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🐹 Good morning, RVA: A small area plan, Fall Line updates, and a tiny coffin

Good morning, RVA! It’s 61 °F, and today we’ve got a pretty good chance for not only rain but maybe even some pretty intense storms. NBC12’s Andrew Freiden says we could see “downpours with localized flooding” (Twitter) this evening—so keep an eye on the sky, especially if you’re commuting home later this afternoon.
 

Water cooler

The City has released a new draft of the Shockoe Small Area Plan, which you can view and comment on through Knoveio. I feel like I’ve read through this plan previously, and the Richmond 300 email newsletter tells me that, “The development of the plan began in 2019 but was put on hold in 2022 while a critical Hydrology and Hydraulics Study (H&H Study) was completed. The H&H Study determined what can and cannot be constructed in Shockoe because of the floodway and floodplain.” That study seems pretty important, because a quick scan of the draft plan’s executive summary reveals this bit about the proposed “Heritage Campus” site (which includes Devil’s Half Acre and the African Burial Ground): “The recently completed Hydrology and Hydraulics study shows that the floodplain, floodway, and major stormwater management infrastructure will have a substantial impact on development within the Heritage Campus footprint. Buildings with large footorints cannot be achieved in this area. These impediments will require innovative and creative solutions.” Sounds ominous, and I wonder what impact those “impediments” will have on some of the pretty renderings we’ve previously seen of the future of that space.
 

Mike Platania at Richmond BizSense reports on an opportunity to rezone three entire blocks of Manchester on Semmes Avenue to TOD-1. Given all of the new development and traffic patterns in that area, I think it’s time to figure out what to do with the section of Semmes between the Belvidere Bridge and the 9th Street Bridge. It’s unnecessarily highwayish and, with some creativity, could maybe better connect a couple neighborhoods in some thoughtful ways. Honestly, taming Commerce Road is probably the bigger need but seems like a much more intimidating project…
 

#1094
May 16, 2023
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🐹 Good morning, RVA: A small area plan, Fall Line updates, and a tiny coffin

Good morning, RVA! It’s 55 °F, and all of this week looks wonderfully springlike. Today, you can expect highs in the mid 70s and probably some clouds, and we may see some rain tomorrow, but, other than that, the week looks dry, temperate, and welcoming!
 

Water cooler

Luca Powell at the RTD talks with Kevin Cianfarini, “a volunteer with the local environmental advocacy group Beyond Methane” who travels around the City looking for natural gas leaks using his own high-end gas detector. He’s found hundreds of leaks and, according to records the RTD dug up, the Department of Public Utilities knows about almost 900 leaky pipes. Seems bad, right? It gets worse: “Last year, the city lost nearly $4 million worth of gas, according to purchasing receipts reviewed by the Richmond Times-Dispatch.” And then this bit absolutely blew my mind: “In Richmond, the leaks are also worsening. In January 2022, the system leaked 14% of all its gas into the atmosphere — the highest leak rate ever recorded by the utility in a month.” Honestly, it’s getting harder and harder for me not to see a death spiral in DPU’s natural gas future. As their gas infrastructure ages, the utility raises rates to pay for fixes, then more people transition away from gas to cheaper and cleaner alternatives, and the utility is forced to raise rates to fund the gap. As those electric alternatives get more affordable and available—sometimes even subsidized by the federal government—the cycle will only speed up. I know it’d be a monumental lift, but the City really needs to fight off the sunk-cost fallacy and start exploring how to break up with natural gas and get out of that business entirely. P.S. I first heard about Kevin Cianfarini’s citizen data journalism work over on rva.fyi, a friendly Mastodon server that you should join if you’re looking for a way to escape the ever more horrific Twitter hellscape.
 

Luca Powell RTD double header! They also report this extremely dumb thing: “Richmond is spending $300,000 in ARPA money on 120 ballistic shields for the police department.” The money comes from the Office of the Attorney General and is earmarked by the General Assembly for “community-based gun violence prevention programming.” You’d have to do a set of real complex and convoluted mental gymnastics to convince yourself that riot shields for cops have anything at all to do with community-based gun violence prevention programming. So while I’m sure the OAG is stoked to have this money spent on equipment for police officers, I think that Richmond’s actual community-based gun violence prevention programs could use the $300,000 instead (and, let’s be honest, the RPD probably needs fewer riot shields not more).
 

#526
May 16, 2023
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🐖 Good morning, RVA: Gas leaks, open streets, and patio dining

Good morning, RVA! It’s 55 °F, and all of this week looks wonderfully springlike. Today, you can expect highs in the mid 70s and probably some clouds, and we may see some rain tomorrow, but, other than that, the week looks dry, temperate, and welcoming!
 

