Oct. 27 Newsletter: Protecting cultural heritage while creating housing
Weather: Cool weather appears here to stay this week. High of 60.
On this date in 1927, a group of business and civic leaders is convened to discuss the building of City Stadium, which opened two years later.

Citywide cultural heritage plan returns, modified to address fears about stifling housing development
A new version of Richmond’s proposed Cultural Heritage Stewardship Plan will make its way through the approval process, addressing concerns that the original plan could stifle housing development amid an affordability crisis.
For many residents who had been involved with the crafting of the document, the decision to delay discussion was seen as an affront.
- But other residents criticized the plan as an effort to cramp neighborhoods’ evolution by defining them in terms of their historical “character” and regulating further growth through new rules.
Read more on the proposal here.

After 200 year delay, President Monroe's daughter is buried in Hollywood Cemetery
Nearly 200 years after her death, the remains of Elizabeth "Eliza" Kortright Monroe Hay, daughter of the fifth President of the United States, have been reunited with her family in Richmond’s Hollywood Cemetery.
Read more on the retired teacher who discovered her in an unmarked grave in Paris.

To some callers, RVA311 is the wrong number
Richmond's 311 system has undergone a facelift to make it easier for residents to report issues, but as David M. Poole reports, that doesn't always mean those issues find their way to the right departments.
- DPU maintains a separate complaint system that uses outdated technology that would be too expensive to integrate with RVA311.

RPS details $25 million in facility upgrades over the past two years
The release of the projects gives insight into how the division is attempting to mitigate problems within its aging buildings.
RPS estimates it will spend $2.5 million on projects this school year – the amount budgeted for capital improvement plans. Last year's number was higher because of state and federal grants. Read more here.
In other news
- Richmond shelter operator charged with embezzling city funds meant to help the homeless (CBS 6)
- RTD175: 25 people who profoundly changed Richmond (Times-Dispatch)
- If you haven’t visited Chesterfield’s Latino Farmers Market, here’s your sign (Style Weekly)
The editor's desk

Good morning from Kansas City, where our radio team enjoyed a tour of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum yesterday. It's an absolute must-see if you're ever in the area.
Michael Phillips, founding editor
mphillips@richmonder.org
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