an early morning slaying of one man in east Richmond. Another man suffered life-threatening injuries in the shooting.

Elsumakeal M. Lamar, 29, of the 700 block of North 35th Street, is wanted for aggravated assault, use of a firearm and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon in the shooting of the second victim.

11:54 a.m.

One man was killed and another wounded in an early-morning shooting in east Richmond.

Richmond police responded to a call around 12:38 a.m. in the 700 block of North 35th Street. Police spokesman James Mercante said officers found one male dead from a gunshot wound. Police identified him as Keith W. Bates, 47, of the 700 block of North 35th Street.

A second male suffered a gunshot wound, police said. He was transported to VCU Medical Center with life-threatening injuries.

The investigation is ongoing. Anyone with information is asked to call Crime Stoppers at (804) 780-1000.

Five Filters featured article: Headshot – Propaganda, State Religion and the Attack On the Gaza Peace Flotilla. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

Post Footer automatically generated by Add Post Footer Plugin for wordpress.

Original Article: Fancy Hat Contest at Colonial Downs

Men and women from around Virginia participated in the Fancy Hat Contest at Colonial Downs on Virginia Derby Day.

Five Filters featured article: Headshot – Propaganda, State Religion and the Attack On the Gaza Peace Flotilla. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

Post Footer automatically generated by Add Post Footer Plugin for wordpress.

Original Article: Richmond could spend $650,000 to keep Pfizer






The city of Richmond is preparing to spend $650,000 over 10 years to keep Pfizer Inc.’s research-and-development center on North Side.

After hailing the pharmaceutical company’s decision to retain the Sherwood Avenue facility, Mayor Dwight C. Jones’ administration is asking the City Council to approve a 10-year grant for the firm that would start in 2014.

Peter H. Chapman, deputy chief administrative officer for economic and community development, said it was critical to hold onto the more than 300 research-and-development jobs.

“When we look at the drivers of the local and regional [economy], we see life sciences as one of those drivers,” he said.

If approved by council, the grant would amount to a partial reimbursement of Pfizer’s real estate tax bill.

The installments would be the lesser amount of 10 percent of the company’s tax bill or $100,000. With Pfizer’s property currently assessed at $47 million, city officials estimate the annual payments will be about $65,000.

Overall, the grant would be capped at $650,000, although Pfizer would be able to request additional funds for every $50 million invested in the property. “It’s a performance-based grant — very modest,” Chapman said.

The grant was endorsed last week by the council’s Finance and Economic Development Committee and is scheduled for vote by the full council on July 26.

Last month, officials said that city and state incentives were being offered to retain the facility, although details of the city’s inducements weren’t disclosed until last week.

The state incentives call for grants for employee training, as well as an enterprise-zone designation that will allow Pfizer to qualify for tax benefits if it adds jobs or upgrades the facility as expected.

New York-based Pfizer, the world’s biggest drugmaker, acquired the Sherwood Avenue facility and others in the area last year as part of its $68 billion acquisition of Madison, N.J.-based drugmaker Wyeth.

In May, Pfizer announced plans to close a factory in Henrico County.

Officials said the company considered closing the Richmond facility and consolidating it with another research site outside Virginia. The local 270,000-square-foot center, which opened in 1998, houses research and development for over-the-counter consumer health products such as ChapStick, Preparation H and Centrum, as well as support functions.



Contact Will Jones at (804) 649-6911 or wjones@timesdispatch.com.

Five Filters featured article: Headshot – Propaganda, State Religion and the Attack On the Gaza Peace Flotilla. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

Post Footer automatically generated by Add Post Footer Plugin for wordpress.

Original Article: Free couch!


RVA News

Best Community Blog 2010



RVA News

Best Comments 2008



RVA News

Best Community Blog 2007



Richmond Magazine

2007 Editor’s Pick

“Media Pleasures”

Five Filters featured article: Headshot – Propaganda, State Religion and the Attack On the Gaza Peace Flotilla. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

Post Footer automatically generated by Add Post Footer Plugin for wordpress.

Original Article: UPDATE: Suspect in South Richmond standoff dies




9:21 p.m.

