Good morning, RVA! Itâs 70 °F, and, as foretold, highs today should top out around 80 °Fâbut you gotta deal with all of this rain in return. Decent trade, I think! This weekendâs weather looks pretty great, with steadily increasing temperatures until weâre right back on the surface of the sun by the middle of next week.
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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: 176, 25, and 5.9, respectively. VDH reports a seven-day average of 20.3 new cases in and around Richmond (Richmond: -5.9; Henrico: 21.4, and Chesterfield: 4.7). Since this pandemic began, 1,359 people have died in the Richmond region. 46.8%, 58.6%, and 55.1% of the population in Richmond, Henrico, and Chesterfield have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. Thatâs nearly half a million people in the region (496,085) with at least some protection from this disease! Thatâs great, but having even more folks vaccinated would be greater. Hereâs this weekâs stacked chart of new cases, hospitalizations, and deaths across the Commonwealth, and you can see slight upticks across the board. And, if youâre not yet vaccinated and need something more convincing than a couple of charts, read this terrifying piece in The Atlantic about what the darkest of winters could look like due to the delta variant.
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Yesterday, the Governorâs state of emergency expired and that brought with it some confusion about where and when masks are required, recommended, or not needed at all. VDH has a helpful press release laying the whole thing out. Hereâs the gist: people older than five are required to wear a mask âwhile indoors at a public or private K-12 schoolâ and on planes, buses, trains, and other forms of public transportation. People who are not yet full vaccinatedâincluding children under the age of 12âshould still wear masks while indoors, following the current CDC recommendations. At the moment, the CDC and VDH are not recommending that fully vaccinated people need to wear a mask, but you totally can if you would feel more comfortable doing so. The VDH press release also includes this slightly ominous line: âMasks may be especially important now that recent cases of the âDelta variantâ (B.1.617.2) have been identified in Virginia.â Donât throw out all your favorite masks yet, I think.
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As we inch closer to ARP money hitting the Cityâs bank account, I still donât have a great feel for the goals or processes for deciding how to use this huge influx of cash. Luckily, smarter people than I are on the case, and the folks at Richmond Together have updated their comprehensive proposal for how to deeply, equitably invest this money into our city. Compare and contrast the programs created and funded in this documentâinvestments that would begin to address some seriously systemic issuesâto the extremely narrow district-by-district priorities found in Councilâs RES. 2021-R030 (which has not yet passed). Anyway, Richmond Togetherâs document is a pleasure to read, and I hope youâll take the time to do so and then send your favorite highlights (or the entire thing) to your set of elected officials.
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If you havenât seen it yet, the Cityâs Office of Equitable Transit and Mobility has put together a kind of pre-survey as they kick off the process for a much-needed update to the Cityâs transportation plan. Itâs a MetroQuest survey, which is not my favorite, and it asks you to mark transportation barriers on a map, which I think is a huge barrier for a lot of folks who arenât great at reading maps. That said, Iâm excited for this process, and will take some of my weekend to dutifully mark this map with several dozen places that are terrible for people trying to walk, roll, ride, or bus around.
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In his still-great email, RPS Superintendent Jason Kamras highlights a special School Board meeting on July 13th at George Wythe High School to discuss the construction of a replacement for George Wythe High School. This sounds like a positive step in the right directionâat least I hope so! Itâs certainly an improvement over the Boardâs previous position of just not wanting to discuss any possible compromise with City Council and the Mayor about whoâs in charge of building schools. Also positive and of note, public comment at this meeting will be limited to the first 30 minutes.
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Scott Wise and Cameron Thompson at WTVR report that a âfree marijuana seed giveaway at a CBD Store on Lauderdale Drive in western Henrico County was temporarily shut down early Thursday due to the large crowds.â Amazing.
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Logistical note! Iâm headed out on vacation and will take a break from Good Morning, RVA for the next two weeks. Youâll hear from me again on July 19th, but, if you miss me or have excellent PDFs to share, you can always email them to me at ross@gmrva.com. Have a great fortnight, and please take good care of Richmond for me while Iâm gone!
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I feel like Iâve shared a longread about nut heists before, but maybe about almonds? People will steal anything, I tell you what.
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While completing orders and going over inventory, employees at a San Joaquin Valley pistachio company realized something didnât add up. They seemed to be missing some nuts â and more than just a few. An audit launched earlier this month revealed that roughly 42,000 pounds of pistachios had vanished. Touchstone Pistachio Co. reported the missing merchandise to law enforcement on June 17, officials with the Tulare County Sheriffâs Office said. It didnât take authorities long to crack the case.
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