Good morning, RVA! Itâs 53 °F, and todayâs weather looks just as incredible as yesterdayâs. Expect a lovely day with highs in this low 80s. Maybe social distance some beers in your best palâs backyard?
As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 872âď¸ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 39âď¸ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 76âď¸ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 32, Henrico: 20, and Richmond: 24). Since this pandemic began, 361 people have died in the Richmond region. VCUâs number of new cases continues to drop, and theyâre holding steady at just under 50 total active cases between students and employees. University of Richmond, on the other hand, has zero active cases and hasnât reported a new case since the week of September 6th. I donât know what everyoneâs doing out there, but, good job and keep doing itâthat is unless youâre just not getting tested or not reporting your potential illness. Donât keep doing that.
Yesterday, the Mayor proposed a new dedicated funding stream for the Cityâs Affordable Housing Trust Fund, and Iâm not sure Iâm smart enough to have a great opinion on it. Lemme quote from the release: âUnder the proposal, the future tax revenues from properties leaving the real property partial tax exemption rehabilitation program will go directly to an AHTF special fund to build new affordable units. In short, as properties are phased out of tax-exempt status, the Finance Department would direct that new revenue to the AHTF.â So the City has an existing program that gives folks who rehabilitate old buildings a tax exemption for a whileâitâs a complex program of which I donât fully understand the details. The Mayorâs proposal would take any tax revenues from those buildings, once the exemptions expire, and put them into a special bucket designated solely for the Affordable Housing Trust Fund. According to the Mayorâs office: âThe administration anticipates that this will result in $2 million in revenues in FY22, growing by approximately $2 million each year for the next five years. Therefore, in FY2026, the revenue to the AHTF will be an unprecedented $10 million.â I have lots of questions, but will wait patiently for some of the Housing Big Brains to tell me what I should think about the Mayorâs plan. Because I canât help myself: I donât think I love permanent special funds and do wonder, though, if a proposal like this would prevent future reforms/changes to the existing rehabilitation exemption program. Anyway, like I said, I will make space for the Big Brains. P.S. At the bottom of that press release, the City teases the release of their Equitable Affordable Housing Plan, which will drop on September 28th. Iâm sure weâll all excitedly be keeping an eye out for that PDF.
Gregory J. Gilligan at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports that Bow Tie Cinemas wants to sell all or some of their property on Arthur Ashe Boulevard. They donât plan on closing either Movieland or The Criterion, which, assuming movies still exist in the future, makes me breathe a sigh of relief. How about this: What if the City bought the 5.88 acre wooded lot directly east of the Movieland parking lots and turned it into a park as part of the proposed Greater Scottâs Addition âCrescent Park?â
GRTC has the details on the shuttle that theyâll run from City Hall to the new office of the General Registrar at the end of Laburnum. Itâs an hourly bus that runs weekdays from 7:45 AM to 5:15 PM beginning September 23rd. Itâs not great, and still makes trips to the Registrar more difficult, but itâs something. Iâm not going to celebrate a mildly workable transit solution to a problem that was 100% avoidable and is, still, mostly fixable with some creative thinking about what services folks needs from the Registrar.
Those two resolutionsâto rename Route 1 within the City (ORD. 2020â153) and the long-running Vision Zero priorities resolution (RES. 2019-R068)âpassed yesterdayâs Land Use, Housing and Transportaiton committee. That means, at the moment, weâre gearing up for a pretty packed City Council meeting on September 28th. Should the agenda hold, theyâll take up the two aforementioned papers along with reducing fees for sidewalk dining, maybe two resolutions to increase contributions to the Affordable Housing Trust Fund (although Mark Robinson at the RTD says Councilmember Robertson will co-patron the Mayorâs AHTF proposal, so I wonder what impact that will have on her own resolution), asking to increase pay for public defenders, rezoning the area around a couple of Pulse Stations, and the Equitable Affordable Housing Plan presentation. Of course, now that Iâve spoken it aloud, all of these papers will get continued into oblivion. You can check out the always-temporary full agenda here.
Iâve made a few tweaks and updates to the Big List of Richmondâs 2020 Candidates Trello board. Iâve added a few useful reference links and attached each of the RTDâs questionnaires to the appropriate candidate card. I would love, love, love for folks to send me links to additional questionnaires for any and all candidates. I want this resource to be as comprehensive as possible, so, seriously, send me links. Finally, donât forget about the Big List of 2020 Candidate Events document. Turns out there are a ton of candidate events. Was it always this way? Are we just more interested in this particular election? Has the pandemic trapped us at home so all we can do is watch candidate events? Anyway, I know I said I wouldnât, but Iâm going to shout out one in particular: The Mayorathon will host a 2nd District forum tonight at 6:30 PM via Zoom. Iâll be moderating this one, in as much as âmoderatingâ means asking smart candidates interesting questions.
Submitted by Patron Ryan. Remember the âHenrico Laptop Stampede?â This piece in Vice gives some background and history and points out that, while embarrassing for the region, it was more about systemic (and probably racist) lack of access to technology than anything else. Also, even the moniker feels gross and dehumanizing, right?
There are two stories about the Henrico County, Virginia school district worth discussing in the context of computing history: The fact that the school may have been one in the first in the country to give a laptop to nearly every student, and what happened to those laptops after the district decided to upgrade. The first is a story about a forward-thinking district leveraging its largesse for the purposes of equipping its student body for the future. The second, unfortunately, kind of has a Lord of the Flies-type vibe. Letâs spend a little time talking about the first part, because it really was an innovative program.
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