Police spokesman Gene Lepley said tonight the suspect in a four-hour standoff in south Richmond has died. The man was identified as Jataynun Fleming, 22, of the 3100 block of Able Court in Chesterfield County.

Lepley said Fleming was being sought in this morning’s slaying of William A. Charity Jr., 46, in the Whitcomb Court area of the city’s East End. Fleming was considered the only suspect, Lepley said.

7:45 p.m.

Police spokesman Gene Lepley said the standoff in south Richmond ended before 7:30 p.m.

He said police negotiations with the suspect broke down, and the SWAT team sent tear gas into the home. Shots were fired when police entered the home and the man was injured.

He was taken to VCU Medical Center. Lepley said the man had two outstanding warrants in Richmond for robbery and the use of a firearm in a felony. He also had a parole violation in Chesterfield County.

7:32 p.m.

At about 7:17 p.m., two loud booms came from the area of the standoff and an ambulance and firetruck advanced beyond the barricades into the neighborhood   Several minutes later, an ambulance left the scene with lights and sirens flashing, escorted by two police vehicles.

From previous reports

A Richmond SWAT team and the U.S. Marshalls are involved in a standoff in South Richmond this afternoon.

Police spokesman Gene Lepley said U.S. Marshalls tried to serve several local warrants on a man in the 300 block of Beaufont Hill Drive. The man barricaded himself inside the home about 3 p.m. and U.S. Marshalls called for a Richmond SWAT team, Lepley said.

Richmond fire and ambulance crews are also on the scene. A handful of people said they could not return to their homes because of the barricades blocking access to the subdivision.

Five Filters featured article: Headshot – Propaganda, State Religion and the Attack On the Gaza Peace Flotilla. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

Post Footer automatically generated by Add Post Footer Plugin for wordpress.

Original Article: Eat Your Garden

Azaleas and boxwoods have long been staples of the traditional Richmond garden, but these days, you’re more and more likely to see plants of the edible variety integrated into residential landscapes. Inspired by a growing national movement to eat healthier and locally, some homeowners and apartment dwellers are taking the mission to heart. You can’t get more local than one’s own backyard, porch or balcony.

For Kim Davis, a Northside resident, growing food is a source of fulfillment and satisfaction. “I’ve always liked to grow things, even as a kid,” she said. “It helps keep the rest of life in perspective.”

A former Peace Corps volunteer in the 1980s, Davis helped women in the Dominican Republic improve nutrition by growing produce and raising rabbits and sheep. She’s been growing her own food ever since. Last year, Davis deconstructed her house’s backyard deck, turning the reclaimed wood into seven 4’-by-16’ raised beds, where she grows tomatoes, herbs, eggplant, zucchini, okra, peppers and strawberries. The area also houses two compost bins and a rabbit hutch.

“I grow what I like to eat,” said Davis, whose garden features some more unusual crops, like paw paw trees and Concord grape vines that grow along the backyard fence. “The garden’s different every year. I’ll try anything.”

A few miles away, just north of Carytown, Anne Cook’s garden features a combination of flowers and vegetables, including plenty of Swiss chard, cucumbers, beets, soybeans, leeks, sweet potatoes and eggplant. Cook spent her childhood summers helping out on a family farm and has been gardening at her Ellwood Avenue home for the past 18 years.

“It’s in my blood,” she said. “I always feel better when I’m digging in the dirt.”

Cook says she grows enough to feed her family, which includes four children between the ages of 10 and 16, and occasionally induces her sometimes-reluctant children to help her tend to the gardens. She recently added some raised beds to her front yard—the shade cover in her backyard has grown to the point that it hinders the growth of sun-needy plants like tomatoes— and is enhancing her backyard garden with drip irrigation that will provide her plants with more efficient watering from a rain barrel.

The new raised beds include an Italian sauce garden, which includes eggplant, garlic, oregano and other sauce ingredients, and a salsa garden, featuring cilantro, tomatoes and other veggies. Like Davis, Cook says she gets a sense of accomplishment from working in the garden.  

