Good Morning, RVA

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🙋 Good morning, RVA: 922↘️ • 13↘️; a George Floyd hologram, and a stunning map

Good morning, RVA! It’s 75 °F, and you can expect “cooler” temperatures today. We’ll still see the hot and humid 90s, just the low 90s instead of the high 90s.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 922↘️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 13↘️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 127↘️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 30, Henrico: 65, and Richmond: 32). Since this pandemic began, 281 people have died in the Richmond region. A couple things to note this morning! First, the outage or backlog or whatever at VDH did seem to cause a one-time increase in new coronavirus case counts, and today’s new COVID-19 case numbers are back under 1,000. Second, faced with a worsening situation in the 757, the Governor tweaked Phase Three (as predicted) for just a handful of localities in the Eastern Region of the state: Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Norfolk, Suffolk, Portsmouth, Hampton, Williamsburg, Newport News, Poquoson, James City County, and York County. In those localities, on-site alcohol sales will end at 10:00 PM, all dining establishments must close by 12:00 AM, indoor dining will be limited to 50% of capacity, and gatherings over 50 people will be prohibited. The new restrictions will remain in place for at least a couple of weeks, an entire COVID-19 incubation period. Third, a GMRVA Patron reminded me of this VDH form to report violations of the Governor’s executive order requiring folks to wear masks inside of buildings. Wearing a mask is not a joke, and, in fact, it is required by the dang Governor while inside.

RPS Superintendent Jason Kamras says teachers will not be virtually teaching from their classrooms this coming school year. While this is exactly what Chesterfield Public Schools have required—that teachers show up for work each and every day with students staying home—I didn’t know that it was something teachers in Richmond wanted. Kamras says opening the buildings to teachers would open the buildings to additional staff, additional cleaning costs, and, most importantly, the coronavirus itself—which is exactly the point of keeping all learning virtual for the foreseeable future.

#313
July 29, 2020
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📑 Good morning, RVA: 958↘️ • 3↗️; protests return to Richmond; and a packed City Council agenda

Good morning, RVA! It’s 77 °F, and, wow, big surprise, we’re headed into another day with temperatures in the upper 90s and lots of humidity. Enjoy!

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 958↘️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 3↗️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 74↘️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 28, Henrico: 29, and Richmond: 17). Since this pandemic began, 280 people have died in the Richmond region. I’m interested to hear what the Governor will have to say this week and what actions he may take as the Commonwealth continues to see about 1,000 new coronavirus cases each day. On Saturday, he said “We will be watching the public health data closely over the weekend—if the numbers don’t come down, we may have to take additional steps to blunt the spread of this virus.” The numbers, particularly in Eastern Virginia, do not look to have appreciably come down. I still think that he’ll be extremely hesitant to move even a single region fully back to Phase Two, and, if I were to guess, I’d say he’ll modify Phase Three in some of the most impacted regions by re-banning indoor dining and reducing the number of people allowed at public gatherings. Kate Masters at the Virginia Mercury has the details on the statewide picture. I guess we’ll learn more today or tomorrow, and, until then, make sure you stay home if you can, mask up and keep your distance if you cannot.

This past weekend saw two nights of protests return to the streets of downtown Richmond and VCU-adjacent parts of the Fan. I don’t want to speak for any of the folks involved, but the vibe on Saturday was weird and different. Literal White Supremacists with assault rifles led the march for a portion of the night, I saw video of an angry white man shoot his gun into the street to intimidate someone (content warning: n-word), police again used chemical weapons on crowds, and members of the press were manhandled by the Richmond Police Department. You should read the recap in the Richmond Times-Dispatch by Sabrina Moreno and Ali Sullivan as Moreno was one of the reporters thrown to the ground by police. As Saturday night’s crowd made its way through the City, protestors shattered dozens of windows along Grace Street causing, according to VCU President Rao, over $100,000 of damage. Sunday night was, again, weird and different. After the previous night of property damage and scary gun violence, to an outside observer it felt like the RPD were much more on edge. Police harassed, detained, or arrested four people who have been involved in covering the protests for the last 60 days. The Commonwealth Times’s Eduardo Acevedo was harassed despite loudly and prominently showing his press pass. The CT’s Andrew Ringle was detained and handcuffed. @GoadGatsby—who, while not press, has provided the most consistent coverage of the last 60 days—was arrested and released. And @socialistdogmom—also not officially press but has covered recent events in Richmond and has a long history of covering city government in Charlottesville—was arrested and, at least as of this moment, has not yet been released. As you can imagine, I feel very protective of folks who are not quite press but still fill important roles in helping people stay informed about what’s going on in their city. With City Council set to vote on some of the police-reform legislation tonight (more on that below), this weekend’s protests have left me feeling confused and unmoored.

#170
July 27, 2020
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📑 Good morning, RVA: 958↘️ • 3↗️; protests return to Richmond; and a packed City Council agenda

Good morning, RVA! It’s 77 °F, and, wow, big surprise, we’re headed into another day with temperatures in the upper 90s and lots of humidity. Enjoy!

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 958↘️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 3↗️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 74↘️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 28, Henrico: 29, and Richmond: 17). Since this pandemic began, 280 people have died in the Richmond region. I’m interested to hear what the Governor will have to say this week and what actions he may take as the Commonwealth continues to see about 1,000 new coronavirus cases each day. On Saturday, he said “We will be watching the public health data closely over the weekend—if the numbers don’t come down, we may have to take additional steps to blunt the spread of this virus.” The numbers, particularly in Eastern Virginia, do not look to have appreciably come down. I still think that he’ll be extremely hesitant to move even a single region fully back to Phase Two, and, if I were to guess, I’d say he’ll modify Phase Three in some of the most impacted regions by re-banning indoor dining and reducing the number of people allowed at public gatherings. Kate Masters at the Virginia Mercury has the details on the statewide picture. I guess we’ll learn more today or tomorrow, and, until then, make sure you stay home if you can, mask up and keep your distance if you cannot.

This past weekend saw two nights of protests return to the streets of downtown Richmond and VCU-adjacent parts of the Fan. I don’t want to speak for any of the folks involved, but the vibe on Saturday was weird and different. Literal White Supremacists with assault rifles led the march for a portion of the night, I saw video of an angry white man shoot his gun into the street to intimidate someone (content warning: n-word), police again used chemical weapons on crowds, and members of the press were manhandled by the Richmond Police Department. You should read the recap in the Richmond Times-Dispatch by Sabrina Moreno and Ali Sullivan as Moreno was one of the reporters thrown to the ground by police. As Saturday night’s crowd made its way through the City, protestors shattered dozens of windows along Grace Street causing, according to VCU President Rao, over $100,000 of damage. Sunday night was, again, weird and different. After the previous night of property damage and scary gun violence, to an outside observer it felt like the RPD were much more on edge. Police harassed, detained, or arrested four people who have been involved in covering the protests for the last 60 days. The Commonwealth Times’s Eduardo Acevedo was harassed despite loudly and prominently showing his press pass. The CT’s Andrew Ringle was detained and handcuffed. @GoadGatsby—who, while not press, has provided the most consistent coverage of the last 60 days—was arrested and released. And @socialistdogmom—also not officially press but has covered recent events in Richmond and has a long history of covering city government in Charlottesville—was arrested and, at least as of this moment, has not yet been released. As you can imagine, I feel very protective of folks who are not quite press but still fill important roles in helping people stay informed about what’s going on in their city. With City Council set to vote on some of the police-reform legislation tonight (more on that below), this weekend’s protests have left me feeling confused and unmoored.

#170
July 27, 2020
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🏢 Good morning, RVA: 904↗️ • 15↘️; two police reform papers pass committee; and a logistical note

Good morning, RVA! It’s 73 °F, and highs today will head back up past 90 °F. The Feels Like™ will most likely hit triple digits, so stay inside if you can. Maybe some rain this evening, though!

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 904↗️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 15↘️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 77↗️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 35, Henrico: 17, and Richmond: 25). Since this pandemic began, 275 people have died in the Richmond region. I don’t think it’s reflected in the VDH numbers yet, but C. Suarez Rojas at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports that an outbreak a the Henrico County Jail West “has resulted in roughly 130 confirmed cases among inmates and jail staff.” At the national level, for whatever reason, I find these hexagonal Catan maps of the number of new COVID-19 cases by state extremely compelling. Looking at the most recent one from the COVID Tracking Project, and as of yesterday, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Georgia all reported more than 1,800 new cases. In fact, all of them except for South Carolina reported over 2,000 new cases. Florida reported 13,965 cases in one day! You’d have to add up every new reported positive case in Virginia since June 26th to hit that number. Things are not looking good throughout the South.

City Council’s Finance and Economic Development committee met yesterday and recommended that full City Council approve both of their police reform resolutions—thats RES. 2020-R046 (asset forfeiture reports) and RES. 2020-R047 (requests a report on reallocating a few mental-health-related portions of the Richmond Police Department’s budget). Ali Rockett at the RTD has a recap of the three-hour meeting, for which I am very thankful (but the audio is, of course, available for those of you who are into that sort of thing). Councilmembers Jones and Robertson voted for the latter paper and Councilmember Larson voted against. Again, I haven’t listened to the audio for the context, but Rockett quotes Larson as saying “I’m not comfortable with moving money to move money.”

#1027
July 17, 2020
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🖥 Good morning, RVA: 801↗️ • 9↘️; virtual instruction at RPS for 2020; and new bike lanes

Good morning, RVA! It’s 71 °F, and you’ve got another hot and humid day lined up in front of you. Summer in Richmond continues!

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 801↗️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 9↘️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 121↗️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 62, Henrico: 34, and Richmond: 25). Since this pandemic began, 272 people have died in the Richmond region. Yesterday, the Governor did hold a coronavirus press conference in light of the increasing number of reported positive COVID-19 cases across the state—especially in the eastern part of the Commonwealth. Kate Masters at the Virginia Mercury has one recap which focuses on the the lack of specificity and transparency in the public VDH datasets and another with the details on the Governor’s plan to combat rising case counts by getting the Virginia ABC and the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services to conduct unannounced mask inspections at businesses. The ABC will also ban alcohol sales after 11:00 PM. I dunno, y’all. Is enforcement really the best and most equitable way to get people to practice safe public health behavior? When we talk about Vision Zero and making streets safer, it’s implementing actual, physical changes to a street that shifts behavior—not setting up a speed trap for a weekend. In fact, lots of groups have dropped “enforcement” from their Vision Zero strategies entirely. I’m not convinced that deploying a couple hundred inspectors to enforce the mask and social distancing requirements will actually shift folks' coronabehavior, and I’m concerned about which businesses and people will be on the receiving end of that enforcement. I think we probably need to do the equivalent of making actual, physical changes to a street and close bars and indoor dining for a while.

Richmond’s School Board met last night and, after hearing hours of public comment, voted 8–1 to move forward with Plan E—an entirely virtual first semester for all students. The Board could change course if the public health picture improves, but, for now, it looks like kids across the city are stuck at home (and I mean that in the best possible way) for the rest of the calendar year. It also looks like longer-term childcare will become an even more critical need for families whose work situations just will not allow them to stay home to help facilitate online learning. If you want, you can read the 122-page document (PDF) of alllllll the public comments and maybe check out a quick refresher of the key elements of virtual instruction on page nine of this PDF. This is a big freaking deal, and, while I think I’m still convinced that in-person school for our youngest students is probably a good idea, I’m impressed that the School Board was able to make this decision quickly and decisively. At least now we all know what to expect in the City come September. We’ll now get to see how Richmond’s path forward impacts what Henrico and Chesterfield decide to do. That school reopening is not a decision made regionally blows my mind!