Water cooler

Luca Powell at the RTD talks with Kevin Cianfarini, “a volunteer with the local environmental advocacy group Beyond Methane” who travels around the City looking for natural gas leaks using his own high-end gas detector. He’s found hundreds of leaks and, according to records the RTD dug up, the Department of Public Utilities knows about almost 900 leaky pipes. Seems bad, right? It gets worse: “Last year, the city lost nearly $4 million worth of gas, according to purchasing receipts reviewed by the Richmond Times-Dispatch.” And then this bit absolutely blew my mind: “In Richmond, the leaks are also worsening. In January 2022, the system leaked 14% of all its gas into the atmosphere — the highest leak rate ever recorded by the utility in a month.” Honestly, it’s getting harder and harder for me not to see a death spiral in DPU’s natural gas future. As their gas infrastructure ages, the utility raises rates to pay for fixes, then more people transition away from gas to cheaper and cleaner alternatives, and the utility is forced to raise rates to fund the gap. As those electric alternatives get more affordable and available—sometimes even subsidized by the federal government—the cycle will only speed up. I know it’d be a monumental lift, but the City really needs to fight off the sunk-cost fallacy and start exploring how to break up with natural gas and get out of that business entirely. P.S. I first heard about Kevin Cianfarini’s citizen data journalism work over on rva.fyi, a friendly Mastodon server that you should join if you’re looking for a way to escape the ever more horrific Twitter hellscape.
 

Luca Powell RTD double header! They also report this extremely dumb thing: “Richmond is spending $300,000 in ARPA money on 120 ballistic shields for the police department.” The money comes from the Office of the Attorney General and is earmarked by the General Assembly for “community-based gun violence prevention programming.” You’d have to do a set of real complex and convoluted mental gymnastics to convince yourself that riot shields for cops have anything at all to do with community-based gun violence prevention programming. So while I’m sure the OAG is stoked to have this money spent on equipment for police officers, I think that Richmond’s actual community-based gun violence prevention programs could use the $300,000 instead (and, let’s be honest, the RPD probably needs fewer riot shields not more).
 

#284
May 15, 2023
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🚦 Good morning, RVA: More traffic violence, big fraud, and two commencements!

Good morning, RVA! It’s 61 °F, and today looks legitimately hot! Expect highs in the upper 80s, followed by a chance for rain tomorrow, and then—to round out the weekend—a pretty excellent spring Sunday. Enjoy, stay hydrated, and find some time for yourself if you can!
 

Water cooler

The Richmond Police Department reports that a person was hit and killed by a driver early in the morning this past Wednesday on the 5200 block of Orcutt Lane in the City’s 9th District. First, the driver did not stop, so if you have any information you can call the RPD’s Crash Team Investigator at 804.646.1369. Second, while Orcutt Lane is not part of the City’s High Injury Street Network, at least two other people have been seriously injured or killed on that same stretch of road (it’s hard to tell for sure given the quality of this map, see below). Third, this is a chance for the Mayor and City Council to show that they can and will respond to traffic violence throughout the City—not just north of the river, not just when one of the partners involved is a tremendously powerful university, and not just when the victim was well-known and well-connected.
 

Ben Paviour at VPM reports on the Governor pulling Virginia from the Electronic Registration Information Center, or ERIC, which states created to improve accuracy of voter rolls. I mean, whatever, classic Republican dumb stuff. What I think is more interesting than what’s actually happening with ERIC is the brutally honest tone Paviour takes while covering this Republican dumb stuff. It’s definitely a step towards what we need from news organizations as we head into the 2024 presidential elections and leaves me with a little hope—especially given what I’ve seen from CNN over the past few days (Twitter).
 

#298
May 12, 2023
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🛢️ Good morning, RVA: End of the PHE, 10 new speed tables, and trail maintenance

Good morning, RVA! It’s 52 °F, and another beautiful day stretches out ahead of us. Today you can expect highs right around 80 °F and some potentially overcast skies. It’s probably our best day of the week, weather-wise, at least until Sunday. I hope you get out there and get after it (whatever “it” may be for you today)!
 

Water cooler

Today, the federal Department of Health and Human Services will end the Public Health Emergency for COVID-19, which, unsurprisingly, means a lot of things. Katelyn Jetelina at Your Local Epidemiologist had a good write up back in February about how bringing the PHE to an end will impact various government policies and services, and you can watch the Virginia Department of Health’s Dr. Forlano explain some of those impacts here in the Commonwealth. As for how we continue to track COVID-19 and make smart decisions about our own personal behavior, it sounds like the CDC’s Transmission Level metric will go away, but I’m still unclear on what will happen to their green/yellow/orange “Community Level” maps. A new update to those maps is due this evening, so we’ll have to see! You can read more in a new post by Jetelina in which she focuses on how the COVID-19 data we’ve all grown accustom to looking at over the past three years (some of us more than others) will also change.
 

VCU Parking sent out a map confirming the locations of 10 speed tables the City plans to install on and around VCU’s Monroe Park campus over the next week. This is an exciting map, and these are some pretty well-placed traffic calming measures—with most of them situated on long, pedestrian-dense blocks where drivers have the chance to floor it and reach unsafe speeds. I’m especially pleased (and surprised!) that there’s even a speed table planned for Main Street east of Belvidere, near the intersection where a driver hit and killed VCU student Shawn Soares last week. Crews will close roads one by one, and, by this coming Tuesday, we might have 10 new pieces of quick, rapid-response infrastructure designed to make our streets safer for everyone. While I’m mad and frustrated that it took two students dying to move the City to action, I’m really hopeful that this—analyze an area after a serious crash, work with partners and neighbors, and then quickly install infrastructure—becomes a regular practice for Richmond’s Department of Public Works.
 

