Good morning, RVA! Itâs 72 °F, and today you can expect highs in the mid 90s with Feels Likes above and beyond 100 °F. Weâre deep in dangerous heat territory, and if youâve got to go outside, be smart about it! Weâve got at least a couple more days before temperatures cool down.
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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: 165, 7, and 6, respectively. VDH reports a seven-day average of 15.4 new cases in and around Richmond (Richmond: 2.1; Henrico: 10.1, and Chesterfield: 3.1). Since this pandemic began, 1,358 people have died in the Richmond region. 46.6%, 58.2%, and 54.8% of the population in Richmond, Henrico, and Chesterfield have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.
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The big COVID-19 news this morning is that a WHO official urged the public to continue wearing masks indoorsâeven if fully vaccinatedâas a precaution against the delta variant of COVID-19. The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health quickly followed suit and issued the same recommendation for its residents. Iâve seen this new variant-related mask recommendation framed a couple of ways in the media, mostly as âwe donât know enough about the delta variant, and wearing masks helps keep youâeven if youâre vaccinatedâfrom spreading this highly transmissible variant to folks who may be unvaccinated.â But Iâve also seen the actual quote from the WHO official, taken out of whatever context it may have originally been in, and it reads way more intense: âPeople cannot feel safe just because they had the two doses. They still need to protect themselvesâŚVaccine alone wonât stop community transmission.â According to the NYT, yesterday the CDC âpointed to [its] existing guidance and gave no indication it would change.â So, here we are again with seemingly conflicting mask guidance, and I donât love it! To give you some context on the local spread of the delta variant, the VDH Variants of Concern dashboard reports 48 total cases in Virginia, with zero in Richmond, 14 in Henrico, and three in Chesterfield.
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Kenya Hunter at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports that Richmond Public Schools âanticipates a 14 percentage point boost in its graduation rate, with Latino students and economically disadvantaged students seeing the most significant gains.â This year, according to preliminary figures, 85.7% of students will graduate on time, compared to 71.6% last year. Thatâs a lot of dang percentage points to increase, and I wonder what it all means given the year students just had. Will those numbers hold for next year? Was something about virtual learning better for high school students? Or maybe, as RPSâs Chief Academic Officer Tracy Epp, says âThis is the culmination of three yearsâweâre seeing that weâre finally gaining traction, based on the past three years of our efforts.â
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Quick City Council update: Last night Council passed all of the Jackson Ward street dedication ordinances. DPW will now get to hanging up some new signage!
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Iâm fascinated by ghost kitchens, and Richmond BizSenseâs Mike Platania reports that Uber co-founder Travis Kalanick will bring one to Broad Street near Arthur Ashe Boulevard. If Iâm being honest with myself, Iâm mostly fascinated by the generic, keyword-heavy names that some delivery-only restaurants using ghost kitchens come up with. Mine would be called âWings are Good.â
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Twitter user Doug Allen made this super useful map of all (?) the Richmond-area bike shops. I know bike shops are like tacosâeveryone has a favorite spotâbut, if you donât already have a favorite of your own, check out the map and try one out near you. I definitely prefer taking my bike(s) to the shop and having them actually fix a thing rather than watching a YouTube and getting frustrated that my brain canât understand simple machines for some reason.
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Brent Baldwin at Style Weekly talked to Chris Haynie, cofounder of Happy Trees Agricultural Supply, about how to grow marijuana in your house. Honestly, sounds waaaaay too complicated for me. I do love this quote, though, which makes me feel like I could at least keep a plant alive as an ornamental, âCannabis is not some crazy plant that aliens gave us from some other world, it grows like a pepper, man. Itâs a fast-flowering annual.â
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The Washington Post has a nice article from a couple weeks back about how Virginia is crushing it when it comes to expanding passenger rail. Itâll still take the better part of a decade to realize some of the planned improvements, but Iâm pretty stoked to take the train everywhere when Iâm retired.
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I live in a very shady, tree-filled neighborhoodâwhich we know is because where I live was never redlined and has seen decades of investment in its trees and other infrastructure. Many neighborhoods near meâin fact, the one just across the streetâhavenât had the benefit of all that investment and of all those trees and sits sweltering and shadeless in 100 °F heat. I wonder if strategic tiny forests could be part of the solution?
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The small-footprint projects are based on the work of Japanese botanist Akira Miyawaki, who, beginning in the 1970s, pioneered a method of planting young indigenous species close together to quickly regenerate forests on degraded land. Miyawaki, who extensively studied and catalogued the vegetation of Japan, surveyed forests near potential Tiny Forest sites for a mixture of their main species. âThe planting should center on the primary trees of the location, and following the laws of the natural forest,â he wrote in a 2006 essay upon accepting the Blue Planet award. Competing for light, the saplings grow quickly, explained Miyawakiâs collaborator Kazue Fujiwara. According to Fujiwara, the method can work anywhere, even in plots as small as one meter wide, though she said a minimum of three meters is easier to plant a mix of species.
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Take-out bike is back!
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