#540
July 15, 2020
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🙋 Good morning, RVA: 972↗️ • 2↗️; police reform legislation; school board decision?

Good morning, RVA! It’s 70 °F, and today looks slightly less steamy-hot than the last couple of days. Get out there and enjoy it (while staying hydrated)!

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 972↗️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 2↗️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 75↗️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 27, Henrico: 31, and Richmond: 17). Since this pandemic began, 270 people have died in the Richmond region. The last time the Commonwealth reported more than 972 cases was back on June 7th, one of just a handful of days ever with over 1,000 reported positive coronavirus cases. We’ll see what today’s numbers bring, but if Virginia starts reporting 1,000 cases per day on the regular I have to think the Governor will implement some changes. Maybe changes to Phase Three? Maybe regional changes? If you’ve got a second, tap through the Number of Cases by Date of Symptom Onset graphs filtered by region. Almost every region (except Central Virginia) has seen an increase in cases, but Eastern Virginia is really driving a lot of the change we’re seeing in the statewide numbers. I’d love to know what’s different in each of these regions and what we can learn from each other over the next couple of months.

The Commonwealth Times’s Hannah Eason spent some time at last night’s peaceful protest Downtown, and she’s put together some pictures and videos from the event. This is the second night of peaceful protests that start at MLK Middle School and make their way to City Hall to hangout, demonstrate, and listen to speakers. Unlike a couple weeks back, police did not show up—Richmond Police or Virginia State Police—and gas everyone to get them to go home. Related and totally worth your tap: NPR talked to Regina Boone, a Richmond Free Press photographer, about her work capturing images from the last month and a half of protests.

#211
July 14, 2020
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📈 Good morning, RVA: 888↗️ • 4↘️; new school reopening plans; and taking down the plinth

Good morning, RVA! It’s 71 °F, and you might see some rain this morning! After that, though, we’re back to the standard hot and humid Richmond summer.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 888↗️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 4↘️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 87↗️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 20, Henrico: 38, and Richmond: 29). Since this pandemic began, 270 people have died in the Richmond region. I think it’s pretty clear now that reported positive case in Virginia are trending upward, and the last time the Commonwealth saw the same number of cases while they were increasing was back in mid April (so on the way up the previous spike, not on the way down). The number of tests reported does continue to increase, yet the statewide percent positivity also has crept up almost a percentage point as of the last couple weeks of June. Since the Governor has stopped his regularly-scheduled COVID-19 press conferences, we’ve got to catch him at public appearances, like this one in Hampton Roads. In light of the worsening coronastats, he announced that he “won’t hesitate to impose restrictions if needed,” and that, if necessary, he’d consider a move back into Phase Two or modifying Phase Three’s requirements around large gatherings. About schools (more on that below) the Gov said "…if our numbers don’t stay where they are and we can’t remain in Phase Three then we are not going to be able to move forward with that.” So keep an eye on that and the willingness to monkey around with the requirements of Phase Three to avoid moving back into Phase Two and forcing the closures of schools.

Last week, I recapped the Richmond School Board meeting where they heard from experts and discussed possible plans for reopening the District. At the time, the Superintendent had put forward two plans—Plan A and Plan B—one would have students in schools a couple of days a week, one would have students in schools every day, both would provide fully-virtual options for families that wanted to stay home. Now the Superintendent has three more plans, Plans C through E. Plan C would have elementary schools students back for full-time, in-person instruction and everyone else would do fully virtual learning. Plan D would allow for full-time, in-person instruction for high-needs students with every one else fully virtual. Plan E would keep everyone fully virtual for the first semester. Note with every plan, all students will have the option to go fully virtual, and, in the Superintendent’s words, “No RPS employe will be forced to work in-person. Period. Full stop.” Plan C is the exact modification to Plan B I wrote about last week, so I’m glad its now an official, lettered option. School Board will have another meeting this Tuesday, tomorrow, to further discuss all of these options and to try to chart a path forward. If you’ve got thoughts and opinions, you can make an official public comment by emailing speakers@rvaschools.net (which they will totally read at the meeting) or you can email the Superintendent (jkamras@rvaschools.net) and the School Board directly.

#430
July 13, 2020
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🏫 Good morning, RVA: 613↗️ • 32↗️; how to reopen schools; and green stormwater infrastructure

Good morning, RVA! It’s 74 °F, and you know the drill. Expect hot, humid weather today and through the weekend. We might could see some rain next week, though!

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 613↗️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 32↗️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 46↘️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 30, Henrico: 4, and Richmond: 12). Since this pandemic began, 263 people have died in the Richmond region. Watching last night’s School Board meeting (more on that below) I learned that you can filter by region VDH’s Number of Cases by Date of Symptom Onset graph that I talked about yesterday! This should have been obvious since in the very chart I linked to yesterday there’s a drop down that literally says “Select Region.” Anyway, this is a fascinating dropdown because you can see how cases are increasing across the Commonwealth, even while they’re decreasing in Central Virginia. Actually, cases are increasing in every region—some more than others—except Central Virginia. Two reminders while playing around with this data: 1) the data are more incomplete the further to the right you get, and 2) the y-axis is not the same on each graph!


#572
July 10, 2020
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📺 Good morning, RVA: 635↗️ • 52↗️; evictions; and tune in to School Board

Good morning, RVA! It’s 74 °F, and today you get more of the same. Expect highs in the 90s, humidity, and probably no rain. Water those plants—I bet they’re thirsty.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 635↗️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 24↗️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 52↗️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 19, Henrico: 13, and Richmond: 20). Since this pandemic began, 253 people have died in the Richmond region. I don’t think I can replicate VDH’s Number of Cases by Date of Symptom Onset graph with the data I’ve got, but its an interesting chart worth looking at. Since, I think, they’re backfilling new cases to the date symptoms began you get a little bit of a different picture than the straight graph of new reported positive cases. Remember that data further toward the right side of the graph will likely change as they find new cases and stick them in their appropriate spot. Maybe the former graph shows a more marked increase in cases over the last two, three weeks? Maybe not? Regardless, both graphs do show an increase in new cases since about the middle of June while percent positivity has stayed mostly flat or gone down a couple tenths of a percent since then. I keep feeling like one more day of data will expose some sort of trend, but that just never seems to be the case!

The Mayor’s very thorough warehousing of our city’s Confederate monuments continues! Yesterday he had the mass-produced man atop the Confederate Soldiers and Sailors monument mothballed and got crews to clean up the remaining bronze bits of the Jefferson Davis monument. However! Mark Robinson at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports that an anonymous person filed a lawsuit earlier this week asking “among other things, that a judge bar Stoney from ordering or authorizing any further removals.” As of 12 hours ago a hearing had not been scheduled, so I imagine the takedowns will continue throughout this week until a judge orders otherwise. Honestly, this lawsuit, and whichever ones that follow, seem like a waste of everyone’s time. Council will vote to get rid of the monuments on August 3rd, just 25 days from now and in line with the dumb and required State process, regardless of what a court decides about this particular lawsuit.

#519
July 9, 2020
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🆎 Good morning, RVA: 638↗️ • 28↗️; Stuart down, Soldiers and Sailors next; two plans to reopen schools

Good morning, RVA! It’s 73 °F, and we’ve got another hot and humid day ahead of us. Looks like we should avoid the rain that other parts of the state will see this afternoon, though.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 638↗️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 28↗️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 69↗️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 33, Henrico: 23, and Richmond: 13). Since this pandemic began, 248 people have died in the Richmond region. I’ve got a couple data points I want to mention this morning. First, aside from yesterday’s weird holiday reporting, Virginia has seen more than 500 new reported positive cases every day in July—here’s that graph. Second, the seven-day average of new reported positive cases in Richmond, Henrico, and Chesterfield have settled back into the same neighborhood (13, 17, and 23 respectively). Chesterfield no longer reports a big discrepancy compared to the rest of the region—here’s that graph. Third, and finally, 27 people have died in the Richmond region as a result of the virus since June 30th. That seems like a lot to me. Here’s that graph, but be careful with this one since its full of really small numbers and any weird reporting situation has a big impact.

Yesterday morning, right after I hit send on Good Morning, RVA, crews showed up at Stuart Circle and took down the J.E.B. Stuart monument like it was no big deal. Andrew Ringle from the Commonwealth Times has some photos and videos of the moment, which lacked the same crowds (and involuntary gasps from me) from when the Stonewall Jackson monument lifted off its pedestal last week. Did we normalize tearing down 100-year-old statues to white supremacy within the course of one week? People are amazing. Anyway, I imagine at least one more monument will come down today, and /r/rva says its the Soldiers and Sailors monument on Libby Hill (which has had some cool new context added to it in recent days).

#1060
July 8, 2020
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👖 Good morning, RVA: 354↘️ • 0↘️; getting rid of silos; and goodbye Need

Good morning, RVA! It’s 75 °F, and today looks hot and humid. Back when we still sat next to people at things, this was the time of year where I did my part to normalize showing up at meetings sweaty and smelly from riding a bike.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 354↘️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 0↘️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 27↘️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 11, Henrico: 4, and Richmond: 12). Since this pandemic began, 241 people have died in the Richmond region. Alert! Most likely these numbers are garbage, and you shouldn’t pay too much attention to them. A holiday weekend probably means low reporting—in fact, some states just didn’t report at all—which then means spikier data over the next couple of days. So take today’s numbers with a grain of salt, too.

I didn’t get a chance (yet) to listen to yesterday’s meeting of Council’s Organizational Development committee, which includes all nine Council members. The video, is, however, online for those of us that are willing to spend 90 minutes of their lives listening to this sort of thing. Given some the comments that flew by, it sounds like at least parts of it were interesting / entertaining. Coming out of that meeting, 5th District Councilmember Lynch put together a good thread about the police reform legislation currently floating around on Council’s agenda. You can see all of it over on the GMRVA Ordinance Tracker, and I’ve tagged the applicable cards with “Police reform.” Because of how our system of local government works, a lot of these papers are resolutions that boil down to City Council asking the Mayor’s administration to do a thing (i.e. create reports on asset forfeiture and the Richmond Police Department’s budget, set up a Marcus Alert work group, get the police to stop using chemical weapons). Remember: City Council can pass laws (ordinances) and it can ask the Mayor in a non-binding way to change his administration’s policies (resolutions). For meaningful police reform, we’ll need both the City Council and the Mayor to get on the same page, pulling in the same direction.

#80
July 7, 2020
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👖 Good morning, RVA: 354↘️ • 0↘️; getting rid of silos; and goodbye Need

Good morning, RVA! It’s 75 °F, and today looks hot and humid. Back when we still sat next to people at things, this was the time of year where I did my part to normalize showing up at meetings sweaty and smelly from riding a bike.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 354↘️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 0↘️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 27↘️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 11, Henrico: 4, and Richmond: 12). Since this pandemic began, 241 people have died in the Richmond region. Alert! Most likely these numbers are garbage, and you shouldn’t pay too much attention to them. A holiday weekend probably means low reporting—in fact, some states just didn’t report at all—which then means spikier data over the next couple of days. So take today’s numbers with a grain of salt, too.

