Students experiencing homelessness remain one of the most overlooked populations in our public school systems despite the protections outlined in the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act. The policy was designed to remove and reduce barriers to enrollment and ensure students have a stable education. It often fails to address the full scope of challenges these students face.
People are also reading…
- UPDATED: City Council approves acquisition agreement for parts of Tyson property
- Lexington's Mexican community engages in cultural celebration at public library
- Cozad boys win Dawson County golf triangular
- Cozad girls, Swede boys earn runner-up titles at Gothenburg junior high Dutch Zorn Invite
- Lexington's Ashley Najera receives Nebraska Scholastic Wrestling Coaches Association female senior scholarship
- Trump administration rejects women picked for soybean board, appoints men instead
- Lexington residents raise concerns about Greenwood Cemetery at City Council meeting
- Flatwater Forum: Lexington begins to look ahead after Tyson closing
- Friday with Friends returns May 1 at Mac’s Creek Winery and Brewery
- 5 local schools compete at Don Bader Invite in Lexington
- Overton's Brock McCarter earns 2 gold medals at Fort Kearny Conference Invite
- Lexington girls pick up 2-0 victory at home over Aurora
- Lexington's Oakley Burson. Sofia Silva-Benavidez win the Tree Board Poster Contest
- Arbuthnot, Ryan to receive CCC's commemorative medallion
- Nebraska DHHS announces full support for federal efforts to strengthen Medicaid Integrity
In March 1961, Richmond’s sixth annual Boat and Sports Show was on its way to the Arena. To promote the event, a small tugboat and a sailboat visited Shields Lake at Byrd Park. The sailboat was a new “bantam” model, only 9 feet long by 4 feet wide and just over 100 pounds. The lake demonstration showed how easily children could handle the boat.
- James Netherwood
This January 1936 image shows the Carillon in Byrd Park as seen from across Swan Lake. The design for a memorial to World War I’s dead was debated in the mid-1920s, with Richmond industrialist Granville Valentine leading a campaign for a carillon – despite a war memorial commission favoring an alternative. The state ultimately endorsed a carillon, and the bell tower was dedicated in October 1932.
- RTD Staff
In June 1951, amid high temperatures and humidity, Shields Lake in Byrd Park and other pools in Richmond were setting attendance records. Shields Lake was a whites-only public swimming facility that was closed in 1955. City officials cited the high cost of necessary repairs, not court rulings against segregation, and said several new neighborhood pools could be built for less than renovating the lake facility.
- Mike O'Neil
This May 1948 image shows Boy Scouts enjoying the lake at Camp Shawondasee in Chesterfield County. In May 1965, the camp shut its doors after more than 50 years serving Scouts in the region. The urbanization of Chesterfield around it, limited drinking water and a lake that didn’t hold up to a whole summer of campers led the Scouts to find a new location in Goochland County. The next year, the YMCA purchased the land, and its Camp Thunderbird still operates there today.
- RTD Staff
In early October 1952, temperatures reached into the mid-80s, and people around the area found ways to enjoy the unseasonably warm weather. These boys soaked up the sun while fishing at Shields Lake in Richmond. A day later, temperatures dropped into the 60s after a cold front arrived.
- Mike O'Neil
In June 1969, 10 new paddle boats were put into service on Fountain Lake in Byrd Park in Richmond. In the lead boat are (from left) Larry Tucker and Eugene Mosby. In the second boat are Mark Waldron; his father. I.H. Waldron; and Barry Graves.
- Bob Brown
In September 1951, a boy fished at the dam of Lakeside Lake in Henrico County. Lewis Ginter built the dam in the 1890s to connect Lakeside Park to the Lakeside Wheel Club. Today, the lake is in on the grounds of Jefferson Lakeside Country Club.
- Staff photo
From the Archives: Richmond lakes
In March 1961, Richmond’s sixth annual Boat and Sports Show was on its way to the Arena. To promote the event, a small tugboat and a sailboat visited Shields Lake at Byrd Park. The sailboat was a new “bantam” model, only 9 feet long by 4 feet wide and just over 100 pounds. The lake demonstration showed how easily children could handle the boat.
- James Netherwood
This January 1936 image shows the Carillon in Byrd Park as seen from across Swan Lake. The design for a memorial to World War I’s dead was debated in the mid-1920s, with Richmond industrialist Granville Valentine leading a campaign for a carillon – despite a war memorial commission favoring an alternative. The state ultimately endorsed a carillon, and the bell tower was dedicated in October 1932.
- RTD Staff
In June 1951, amid high temperatures and humidity, Shields Lake in Byrd Park and other pools in Richmond were setting attendance records. Shields Lake was a whites-only public swimming facility that was closed in 1955. City officials cited the high cost of necessary repairs, not court rulings against segregation, and said several new neighborhood pools could be built for less than renovating the lake facility.
- Mike O'Neil
This May 1948 image shows Boy Scouts enjoying the lake at Camp Shawondasee in Chesterfield County. In May 1965, the camp shut its doors after more than 50 years serving Scouts in the region. The urbanization of Chesterfield around it, limited drinking water and a lake that didn’t hold up to a whole summer of campers led the Scouts to find a new location in Goochland County. The next year, the YMCA purchased the land, and its Camp Thunderbird still operates there today.
- RTD Staff
