Good morning, RVA! Itâs 74 °F, and you should expect a good chance of rain untilâŚlater. Maybe later this week? Maybe later next week? Thereâs a lot of dang rain in the seven-day forecast.
As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 836âď¸ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 2âď¸ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 153âď¸ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 43, Henrico: 87, and Richmond: 23). Since this pandemic began, 326 people have died in the Richmond region. VCUâs total number of active cases has dropped to 53 and now only 36 people are in isolation or quarantine. I will admit, I didnât think weâd see the coronanumbers at VCU headed down after three weeks of in-person instruction. What makes VCU so different from other campuses across the state and country? I have no idea, but itâs fascinating.
The first day back to school around the region was not without its issues. Chesterfield County Public Schools in particular hit a technology snag that prevented students from logging in to their remote learning platform for a couple hours. Thatâs frustrating, but, as Richmond Public Schools Superintendent Jason Kamras has said for the past forever, we all need to treat each other with an extra helping of grace over the next couple of weeks. Itâs a big, new challenge to move entire school districts to remote learning, and we should expect some issuesâeven with a couple months to prepare. That said, my personal experience as a parent of a fully-remote RPS middle schoolerâwhich is not representative of anything other than thatâwas pretty OK! The team at the Richmond Times-Dispatch has put together a collection of stories about first days around the region, how staff are handling studentless facilities, and some details on the technology issues that impacted Chesterfield. Now, on to day two!
Remember Del. Bourneâs qualified immunity bill (HB 5013)? Remember how it died in committee, resurrected, and emerged onto the House floor only to die again in a vote that saw five Democrats join Republicans in voting it down? Well, HB 5013 has pulled the olâ Double Lazarus, and is back again! The House of Delegates reconsidered the bill and it passed 49-Y, 45-N, and 2-A. Ned Oliver at the Virginia Mercury has the details, including the reality that Virginiaâs Senate has already rejected a similar bill. Iâd say donât hold your breath, but, considering the billâs history at this pointâŚwho knows!
Yesterday, City Council unanimously passed the Mayorâs bill to ban guns at or adjacent to protests. This is great news, and Iâm so happy to see Council move a bill from start to finish over the course of just a month. Now thatâs legislating! Also, in a wonderful article at Richmond BizSense, Jonathan Spiers says that the rezoning around the Science Museum, Alison Street, and VCU & VUU Pulse stations (ORD. 2020â103) passed Planning Commission. Iâm still waiting for the Cityâs website to update, but I believe the reduction in parking requirements on Franklin Street (ORD. 2020â174) passed as well. Next step for both of these papers is, of course, City Council. I think the latter will probably end up on the Consent Agenda, while the formerâŚweâll see what Council wants to do with it. It certainly wouldnât hurt to email your councilmember in support of ORD. 2020â103 and of building a denser city around our best public transit.
On small correction: Yesterday I said that Bike Walk RVAâs new academy for the fall was bike-focused, and that was a terrible lie. This new academy will, instead, focus on âfunding, plans, and policies for significant development of sidewalks in our region, especially in south Richmond where those who rely on walking the most often have the least access to to safe walking infrastructure.â Bike lanes are rad, but how rad are sidewalks?? If youâd like to make our region a better place to move around, youâve got until September 14th to fill out the Bike Walk RVA academy application!
Cool volunteer opportunity alert! The Department of Parks, Recreation, and Community Facilities (thatâs Parks & Rec if youâre nasty) needs a handful of folks to help install a permeable pathway in a new park right on the Pulse corridor at Cutshaw Avenue. If hauling gravel and placing pavers seems like a great way to spend your Saturday (this Saturday, September 12th from 9:00 AMâ1:00 PM), go sign up on the Hands On RVA website.
Pssssst, itâs paw paw season.
Itâs not surprising that the planning process for huge roads is geared to favor huge roads. Wait a second, did a huge road design this process?
The project is now finished, and everyone in Louisville can see for themselves which prediction was the better one. In 2018, a post-construction traffic study showed that cross-river trips decreased by 2 percent from 2013 to 2018. As a result, the project has been called by Vox, among others, a âboondoggleâ of epic proportions. The Louisville highway project is hardly the first time travel demand models have missed the mark. Despite them being a legally required portion of any transportation infrastructure project that gets federal dollars, it is one of urban planningâs worst kept secrets that these models are error-prone at best and fundamentally flawed at worst.
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