I didn’t get a chance (yet) to listen to yesterday’s meeting of Council’s Organizational Development committee, which includes all nine Council members. The video, is, however, online for those of us that are willing to spend 90 minutes of their lives listening to this sort of thing. Given some the comments that flew by, it sounds like at least parts of it were interesting / entertaining. Coming out of that meeting, 5th District Councilmember Lynch put together a good thread about the police reform legislation currently floating around on Council’s agenda. You can see all of it over on the GMRVA Ordinance Tracker, and I’ve tagged the applicable cards with “Police reform.” Because of how our system of local government works, a lot of these papers are resolutions that boil down to City Council asking the Mayor’s administration to do a thing (i.e. create reports on asset forfeiture and the Richmond Police Department’s budget, set up a Marcus Alert work group, get the police to stop using chemical weapons). Remember: City Council can pass laws (ordinances) and it can ask the Mayor in a non-binding way to change his administration’s policies (resolutions). For meaningful police reform, we’ll need both the City Council and the Mayor to get on the same page, pulling in the same direction.

#80
July 7, 2020
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😬 Good morning, RVA: 639↗️ • 4↘️; some personal news; and decking over the highway

Good morning, RVA! It’s 74 °F, and today we’ve got more of the same. Expect highs in the mid 90s, sunshine, and humidity—all the things that make Richmond summers great. Stay cool, stay hydrated, and stay masked up.

Water cooler

Some personal news: At the end of this month, I will resign my position as Executive Director of RVA Rapid Transit (that’s my day job). I’ve had the absolute best time over the last four years working for an organization whose vision—a region packed with frequent and far-reaching public transportation—aligns so closely with my own. However, trite as it sounds, the last three months of pandemic and protests have helped bring into focus what’s important to me and what I do best.

First, it’s clear to me that the advocacy for better public transportation in our region must be led by the people most impacted by our region’s past—and ongoing—racist planning decisions. That’s obviously not my lived experience, and it’s appropriate and necessary for me to step aside and make space for someone else.

#813
July 6, 2020
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🏗 Good morning, RVA: 532↗️ • 30↗️; more monuments coming down; and a peaceful protest

Good morning, RVA! It’s 70 °F, and today will be hot. Expect highs in the mid 90s and Feels Like temperatures even higher. If you’ve got to go outside for some reason, wear a hat and remember to hydrate! Expect similar hot—and mostly rain-free—weather over the holiday weekend.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 532↗️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 30↗️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 51↘️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 25, Henrico: 12, and Richmond: 14). Since this pandemic began, 235 people have died in the Richmond region. So you can see everything in on place, I put together the graphs of new reported positive cases, new deaths, and new hospitalizations plus their seven-day averages here. New positive cases have stuck right around 500 for the past couple weeks, while deaths have increased, and hospitalizations have bounced around a bit. According to VDH the Commonwealth’s percent posititivity is on the rise since about a week ago, but they just reported a ton of tests (increasing the denominator) a couple days back so that could change. When taken together…I’m not sure what to make of all that. Virginia is certainly not in the same dire straights as our Southern neighbors: Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida all reported more than 1,500 new coronavirus cases yesterday. In fact, Florida became the first state to report over 10,000 new cases in a single day since New York back on April 15th. I don’t know what keeps Virginia from slipping off of its 500-cases-per-day plateau, but, like, keep doing whatever it is we’re doing! If you’re hanging out this weekend, please, please keep your distance and your masks on.

The Mayor’s march down Monument Avenue continues, and yesterday saw the removal of the Maury statue (his globe still remains) and two Confederate memorial cannons from the median of Monument that I’d totally forgot existed. It requires, admittedly, an immense amount of privilege and a massive lack of curiosity to live in a place and just plain forget about its monuments to white supremacy. I had a chance to ride past the now-empty Jackson plinth, and the statue’s absence is striking (see above). The statue took up a building-sized spot in the intersection and now that it’s gone, the space feels open and airy. Getting rid of that plinth—even though it looks pretty rad and definitely serves as an arresting reminder for what we allowed to stand for 100 years—should be at the top of the City’s list. After we work our way through he State’s dumb and required monument process, the Department of Public Works should redesign that intersection to make it way safer for folks trying to walk, roll, or ride on through.

#806
July 3, 2020
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🚮 Good morning, RVA: 416↘️ • 23↗️; Stonewall comes down; and moving forward on policy change

Good morning, RVA! It’s 68 °F, and today does look a little bit cooler than the last couple of days. You probably don’t need to worry about sporadic downpours, either. Honestly, sounds like bike-riding weather to me.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 416↘️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 23↗️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 33↘️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 17, Henrico: 12, and Richmond: 4). Since this pandemic began, 228 people have died in the Richmond region.


#206
July 2, 2020
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🥦 Good morning, RVA: 598↗️ • 23↘️; Phase Three; and a bunch of new laws

Good morning, RVA! It’s 72 °F, and today looks hot but with a a chance of rain this morning and perhaps this evening as well. I think if you’re waiting on cooler temperatures, you should instead just make peace with the fact that you’re gonna be a sweaty mess for the next forever.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 598↗️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 23↘️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 49↘️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 28, Henrico: 7, and Richmond: 14). Since this pandemic began, 221 people have died in the Richmond region. The COVID Tracking Project now has state-level graphs that exactly match the Virginia graphs I have in my own personal spreadsheet. Check out the Commonwealth’s couple-weeks plateau of new cases and it’s worrying increase in new deaths. Important, considering: We’re in Phase Three, y’all! Most places and businesses can now reopen as long as folks keep six feet of social distance between themselves, and gatherings of up to 250 people are now allowed. Yesterday, at the last minute, the Governor took the smallest step back from full Phase Three and extended the ban on bar seating in restaurants. This is good news, but better news would have been to just keep bars closed. Here’s what Dr. Fauci has to say: “Bars: really not good, really not good. Congregation at a bar, inside, is bad news. We really have got to stop that.”

Peter Coutu at The Virginia-Pilot has an update on the State’s contact tracing program, which sounds like is still—on the 1st of July—in the process of spinning up. The Virginia Department of Health declined the Pilot’s interview requests, so the Pilot journalismed them with a FOIA request instead. Way back on March 13th—basically Coronavirus Day One—I said I wanted high-quality and up-to-date information from our State, City, and institutions. That’s still true 100-and-some days later, and it applies to infection/death stats just as much as it does to the ongoing work to crush this virus. Expect to hear more on this story as reporters continue to dig in.

#753
July 1, 2020
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0️⃣ Good morning, RVA: 453↘️ • 8↘️; how should schools reopen; and a 21-day racial equity challenge

Good morning, RVA! It’s 69 °F, and today looks exactly like yesterday. Expect hot, humid weather, plus more of the same for the next couple of days. It’s definitely summer!

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 453↘️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 8↘️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 29↘️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 13, Henrico: 5, and Richmond: 11). Since this pandemic began, 220 people have died in the Richmond region. Just a quick reminder, the increasing/decreasing emoji arrows represent the change in the seven-day average of that stat since yesterday. I know it’s uninteresting to turn this section of the email into just reposts of terrifying graphs from the COVID Tracking Project, but I thought this particular one from yesterday showing new cases by state was fascinating. Maybe it’s a lack of mandatory mask requirements, maybe it’s more robust testing than what we have here in the Commonwealth, maybe it’s some other as-yet-unknown factor, but Virginia’s neighboring states are absolutely exploding with positive coronavirus cases. Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia all reported more than 1,000 positive cases yesterday. It’s like we’re being surrounded! Now, on that note, remember that tomorrow Virginia moves into Phase Three of the Governor’s recovery plan (PDF).

I think, but am not certain, that the city saw no after-dark protests last night. If so, that’d be the first day in over 30 days, which is fine by me. Everyone needs to take some time to get rest and hydrate! As far as changing the policies around policing in our region, the Henrico Board of Supervisors wants your input on potentially creating a civilian review board. If you live, work, or travel through the County on a regular basis you definitely should drop them your thoughts by sending an email to civilianreviewboard@henrico.us. There are many types of civilian review boards with many different types of powers, and it’s important to build one that fits your community. If you’re looking for a place to start learning about CRBs, this PDF from the National Association for Civilian Oversight of Law Enforcement is the best I’ve found so far. Also in Henrico, C. Suarez Rojas in the Richmond Times-Dispatch, says the County’s Commonwealth’s Attorney’s office “will soon add a deputy prosecutor in charge of overseeing complaints against police officers.”

#929
June 30, 2020
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🎺 Good morning, RVA: 489↘️ • 8↗️; scenes from the Circle, and a new police chief

Good morning, RVA! It’s 73 °F, and you can expect a hot, humid day ahead of you. No rain for the next couple of days, so take care to water your plants and gardens!

Water cooler

Richmond Police are reporting that last Thursday afternoon, Dominic Thompson, 31, was shot to death on the 2600 block of Ford Avenue in the city’s East End.


#869
June 29, 2020
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📰 Good morning, RVA: 432↘️ • 14↗️; evictions to resume, maybe?; and student journalists

Good morning, RVA! It’s 64 °F, and today looks a lot like yesterday which looks a lot like tomorrow and the next couple of days. I can handle the heat and humidity and am just happy for clear skies.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 432↘️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 14↗️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 80↘️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 25, Henrico: 37, and Richmond: 18). Since this pandemic began, 219 people have died in the Richmond region. For the past two weeks, the number of new reported cases in Virginia has remained relatively stable, as testing (however you choose to define that) has continued to increase. I haven’t had the time, but I’d love to break down the number of new reported cases by region. I wonder if some regions are seeing cases increase at a similar rate to regions seeing a drop in cases? Kind of like what was happening across the country for several weeks, as the Northeast cooled off while the South and West heated up? Maybe over the weekend! One last bit of virus news, Kate Masters at the Virginia Mercury says the Governor will “discontinue his twice-weekly briefings, citing a rise in testing and a decreasing percentage of results that come back positive.” OK. I don’t get it. More communication is always better than less, and I just can’t understand why our elected officials—and this applies locally, too—have decided to dip out during a time of crisis.

I think, for the most part, for the first time in 27? 28? days, there were no major protests in Richmond last night. The word “major” is doing a lot of work in that sentence, because the Richmond Times-Dispatch says 50 folks were at the Lee Circle until 12:00 AM, and WTVR says 15 folks were arrested for conducting a sit-in out front of the Commonwealth Attorney’s home. Both of those things would be ultra headline news at any other moment in time but not this morning!

#73
June 26, 2020
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📰 Good morning, RVA: 432↘️ • 14↗️; evictions to resume, maybe?; and student journalists

Good morning, RVA! It’s 64 °F, and today looks a lot like yesterday which looks a lot like tomorrow and the next couple of days. I can handle the heat and humidity and am just happy for clear skies.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 432↘️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 14↗️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 80↘️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 25, Henrico: 37, and Richmond: 18). Since this pandemic began, 219 people have died in the Richmond region. For the past two weeks, the number of new reported cases in Virginia has remained relatively stable, as testing (however you choose to define that) has continued to increase. I haven’t had the time, but I’d love to break down the number of new reported cases by region. I wonder if some regions are seeing cases increase at a similar rate to regions seeing a drop in cases? Kind of like what was happening across the country for several weeks, as the Northeast cooled off while the South and West heated up? Maybe over the weekend! One last bit of virus news, Kate Masters at the Virginia Mercury says the Governor will “discontinue his twice-weekly briefings, citing a rise in testing and a decreasing percentage of results that come back positive.” OK. I don’t get it. More communication is always better than less, and I just can’t understand why our elected officials—and this applies locally, too—have decided to dip out during a time of crisis.

