Good morning, RVA! Itās 75 °F, and our respite from blazing hot temperatures is over. Today, you can expect highs near 90 °F and plenty of humidity to go along with the heat.
Richmond Police are reporting two murders from last week.
On August 20th, Damon L. Teach, a man in his 40s, was found dead on the 5400 block of Blue Ridge Avenue. The Medical Examiner will determine the cause of death.
On August 19th, police responded to the 1100 block of St. Paul Street and found a juvenile, and RPS student, shot to death. In his email last Thursday, Superintendent Kamras said, āIām devastated to share that we have once again lost a student to gun violence. Last night, an 11th grader who had attended both TJ and Marshall was fatally shot. Iāve now written some version of this sentence dozens of times as Superintendent. I beg of you, regardless of which political party you call home, please support candidates this November who will enact common sense gun control legislation. Our students' lives literally depend on it.ā
As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 894āļø new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 24āļø new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 146āļø new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 38, Henrico: 68, and Richmond: 40). Since this pandemic began, 308 people have died in the Richmond region. Additionally, VCU updated their data dashboard and now report 58 total student cases of the coronavirus (33 new cases) and 12 employee cases (one new case). A total of 96 people are either in isolation or quarantine. I wish, like the UNC dashboard, that VCU would report other data like percent positivity and number of clusters in residence halls. Now, though, we wait and see if those case numbers continue to increase at the current rate, and, if so, what thatāll mean for the Universityās in-person instruction plans.
Remember this past Thursday when police showed up at GWARBar in response to a dubious flyer and a handful of folks standing around on the barās private property (possibly protestors, possibly neighbors, possibly people hanging out at GWARBar)? VPMās Roberto Roldan has owner Michael Derksās statement which is worth reading. Derks says he gave his permission for people to be on his property, told the cops as much, and was ignored by officers on the scene: āI asked to speak to the officer in charge, as owner of the property I wanted to be told what [the officers'] reasoning was for coming on the property and arresting people. I was told that they were obstructing justice but the Captain on the scene did not ever come speak with me even after I requested several times.ā I said this last week, and it continues to be true, but each public interaction like this just further radicalizes everyday people against the police. It still wonāt be easy, but the path towards meaningful police reform in Richmond gets less and less complicated with more and more public support.
Hereās an example of how elected officials can quickly lose that public support as they attempt to navigate the politics of police reform: Alex GuzmĆ”n has resigned from the Mayorās Task Force to Reimagine Public Safety following the police actions at GWARBar described above. Alex joined the Task Force after criticizing the Mayor for not including a single Latinx voice, and his open letter to the Mayor, Council, and the rest of us about why he left the Task Force is worth your time this morning. Hereās an excerpt: āAt the end of the day, processes matter. I do not believe the task force was ever intended to provide real solutions. It included individuals who would knowingly make it difficult to āreimagineā public safety in any meaningfulway. It relied on a limited framework that still saw police at the forefront of the public safety continuum. It has a 90-day timeline to produce actionable recommendations, which is a mighty task for a group of volunteers. It feels like pageantry. I donāt do pageantry.ā You can watch the first meeting of the Task Force over on the Cityās YouTube, but, donāt expect too much in the way of policy as itās mostly a context-setting agenda.
One more police-related story: According to the RTDās Katy Burnell Evans, today Henrico County will host a āmedia briefing regarding the hiring of a new chief of police.ā The current chief, Humberto Cardounel Jr. announced back in June that heād retire September 1st, so this isnāt a huge surprise. There has been some work toward police reform in the county, mostly led by Supervisor Nelson, and Iām interested in how reform-minded the new chief will be. Speaking of, RVAHub has all the information you need to tune into the Henrico Board of Supervisors work session tonight at 5:15 PM where they will discuss a Civilian Review Board of their own.
Holly Prestidge at the Richmond Times-Dispatch has an interesting piece about a local balloon company (I did not know we had a local balloon company) creating a āpodā for high-school aged kids of its employees. Balloon School, which is charmingly capitalized as such throughout the article, involves a bunch of socially distanced teens, sitting at their own desks, doing their own virtual learning while a hired facilitator keeps everyone on track. Itās a clever way to try and solve childcare issues for older kids while still allowing parents to do in-person work that canāt be done from homeālike, I would guess, making balloons. Creating a school enviornment inside of a workplace does compound the coronarisks, and I hope the balloon people are taking the time to familiarize themselves with all of the proper CDC guidancesāboth for balloons and for high school students.
Looking for a volunteer opportunity? Consider helping Richmond Public Schools pack and distribute academic kitsāall the supplies and subject-specific materials students will need to start off the virtual school year. HandOn has lots and lots of school-specific time slots for volunteers to sign up for, so, if you want, you can volunteer right at your neighborhood school.
Submitted by Patron Val. Weāre living in a truly weird time, and itās OK to acknowledge that weāre all operating at something other than peak performance.
She says people are having to live their lives without the support of so many systems that have partly or fully broken down, whether itās schools, hospitals, churches, family support, or other systems that we relied on. We need to recognize that weāre grieving multiple losses while managing the ongoing impact of trauma and uncertainty. The malaise so many of us feel, a sort of disinterested boredom, is common in research on burnout, Masten says. But other emotions accompany it: disappointment, anger, grief, sadness, exhaustion, stress, fear, anxiety ā and no one can function at full capacity with all that going on.
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