Good morning, RVA! Itâs 59 °F, and today you should expect highs in the mid 70s. Thatâs shockingly fall-like, and I hope you take the time to enjoy it.
The Richmond Police Department reports that Jeremiah Darden, Jr., a man in his 20s, was shot and killed this past Friday on the 00 block of E. Blake Lane near the intersection of Hull Street and E. Broad Rock Road. Police are asking anyone traveling in the area around 12:00 AM to contact detectives (804.780.1000).
As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 757âď¸ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 19âď¸ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 68âď¸ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 18, Henrico: 31, and Richmond: 19). Since this pandemic began, 334 people have died in the Richmond region. Astute readers will notice the big drop in new cases in our regionâparticularly in Henrico. Turns out, thatâs not a drop at all, but me correcting a pretty severe typo in my coronacounts spreadsheet! At some point, my spreadsheet started adding Richmondâs new case count to Henricoâs new case count, and that sent the Countyâs numbers skyrocketing (comparatively). I should have noticed this earlier, but, unfortunately, it took two readers emailing me yesterday asking what the heck was going on in Henrico to send me poking through my spreadsheet forumlas. Hereâs a corrected graph of the seven-day average of new regional case counts, which, while not great, no longer paints Henrico as a horrible outlier. To help prevent this sort of casual-yet-catastrophic error in the future, Iâm going to attempt to move my coronacounts spreadsheet to a public Google Sheet. That way other folks can poke around in the formulas should the so desire. Anyway, sorry about that!
Yesterday, Mayor Stoney announced that the City will convert 36-acres of unused city-owned land into public green spaces. Thatâs five parcels, all located on the Southside, with three in the 8th District and two in the 9th District. Hereâs a map of the locations, or, if you really care, you can look at the property details on the Cityâs Property Search website (1, 2, 3, 4, 5). Another cool thing about this announcement is that the City used the RVAgreen 2050 Climate Equity Index to figure out where to locate all this new green space. Iâm going to link to this Climate Equity Index interactive map, which presumably explains it all, but it is too intense for my iPad to loadâso who even knows what youâll find should you click that link. For the rest of us, here are some jpg maps that illustrate the kinds of things the Climate Equity Index takes into account. You can easily see how it makes a lot of sense to focus the creation of new public green space on the Cityâs Southside. Up next: The Mayor will introduce the ordinance to get things moving at the September 28th Council meeting, and then Parks & Rec will start engaging with communities around the parcels to begin designing the spaces.
Speaking of RVAgreen, there are lots of ways for you to get involved in the Cityâs âequity-centered climate action and resilience planning initiative.â I really enjoy their Get Involved page which gives you a bunch of different options based on the amount of time youâve got to spendâfrom signing up for email updates (one minute), to taking a community survey (10 minutes), to applying to join the Racial and Environmental Justice Roundtable (3â5 hours per month).
Nerdy urbanism topics abound today! Richmond 300, the Cityâs Master Planning process, has released their âpre-final planâ. Probably what youâre after is this memo documenting revisions between June 1st and now (PDF). One of the bigger changes is the addition of a new land use category called âcommunity mixed-use,â which appears to allow for more density than âneighborhood mixed-useâ but not as much density as âcorridor mixed-use.â Is this splitting hairs? I have no idea, but I imagine the process/conversation behind making this particular decision wasâŚinterestingâŚand Iâd love to hear more. Anyway, as far as Iâm concerned thereâs still too much of the residential category on the Future Land Use map, particularly in parts of the Northside and West End. This kind of conservative planning only makes reaching our housing goals that much harder and removes much of the burden of More Housing⢠from those aforementioned neighborhoods. Iâm sure, as with everything, you could do some interesting overlays with the red lining map. Also of note, Objective 8.4 âIncrease transit serviceâ has been changed to add a clear goal: âserve existing and new riders so that 75% of residents live within a half mile of a transit line with service that comes every 15 minutes by 2040.â Love it.
You thought we were done with nerdy PDFs and dashboards? THINK AGAIN. At some point, VDOT put together this really interesting pandemictimes Virginia Commuter Survey and the results of the first round are out. Surprise: Lots of folks are working from home! Thatâs not surprising, but, maybe actually surprising: 37% of respondents who are currently commuting via bicycle switched from a different mode. Make sure you check out the three dashboards and quench whatever early-morning desire for data you may have.
As one of the only public school systems in the region doing in-person instruction, itâs fascinating to watch Hanover County deal with positive coronavirus cases. Abby Church at the Richmond Times-Dispatch says Kersey Creek Elementary school in Hanover will move to remote instruction after a teacher tested positive. Itâs interesting (and maybe predictive?) that the County decided to move the entire school to remote instruction rather than just the class. Keep that in mind as other schools start to move back to some sort of in-person instruction. Like, for example, the RTDâs Jessica Nocera reports that âselect Kâ12 special education students are heading back into Chesterfield County public school classrooms at the end of the month.â Other groups of students will tentatively return over the course of a couple weeks, with 6thâ12th graders returning to a hybrid in-person instruction model by November 9th. Personal opinion, this seems complex: âCohorts 2â4 will return to school twice a week and will be split by last name. For example, Group 1 of any cohort is students with last names that begin with A through L. These students would attend school Monday and Tuesday. Group 2 of any cohort is students with last names that start with M through Z, and they will attend Thursday and Friday. Every Wednesday, schools will be closed for cleaning with all cohorts participating in asynchronous learning.â Better hope everyone in your family has the same last name, I guess!
Space is just so, so neat, and the Voyager probes are some of our coolest things. Good work, humans.
Voyager 1, which took a more direct route through the Solar System, passed out into interstellar space in 2012, before Voyager 2 joined it in 2018. Currently around 13 billion and 11 billion miles from Earth respectively, they are now drifting out, ever further into the space beyond our Solar System, sending back more data as they do. What these two aging probes revealed about the boundary between the heliosphere and the interstellar medium has provided fresh clues about how our Solar System formed, and how life on Earth is even possible. Far from being a distinct boundary, the very edge of our Solar System actually churns with roiling magnetic fields, clashing stellar windstorms, storms of high energy particles and swirling radiation.
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