I think, for the most part, for the first time in 27? 28? days, there were no major protests in Richmond last night. The word “major” is doing a lot of work in that sentence, because the Richmond Times-Dispatch says 50 folks were at the Lee Circle until 12:00 AM, and WTVR says 15 folks were arrested for conducting a sit-in out front of the Commonwealth Attorney’s home. Both of those things would be ultra headline news at any other moment in time but not this morning!

#73
June 26, 2020
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📥 Good morning, RVA: 520↗️ • 16↗️; a legislative agenda; and the list of local candidates

Good morning, RVA! It’s 68 °F, and highs today look like they’ll stay in the 80s—but beware the humidity! Also keep an eye out for a possible thunderstorm this afternoon. Typical Richmond summer-type stuff.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 520↗️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 16↗️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 114↗️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 59, Henrico: 15, and Richmond: 40). Since this pandemic began, 218 people have died in the Richmond region. Yesterday, the COVID Tracking Project announced that the U.S. set a record for new cases reported in a day at 38,672, topping the previous record set way back on April 25th. This chart of the seven-day average of positive cases per million population by region does a great job at illustrating how the Northeast is coming out of a pandemic while the South and West are rushing headlong into one. Looks like things in the South turned a bad, bad corner around Memorial Day, which is probably around the time when people got tired of staying inside and let their desires for cheap beer and grilled meats overwhelm their better judgement. Meanwhile, New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut will impose a 14-day quarantine on travelers from states that meet a certain threshold of infections per 100,000 residents—that’s currently Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, Utah, and Texas. North Carolina and South Carolina! They’re right next to us. I wonder if we’ll see something similar from our Governor at his next coronavirus briefing. Stay tuned, stay inside, stay masked up, and stay remembering that there is a deadly pandemic sweeping through the South.

That’s two nights in a row neither the Virginia State Police or the Richmond Police Department used chemical weapons on protestors. I feel like I need to get an OSHA safety sign. Last night, folks again gathered at the Lee Circle until nightfall, spent time grillin' and chillin', and cops in riot gear again showed up to eventually force folks from the circle. You can scroll through Zach Joachim from the Richmond Times-Dispatch’s feed or read this thread from the Commonwealth Tiimes’s Eduardo Acevedo. I saw a couple of report of rubber bullets fired at the crowd, but other than that (and the fact that a phalanx of cops in riot gear is super freaking intimidating), it looks like interactions between the protestors and the police were minimal—at least considering the last several weeks. Then, after vacating the Circle, protestors formed an ad-hoc march and spent the next several hours loudly marching all over the Fan and the Museum District. I wonder two things: 1) Would the march have even happened without the police involvement earlier in the night? 2) What kind of coordination happens between VSP and RPD? Are the local police prepared for whatever happens as a result of state police action? This is a really complicated situation, and I don’t think it’s just going to suddenly resolve itself without thoughtful action from elected and community leaders.

#674
June 25, 2020
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🐄 Good morning, RVA: 529↗️ • 25↗️; no nightly tear gassing; and a parklet program

Good morning, RVA! It’s 72 °F, and you can continue to expect hot, sunny, and humid weather today. No rain in the forecast, though!

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 529↗️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 25↗️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 119↗️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 74, Henrico: 22, and Richmond: 23). Since this pandemic began, 217 people have died in the Richmond region. I know I keep talking about Chesterfield, but yesterday the County accounted for 62% of the region’s reported positive cases and 14% of the entire Commonwealth’s reported positive cases. That seems like a lot. While the percent positivity in the County has seen a slight decline over the past month, it still sits at 11.3%—higher than Richmond, Henrico, or the the state as a whole (all of which have percent positivity less than 8%). If anyone see a statement from the Chesterfield County government or their health district about the impact the virus continues to have on the county, please send it my way! Also yesterday, Governor Northam announced that the Commonwealth will move into Phase Three on July 1st, giving folks a week and a half to order American flag masks for the July 4th holiday. Phase Three means gatherings of 250 people are allowed, restaurants opening at full capacity, salons and barbershops can open, plus swimming pools and gyms return to mostly normal. Social distancing requirements do still remain in effect, though, which will limit capacity at some of these spots. You can read the detailed Phase Three guidelines here (PDF). Because it’s easy to get stuck in a local- or even state-focused context, take a look at the New York Times’s Coronavirus in the U.S map. The seven-day average of new cases in America has almost returned to its April peak, fueled by big increases across many states. In fact, 27 states are seeing reported cases increase. The graphs from California, Texas, Florida, Georgia, Arizona, and North Carolina are particularly terrifying.

Last night police refrained from tear gassing protestors, and I didn’t have to spend the morning watching war zone videos shot on streets that I love. It appears that the Governor or the Virginia State Police or someone chose not to enforce the new sunset-to-sunrise restrictions at the Lee Circle, protestors hung out peacefully well into the night, and then most of them eventually headed home. At 2:39 AM the Richmond Police Department declared the remaining assembly unlawful and Virginia State Police moved into the circle to begin, in their words, “cleaning up trash left on the Lee Monument & ground.” They also removed seating that had been added to the space yesterday and took down a pop-up community library. I don’t know that I’d consider either “trash,” as those are exactly the types of amenities that make public spaces thrive, but sure. @socialistdogmom has a good thread with pictures and thoughts from throughout the night and into this morning, and I wanted to pull two: Compare and contrast this picture of hundreds of folks sitting in the circle listening to speakers with this picture of dozens of riot cops guarding an empty circle. I’m not going to applaud the VSP or RPD for making the right choice and not gassing my neighbors, but it is incredibly striking how calm things remain when the police choose not to escalate the situation with chemical weapons. I wanted someone to ask the Governor what his thoughts were on the use of chemical weapons just a couple blocks from his house, and Mel Leonor has his pretty disappointing responses which include “After three weeks, it is no longer clear what the [protestor’s] goals are or a path to achieve them.” I just…OK. This sounds a lot like a quote from someone who has either not asked what the goals are or hasn’t listened when folks have told him. One other protest update, the Richmond Police Department reports that they arrested 12 people (with an average age of 25) for unlawful assembly at the City Hall protest two nights ago. RPD also reports that “One RPD officer was injured when he was struck on the arm by a hickory stick.”

#350
June 24, 2020
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☹️ Good morning, RVA: 471↗️ • 9↗️; an abundance of tear gas; and an Airbnb ordinances

Good morning, RVA! It’s 68 °F, and today looks a lot like yesterday. Expect heat, humidity, and a (smaller) chance of rain this evening. It’s vampire time in Richmond: Get your physical activity in before or after the sun comes up / goes down.

Water cooler

Richmond Police report that Willie L. Johnston, 81, was shot to death on the 1400 block of Stoney Run Road early yesterday morning. According to RPD data, 21 people have been murdered in 2020.


#487
June 23, 2020
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🔨 Good morning, RVA: 552⬇️ • 4⬇️; community-driven urban planning; police violence

Good morning, RVA! It’s 69 °F, and you can expect highs in near 90 °F but with plenty of humidity layered right on top of that. Keep an eye out for a possible afternoon/evening storm.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 552⬇️ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 4⬇️ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 71⬇️ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 16, Henrico: 30, and Richmond: 25). Since this pandemic began, 213 people have died in the Richmond region. This morning I’ve added emoji arrows next to the new reported positive cases across the state, new deaths reported across the state, and new reported positives cases in the Richmond region (defined as Chesterfield, Henrico, and Richmond). The arrows point the direction the seven-day average is moving compared to yesterday for each set of data. I know I’m wading into double and triple derivative territory here, but I continue to struggle with how to provide context to these numbers. What I really need is tiny little sparklines, but I don’t know how to easily do that in an email yet. Hopefully this addition helps, and, as always, I’m open to feedback.


#839
June 22, 2020
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👮 Good morning, RVA: 445 • 18; the police chief resigns, and so does another Confederate monument

Good morning, RVA! It’s 63 °F, and you can expect cooler temperatures and more rain. You might see the sun tomorrow, though!

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 445 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 18 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 103 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 65, Henrico: 22, and Richmond: 16). Since this pandemic began, 205 people have died in the Richmond region. Almost a quarter of the new coronavirus cases in Virginia reported yesterday came from the Richmond region. Out of the three local jurisdictions, Chesterfield has the highest percent positivity at 12.1, with Richmond and Henrico at 11.0 and 8.6 respectively. I don’t really know what to make of it, but the graph of the seven-day averages of new cases in the region by locality is pretty interesting. Something is different about Chesterfield! At the Governor’s press conference yesterday, which featured Pharrell, he (the Governor, not Pharrell) said the Commonwealth would not move into Phase Three this week and that he would have more details on the particulars of Phase Three on Thursday.


#711
June 17, 2020
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📅 Good morning, RVA: 380 • 6; continued police violence; and do we even have a Public Safety committee anymore?

Good morning, RVA! It’s 61 °F, and the chance for rain continues throughout the day and into the night. Looks like late afternoon may be your best bet to spend some drytime outside. Good luck!

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 380 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 6 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 56 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 13, Henrico: 25, and Richmond: 18). Since this pandemic began, 204 people have died in the Richmond region.

Day 18 of protests in Richmond for police and social justice reform peaked with more violence from the police. Last night, the Richmond Police Department once again defended the small surface-level parking lot across from their headquarters on Grace Street with rubber bullets, chemical weapons, riot shields, loud explosions, and clouds of smoke. Andrew Ringle, editor at The Commonwealth Times, has a good thread recapping events, including this video of what looks like a war zone and this tweet: “Police backed me and others up against a wall as I filmed them spraying us and throwing explosives. Two protesters that I didn’t get the names of shielded me with umbrellas. Thank you to those guys.” You can read the CT’s full write-up here. Both Councilmember Jones and Councilmember Lynch were on hand, the former saying “Can’t believe what I saw this evening.” and the latter “Shots fired into the crowd—tear gas everywhere. Scared for the people who are closer in…here to see it firsthand. This is absolutely unacceptable.” Last night’s protest followed Sunday night’s protest—at which the RPD gassed and pepper sprayed the crowd. Sunday night’s protest followed Saturday night’s protest—at which an RPD officer drove their SUV up onto a sidewalk and into a crowd of people. Both of these come after June 1st’s unprovoked and absurd tear gassing of peaceful protestors at the Lee Monument. I’m shocked that the RPD—night after night as the entire city watches—continues to respond to protests against police violence by tear gassing the shit out of people. If the police wanted to radicalize the entire city against them and their $100 million budget, they’re doing a great job of it. And its not just me! Sen. Jennifer McClellan said, before last night’s events, “I’m disturbed by reports of RPD behavior towards protesters this weekend. I agree that we need to reimagine the role of police and how we keep communities safe, and that the rights of protesters must be respected/protected.” The ACLU of Virginia sent a letter to Mayor Stoney, Police Chief Smith, and Commonwealth’s Attorney McEachin saying “All of you must take positive action—individually and collectively—to lead changes in the laws, policies, practices, and police culture that allowed these events to take place. You must lead the implementation of lasting reforms that reimagine the role of police in our Commonwealth and how we keep communities safe.” Councilmember Jones released a statement saying “City Council must immediately be presented with budget amendments for the Fiscal Year 2021 Budget that withdraws funding from areas associated with aggressive policing and reallocate these funds into community support functions, and City Council should take immediate steps to execute our oversight responsibly by way of the Public Safety and Organizational Development committees.” (btw, see more about that below). The Mayor, however, (as of this morning) has said nothing beyond his statement on Sunday about asking the Commonwealth’s Attorney to open an investigation into the SUV incident. The silence and inaction on the Mayor’s part is frustrating and hurtful.

