Good morning, RVA! Itâs 75 °F, and today you can expect a bunch of rain. That bums me out as I wanted to ride my bicycle around, but Iâm sure my garden does not feel the same way. Enjoy, garden!
As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 882âď¸ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 11âď¸ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 139âď¸ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 40, Henrico: 77, and Richmond: 22). Since this pandemic began, 329 people have died in the Richmond region. I havenât linked to it a ton, but the University of Richmond has their own data dashboard with a few graphs in addition to the daily case number updates. Since July, UR has seen 13 total cases, with four of those reported in the last week or so. UR and VCUâs campuses are so very differentâdemographics aside, even their size, geometry, and biome (or whatever you want to call the surrounding natural environment) are different. I wonder if the spread of the virus will be impacted more by the two campuses' similarities or their differences.
This is awful: A driver hit and killed a 68-year-old man in a wheelchair who was crossing Broad Street out near Glenside. Iâve talked about it a thousand times before, but the parts of Broad Street west of 195 grow increasingly hostile to humans. As we build more homes and run more transit to reconnect the western parts of our region, we (and by we I mean Henrico) will have to do some serious work to reevaluate the safety and focus of our infrastructure. Right now itâs dangerous, we know itâs dangerous, we know how to fix it, and we just need to start (and fund) the work to do so.
Remember when these Virginia is For Lovers trucker hats dropped and everyone lost their minds? I feel like weâre headed that way with masks. Whoâs going to design the most fashionable, most city-reppin' mask that folks will (virtually) queue up for? Maybe itâs these RVA masks that Richmond Region Tourism have put together and are giving out for free at their visitor centers?
Did you know that James River Week begins this Saturday, September 12th? To celebrate, the James River Association has put together these Atlantic Sturgeon Paddle Trips. I will admit, most of what Iâve learned about the (endangered) Atlantic Sturgeon I have learned in the last 24 hours. Talk about fascinating, check this out: âCapable of growing up to 14 feet in length, weighing 800 pounds, and living 60 years, Atlantic sturgeon spend their adult years in the Atlantic Ocean. Every spring and fall, they return to spawn in the rivers where they were born.â Just some cool water monsters living in the river that runs through our city. No big deal.
The Big List of 2020 Candidate Events has finally lived up to its name, becoming almost too unwieldy for a Google doc. Thatâs great! Nearly every day this week youâve got a chance to learn about one of the candidates for School Board, City Council, or mayor, and you should take advantage of those opportunities before its suddenly November. If you canât make any of these events, you should check out this Trello board I put together with all of the waysâsocial media accounts, email addresses, websitesâto connect with those candidates. If youâve got questions, you should ask them. How these folks respond as a candidates will often give you good insight into how theyâll respond as elected officials.
OK, Jack Jacobs at Richmond BizSense, you had me atâŚwell, every single word in this headline: âPhishâs chef rolls out frozen burrito delivery venture in Richmond.â You also gotta love sentences like this âJim Hamilton has had a burrito business on his mind for a while, but was too busy touring with Phish as the bandâs chef to give it his full attention. He can thank the pandemic for giving him the nudge to dive in.â 2020! Sure! You can place your burrito order over on Sous Casaâs website, which I just did.
If you need a COVID-19 test you can stop by Hotchkiss Field Community Center (701 E. Brookland Park Boulevard) today from 4:00â6:00 PM. Thatâs rain or shine, too, so weather be damned! And remember, if youâve got coronaquesitons, you can always call the coronvirus hotline at 804.205.3501.
How much do I want to become obsessed with ventilation??
Become as obsessed with ventilation as I am, and youâll develop what can be described only as âventilation radar.â You sense the torpor of a hotel room in which the windows donât open. You feel suffocated in a cafĂŠ without a breeze. You can walk into a restaurant and instinctively estimate risk, eyeballing potential dead-air hot spots and considering whether aerosols might be a problem. How many windows are open? Is the restaurant using both AC and fans? You start to bail on weakly ventilated joints. Ventilation becomes a proxy for everything. If the ventilation is bad, what about the food? If management canât get something as obvious as the airflow in check, who knows what horrors might be going on in that kitchen.
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