#330
May 11, 2023
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⚠️ Good morning, RVA: New speed tables, new budget, and a new community

Good morning, RVA! It’s 48 °F, and today looks like a stunner. Expect sunshine, extremely A+ temperatures in the upper 70s, and every reason in the world to take an evening beverage out on the stoop, porch, or deck. If bikes are your thing, it’s a great day to get out there and get rad—otherwise, I hope you at can find at least a little bit of time to spend outside.
 

Water cooler

Proving that they can in fact rapidly respond to serious incidents of traffic violence, Richmond’s Department of Public Works will “install speed tables in the VCU Monroe Campus vicinity from Belvidere Street to Harrison Street” beginning tomorrow, May 11th. While this new infrastructure won’t address the portion of Main Street where a driver killed Shawn Soares last week, it will help slow traffic in and around VCU’s campus—one of the city’s most pedestrian-dense neighborhoods. I hope this will be good practice for DPW, and that the Mayor’s administration will see that rapid-response infrastructure is possible and should be a regular part of Richmond’s Vision Zero toolkit.
 

About two months ago, the Governor announced he’d allocated $30 million for Learning Recovery Grants to pay for “qualifying education services intended to address the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on students' educational progress and well-being.” Those grants have since been renamed “Learning Acceleration Grants,” and, if you’re a parent of a school-aged kid in Virginia, you can now apply online. Should you choose to take advantage of this opportunity, you’ll need to spend the grant funds on an approved tutoring service, specialized educational therapy services, or assistive technology (you can read through more comprehensive definitions here). Definitely seems like something to take advantage of if your young learners have some tutoring needs over the summer. Note: Anyone can apply for the $1,500 grant, but only folks making below 300% of the Federal Poverty Limit can apply for the $3,000 grant.
 

#754
May 10, 2023
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🐢 Good morning, RVA: Diamond District Deal, get narcan trained, and infrastructure changes on Main Street

Good morning, RVA! It’s 63 °F, and today brings a chance for wet weather and cooler temperatures. Keep an eye out for the rain around lunchtime and, with it, highs somewhere in the mid 70s. If you can manage to dodge the precipitation, the day looks pretty lovely!
 

Water cooler

Eric Kolenich at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports on City Council’s informal discussion on making Main Street near VCU slower and safer. You can listen to a recording of that meeting here. Sounds like a handful of traffic-calming measures are up for discussion, things like curb bump-outs, speed tables, and lowering the speed limit—all good stuff. I really appreciate Councilmember Addison’s push to not just focus on VCU but on the entire City and his request that Council make “bold, unpopular decisions.” Once again, I’ll shout into the void about my bold, unpopular decision: Some of these traffic calming measures, especially bump-outs, could be implemented this afternoon with simple cones and barrels. We don’t need to wait for concrete to make our streets safer and protect people’s lives.
 

Today is National Fentanyl Awareness Day, and it’s probably a good time to sign up for free narcan training through your friendly neighborhood local health district. Fentanyl is a powerful, dangerous opioid that’s often—unknowingly!—combined with other drugs and is part of what’s driving today’s opioid epidemic. It’s scary stuff. If you’d like to learn more, I’d suggest spending some time today over on the National Harm Reduction Coalition’s website, they’ve got a ton of great resources to get you started.
 

#402
May 9, 2023
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🚌🍺 Good morning, RVA: Traffic violence, the VP, and tons of stuff to do this weekend.

Good morning, RVA! It’s 44 °F right now, but the rest of today looks amazing! Expect sunshine, highs right around 70 °F, and tons of excited college kids sitting outside celebrating the end of the semester. The excellent weather (and vibes) continues through the next few days with highs on Sunday most likely topping out in the low 80s. Enjoy, and I hope you have an excellent, outdoor weekend.
 

Water cooler

WTVR reports that a person died after a fatal crash on W. Main Street and Madison Street. Police haven’t released any details yet, but WTVR says a vehicle “smashed into the side of a law firm building, which sits just across the street from the VCU School of Business” and that “a scooter was involved in the wreck.” I’m sure we’ll learn more details in the coming days but, 1) this part of Main Street is on Richmond’s High-Injury Street Network, we already know it’s too fast and too dangerous, and 2) this intersection is just a couple blocks from where a driver hit and killed a VCU student earlier this year.
 

Vice President Kamala Harris stopped by Scott’s Addition yesterday, and Michael Martz at the Richmond Times-Dispatch has the report. Sounds like Republicans’ drunken dance on the edge of the debt-ceiling cliff was a major topic of conversation.
 