#167
June 16, 2020
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📅 Good morning, RVA: 380 • 6; continued police violence; and do we even have a Public Safety committee anymore?

Good morning, RVA! It’s 61 °F, and the chance for rain continues throughout the day and into the night. Looks like late afternoon may be your best bet to spend some drytime outside. Good luck!

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 380 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 6 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 56 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 13, Henrico: 25, and Richmond: 18). Since this pandemic began, 204 people have died in the Richmond region.

Day 18 of protests in Richmond for police and social justice reform peaked with more violence from the police. Last night, the Richmond Police Department once again defended the small surface-level parking lot across from their headquarters on Grace Street with rubber bullets, chemical weapons, riot shields, loud explosions, and clouds of smoke. Andrew Ringle, editor at The Commonwealth Times, has a good thread recapping events, including this video of what looks like a war zone and this tweet: “Police backed me and others up against a wall as I filmed them spraying us and throwing explosives. Two protesters that I didn’t get the names of shielded me with umbrellas. Thank you to those guys.” You can read the CT’s full write-up here. Both Councilmember Jones and Councilmember Lynch were on hand, the former saying “Can’t believe what I saw this evening.” and the latter “Shots fired into the crowd—tear gas everywhere. Scared for the people who are closer in…here to see it firsthand. This is absolutely unacceptable.” Last night’s protest followed Sunday night’s protest—at which the RPD gassed and pepper sprayed the crowd. Sunday night’s protest followed Saturday night’s protest—at which an RPD officer drove their SUV up onto a sidewalk and into a crowd of people. Both of these come after June 1st’s unprovoked and absurd tear gassing of peaceful protestors at the Lee Monument. I’m shocked that the RPD—night after night as the entire city watches—continues to respond to protests against police violence by tear gassing the shit out of people. If the police wanted to radicalize the entire city against them and their $100 million budget, they’re doing a great job of it. And its not just me! Sen. Jennifer McClellan said, before last night’s events, “I’m disturbed by reports of RPD behavior towards protesters this weekend. I agree that we need to reimagine the role of police and how we keep communities safe, and that the rights of protesters must be respected/protected.” The ACLU of Virginia sent a letter to Mayor Stoney, Police Chief Smith, and Commonwealth’s Attorney McEachin saying “All of you must take positive action—individually and collectively—to lead changes in the laws, policies, practices, and police culture that allowed these events to take place. You must lead the implementation of lasting reforms that reimagine the role of police in our Commonwealth and how we keep communities safe.” Councilmember Jones released a statement saying “City Council must immediately be presented with budget amendments for the Fiscal Year 2021 Budget that withdraws funding from areas associated with aggressive policing and reallocate these funds into community support functions, and City Council should take immediate steps to execute our oversight responsibly by way of the Public Safety and Organizational Development committees.” (btw, see more about that below). The Mayor, however, (as of this morning) has said nothing beyond his statement on Sunday about asking the Commonwealth’s Attorney to open an investigation into the SUV incident. The silence and inaction on the Mayor’s part is frustrating and hurtful.

#167
June 16, 2020
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🤬 Good morning, RVA: 637 • 5; police violence continues, and a transit-oriented rezoning

Good morning, RVA! It’s 62 °F, and “cooler with a chance of rain” is the forecast for the next eight days. So, enjoy the reprieve from the heat, and keep an eye on the radar for opportunities to sneak outside while staying dry.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 637 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 5 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 86 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 31, Henrico: 30, and Richmond: 25). Since this pandemic began, 204 people have died in the Richmond region. I don’t have much to add to today’s coronanumbers, but I did enjoy this piece from the Washington Post about five coronametrics we should be tracking instead of all the stuff in my spreadsheet: Number of unlinked infections, speed of isolating infected people, proportion of cases arising among quarantined contacts, number of health-care worker infections, and trend in excess mortality. I don’t think I’ve seen public sources for any of those metrics, but, as always, I’d love to add a few more columns to my spreadsheet.

Yesterday marked the 17th day of consecutive protests for police and social justice reform in Richmond. First, that’s amazing. Second, it’s shocking how the police response to people protesting police violence continues to be…violent. With every single person filming and broadcasting each and every interaction with police—and the entire world watching—still our local police department reacts with unnecessary and dangerous violence. It’s happening across America, and every morning, as we scroll through our feeds, we see incontrovertible video proof that policing in our country is deeply, systemically broken. On Saturday here in Richmond, we watched as members of our own police department used their vehicle as a weapon against protestors. You can read a first-hand account of the incident from the Richmond Times-Dispatch’s Ali Rockett who was standing nearby at the time. Then, last night, folks showed up at the police headquarters on Grace Street to specifically protest the violence used against the previous night’s protest. RPD responded with more pepper spray and more tear gas. This video of a police officer indiscriminately spraying pepper spray over the crowd and this video of police clearing a parking lot with tear gas after most of the crowd had dissipated are particular infuriating. You can read @socialistdogmom’s long thread and this piece in the Commonwealth Times for first-hand accounts of the evening. After Saturday night, Mayor Stoney said he’s asked the Commonwealth’s Attorney to investigate the incident involving the police officer hitting people with their car and has “instructed the Richmond Police Department to place the officer involved on administrative leave pending the result of the investigation by the Commonwealth’s Attorney.” Sure that’s a step to take, but it’s a step taken to address an individual problem. It is abundantly clear that the problem with the Richmond Police Department is systemic. The Mayor needs to start announcing systemic policy and budget proposals to address the systemic issues with policing in Richmond. As @Morr_Ruth said on Twitter last night, “When all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail. We HAVE MORE TOOLS THAN POLICE.” Our legislation and our budget should start reflecting that.

#606
June 15, 2020
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🚮 Good morning, RVA: 439 • 18; police reform policy; and Jefferson Davis retreats (again)

Good morning, RVA! It’s 75 °F, and highs again are, like, way, way high. Expect highs in the 90s and plenty of humidity to go along with it. There’s a chance of rain throughout the day, so keep an eye out.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 439 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 18 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 88 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 53, Henrico: 16, and Richmond: 19). Since this pandemic began, 199 people have died in the Richmond region. This is the fewest number of new cases reported in a single day since way back in April and caps off three days of significant decline. However! I missed this story by the Richmond Times-Dispatch’s Mel Leonor a couple of days ago that said VDH has “a running backlog of 13,000 COVID-19 test results that have not been reported to the public” and the agency will also “add a different set of 13,000 backlogged tests to the public dashboard…which could appear to skew the data.” Officials also said that the backlog contains mostly negative test results, so any skew would push the percent positivity down (just increasing the denominator). I guess this answers some of the questions I had earlier this week about the apparent regression in number of tests being reported across the Commonwealth. As we seriously move into Phase 2, keep an eye on the data—we don’t want Virginia’s coronavirus graphs to start looking like Arizona’s or Texas’s (over 2,000 new cases per day). Wear your masks! Keep your distance!

Last night, the Jefferson Davis statue on Monument Avenue came a-tumbling down, and I don’t know what to say about it other than that it feels weird not to have a ton to say. Random Twitter accounts report that, rather than the large peaceful crowds we’ve seen over the last couple of weeks, Davis was torn off his pedestal by a “small sedan” which then, I guess, sped off into the night. Here’s a video of the statue heading to its new resting place in a parking lot somewhere on a flatbed truck as a small crowd celebrates. Yesterday, when we were all focused on the Christopher Columbus statue, the Mayor tweeted his concerns about protestors removing monuments on their own, outside of an established process, saying “The atrocities inflicted upon indigenous people by Christopher Columbus are unconscionable. That’s why the city began observing Indigenous Peoples’ Day, not Columbus Day, in 2019. But the decision & action to remove a monument should be made in collaboration w/ the community. Working with Richmond’s History and Culture Commission, we are establishing a process by which Richmonders can advocate for change to the figures we place on public pedestals across our city in a legal and peaceful way.” First, “but they have a day” isn’t the best way to start out this particular response. Second, I didn’t see any similar concerns when people brought down the Wickham statue in Monroe Park. Third, I’d love to know more about what the History and Culture Commission has been up to since Council passed the enabling legislation back in November of 2018 (ORD. 2018–269). Surely they’ve been working on the process for removing monuments at least since the General Assembly granted localities the authority to do so earlier this year? And surely that process will focus on equity and inoculate itself against loud, racist NIMBYs who constantly overwhelm a significant percentage of our public discussions? Regardless, I agree with @jeffrock, who said “[City of Richmond,] I know you want to fill out forms in triplicate, but you’re out of time. You can’t wait to vote on this. Take these monuments down safely before someone gets hurt.” He’s right, and, in fact, someone was injured in Portsmouth yesterday as folks got to work taking down one of their Confederate monuments. I think you could make the argument that in this current moment, the Confederate monuments are a public safety hazard and the smaller ones that can be removed should be removed as soon as possible. We can store them in a Raiders of the Lost Ark-style warehouse until the History and Culture Commissions figures out whatever process they want, but, until then, box 'em up before people get hurt.

#227
June 11, 2020
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🏊 Good morning, RVA: 487 • 19; how do schools reopen; and Christopher Columbus into the drink

Good morning, RVA! It’s 75 °F already! Expect highs today in the 90s and Feels Likes near 100 °F. I think, if you can, stay inside until things cool off later this week.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 487 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 19 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 110 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 76, Henrico: 18, and Richmond: 16). Since this pandemic began, 198 people have died in the Richmond region. The number of reported new cases of the virus in the Virginia are down, the number of deaths are down, and, slightly concerning, the number of reported testing encounters are down as well. As per always, I am not an epidemiologist, so I have no idea what the data portends, but I do know Virginia is still not meeting its goal of 10,000 tests per day (regardless of how you define “tests”). The seven-day average of new tests sits at around 8,600. I know percent positivity governs how we practically move back into the world, but, like, we still need to test a lot more folks, right? While we are in the “anyone who wants a test can get a test” phase, maybe the non-coronavirus related events of the last two weeks have prevented people from getting a test? Or at least knocked it down a few spots on their todo lists? I have no idea but will continue to update my sisyphean spreadsheet each day.

On Friday, Richmond joins the rest of the Commonwealth and moves into the Governor’s Phase 2 of recovery. You can find all of the details of what that means for various industries and businesses over on the RVA Strong website. The short of it: Restaurants, breweries, gyms, salons, barbers, pools, and places of worship can all reopen with a bunch of restrictions—mostly limiting indoor occupancy to 50% capacity or less. Let the hangouts commence, I guess! Wash your hands, wear your masks, and keep two yard sticks between you and the person next to you. I’m incredibly interested in which businesses decide to open up, how it all works out, and what we’ll learn about how to function as City moving forward. I bet we’ll figure a bunch out in the next couple of weeks, and I’m perfectly happy to sit at home during that process.

#744
June 10, 2020
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✋ Good morning, RVA: 570 • 5; police update; and a monument injunction

Good morning, RVA! It’s 64 °F, and the day ahead of us looks hot and humid. Still sunny though!

