Good morning, RVA! Itâs 72 °F, and you can probably guess todayâs weather forecast: More highs in the 90s with triple-digit Feels Likes. Cooler temperatures move in tomorrow afternoon, though! A reprieve is in sight!
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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, 8, and 6.4, respectively. VDH reports a seven-day average of 14.4 new cases in and around Richmond (Richmond: 0; Henrico: 11.9, and Chesterfield: 2.6). Since this pandemic began, 1,359 people have died in the Richmond region. 46.6%, 58.3%, and 54.9% of the population in Richmond, Henrico, and Chesterfield have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.
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The conversation and coverage of the delta variant and WHOâs recent decision to recommend that fully-vaccinated people wear masks indoors continues. The timing is particularly noteworthy, as the Governorâs state of emergency ends tonight, which, technically, makes wearing a mask in Virginia (to conceal oneâs identity) illegal. Sabrina Moreno at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports on a bunch of local folks' thoughts and recommendations which basically boil down to âwe need to learn more, but, in the meantime you should definitely get vaccinated.â Alan Rodriguez at VPM has some quotes from Dr. Danny Avula on the subject, too: âI think the context domestically â given our much higher rates of vaccination than many countries because of access and the efforts people have made to get vaccinated, paired with relatively low, or extremely low, rates of COVID â I think we can still cling to the guidance of: If youâre fully vaccinated, you do not need to wear a mask.â
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How cool are these massive banners hanging up on City Hall (pictured below)?? Theyâre part of a collaboration between Performing Statistics and RISE for Youth: âThe installation features two, 160ft. tall portraits of TaâDreama McBride and Clyde Walker made in collaboration with artist and Performing Statistics creative director Mark Strandquist. They will be installed on the north and west-facing sides of the City Hall building. McBride and Walker are both youth leaders from RISE for Youth, a state campaign that promotes the creation of healthy communities and community-based alternatives to youth incarceration.â Performing Statistics will host an unveiling and rally tomorrow at 12:00 PM at City Hall, if you want to get up close and personal with the banners. Although, at 160 feet, you can see these things from alllll sorts of places! So cool.
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Iâm way out of the loop on the conversations around setting up our regional transportation authority, but I was poking around on the CVTAâs website this morning and found this draft document of Recommended Project Eligibility for CVTA Regional Funding. I assume this is how the CVTA will decide which projects are eligible for their âregionalâ bucket of money, which makes up 35% of the total. You can see, just from word count alone, where this documentâs priorities lie: Highways, highways, highways. I donât know why any transportation authority, in 2021, is considering building new highways, but sure. It was 120 °F in Portland this week, but, yes, letâs build highways to encourage development patterns that will significantly contribute to climate change. While I donât think that any new highways or highway expansions should be eligible for this money at all, I do hope that there are at least plans for the Authority to include climate impact as part of their eventual project-ranking process. But, like I said, I am way out of the loop and will try to dig through some of these PDFs to learn more.
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The Richmond Times-Dispatchâs Colleen Curran has all the details on the VMFAâs recently announced $190 million, 100,000-square-foot expansion. It all sounds very impressive. Because I am an old person, I feel like the VMFA just wrapped up their last massive expansion, but that was, in fact, 11 years ago. âThe new expansion will add a new 100,000-square-foot, five-story wing for African art, photography and 21st-century art off of the existing Mellon and Lewis Wing,â plus new special exhibition space and special events space.
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Via /r/rva, this list of seven booze-related laws that go into effect tomorrow (alongside the legalization of marijuana). I had no idea that the cocktails to go legislation got extended for at least another year. My household is excited to celebrate continued cheap margaritas with takeout Mexican food!
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All sorts of trigger warnings for this piece about how Airbnb deals with sexual assaults and other horrible things that happen on their hosts' property. How companies handle âriskâ is fascinating to me.
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Although the settlement doesnât bar the woman from cooperating with prosecutors, it does prevent her from blaming or suing the company. That was especially important for Airbnb because the woman wasnât the one whoâd rented the apartment, so she hadnât signed the companyâs 10,000-word terms of service agreementâanother important way Airbnb keeps incidents out of court and out of the public eye. Anyone registering on the site is required to sign this agreement, which bars legal claims for injury or stress arising from a stay and requires confidential arbitration in the event of a dispute. Former safety agents estimate the company handles thousands of allegations of sexual assault every year, many involving rape. Yet only one case related to a sexual assault has been filed against Airbnb in U.S. courts, according to a review of electronically available state and federal lawsuits. Victimsâ lawyers say the terms of service are an important reason.
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Photo via Performing Statistics.
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