#342
May 5, 2023
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🪖 Good morning, RVA: Roundabout timeline, a music festival gone wrong, and NIL for high school kids

Good morning, RVA! It’s 45 °F, and temperatures have started to creep back up. Today you can expect highs in the mid 60s, tomorrow the 70s, and then, by this weekend, highs in the mid 70s. Every day for the next handful of days should be more beautiful than the last! Get excited!
 

Water cooler

Whoa, big news in my inbox from the City’s Department of Public Works: A portion of the lanes in the roundabout at Monument and Allen, aka Marcus-David Peters Circle aka the old Lee Circle, will close on May 10th at 8:00 AM for installation of landscaping. If all goes as planned, on July 7th, the roundabout will reopen—without the horrible fencing! That’s just two months away! Now that we’ve got a short-term plan for the circle that removes the horrible fencing, I’d love to hear more about the long-term plans for reimagining this particular circle, yes, but also for reimagining the entirety of Monument Avenue. I don’t think folks are going to forget that both the City and the State have committed in various ways at various times to run some sort of process to think through how best to use that space. I certainly haven’t forgotten!
 

Anna Bryson at the Richmond Times-Dispatch sat down for a Q&A with Lisa Coons, Virginia’s newish Superintendent of Public Instruction. Coons comes to the Commonwealth from Tennessee, which, we all know how their state-level government is going at this point. But, setting that aside, you should read this interview if only to have something to reflect back on as the Governor’s administration works with the General Assembly to finalize this year’s budget—which, depending on whether or not they decide to cut taxes for the wealthiest Virginians, could mean millions more for public schools. Related, here’s an interesting excerpt to keep in mind: “When the accreditation system is changed, do you think those schools that lose their full accreditation should receive more resources from the state? 100%. The goal of accreditation is to support our schools so that every child can have the same equitable opportunity. So if a school is deficient in their accreditation, it is our responsibility as a state agency to give them the support they need to provide that opportunity for that child.”
 

#656
May 4, 2023
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🚧 Good morning, RVA: Diamond District deal creeps forward, Texas Beach closed for a while, and Bike Month continues!

Good morning, RVA! It’s 45 °F, and today looks like the chilliest day of the week. You can expect cloudy highs right around 60 °F, but I’m hoping to squeeze a couple more degrees out of the day because I’ve got big back-deck plans this evening. Either way, warmer temperatures start to return tomorrow, and next week looks pretty excellent.
 

Water cooler

VPM’s Jahd Khalil reports that this past Monday, the City’s Planing Commission signed off on the land transfer needed to finalize the Diamond District deal. Khalil also reports on a few changes to the deal that will help cover the now larger-than-anticipated costs as the project’s timeline has slipped and as interest rates have climbed. Specifically, the size of the TIF district has grown a bit, but not even close to the size of the all encompassing Big TIF from the Navy Hill days, and the City will “now be responsible for the public infrastructure in the first phase of the project’s four phases, at a cost of $54 million.” I’d love if someone put together a table of these recent changes so I could get a feel for their scope. I totally get the need to cover increasing costs, but I would like a better way of understanding what those new costs are and how the project expects to pay for them. Maybe this exists somewhere?
 

Zach Joachim at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports that the pedestrian bridge to Texas Beach will remain closed for at least another year. It’s kind of charming, in a dirty Richmond way, that folks keep prying off the barricades that prevent people from using the bridge, but, seriously, you should not do this! You will never ever catch me crossing a canal and a set of train tracks on a decades-old, “structurally unsafe” span! The multi-year delay in reopening Texas Beach to the public is a huge bummer, of course, but it’s far less of a bummer than if people got seriously injured by an old bridge giving up the ghost and dumping people into the canal.
 

#321
May 3, 2023
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🐘 Good morning, RVA: rva.fyi, we need a DOT, and wheelies!

Good morning, RVA! It’s 51 °F, and the chillier weather continues. Today you can expect highs in the mid 60s with even cooler temperatures moving through tomorrow. Don’t be afraid to put on an extra layer—yesterday, on my ride in to work, I big-time regretted not wearing gloves! On Thursday, overnight lows bottom out in the low 40s, and then things start to heat up from there. I think next weekend might even be the weekend to move some plants outside.
 

Water cooler

tl;dr: I set up a Mastodon server for folks trying to figure out how to get off of Twitter but confused or intimidated by how Mastodon works. Twitter is bad, and the person running Twitter is also bad. Unfortunately, a lot of news takes place exclusively on Twitter and nowhere else—stuff like transportation survey announcements, live coverage of public meetings, and sometimes our elected officials even make official statements and only put them on Twitter, which, again, is a bad place run by an incredibly offensive and unserious person. Honestly, if Twitter were a brand of cereal or a fast-food chain we’d all have boycotted it years ago, but, since Twitter provides a valuable service, we begrudgingly give all of our content to a childish memelord. This frustrates me! So I thought about it, and I felt like I could maybe be helpful in getting people in Richmond to move off of Twitter and onto something else. To that end, I set up a new Mastodon server at rva.fyi. This server is, for now, open to anyone, but I’d particularly like it to be a place for people interested in the types of things that would show up in a Good Morning, RVA. Like I said, there are a million Mastodon servers floating around out there, and, in fact, Mastodon just announced a default server for new users that you’re more than welcome to join instead! There’s nothing special about rva.fyi, other than I wanted a new project and wanted to make it as easy as possible for local people to take two steps back from Twitter. Truthfully, I don’t know that Mastodon is the best alternative to Twitter, but it’s here, it exists, and I’ve been enjoying my time on it over the last few months! Come check it out and see how you feel, it might be awesome!
 