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 570 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 5 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 97 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 35, Henrico: 32, and Richmond: 30). Since this pandemic began, 197 people have died in the Richmond region. Honestly, the numbers are all over the place lately, which makes a lot of sense to me given that everyone’s got a lot going on. One thing to keep an eye on: VDH reported under 4,000 new tests yesterday—which might speak to the difficulty in getting people tested over the last couple of days. It is Pandemic Tuesday, so keep an eye on the numbers announced today to see if they jump significantly or not.


#699
June 9, 2020
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🐻 Good morning, RVA: 951 • 17; we got the votes; Downtown? I can hardly bear it

Good morning, RVA! It’s 72 °F again, but, today, highs should stay out of upper 90s. Expect at growing chance of rain throughout the afternoon and into the evening. Saturday looks hot, but Sunday looks pretty A+.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 951 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 17 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 106 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 60, Henrico: 13, and Richmond: 33). Since this pandemic began, 195 people have died in the Richmond region. Remember that today most of the region moves into Phase Two of the Governor’s plan for recovery. This means a lot of things, but, mostly, that 50 folks can gather together with the proper social distancing and masks and sanitization and so on. After the Governor announced the move into Phase Two (which still, at this moment in time, has not made it to the State’s recovery website), I was pretty confused about what business were supposed to do who could now open to 50% of their capacity but that 50% capacity was more than 50 people. Turns out, I’m not the only with questions! Lane Kizziah at the Richmond Times-Dispatch says the Dominion Raceway in Spotsylvania was also confused and had planned to hold a race on Saturday with upwards of 1,200 folks. Turns out, they’re only allowed 50 spectators not 50% of potential spectators. I don’t blame them for misunderstanding the guidance. It’s a 41-page PDF, and, despite what you read in this email, people generally don’t love looking through massive PDFs. I think this quote from the racetrack’s sales manager also speaks to the lack of lead time businesses were given before the upshift into Phase Two: "We had a plan on Monday, and it changed on Tuesday…The governor’s information came out on Wednesday, and we changed again. Now it’s Thursday, and it appears we’re changing again.”


#752
June 5, 2020
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🚮 Good morning, RVA: 666 • 21; taking down monuments; and eight police policies

Good morning, RVA! It’s already 73 °F! Today, you can expect another humid day with highs in the mid 90s. Relief comes maybe this weekend after a bit of rain.

Water cooler

Richmond Police are reporting that Jermaine R. Storman, 30, was found shot to death on the third floor of the Rodeway Inn on the 3200 block of N. Arthur Ashe Boulevard early Tuesday morning.


#807
June 4, 2020
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2️⃣ Good morning, RVA: 841 • 15; Phase Two; and a hopeful night in Richmond

Good morning, RVA! It’s 72 °F, and today looks hot and humid. Expect highs in the 90s until the sun goes down. If you spend some time outside, expect to sweat.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 841 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 15 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 157 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 59, Henrico: 61, and Richmond: 37). Since this pandemic began, 196 people have died in the Richmond region. Pandemic Tuesday did not bring its expected numbers bump, and VDH has reported 20 or fewer people dying from the coronavirus each of the last five days—an encouraging sign.

Yesterday, the Governor announced that, except for Richmond and Northern Virginia, evvvvveryone else moves into Phase Two of recovery this coming Friday. Folks get a whole three days notice! You can read the 40 pages of guidelines here (PDF). Notable changes:

#574
June 3, 2020
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✊ Good morning, RVA: Peaceful protests, police violence, and the Richmond 300 draft

Good morning, RVA! It’s 56 °F, and, with highs today in the mid 80s, it looks like another great day to spend outside.

Water cooler

Yesterday, locked away safe in my home following along on Twitter, I saw some of the most wonderful and peaceful protests bookended around one incidence of violence and escalation by the Richmond Police Department. Early evening, protestors had gathered downtown with, at least to my eyes, an entirely different vibe from previous nights. Organizers led folks in chants, in silence, in sitting down quietly while folks spoke—I saw lots of masks! Eventually the protestors made their way to the Robert E. Lee monument and gathered there ahead of the 8:00 PM curfew. About 30 minutes before curfew began, without warning, Richmond police officers shot tear gas into a calm and peaceful crowd. Any goodwill either the RPD or, by extension, the Mayor had left after the last couple of days most likely evaporated when cops swaggered their way through clouds of teargas, chased people down—people who were running away—and sprayed them point-blank with pepper spray. The lasting visual of Richmond’s police department from yesterday will be their choice to use fear and violence against Richmond humans to protect a Confederate statue.

RPD’s reaction to folks' outrage, in the moment, was…not great. First they started with: “To our peaceful protestors: We are sorry we had to deploy gas near the Lee Monument. Some RPD officers in that area were cut off by violent protestors. The gas was necessary to get them to safety.” Videos and first-hand reporter accounts don’t support that position at all, and, you can imagine the response people paying attention had to a “we are sorry but” tweet. It was not positive. RPD followed that up with: “To our peaceful protestors: We stand with you today and will keep supporting your rights to express your opinions in safety.” Which, after the whole machismo, Resevoir Dogs-through-the-cloud-of-tear-gas moment, didn’t ring super true. And, finally, about two hours after the original event, they posted: “Chief Smith just reviewed video of gas being deployed by RPD officers near the Lee Monument and apologizes for this unwarranted action. These officers have been pulled from the field. They will be disciplined because their actions were outside dept protocols and directions given.” This pretty much contradicts their original statement, so it’ll be interesting to see who accepts responsibility for what or how things get spun this morning.

#77
June 2, 2020
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✊ Good morning, RVA: Peaceful protests, police violence, and the Richmond 300 draft

Good morning, RVA! It’s 56 °F, and, with highs today in the mid 80s, it looks like another great day to spend outside.

Water cooler

Yesterday, locked away safe in my home following along on Twitter, I saw some of the most wonderful and peaceful protests bookended around one incidence of violence and escalation by the Richmond Police Department. Early evening, protestors had gathered downtown with, at least to my eyes, an entirely different vibe from previous nights. Organizers led folks in chants, in silence, in sitting down quietly while folks spoke—I saw lots of masks! Eventually the protestors made their way to the Robert E. Lee monument and gathered there ahead of the 8:00 PM curfew. About 30 minutes before curfew began, without warning, Richmond police officers shot tear gas into a calm and peaceful crowd. Any goodwill either the RPD or, by extension, the Mayor had left after the last couple of days most likely evaporated when cops swaggered their way through clouds of teargas, chased people down—people who were running away—and sprayed them point-blank with pepper spray. The lasting visual of Richmond’s police department from yesterday will be their choice to use fear and violence against Richmond humans to protect a Confederate statue.

RPD’s reaction to folks' outrage, in the moment, was…not great. First they started with: “To our peaceful protestors: We are sorry we had to deploy gas near the Lee Monument. Some RPD officers in that area were cut off by violent protestors. The gas was necessary to get them to safety.” Videos and first-hand reporter accounts don’t support that position at all, and, you can imagine the response people paying attention had to a “we are sorry but” tweet. It was not positive. RPD followed that up with: “To our peaceful protestors: We stand with you today and will keep supporting your rights to express your opinions in safety.” Which, after the whole machismo, Resevoir Dogs-through-the-cloud-of-tear-gas moment, didn’t ring super true. And, finally, about two hours after the original event, they posted: “Chief Smith just reviewed video of gas being deployed by RPD officers near the Lee Monument and apologizes for this unwarranted action. These officers have been pulled from the field. They will be disciplined because their actions were outside dept protocols and directions given.” This pretty much contradicts their original statement, so it’ll be interesting to see who accepts responsibility for what or how things get spun this morning.

#77
June 2, 2020
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😠 Good morning, RVA: Three nights of protests, a bus burned, and get your tear gas outta my city's streets

Good morning, RVA! It’s 54 °F, and today’s weather looks absolutely brilliant. Expect highs in the 70s and lots of sunshine. Later this week expect temperatures to heat up into the classic Richmond summer zone.

Water cooler

A lot has happened since we last spoke. For the last three nights protesters have gathered in Downtown Richmond, angry about the murder of George Floyd by a White police officer, to demand police and criminal justice reform. The situation is obviously a lot more layered and complex than that previous sentence, but it’s a good place to start.

On Friday night, protesters—which, in the moment, following from afar on Twitter, seemed largely peaceful and chill—burnt and destroyed a GRTC Pulse bus. While both operators and riders were unharmed, GRTC did suspend evening bus service on Saturday, all bus service on Sunday, and will again suspend evening service tonight. March Cheatham at the Cheats Movement has photos of the burned-out bus wreckage, which, even three days later, still shock me (or is it 600 days later? it’s hard to tell at this point).

#119
June 1, 2020
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😠 Good morning, RVA: Three nights of protests, a bus burned, and get your tear gas outta my city's streets

Good morning, RVA! It’s 54 °F, and today’s weather looks absolutely brilliant. Expect highs in the 70s and lots of sunshine. Later this week expect temperatures to heat up into the classic Richmond summer zone.

Water cooler

A lot has happened since we last spoke. For the last three nights protesters have gathered in Downtown Richmond, angry about the murder of George Floyd by a White police officer, to demand police and criminal justice reform. The situation is obviously a lot more layered and complex than that previous sentence, but it’s a good place to start.

On Friday night, protesters—which, in the moment, following from afar on Twitter, seemed largely peaceful and chill—burnt and destroyed a GRTC Pulse bus. While both operators and riders were unharmed, GRTC did suspend evening bus service on Saturday, all bus service on Sunday, and will again suspend evening service tonight. March Cheatham at the Cheats Movement has photos of the burned-out bus wreckage, which, even three days later, still shock me (or is it 600 days later? it’s hard to tell at this point).

#119
June 1, 2020
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🗣 BONUS: 1st District Councilmember Addison on the new two-stage budget process

As part of my ongoing plans to expand the scope of GMRVA while sticking to its two major distribution platforms (the email and the podcast), I thought I would talk with someone directly involved in putting together the new two-stage budget review process and whose life will be directly impacted by it: 1st District Councilmember Andreas Addison.

This sort of thing is a new, fun, and, I hope, informative direction to take GMRVA, but does take a long time to put together. If you’d like to see more, please consider becoming a GMRVA Patron.


This past week, Richmond's City Council passed RES. 2020-R035 which created a two-stage budget review process for City Council and the Mayor’s team to follow for (at least) this upcoming fiscal year. I wrote a bunch of words about how that process works, which you can read here. I sent 1st District Councilmember Addison a couple of questions about the process, asked him to send me back a voice memo with this thoughts, and now you get to hear straight from the 1st District horse’s mouth!

#467
May 29, 2020
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1️⃣ Good morning, RVA: 907 • 45; Phase One in Richmond; and racism

Good morning, RVA! It’s 73 °F, and probably raining. You can expect the chance of rain to persist throughout the day while the temperature—and humidity—rise. I think we did it. I think it’s warm now!

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 907 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 45 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 106 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 50, Henrico: 33, and Richmond: 23). Since this pandemic began, 172 people have died in the Richmond region. I think this is the most new coronavirus deaths reported in a single day since VDH started releasing data. Compared to 2017 (the most recent data on this CDC website), COVID-19 is now the 9th leading cause of death in Virginia, killing 1,281 people—more than Septicemia (1,249) and Flu/Pneumonia (1,245). At the current rate (about 30 new deaths each day), the coronavirus will pass Kidney Disease in 12 days and Diabetes in 23 days.

