Below are details on some upcoming public meetings in Richmond and the counties of Chesterfield, Hanover and Henrico.
Richmond
City Council
4 p.m. Monday
Council chambers, 2nd floor, Richmond City Hall
301 N. 9th St.
For the council’s informal meeting, members are set to get a paving, infrastructure and traffic calming plan report from Director of Public Works Bobby Vincent Jr., and an annual report on J. Sargeant Reynolds Community College from its president.
City Council
6 p.m. Monday
Council chambers, 2nd floor, Richmond City Hall
301 N. 9th St.
A resolution to approve Richmond’s plan to sell and administer 28 city-owned properties — 21 residential and seven commercial — that are no longer needed is the only item expected to be voted on.
Selling the parcels could bring nearly $5.5 million in direct revenue for the city, per council documents. The resolution is on the consent agenda.
Education and Human Services Standing Committee
2 p.m. Thursday
Council chambers, 2nd floor, Richmond City Hall
301 N. 9th St.
RPS Superintendent Jason Kamras is slated to give the committee an update on the revised proposed fiscal year 2026 budget the School Board approved last week.
Also, Richmond’s outgoing deputy chief administrative officer for human services is expected to present on the status of shelters for the unhoused and the city’s family crisis fund.
Henrico County
Board of Supervisors
3 p.m. & 6 p.m. Tuesday
County Government Center 4301 E. Parham Road
Before the board’s regular meeting, Henrico supervisors will hold a work session starting at 3:45 p.m. to discuss several items of importance.
The first is an update on crime status from the Henrico County Police Division.
County supervisors will also discuss results from the latest round of public engagement meetings for Henrico’s comprehensive plan.The county’s lands guide has been in development for an extended period of time.
Supervisors will open the first public hearing for the county budget and tax rates for FY26 during their regular meeting at 6 p.m.
More details on the county budget here.
School Board
3 p.m. Thursday
New Bridge Learning Center Auditorium, 5915 Nine Mile Road
Henrico County’s School Board has a scheduled work session and regular meeting to discuss ongoing results of its employee feedback response survey and school boundary updates.
The board will also review a number of policy revisions that members will later vote on in April.
Hanover County
School Board
3 p.m. & 6 p.m. Tuesday
County Administration Building Board Room
7516 County Complex Road
Hanover’s appointed school board will discuss ongoing results of the division’s school boundary adjustments.
The school board hired MGT Consulting, a third-party vendor, to help with public engagement and boundary analysis.
The work group will update the full board regarding any recommendations.
The boundary adjustments are expected to take effect at the start of the 2025-26 school year. A final vote on the boundary adjustments is still planned for this spring.
Chesterfield County
Board of Supervisors
2 p.m. Wednesday
Chesterfield County Administration Building, Room 502
9901 Lori Road
Supervisors are slated to unveil the proposed fiscal year 2026 budgets for the county and school district.
Board of Supervisors
Public meeting room
10001 Iron Bridge Road
The board is set to consider an ordinance proposing more rules on water meters, including making residents responsible for maintaining the area around them and charging consumers $200 if a meter requires a replacement, repair or adjustment for reasons “other than ordinary wear and tear.”
Supervisors are also expected to vote on a proposal from the general registrar to relocate six polling places: Falling Creek Voting Precinct (205), Falling Creek East Voting Precinct (220), LaPrade Voting Precinct (405), Reams Voting Precinct (408), Beaufont Voting Precinct (513) and Davis Voting Precinct (515).
The Falling Creek locations need to move to the new middle school building, while others need relocation because of upcoming construction. The Forest View Rescue Squad “no longer wishes to serve as a voting location,” according to county documents.