On Sunday, Twitter user Wyatt Gordon posted a picture of the Cannon Creek Greenway closed at Dove Street as crews begin to prepare the nearby Highland Grove site for development. Gordon notes that the proposed development includes building at least two new streets, creating new crossings (aka conflict points) on what’s currently a really lovely and safe stretch of bike-and-pedestrian path. Better Housing Coalition, the developers in question, weighed in later in the thread with a few more details and that they’re “working closely with DPW & PDR on a temporary & safe detour.” First, I don’t know how we are still, still!, not requiring developers to provide an alternate safe path through construction when they close existing access. If you close a bike lane or sidewalk, you should be required to provide a temporary bike lane or sidewalk replacement. One-for-one! It’s nice that BHC is working with the City on a solution, but that solution needs to be figured out ahead of time—not only after someone complains on Twitter! Second, Richmond still lacks a body with the necessary authority to review projects like this and advocate for better multimodal transportation options. This could be a true-blue Department of Transportation or perhaps a powered-up version of City Council’s Safe and Healthy Streets Committee. Whoever it is, someone needs the authority to step in with a new development like this and advocate for better and safer transportation solutions. We can build more and more affordable housing in Richmond and make it safer to move around in our City—it’s not a zero-sum game. We just need to make doing so a priority, and this situations shows me that it clearly is not. P.S. Note this whole conversation played out exclusively on Twitter!
 

#7
May 2, 2023
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🐘 Good morning, RVA: rva.fyi, we need a DOT, and wheelies!

Good morning, RVA! It’s 51 °F, and the chillier weather continues. Today you can expect highs in the mid 60s with even cooler temperatures moving through tomorrow. Don’t be afraid to put on an extra layer—yesterday, on my ride in to work, I big-time regretted not wearing gloves! On Thursday, overnight lows bottom out in the low 40s, and then things start to heat up from there. I think next weekend might even be the weekend to move some plants outside.
 

Water cooler

tl;dr: I set up a Mastodon server for folks trying to figure out how to get off of Twitter but confused or intimidated by how Mastodon works. Twitter is bad, and the person running Twitter is also bad. Unfortunately, a lot of news takes place exclusively on Twitter and nowhere else—stuff like transportation survey announcements, live coverage of public meetings, and sometimes our elected officials even make official statements and only put them on Twitter, which, again, is a bad place run by an incredibly offensive and unserious person. Honestly, if Twitter were a brand of cereal or a fast-food chain we’d all have boycotted it years ago, but, since Twitter provides a valuable service, we begrudgingly give all of our content to a childish memelord. This frustrates me! So I thought about it, and I felt like I could maybe be helpful in getting people in Richmond to move off of Twitter and onto something else. To that end, I set up a new Mastodon server at rva.fyi. This server is, for now, open to anyone, but I’d particularly like it to be a place for people interested in the types of things that would show up in a Good Morning, RVA. Like I said, there are a million Mastodon servers floating around out there, and, in fact, Mastodon just announced a default server for new users that you’re more than welcome to join instead! There’s nothing special about rva.fyi, other than I wanted a new project and wanted to make it as easy as possible for local people to take two steps back from Twitter. Truthfully, I don’t know that Mastodon is the best alternative to Twitter, but it’s here, it exists, and I’ve been enjoying my time on it over the last few months! Come check it out and see how you feel, it might be awesome!
 

On Sunday, Twitter user Wyatt Gordon posted a picture of the Cannon Creek Greenway closed at Dove Street as crews begin to prepare the nearby Highland Grove site for development. Gordon notes that the proposed development includes building at least two new streets, creating new crossings (aka conflict points) on what’s currently a really lovely and safe stretch of bike-and-pedestrian path. Better Housing Coalition, the developers in question, weighed in later in the thread with a few more details and that they’re “working closely with DPW & PDR on a temporary & safe detour.” First, I don’t know how we are still, still!, not requiring developers to provide an alternate safe path through construction when they close existing access. If you close a bike lane or sidewalk, you should be required to provide a temporary bike lane or sidewalk replacement. One-for-one! It’s nice that BHC is working with the City on a solution, but that solution needs to be figured out ahead of time—not only after someone complains on Twitter! Second, Richmond still lacks a body with the necessary authority to review projects like this and advocate for better multimodal transportation options. This could be a true-blue Department of Transportation or perhaps a powered-up version of City Council’s Safe and Healthy Streets Committee. Whoever it is, someone needs the authority to step in with a new development like this and advocate for better and safer transportation solutions. We can build more and more affordable housing in Richmond and make it safer to move around in our City—it’s not a zero-sum game. We just need to make doing so a priority, and this situations shows me that it clearly is not. P.S. Note this whole conversation played out exclusively on Twitter!
 

