Good morning, RVA! Itās 71 °F, and youāve got another hot and humid day lined up in front of you. Summer in Richmond continues!
As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 801āļø new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 9āļø new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 121āļø new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 62, Henrico: 34, and Richmond: 25). Since this pandemic began, 272 people have died in the Richmond region. Yesterday, the Governor did hold a coronavirus press conference in light of the increasing number of reported positive COVID-19 cases across the stateāespecially in the eastern part of the Commonwealth. Kate Masters at the Virginia Mercury has one recap which focuses on the the lack of specificity and transparency in the public VDH datasets and another with the details on the Governorās plan to combat rising case counts by getting the Virginia ABC and the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services to conduct unannounced mask inspections at businesses. The ABC will also ban alcohol sales after 11:00 PM. I dunno, yāall. Is enforcement really the best and most equitable way to get people to practice safe public health behavior? When we talk about Vision Zero and making streets safer, itās implementing actual, physical changes to a street that shifts behaviorānot setting up a speed trap for a weekend. In fact, lots of groups have dropped āenforcementā from their Vision Zero strategies entirely. Iām not convinced that deploying a couple hundred inspectors to enforce the mask and social distancing requirements will actually shift folks' coronabehavior, and Iām concerned about which businesses and people will be on the receiving end of that enforcement. I think we probably need to do the equivalent of making actual, physical changes to a street and close bars and indoor dining for a while.
Richmondās School Board met last night and, after hearing hours of public comment, voted 8ā1 to move forward with Plan Eāan entirely virtual first semester for all students. The Board could change course if the public health picture improves, but, for now, it looks like kids across the city are stuck at home (and I mean that in the best possible way) for the rest of the calendar year. It also looks like longer-term childcare will become an even more critical need for families whose work situations just will not allow them to stay home to help facilitate online learning. If you want, you can read the 122-page document (PDF) of alllllll the public comments and maybe check out a quick refresher of the key elements of virtual instruction on page nine of this PDF. This is a big freaking deal, and, while I think Iām still convinced that in-person school for our youngest students is probably a good idea, Iām impressed that the School Board was able to make this decision quickly and decisively. At least now we all know what to expect in the City come September. Weāll now get to see how Richmondās path forward impacts what Henrico and Chesterfield decide to do. That school reopening is not a decision made regionally blows my mind!
Also on the regional schools tip, last night the Hanover County School Board voted to finally rename Lee-Davis High School and Stonewall Jackson Middle School. C. Suarez Rojas at the RTD has the details. What great news, and it only took a million years and the extremely persistent work by advocates in Hanoverāincluding a bunch of former and current students. Thereās obviously a lot of work left to be doneāthe vote was a 4ā3 split after allābut, for now, congratulations to the folks whoāve waited literal decades for this moment.
Iām thankful that the RTDās Ali Rockett has explained the videos floating around of Mayor Stoney talking with police about the time an RPD officer drove their vehicle into protestors. I desperately hate car culture and am extremely disappointed that anyone, especially an elected official, can think that driving a vehicle into people is totally fine. It doesnāt matter if the crowd of protestors āmoved in frontā of the police officerās SUV; if thereās a couple dozen people in front of you, maybe just wait a second and donāt drive your car over there? And maybe especially donāt drive it up onto the sidewalk? Iām sure there are political and electoral hot takes to be made from this video, and youāre free to make them, but Iām going to sit here and seethe about traffic violence instead.
Mike Platania at Richmond BizSense says the City has bought back a piece of the Canal Walk from developers. Iām into it! This is public space and should belong to the public.
Oooo look at this exciting picture via /r/rva: City crews are getting ready to stripe the bike lanes on Malvern! Somehow, after a bunch of years of work, weāre close to having an actual bike network in Richmond. Thatās exciting.
I absolutely love linguists! The context, history, and evolution of language is one of my most favorite things to learn about.
But Ross also explained that in the decades since those minority womenās groups came together to form their alliance, the term āwomen of colorā has been flattened and lost its political meaning. āUnfortunately, so many times people of color hear the term āpeople of colorā from other white people that they think white people created it,ā she said, āinstead of understanding that we self-made ourselves. This is a term that has a lot of power for us. But weāve done a poor-ass job of communicating that history so that people understand that power.ā
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