Good morning, RVA! Itâs 59 °F, and today looks like a repeat of yesterday but maybe a bit warmer. Expect highs near 80 °F, some early fog, but otherwise a pretty pleasant day.
As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 690âď¸ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 24âď¸ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 33âď¸ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 16, Henrico: 8, and Richmond: 9). Since this pandemic began, 387 people have died in the Richmond region. I think itâs really interesting how our local institutions of higher learning are planning for the upcoming spring semester. Virginia Tech just announced their plans which include four fully-online days to kick things off, and then theyâll move in to a mix of virtual and in-person instruction. The university will also split up spring break into five separate one-day breaks to prevent travel. Sounds smart, but definitely less of a recharge for students.
I keep meaning to mention this story in the Richmond Times-Dispatch by Jessica Nocera about Chesterfieldâs return to in-person instruction. Iâve been pretty open about how I think returning our littlest learners to in-person instruction is worth doing. However, this is an impossible thing for me to communicate empathetically since Iâm not one of the teachers whoâd be back in a classroom surrounded by a gaggle of snotty kids. Teachers, obviously, have a real, practical, on-the-ground impact on a school or school districtâs ability to reopen. If teachers donât feel safeâwhether that feeling is science-and-studies-based or otherwiseâitâs tough to do school. I mean, look at these grim stats from the RTD article: 611 employees have resigned or retired in Chesterfield and nearly 400 of those are coronarelated, the County cut food distribution from 170 sites to 65 because of transportation issues, and âthe district is getting by with having school administration employees who have teaching degrees step in and teach in-person classes.â All of that is yikes. If we want some sort of return to in-person instruction, we canât do it without getting the schools, the teachers, the parents, and the students all on the same page. Thatâs a major duh, but, at the same time, an incredibly complicated challenge.
Related, and also in the RTD, Kenya Hunter reports that an RPS official said âthe cityâs increase in daytime crime would explain many student absences at Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School, which reported that more than one-fourth of its students are on track to be chronically absent.â I donât really know what those words mean, exactly, but I think it highlights that, for some families, fully-virtual learning is more complicated than just âsitting in front of the computer all day is terrible.â
Yesterday, the Planning Commission continued ORD. 2020â217 until December. That ordinance which would convert the public right-of-way medians on Monument and Allen Avenues surrounding Marcus David-Peters Circle into parks. Iâve said I was skeptical about this ordinance since Councilmember Gray introduced it because it seemed like a sneaky way to selectively enforce who has access to the area around MDP circleâparks close after sunset and, thanks to recently passed legislation, firearms are prohibited. Iâve also said that Iâm willing to be convinced that this ordinance exists for some actual parks-related reasons. Unfortunately thatâs not the case, and Councilmember Grayâs liaison said as much at yesterdayâs meeting. When questioned by the Commission, he admitted that the ordinance was drafted specifically to prevent loitering, camping, and firearms near the circle. Creating new parks as a way to exclude people from public spaces is shameful, and Iâm embarrassed by this ordinanceâan ordinance that the Mayor has signed on as co-patron. This is bad, lazy legislation. It does nothing to keep firearms out of the area, which, because Virginia, are allowed basically everywhereâincluding on the sidewalks in front of homes. It does nothing to keep firearms out of areas where armed white supremacists gather, like in front of the VMFA and Daughters of the Confederacy building. It does nothing to incorporate these medians into a larger, community-driven engagement process to reimagine Monument Avenue. It sets a bad precedent and highlights how some folks and some parts of town can quickly escalate their concerns into ill-considered legislationâlegislation that takes everyoneâs time and attention away from the actual work of citybuilding.
Thanks to the Shockoe Examiner for pointing me towards this collection of Sanborn Fire Insurance maps of Richmond on the Library of Congress website. Old maps are rad! Hereâs a great one of pre-annexation, pre-highway Southside.
Henrico County small business owners! I think Iâve written about this before, but if youâve got five or fewer employers, you can apply for these pandemic microgrants through LISCâs Henrico County Microenterprise Relief Fund. Theyâve got $300,000 to divvy up into $3,000â$10,000 grants that can be used for payroll, rent, utilities, bills, and coronavirus-related expenses. These are grants, not loans, so if youâre running a small business in the county and looking for a month or two of rent relief, consider filling out the application. First come, first serve!
The Richmond and Henrico Health Districts will host a COVID-19 community testing event today at Diversity Richmond (1407 Sherwood Ave) from 4:00â6:00 PM. Walk, roll, or ride by and get yourself tested! If you have any questions, as always, you can call the COVID-19 hotline (804.205.3501).
Submitted by Patron Alix. Clearly I think that the line between whatâs real, trustworthy news and fakenews (as originally defined) has blurred over the last decade and a half. But, that said, these Republican-run, news-lookalike websites will do a lot of harm in our current algorithm-based news enviornment. Weâve got one locally, the Virginia Star, that you should probably be aware ofâjust so you can avoid it.
Maine Business Daily is part of a fast-growing network of nearly 1,300 websites that aim to fill a void left by vanishing local newspapers across the country. Yet the network, now in all 50 states, is built not on traditional journalism but on propaganda ordered up by dozens of conservative think tanks, political operatives, corporate executives and public-relations professionals, a Times investigation found. The sites appear as ordinary local-news outlets, with names like Des Moines Sun, Ann Arbor Times and Empire State Today. They employ simple layouts and articles about local politics, community happenings and sometimes national issues, much like any local newspaper. But behind the scenes, many of the stories are directed by political groups and corporate P.R. firms to promote a Republican candidate or a company, or to smear their rivals.
If youâd like your longread to show up here, go chip in a couple bucks on the olâ Patreon.