#7
May 2, 2023
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🛹 Good morning, RVA: Roads, buses, and skateboards

Good morning, RVA! It’s 47 °F, and today—this whole week really—looks a bit cooler than with highs floating around in the 60s. I say get out there and enjoy it, because we only have but so many boots and flannel days left before True Summer shows up and we’re all sweating through our shirts.
 

Water cooler

Today you can take a couple of minutes to fill out the City’s survey about their plan to implement a one-way conversion on a short stretch of Brook Road south of Clay Street and north of Broad Street. I think the impetus for this change is solely to create 15 new parking spaces in the neighborhood, but the survey also mentions reducing conflict points and increasing road safety. I’m no engineer, but…I don’t know about all that. Typically converting a two-way road to one-way road means drivers have more room, will drive faster, and will pay less attention to bikes/pedestrians coming from unanticipated directions. Also, while I’m not smart enough to say if this conversion will make the neighborhood less safe, I am smart enough to say that it’s annoying to give up a pretty handy way to bike from the Maggie Walker Plaza to Abner Clay Park in exchange for just 15 parking spaces.
 

While I’ve filled out the previous survey (because it took a grand total of 30 seconds), I’m still working my way through the West Broad Street BRT Corridor Analysis PDF before leaving any feedback. I think I mentioned it last week, but this is an early and necessarily analysis that needs doing before the region can move forward on any of the real work to make a westward BRT extension a reality. Honestly, don’t be intimidated, because as far as transportation analysis PDFs go, this one looks pretty enjoyable. So dig into it—you’ve got until May 15th to submit any feedback.
 

#129
May 1, 2023
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🛹 Good morning, RVA: Roads, buses, and skateboards

Good morning, RVA! It’s 47 °F, and today—this whole week really—looks a bit cooler than with highs floating around in the 60s. I say get out there and enjoy it, because we only have but so many boots and flannel days left before True Summer shows up and we’re all sweating through our shirts.
 

Water cooler

Today you can take a couple of minutes to fill out the City’s survey about their plan to implement a one-way conversion on a short stretch of Brook Road south of Clay Street and north of Broad Street. I think the impetus for this change is solely to create 15 new parking spaces in the neighborhood, but the survey also mentions reducing conflict points and increasing road safety. I’m no engineer, but…I don’t know about all that. Typically converting a two-way road to one-way road means drivers have more room, will drive faster, and will pay less attention to bikes/pedestrians coming from unanticipated directions. Also, while I’m not smart enough to say if this conversion will make the neighborhood less safe, I am smart enough to say that it’s annoying to give up a pretty handy way to bike from the Maggie Walker Plaza to Abner Clay Park in exchange for just 15 parking spaces.
 

While I’ve filled out the previous survey (because it took a grand total of 30 seconds), I’m still working my way through the West Broad Street BRT Corridor Analysis PDF before leaving any feedback. I think I mentioned it last week, but this is an early and necessarily analysis that needs doing before the region can move forward on any of the real work to make a westward BRT extension a reality. Honestly, don’t be intimidated, because as far as transportation analysis PDFs go, this one looks pretty enjoyable. So dig into it—you’ve got until May 15th to submit any feedback.
 

#129
May 1, 2023
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👹 Good morning, RVA: Low COVID levels, gun violence, and big sculpture

Good morning, RVA! It’s 57 °F, and it’s rainy. You should expect the rain to continue for most of the morning and into the afternoon, with it maybe tapering off a bit as the day wears on. Saturday things dry out, and then, on Sunday, more rain. It’s a weekend full of wet weather, and I hope you find some time to curl up somewhere with a book or a horror film and something nice to drink, which, honestly, sounds lovely to me.
 

Water cooler

Yesterday, two RPS students were shot in the parking lot outside of George Wythe High School. One student suffered life-threatening injuries and remains in critical condition. Superintendent Kamras’s email from last night has more details on the incident and how adequate state funding for education can help deter violence in our schools and in our communities: “Like a doctor, I wish we could simply write a prescription to fix everything. While it’s not that simple, there is some medicine on the counter: roughly $1 billion in education funding. That’s what the Senate version of the state’s budget would add to Virginia’s schools, while the House’s would siphon that money off for tax cuts, which would largely benefit the state’s richest residents and richest corporations. That $1 billion would yield about $20 million for RPS. That’s enough money to hire 235 more counselors. Just think what that would do for the students at Wythe and the rest of our schools.” Kamras asks that folks email the legislators who sit on the General Assembly’s budget committees and demand the education funding found in the Senate’s version of the budget (in his words, he humbly requests that you plead with them to invest in our children). It’s absolutely unfathomable that we have the money to invest in education—it’s just sitting right there!—yet Virginia’s Republicans would rather continue their work to defund public schools and further enrich the wealthy at the expense of our children.
 