Since the Governor chose not to grant the Mayor’s request for a modified entry into recovery, at 12:00 AM, Richmond will join Henrico and Chesterfield and jump right into Phase One. What’s that mean? The City has set up a reopening guidance page with both “allowed activities” that correspond to the State’s guidance and the “Mayor’s Best Practices,” which are some of the things Mayor Stoney unsuccessfully requested from the Governor—but based on local public health guidance! We’ve gone over this before, but the gist from the State: retail can open up to 50% of their capacity, restaurants can open up to 50% of their outdoor capacity, salons and barbershops are open by appointment, places of worship can open up to 50% of their capacity, and fitness-based businesses can host outdoor classes. However, the Mayor recommends that places of worship continue meeting digitally or, if they must meet, do so outside. He also suggests restaurants keep a log of patrons to make the inevitable contact tracing easier. I hope and believe that most faith groups and restaurants in the City will do these things! By far, the best part of Richmond’s reopening guidance page are these two sentences: “The state has not released guidance on what Phases 2 and 3 will look like throughout the state. All localities are waiting for guidance from the Governor and the Virginia Department of Health to learn what Phases 2 and 3 will allow or keep restricted.” You and me both, all localities. I’d love to know what metrics the Governor will use to decide to move the state into Phase Two, what that timeline looks like, and what restrictions will lift. Maybe at today’s presser?

#1009
May 28, 2020
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🤘 Good morning, RVA: 763 • 33; more restaurant-only policies; and a good GWAR cover

Good morning, RVA! It’s 54 °F, and today you can expect more of the same! Get ready for temperatures in the 60s, rain here or there, and lots of time to spend pensively staring out of the window. Warmer temperatures, at least, should arrive tomorrow.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 763 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 33 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 103 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 57, Henrico: 22, and Richmond: 35). Since this pandemic began, 162 people have died in the Richmond region. That’s four days in the last week with over 100 new cases in Richmond, Henrico, and Chesterfield combined. Before this week, that’d only happened once—back on May 7th. We know Mayor Stoney has his eye on the data, but I wonder what folks in Chesterfield are thinking as they watch their percent positivity numbers creep upwards. Look at that graph, you can call it flat if you want, but it certainly doesn’t show a fortnight of decrease. If I lived in Chesterfield, which I do not, I might send my Supervisor and County Manager an email with a question or two.

Today, City Council’s Finance and Economic Development committee meets at 1:00 PM. I typically never ever talk about this committee because who even understands how money works?? However, this afternoon they’ll consider Councilmember Gray’s RES. 2020-R026 (PDF) which would set up a restaurant-only grant program in the City of Richmond. If I’m reading it right, it returns to restaurants any meals taxes they paid/will pay in March, April, May, and June—minus the bit of meals tax that go toward schools. It also would give restaurants back half of their BPOL tax over that same time period. Again, just cue up and insert my rant about how relief policies are good but we should be holistic in designing them so that other service industry businesses are not excluded. The Mayor’s administration put together an Administrative Impact Statement (PDF) on this resolution, which puts it bluntly: “The program would potentially have a multi-million dollar negative impact on the FY2020 general fund during uncertain economic times without any identified funding source, and add an administrative burden to implement.” Remember, RES. 2020-R026 is a non-binding resolution that just asks the mayor to submit the budget amendment ordinances necessary to create this program.

#554
May 21, 2020
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🤓 Good morning, RVA: 752 • 5; working on a plan for schools; and a bunch of cool legislation at LUHT

Good morning, RVA! It’s 55 °F, and you can expect potentially soggy highs in the upper 60s. Keep an eye out for rain later tonight. The good news: The seven-day forecast has some sunshine near its end!

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 752 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and five new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 53 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 14, Henrico: 20, and Richmond: 21). Since this pandemic began, 160 people have died in the Richmond region. Here’s a chart of the seven-day averages of the number of new cases in Chesterfield, Henrico, and Richmond. You can see Henrico’s big, quick spike early on with its nation-leading outbreak at the Canterbury Rehabilitation & Healthcare Center. Now each locality in the entire region sees, on average, about the same number of new cases each day as Henrico did during that terrible outbreak. For whatever reason, VDH’s data dashboard won’t show me the percent positivity for each locality this morning, but the line graph still exists. Even including antibody tests, which, remember, increases the denominator in the calculation, percent positivity across the entire region is up over the last week—slightly up in Chesterfield and Henrico, way up in Richmond.

The Governor named a bunch of folks to his COVID-19 Education Work Group, which will “help chart a path forward for determining how schools can safely reopen later this year.” My immediate impression from that very first sentence of the press release is that the group has decided to open schools in 2020 regardless of whatever we learn about COVID-19 between now and then. I’m certainly not saying the Commonwealth needs to cancel even more school—the current situation is untenable and by most counts inequitable—but I’d love to let the work group do some…work…and report back with what they’ve decided as the best path forward. Along those lines, I much prefer this quote, later on in the press release, from the Secretary of Education: “As we begin to think about how Virginia’s education system can operate in the summer and fall, it is crucial that we have the advice of a diverse, thoughtful group of education leaders…This group will use their expertise to guide our approach and help ensure that all voices are heard and all recommendations are made through the lens of equity.” Or even this quote from the Northam himself, from the recap of the Governor’s Monday press briefing by the Richmond Times-Dispatch’s Justin Mattingly: "It is very important for me to get our children back in schools…As soon as we can safely get our students back into the classroom, we will do that. I am hopeful that our students will be back in the classroom this fall.” Unfortunately, scrolling through the list of work group members I don’t see anyone from the Richmond region (unless you count Fredericksburg or Powhatan) and I don’t really see urban school districts represented (other than Chesapeake). I wish I had more time or I would pull the racial demographics of the school districts and the localities represented. A quick, back-of-the-napkin census query shows that the localities represented have a 56% White population—of course, that could be and probably is vastly, vastly different than the demographics of their public schools. Anyway, someone get Jason Kamras on this committee.

#796
May 19, 2020
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🧑‍🎓 Good morning, RVA: 705 • 7; open streets everywhere but here; and a Rodney Robinson appearance

Good morning, RVA! It’s 61 °F, and that’s about the high for today. We’ve got a chance of rain today and maybe every day for the rest of this week. I’m…not looking forward to spending even more time indoors.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 705 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 7 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 53 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 29, Henrico: 26, and Richmond: 17). Since this pandemic began, 160 people have died in the Richmond region. Despite the relatively low number of new cases in the City, Richmond saw more new cases reported over the weekend than ever before (147). In good data news, VDH has update their dashboard to now show percent positivity by health district (tap on “Testing” and then you can select a locality from the drop down). Remember: 7-day positivity rate has become the go-to metric for the governor in his phased recovery plan, and now we’ve got the ability to see that metric change over time. Richmond’s 7-day positivity rate is 25.8% and has increased each of the last eight days. Chesterfield’s remains mostly flat around 11%, and Henrico’s sits at 13.7% having increased from 10.7% since May 12th. Turns out, jurisdictions are different, and the availability of more and more data continues to highlight the inequitable effects the coronavirus. To whit, over the weekend, Sabrina Moreno and Mel Leonor at the Richmond Times-Dispatch looked at the disparate impact COVID-19 has on Black and Latino communities: “Hispanic Virginians make up almost 30% of cases despite being only 9% of the state population. Black residents are 16% of cases, and almost 20% of the population, but in Richmond, make up 16 of the 18 deaths. One is Hispanic and one is not reported.” Additionally, Kate Masters at the Virginia Mercury continues her excellent healthdata reporting and has a good piece on how the Commonwealth still fails to meet the governor’s stated metrics for safely moving into recovery. Masters’s piece will also give you some insight into how the data available from VDH has changed, sometimes abruptly, over the last couple of months—much to the dismay of spreadsheetidemiologists and local policy makers alike.

The City’s Planning Commission meets today to hear a presentation on Richmond 300, and you can take a peek at the slides beforehand. First, the draft of the plan drops on May 26th! That’s pretty exciting. Second, you should gird yourself for a bunch of topic- and geography-focused (virtual) meetings in June. Also, if you scroll down a bit in that PDF, you can see the results of the Planning for a Post-Pandemic Society survey I linked to a couple weeks back. Of particular interest to me is page 11 which shows responses to “Which features do you think individuals will want their neighborhoods to have in a post-pandemic society?” Top four answers: Sidewalks, a public park within a short walk, a commercial area within a short walk, and bike lanes. People want safe, easy ways to get to the things they need to live a thriving life—without a car! To prepare for this—while addressing folks' health and safety needs—the City can and should pilot dozens of miles of slow/open streets all over the place. Honestly, the City should have done this months ago, but, for whatever reason, it has not. In fact, when places like Ashland are piloting open streets and talking about making them permanent, it feels like our City’s leadership actively does not want this sort of thing to happen. You should ask them why not (rvamayor@richmondgov.com and City Council contact information).

#679
May 18, 2020
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🗑 Good morning, RVA: 946 • 36; "a new low in data standards"; and VLBC's letter to the Governor

Good morning, RVA! It’s 49 °F, and we’ve got a potential bit of rain moving through the area this morning. After that, though, get stoked for temperatures in the mid 70s and beyond until at least next week. Find a reason to spend some time outside!

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 946 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 36 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 92 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 25, Henrico: 40, and Richmond: 27). We’ll get one more round of data this afternoon before the Governor’s planned move into Phase One, but, over the last couple of days: the seven-day average of the number of new cases has gone up, the seven-day average of hospitalizations has gone up, the seven-day average of the number of new deaths has gone up, the seven-day average of percent positivity (using unique people tested) has gone up, and the seven-day average of percent positivity (using testing events) has gone up. Some of those data points, especially the Governor’s key metric of percent positivity, rely on testing, which has also steadily gone up over the last couple of weeks. However, we just learned from Mel Leonor at the Richmond Times-Dispatch, in The Most Important Coronavirus Piece That I’ve Read In A While, that VDH had started to mix antibody test results with its standard, viral test results. To me—not a doctor or an expert—that seems confusing at best and misleading at worst. Yesterday, Alexis Madrigal and Robinson Meyer at the Atlantic have this incredibly damning piece that confirms a lot of my concerns with how the Governor is using unreliable data in his decisions to move into Phase One of recovery. You absolutely must read the entire thing, but I’m going to quote some of the more enraging bits. First, “Virginia’s decision to mix the results of two different kinds of tests marks a new low in data standards…By combining these two types of test, the state is able to portray itself as having a more robust infrastructure for tracking and containing the coronavirus than it actually does.” A Harvard professor of Global Health said of the practice, “It’s terrible. It messes up everything.” Meanwhile, the Governor’s Chief of Staff says that the practice is totally fine because other states are doing it too, but the Atlantic “could not find evidence that other states are blending test results in the way that [the Chief of Staff] claimed. In an email, a spokesperson for the Virginia Department of Health claimed that Arizona, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia also mingled viral and antibody results. This is false: Those three governments either separate out, or do not report, the result of negative antibody tests to the public.” Then, about how this impacts the Governor’s key percent positivity metric: “But because Virginia combines viral and antibody results, its positivity rate is unusable, said Jha, the Harvard professor…By lumping the two tests together, as Virginia has done, states can artificially improve their test-positivity rate.” Keep all that in mind as the Governor drags the Commonwealth into Phase One tomorrow.

