Good morning, RVA! Itâs 77 °F, and, later today we should get a reprieve to the opressive heat. You can expect highs in the 80s, but rain should move in late morning or early afternoon to cool things down. Tomorrowâs forecast looks like a real winner, so get excited.
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As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports the seven-day average of new COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths as: 136, 21, and 6, respectively. VDH reports a seven-day average of 18.7 new cases in and around Richmond (Richmond: 0.9; Henrico: 11.9, and Chesterfield: 6). Since this pandemic began, 1,352 people have died in the Richmond region. 45.8%, 57.2%, and 53.7% of the population in Richmond, Henrico, and Chesterfield have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.
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Despite the VDH dashboardâs stubborn refusal to tick over from 69.9% of adult Virginians with at least one dose to the full 70%, the Governor declared victory yesterday at Hope Pharmacy in the East End. From the release, âVirginia is the 16th state in the nation to meet this goal set by President Joe Biden in early May and reaches the key vaccination milestone two weeks ahead of the nationwide July 4 target. To date, over 8.8 million doses of vaccine have been administered in Virginia and more than 4.2 million individuals, or 60.3 percent of the population 18 and older, are fully vaccinated.â Thatâs pretty rad, and weâre seeing some good progress at the local level, too: 53.6%, 69.1%, and 65.9% of adults in Richmond, Henrico, and Chesterfield have had at least one dose. We should celebrate this local progress but also take these local number with a grain of salt. According to the dashboard, a full 1,080,323 people have not been âmapped,â which I assume means they arenât tied to a locality. Thatâs 22% of all people with at least one dose! Doing some reprehensible napkin math and assuming that those one million untethered folks are distributed equally and evenly, (aka just adding 22% to the local-level percentages), weâd end up with 65.4%, 84.3%, and 80.4% of adults across our three localities with at least one dose. Now, of course, I have no reason to think thatâs how the math would actually work outâin fact, the Richmond Times-Dispatchâs Sabrina Moreno reports that it may be weighted towards people living near the North Carolina borderâbut a million folks is a lot of people in a state with a total population of 8.5 million. Anyway, good work everyone, and good luck in the continued work!
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Welp, add one to the enormously long list of âshows what I knowâs. The RTDâs Chris Suarez reports that âOn Monday, the Richmond Planning Commission declined to recommend whether the City Council should authorize the mayorâs administration to remove the bases for the J.E.B. Stuart, Jefferson Davis and âStonewallâ Jackson statues on Monument Avenue, along with the one for the Soldiers and Sailors Monument on Libby Hill. The commissioners did not vote on whether to endorse the removal of the Matthew Fontaine Maury monumentâs pedestal and several smaller monuments on Monument Avenue and in Monroe Park after ending their meeting early Monday evening because of technical difficulties. The commission did, however, endorse plans for the removal of the A.P. Hill statue at the intersection of Hermitage Road and Laburnum Avenue, citing traffic safety concerns there.â I certainly did not expect that! And I certainly did not expect that the Governorâs office, who sent a letter of opposition via Chief of Staff Clark Mercer, would get involved, either! What seemed like a straightforward plan to get rid of racist garbage and present the community with a blank slate from which to work, now seems incredibly messy with differing levels of involvement and expectations from the City, the State, and the public. Weâll see what City Council decides to do next, but Iâm not sure theyâre going to love the State weighing in on on this particular issue at this particular moment in the process. I also have some thoughts on this Reimagining Monument Avenue group, which is not directly associated with the City or its Department of Planning, but seems to be who everyone assumes will do the eponymous work of reimagining Monument Avenue. But! I would like to learn more first.
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I have to link to this editorial in the RTD supporting GRTCâs decision to remain fare-free for another year, because I never thought I would read these sentence in our local paper: âAnd in the long term, we have to find better solutions than our dependency on cars. Multimodal transit is the answer, and GRTC is a key part of that emerging framework.â
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Tonight at 6:00 PM you can attend an actual in-person, indoors public meetingâif you feel comfortable with that sort of thing. The City will host a conversation about the draft City Center Plan at the Convention Center and, of course, simultaneously on Microsoft Teams. This, I think, is the only public meeting on this plan before it works its way through the legislative process, so, while youâll have plenty of public comment opportunities moving forward, this might be your best chance to influence tweaks, changes, and edits. You can read the full plan and leave comments using Konveio here. I know Konveio is a drag to use, but if youâve got thoughts and feelings I really encourage you to go drop a bubble or twoâI already see a handful of âWHEREâS THE PARKING??â comments that probably need some balancing out.
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Gas stoves are maybe terrible, turns out. This is like when I learned the auto industry invented jaywalking to help sell cars.
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Beginning in the 1990s, the industry faced a new challenge: mounting evidence that burning gas indoors can contribute to serious health problems. Gas stoves emit a host of dangerous pollutants, including particulate matter, formaldehyde, carbon monoxide, and nitrogen oxides. One 2014 simulation by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory found that cooking with gas for one hour without ventilation adds up to 3,000 parts per billion of carbon monoxide to the airâraising indoor concentrations by up to 30 percent in the average home. Carbon monoxide can kill; it binds tightly to the hemoglobin molecules in your blood so they can no longer carry oxygen. Whatâs more, new research shows that the typical home carbon monoxide alarms often fail to detect potentially dangerous levels of the gas.
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