Richmond worked as a reporter, photographer, and editor at smaller newspapers, including at the
Brevard Sentinel and the
Englewood Herald. She and her third husband Walt Richmond ran the Centric Foundation and the Richmond-Rohde Press, focused on unconventional ideas in science and education. Their co-authored stories and novels reflect some of the same interests. Richmond taught at the
Florida Institute of Technology. The Richmonds spoke at a 1976 Star Trek fan convention in Florida. She served on the Brevard Local Government Study Commission, but resigned in 1980, in protest over plans for a regional water authority. In 1993, she spoke at a school in
Olympia, Washington, and billed herself as a "physicist and anthropologist". ==Publications==