Henrico County Government highlights board meeting and local leadership

Henrico County Government highlights board meeting and local leadership
John Vithoulkas County Manager of Henrico County — Official Website
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Henrico County Government shared updates on recent county activities and highlighted the impact of local leadership in a series of posts made between July 22 and July 24, 2025.

On July 22, Henrico County Government announced the conclusion of its Board of Supervisors meeting. The post stated, “The July 22 meeting of the Board of Supervisors has concluded. Archived video of the meeting will be available at https://t.co/fJzlnqicRX” (posted July 22, 2025).

In a subsequent post on July 24, the county featured Ebonie Atkins, managing director of the Economic Development Authority. The tweet read: “Having also worked at the federal and state levels, Ebonie Atkins says she prefers how she’s able to make an impact working locally for Henrico County. As managing director of the Economic Development Authority, Atkins works with businesses to help them to grow and succeed. https://t.co/QjRYpV7Gqa” (posted July 24, 2025).

A follow-up message quoted Atkins directly: ‘”I just see Henrico being very innovative, very creative to help their employees be better but [also] help the community be better in so many ways,” she says.’ (posted July 24, 2025).

Henrico County is home to a single public school district that enrolled over 50,000 students during the 2023-24 academic year (source). Enrollment increased slightly from the previous year by about 0.1%. Deep Run High School reported the highest student population among high schools with more than two thousand enrollees (source). Demographically, Black students comprised approximately one-third of total enrollment during this period (source).

The county’s educational system includes several schools with notable enrollments across various grade levels—from Holladay Elementary leading in pre-kindergarten numbers to Tuckahoe Middle School enrolling the most sixth graders (source). These figures illustrate both growth and diversity within Henrico’s student body.

Henrico County Government continues to communicate developments and highlight individual contributions as part of its broader effort to support community engagement and economic development.



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