Obviously, as an amateur spreadsheetidemiologist, I’m against the Governor’s rushed recovery plan—but I’m not the only one! Yesterday, the Virginia Legislative Black Caucus sent a letter to Governor Northam opposing the plans to begin Phase One tomorrow. I strongly agree with this: “Yet a premature reopening of Virginia’s economy under these aforementioned weaknesses in proper medical infrastructure and capacity will hit Black Virginians and Virginians of Color even harder. Under the current plan, and with the already existent racial disparities that this pandemic and economic crisis are perpetuating, we will be creating a situation where Black and Brown Virginians outside of Northern Virginia will become guinea pigs for our economy.” It’s times like these I’m proud that both of my state legislators are members of the VLBC.

#441
May 14, 2020
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🛩 Good morning, RVA: 730 • 41; Richmond expresses reservations; and huge, fast machines

Good morning, RVA! It’s 40 °F, and today looks like a great day to get outside and move your body around. Expect highs right around 70 °F and lots of sunshine. Take advantage of the opportunity!

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 730 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 41 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 90 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 48, Henrico: 23, and Richmond: 19). Locally, this is the third most new reported positive cases in a single day, and that finally got me to put together this chart of the seven-day average of new reported positive cases in Richmond, Chesterfield, and Henrico. As you can see, Chesterfield continues to report more new cases each day, Richmond’s either mostly flat or has a slightly increasing number of new cases, and Henrico is still coming down off its early peak. Statewide, reported deaths shot way up. Doctors and statisticians will hate how I use these numbers—so, grain of salt—but the CDC reports leading causes of deaths for each state, and in Virginia cancer killed 15,064 people in 2017 (the most recent data they’ve got). That’s an average of 41 people per day. Looking at it that way, yesterday, COVID-19 was the leading cause of death in the Commonwealth. Also, not that it matters anymore, VDH reported under 5,000 tests yesterday, and the average number of tests reported over the last six days (for dumb data reasons) is either 6,886 or 7,216—depending on how you define “test.” Both of those numbers are significantly less than 10,000. I’m interested in what the Governor will say at his regularly-scheduled 2:00 PM briefing today, the final one before the May 15th plunge into Phase One.

In potentially huge news locally, Justing Mattingly at the Richmond Times-Dispatch says Mayor Stoney “is expressing reservations about whether Friday is the right time for officials to start easing restrictions in the city” and that “Richmond is considering asking Northam for an exemption similar to what Northern Virginia received.” Heck yes, Mayor! I’m having…an unplanned emotional reaction…to finally reading about an elected official who I feel like has their focus on the health and safety of me, my family, and my neighbors. Yes, that’s for sure how normal people talk about feelings—as “unplanned emotional reactions.” Anyway, as I hinted at yesterday, I don’t think there’s much weight in the Governor’s continued “my restrictions are a floor not a ceiling” rhetoric. At the moment he appears way more focused on, in his words, “Uniformity across the region is critical to a successful strategy, rather than having restrictions piecemeal across towns and counties.” Here again is Mayor Stoney with the A+ response: "I understand that the governor wants everybody to be on the same page in the region to do so, but I think this is once again where being an independent city in this state kind of penalizes you…We’re different than the counties. That’s just the bottom line.” Super different than the counties in priorities: Both county managers from Henrico and Chesterfield say they plan on going ahead with the May 15th move into Phase One.

#204
May 13, 2020
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🐄 Good morning, RVA: 989 • 11; an adopted budget; and a Northside cow

Good morning, RVA! It’s 38 °F, and highs today are still stuck in the low-to-mid 60s. Starting tomorrow and through the weekend, though, we should see highs in the 70s, 80s, and, maybe, even 90s. Get stoked for porches.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 989 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 11 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 34 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 2, Henrico: 16, and Richmond: 16). At his presser yesterday, the Governor continued his push toward a May 15th move into Phase One of recovery. VPM has video of the briefing plus David Streever has the written recap. As per the last forever, Governor Northam leaned heavily on the percent positivity graph and defended Virginia’s cellar-dweller testing rate—which, to be fair, has significantly increased over the last couple of weeks. New yesterday, the Governor “confirmed he’ll use a regional approach to reopening the state…following feedback from leaders in Northern Virginia who say they aren’t ready.” Not so fast, Richmonders eager to continue sheltering in place! While the Gov keeps saying his metrics and goals for moving into Phase One are a floor not a ceiling, it does sound like some amount of regional coordination is needed if a city or county wanted to deviate from the May 15th plan. Here’s a quote from the Washington Post over the weekend: “Alena Yarmosky, a spokeswoman for Northam, said the governor requested the letter [from Northern Virginia localities] to avoid a situation where neighboring localities had different policies that could reduce their effectiveness.” Hmmmm, can you think of any neighboring localities that may have differing policies in how they want to move forward during this crisis? Oh, I don’t know, maybe an urban city with vastly different demographics and needs surrounded by suburban and rural counties? Virginia’s independent cities system strikes again! Meanwhile, at the national level, the New York Times says Dr. Fauci “intends to warn the Senate on Tuesday that Americans would experience ‘needless suffering and death’ if the country opens up too quickly.”

Mayor Stoney announced a COVID-19 health equity pilot which, with some support from the state, has collected 20,000 face masks and 20,000 bottles of hand sanitizer to distribute in Richmond’s underserved neighborhoods. Here’s the Mayor on why focusing on these communities is important: "COVID-19 isn’t singular in its disproportionate effect on communities of color with high poverty rates…The healthcare disparities highlighted by this pandemic are a manifestation of historic injustices, which we can help address with targeted, equity-driven efforts like this program.” He’s obviously not wrong! In the Richmond region, Black people represent a higher percentage of coronavirus positive cases, hospitalizations, and deaths than they do of the population (35%, 55%, and 44% respectively, compared to 32% of the regional population).

#149
May 12, 2020
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🐄 Good morning, RVA: 989 • 11; an adopted budget; and a Northside cow

Good morning, RVA! It’s 38 °F, and highs today are still stuck in the low-to-mid 60s. Starting tomorrow and through the weekend, though, we should see highs in the 70s, 80s, and, maybe, even 90s. Get stoked for porches.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 989 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 11 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 34 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 2, Henrico: 16, and Richmond: 16). At his presser yesterday, the Governor continued his push toward a May 15th move into Phase One of recovery. VPM has video of the briefing plus David Streever has the written recap. As per the last forever, Governor Northam leaned heavily on the percent positivity graph and defended Virginia’s cellar-dweller testing rate—which, to be fair, has significantly increased over the last couple of weeks. New yesterday, the Governor “confirmed he’ll use a regional approach to reopening the state…following feedback from leaders in Northern Virginia who say they aren’t ready.” Not so fast, Richmonders eager to continue sheltering in place! While the Gov keeps saying his metrics and goals for moving into Phase One are a floor not a ceiling, it does sound like some amount of regional coordination is needed if a city or county wanted to deviate from the May 15th plan. Here’s a quote from the Washington Post over the weekend: “Alena Yarmosky, a spokeswoman for Northam, said the governor requested the letter [from Northern Virginia localities] to avoid a situation where neighboring localities had different policies that could reduce their effectiveness.” Hmmmm, can you think of any neighboring localities that may have differing policies in how they want to move forward during this crisis? Oh, I don’t know, maybe an urban city with vastly different demographics and needs surrounded by suburban and rural counties? Virginia’s independent cities system strikes again! Meanwhile, at the national level, the New York Times says Dr. Fauci “intends to warn the Senate on Tuesday that Americans would experience ‘needless suffering and death’ if the country opens up too quickly.”

Mayor Stoney announced a COVID-19 health equity pilot which, with some support from the state, has collected 20,000 face masks and 20,000 bottles of hand sanitizer to distribute in Richmond’s underserved neighborhoods. Here’s the Mayor on why focusing on these communities is important: "COVID-19 isn’t singular in its disproportionate effect on communities of color with high poverty rates…The healthcare disparities highlighted by this pandemic are a manifestation of historic injustices, which we can help address with targeted, equity-driven efforts like this program.” He’s obviously not wrong! In the Richmond region, Black people represent a higher percentage of coronavirus positive cases, hospitalizations, and deaths than they do of the population (35%, 55%, and 44% respectively, compared to 32% of the regional population).

#149
May 12, 2020
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🕵️ Good morning, RVA: 773 • 12; unreliable tests; and a lack of contact tracing infrastructure

Good morning, RVA! It’s 51 °F, and highs today should hit somewhere in the low 60s. Stick around, though, because we could see highs in the 80s later this week—not like you’re going anywhere!

Water cooler

The Richmond Police Department reports that Makayla A. Gregory, 20, was shot to death on Saturday night on the 2000 block of Sussex Street. Another victim is being treated for life-threatening injuries and is listed in critical condition.


#207
May 11, 2020
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🤦 Good morning, RVA: 585 • 32; open and cool streets; and learning from the 1918 pandemic

Good morning, RVA! It’s 47 °F, and while we may have some warmer temperatures today, beware tonight and tomorrow night! NBC12’s Andrew Freiden says we’ve got a chance for garden-killing frost both nights and helpfully points to this post on how to avoid damage to your vegetable younglings if you’ve already put them in the ground.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 585 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 32 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 136 new cases over the last two days in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 61, Henrico: 40, and Richmond: 35). Since VDH missed Wednesday’s data dump, they included all of those results in Thursday’s data dump, and now all my graphs are weird. That said, I think we’ve seen a four-day decrease in reported positive cases, which is the first time that’s ever happened in Virginia. Eternal caveat to that: The Commonwealth continues to do fewer tests per capita than almost any other state in America. Related: The Virginia Mercury has a column from Tram Nguyen, co-executive director of New Virginia Majority, about the Governor’s current plan to move into Phase One of recovery by May 15th, saying “The move to reopen should also include providing those with little or no health insurance access to health care facilities and reliable medical treatments that are affordable, culturally-sensitive, and are considerate of language accessibility. Until we can keep our most vulnerable safe and cared for, Governor Northam must reconsider his premature reopening. Virginia should be a welcoming place for all of us, not a place where some of us are dispensable.”

It is Friday, and the Virginia Employment Commissions has released their weekly unemployment chartsandgraphs update. While the number of new claimants continues to decrease, the number of continued claimants continues to go up each and every week. As of May 2nd, there were 436,320 folks total filing for unemployment insurance. Even with the decrease in new claimants, the VEC reminds us that while “the volumes of initial claims has retreated from its recent peak, it may not return to pre-pandemic levels for some time.” VEC has also put together this data dashboard that includes a bit of demographic data. As you could have probably guessed, Black Virginians represent 28% of claimants yet only around 20% of the total population of the state.

#977
May 8, 2020
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⛲️ Good morning, RVA: ?,??? • ???; return of the NoBro; and a bunch of cool planning documents.

Good morning, RVA! It’s 41 °F, but today looks pretty excellent once things warm up a bit. Expect highs in the mid 60s and plenty of sunshine. We might see some rain over the weekend paired with some chilly morning temperatures.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports…nothing! Sounds like they had a technology issues, and yesterday’s data dump never happened. I hope with today’s update they also make yesterday’s data available. In lieu of numbers, read this press release from the Legal Aid Justice Center that calls Governor Northam’s announcement to move to Phase One of recovery on May 15th "reckless and cruel." Further: “Until we can reliably deliver basic public health protections and care—especially to marginalized communities—and take aggressive steps to minimize the cruel and inequitable effects of the pandemic, Virginia must stay closed for business. There is no acceptable margin of lives lost or families devastated that justifies prioritizing economic pressures over the health and safety of people, especially when Black and brown Virginians would bear the brunt of this deadly calculation.”


#566
May 7, 2020
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