It’s the last week of the month, so I think it’s time to check back in on our region’s COVID-19 Community levels. As of last night (and over the last bunch of weeks at this point), Richmond, Henrico, and Chesterfield all continue to have low CDC COVID-19 Community Levels. In fact, the entirety of the Commonwealth and most of the United States sit at a low/green level, with only 74 localities nationwide (out of 3,221) at a medium or high level. I imagine that, at some point, CDC will start to transition away from Community Level as their go-to metric, but, until then, I’ll check in with it about once a month—just to keep an eye on things. Summer has, historically, been a chill(ish) time for COVID, but I’m pretty interested to see if this fall brings with it another mini-peak. However! That’s a million years from now, and we’ve got the wide-open road of summer stretching out ahead of us first!
 

#283
April 28, 2023
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🚲 Good morning, RVA: Traffic violence, Enrichmond details, and a really big Bike Month

Good morning, RVA! It’s 49 °F, and, while cloudy, today looks lovely with moderate highs in the 70s. Rain definitely returns tomorrow, and Sunday is a real will-they-or-won’t-they situation. Yesterday the forecast for the end of the weekend looked pretty dry, but today it looks like we’ll have a sopping wet Sunday evening. Anyway, take advantage of today however you can!
 

Water cooler

RPD report that around 8:00 PM this past Sunday, a driver hit and killed a person who was attempting to cross the 3300 block of Richmond Highway. I’m irritated by how the press release nots that the “RPD Crash Team responded to the scene and determined that Taylor was attempting to run across the street when he was struck by the vehicle,” as if running implies wrongdoing when it’s the only reasonable way to cross the terrifyingly fast six lanes of traffic. The entirety of Richmond Highway sits on the High-Injury Street Network, so we already knew that this exact spot is too fast and too dangerous for people—in fact, someone was hit and injured on the same block last August. Now that someone has died, will we do anything to slow traffic down and keep people safe?
 

Melissa Hipolit at WTVR has the update on Enrichmond Foundation’s sudden dissolution that I’ve been waiting for: “The Enrichmond Foundation was violating its contracts with nonprofit partners by using nearly $500,000 in partner funds to pay off Enrichmond debts.” You’ll want to read the whole thing, as Hipolit paints a pretty grim picture of the organizations last few months before shutting down. Two things I’ll note: 1) According to a board member, budget shortfalls “were in large part because Enrichmond was not getting enough funding to maintain two historically black cemeteries it acquired in 2017“; and 2) It’s never a good sign when a picture of bankers boxes full of your documents end up on the news. I don’t think we’ve heard the end of this story yet, so stay tuned.
 

#498
April 27, 2023
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🍾 Good morning, RVA: So long parking minimums, a fire presentation, and digital IDs

Good morning, RVA! It’s 42 °F, and today stays cool with highs in the mid 60s. You can expect clear skies for the next couple of days, and you should definitely plan a couple of ways to take advantage of them because sure looks like rain will move into the region on Friday (and possibly Sunday, too).
 

Water cooler

Last night, City Council voted unanimously to eliminate parking minimums across all of Richmond (ORD. 2023–101)! This is amazing news and is entirely the result of advocates like you, reader of this email newsletter, working to push councilmembers to build a more progressive and climate-friendly future for our city. I think Twitter user @DFRSH757 gets it right, saying, “Make no mistake this is a big step. No half-measures or special carve outs. Proud of council for being bold. Creating an affordable, accessible, & climate-conscious city takes 1000 cuts but this a big important cut.” I couldn’t agree more! The biggest impact of last night’s vote may not be the policy itself, but Council publicly showing they are willing to take bold steps without futzing around the edges, requesting endless expensive studies, or watering down legislation at the last minute. With the rewrite of the City’s zoning ordinance on this horizon, these are promising steps in the right direction. Also, while they were busy making big parking moves, Council passed two other ordinances I had my eyes on: ORD. 2023–057 to unprohibit a roundabout at Laburnum and Hermitage and ORD. 2023–123 to purchase Mayo Island. All in all it was a great night for the GMRVA Legislation Tracker!
 

Also Council-related, today the City’s Chief of Fire and Emergency Services will give a presentation to Council’s Public Safety committee about “fire safety and school inspections.” For background: VPM’s Connor Scribner and Megan Pauly have done most of the reporting on Richmond Public Schools’ long list of fire code violations over the last seven years. One chart that stuck out to me from their comprehensive work was RFD documented inspections rate of Richmond schools from 2015 to 2022, which shows a steady decline until very recently (after the Fox Elementary School fire, the inspection rate has thankfully jumped back up to 100%). It’ll be interesting to hear what the Chief has to say this afternoon, because, while most of the public focus has been on RPS and their litany of violations, VPM also reports that “city fire officials said they’d been unaware of issues with inconsistent school inspections and follow-ups until the 2021 city audit” and “Richmond Fire Chief Melvin Carter attributed previous failures in the department’s follow-ups to violations to ‘critical’ staffing shortages.” Sounds like a failure in process and staffing. Again, thankfully, the RFD has staffed up since then, and now hopefully Chief Carter has the tools he needs to work with RPS to make sure our City’s school buildings are safer.
 