“I’ve taken a bare space and created something from it,” she said. “And I like teaching the kids how to grow their own food.”

Of course, for those who don’t come by gardening naturally, the idea of growing food can be intimidating. Local businesses like Backyard Farmer and United States of Food can mitigate gardening anxiety by assisting with garden installation and care.

“People are tapping back into our inherent desire to know where our food comes from and how it grows,” said Shane Emmitt, cofounder of United States of Food, which installs ready-made raised-bed gardens, complete with healthy soil and planted seedlings, throughout Virginia. “But not everyone has the inclination to spend seven years improving the soil quality of their yard. Our gardens don’t require a lot of maintenance. Your main job is to harvest it and eat the food.”

Emmitt says business has been good since the company started advertising its services about two months ago. In addition to installing gardens at businesses and high-end restaurants, United States of Food delivers gardens of varying sizes—a $235 four-square-foot wine barrel up to a $695 32-square-foot raised bed—to urban residences.

“Our clients are folks who knew nothing about gardening to folks who want the automatic drip system so it will water while they’re away,” he said.

Would-be gardeners can find inspiration on Saturday, July 17, during Tricycle Gardens’ inaugural Edible R-evolution Garden Tour, which will highlight 13 urban kitchen gardens throughout Richmond, including those of Davis and Cook.

“You’ll see a range of what is going on in the city,” said Andrea Almond, a board member of Tricycle Gardens, a sustainable food advocacy group. “It’s so broad—people of all ages and socioeconomic status. We’re trying to build on local interest and hope to get more people to start their own gardens.”

Participating gardens, including the joint Strawberry Street/Belmont Butchery garden and a community garden at Holton Elementary School, will be open from 1 to 5 p.m. on Saturday, and a potluck and wine reception will follow from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Jefferson Avenue community garden. Tickets ($20 per carload or up to four people on bicycles), available on tricyclegardens.org, at Tricycle Gardens’ 9th and Bainbridge Urban Farm or at Holton Elementary School on the day of the tour, will benefit Tricycle’s programming. Maps and garden descriptions are available on the Tricycle Gardens’ website.

Five Filters featured article: Headshot – Propaganda, State Religion and the Attack On the Gaza Peace Flotilla. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

Post Footer automatically generated by Add Post Footer Plugin for wordpress.

Original Article: Forum to focus on area mental health services for youth




Parents with questions about mental-health services for children in the Richmond area are invited to attend a discussion Tuesday night featuring local experts.

The panel includes Dr. Bela Sood, medical director of the Virginia Treatment Center for Children at Virginia Commonwealth University; Dr. David Gould of Tucker Psychiatric Clinic; Vivian Mann, clinical director for ChildSavers; and Alex Slusher, a parent and activist who speaks about suicide prevention.

The discussion will take place from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at WCVE studios, 23 Sesame St. The event is free, but space is limited. To reserve a seat or to submit questions in advance, write to rsmurthy@vcu.edu.

The discussion will be taped for broadcast Sunday at 6 p.m. The program is sponsored by Richmond Magazine, WCVE public radio and the VCU psychiatry department.

 

Five Filters featured article: Headshot – Propaganda, State Religion and the Attack On the Gaza Peace Flotilla. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

Post Footer automatically generated by Add Post Footer Plugin for wordpress.

Original Article: Man injured in Richmond shooting




Richmond police are investigating a shooting that injured one man on East Clay Street tonight.

Police Capt. Paul Kiniry said a 28-year-old man was shot in the buttocks around 9 p.m. at in the 400 block of East Clay Street.

The victim, whose name was not released, was found by police after he walked a short distance along Clay Street. He was taken to VCU Medical Center with non-life-threatening injuries, Kiniry said.

Police are looking for two or more suspects who reportedly fled toward the Gilpin Court area, Kiniry said.

Five Filters featured article: Headshot – Propaganda, State Religion and the Attack On the Gaza Peace Flotilla. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

Post Footer automatically generated by Add Post Footer Plugin for wordpress.

Albuquerque | Austin | Baltimore | Colorado Springs | Columbus | Fort Worth | Fresno | Honolulu | Virginia Beach