#791
April 25, 2023
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🦁 Good morning, RVA: Eliminate parking minimums!, buy Mayo Island, and recreate the city

Good morning, RVA! It’s 47 °F, and this week looks a lot chillier than last half dozen days. Today, though, you can expect highs in the mid 60s with temperatures warming up bit through Thursday. After that, who knows! Maybe some rain, maybe the return of cooler weather—we’ll just have to wait and see!
 

Water cooler

OK! I think today’s the big day for eliminating parking minimums across the entire city. As of this moment, the ordinance to do so (ORD. 2023–101) sits on the consent portion of today’s City Council agenda—the place where uncontroversial ordinances typically live. That could change before tonight’s meeting, of course, but it’s a good sign! Also in the “good sign” column, 2nd District Councilmember Katherine Jordan, who I’d pegged as a no-vote (at least on the ordinance as written), announced in her newsletter that she’ll vote yes. Tap through and read the thoughtful explanation of her vote, including a really nice description of what the proposed ordinance would and would not do. And, in a final good sign, earlier this week the Fan District Association launched a poorly-written online survey about parking minimums, I guess hoping to show massive opposition to the proposed changes. Well, the results are in, and…drum roll…64.6% of respondent supported the elimination of parking minimums. We’ll have to see if all these positive signs ultimately point toward at least five votes at Council’s meeting tonight, but I feel better about it than I did last week. If you’d like, you can still email your councilmember (and their liaison!) in support of ORD. 2023–101 this morning.
 

City Council will also tackle three other things of note today. First, ORD. 2023–057 would unprohibit a roundabout at the intersection of Hermitage Road and Laburnum Avenue. While I don’t think a roundabout is necessarily the best solution for this now monument-free intersection, it’s super important to wipe the slate clean of any previous shenanigans and give planners the room they need to work. Second, Planning Commission will meet for a special meeting earlier in the day so that City Council can deal with the papers authorizing the purchase of Mayo Island. Fingers crossed that all the details are nailed down and that the City can finally take ownership of the island, because I’m stoked to get rid of that billboard blocking the skyline views! Third, and this is mostly administrative, but Council should officially introduce their amendments to the Mayor’s budget tonight, which, after listening to last week’s budget session, sound like they’ll be fairly breezy.
 

#506
April 24, 2023
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🦠 Good morning, RVA: COVID-19 vax recommendations, email your councilmember, and new history standards

Good morning, RVA! It’s 61 °F, and we’ve got another round of hot temperatures today. You can expect highs near 90 with plenty of sun, which, honestly, felt pretty nice yesterday. Tomorrow after lunch you can expect some rain, and maybe even some thunder and lighting, bringing with it cooler temperatures for the rest of the weekend. Stay cool today, maybe watch a horror film tomorrow, and spend some time outside on Sunday! Get excited, because it’s the weekend!
 

Water cooler

Earlier this week the FDA updated their COVID-19 vaccine recommendations, with the CDC quickly following suit. Newly eligible folks still need to wait on the Virginia Department of Health to do their thing, which historically has happened pretty quickly after the FDA and CDC get their ducks in a row. So maybe pump the brakes (or at least call ahead) before running out to your local pharmacy for a new vaccination—although, reader of this newsletter, you are most likely already up-to-date on your vaccinations and don’t need to do anything. Despite the FDA headline about simplifying things, the new guidance is…a little complicated. As per always, I think Katelyn Jetelina does a great job about explaining the new guidelines, which I’m just going to copy paste below.
 

You are now considered up-to-date on your COVID-19 vaccines if:
 

#162
April 21, 2023
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🦠 Good morning, RVA: COVID-19 vax recommendations, email your councilmember, and new history standards

Good morning, RVA! It’s 61 °F, and we’ve got another round of hot temperatures today. You can expect highs near 90 with plenty of sun, which, honestly, felt pretty nice yesterday. Tomorrow after lunch you can expect some rain, and maybe even some thunder and lighting, bringing with it cooler temperatures for the rest of the weekend. Stay cool today, maybe watch a horror film tomorrow, and spend some time outside on Sunday! Get excited, because it’s the weekend!
 

Water cooler

Earlier this week the FDA updated their COVID-19 vaccine recommendations, with the CDC quickly following suit. Newly eligible folks still need to wait on the Virginia Department of Health to do their thing, which historically has happened pretty quickly after the FDA and CDC get their ducks in a row. So maybe pump the brakes (or at least call ahead) before running out to your local pharmacy for a new vaccination—although, reader of this newsletter, you are most likely already up-to-date on your vaccinations and don’t need to do anything. Despite the FDA headline about simplifying things, the new guidance is…a little complicated. As per always, I think Katelyn Jetelina does a great job about explaining the new guidelines, which I’m just going to copy paste below.
 

You are now considered up-to-date on your COVID-19 vaccines if:
 

#162
April 21, 2023
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