Good morning, RVA! Itâs 65 °F, and highs today will stay in the mid 80sâa relief from the past month or so. I think weâll also avoid torrential, continual downpours at least for most of the day. NBC12âs Jim Duncan has a post up about the incredible amount of rain Richmond has seen this summer. This Augustâwhich still has 15 days leftâis the now the 2nd wettest August ever and the 4th wettest month ever! Also: âItâs notable that since June 1st Richmond has received nearly 23 inches of rain, even with the near drought conditions in early summer. That amount is more than half our typical rain total for an ENTIRE year!â So, yeah, itâs not just you, it has rained a lot.
Also, Chesterfieldians, take note: The County has declared emergency water restrictions for residents as âsignificant flooding caused the temporary shutdown of Chesterfieldâs water treatment plant and emergency repairs are needed at the City of Richmondâs Jahnke Road pump station, which supplies water to Chesterfield and portions of Powhatan County. Customers are asked to conserve water for essential use only and immediately stop all irrigation. While emergency restrictions are in place to help reduce demand on the water system, the water is safe to drink.â
As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 937âď¸ new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 0âď¸ new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 123âď¸ new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 25, Henrico: 83, and Richmond: 15). Since this pandemic began, 309 people have died in the Richmond region. Today, VCU students head off to their first day of class, and, normally, the first day of fall classes at VCU is one of my favorite days of the year. The Fan and Downtown feels so empty without all of those students hurrying to class and hanging out in pocket parks. Now, though, I just worry about them all and hope they stay safe and virus-free for as long as our institutions of higher learning are open for in-person instruction. Thatâs not going great for our neighboring states, by the way. UNC has already announced four âclustersâ of COVID-19 on campus, which is defined as âfive or more cases in close proximity,â and class hasnât even started yet. They have, however, put together this very informative and public COVID-19 tracking dashboard. I havenât seen anything like that yet locally, and I think itâd be useful for folks. If youâre interested in the procedures and protocols VCU has put together for their students, you can read through the full list here.
The City has set up ânearly 50 locations around the city to pick up disposable surgical face masks free of cost.â Hereâs the map of spots, and if youâd like to offer up your institution (some restrictions apply) as a mask distribution location, you can do so using this form.
Maybe the aforelinked map could be a useful resource to the assortment of police officers who responded to last nightâs Reclamation Teach-In event and apparently werenât interested in wearing face coverings? I was not there in person, so I donât know the full details, but these pictures of cops not wearing masks while also disregarding social distance make me feel intensely uncomfortable. I have no idea what the actual guidance is for cops wearing masks while doing their jobs, especially while outside, but dang set an example!
Over the weekend some jerks came by and cut down the hand-painted Welcome to Beautiful Marcus-David Peters sign. This was NOT done by the City, the Richmond Police Department, or even the Virginia State Police. The VSP have intentionally left the sign in place previously, and the RPD put out this statement over the weekend: âNo city agency was involved - including the RPD. It is illegal to remove signage without permission. Whoever did this may be trying to spark more violence in the City of Richmond.â All signs point to jerks, and, potentially, white supremacist jerks at that.
Richmondâs School Board meets today and has a couple of interesting things on their agenda. Make sure you take a look at this PDF updating the Board on the MOU between Richmond Public Schools and the Richmond Police Department. The survey data about staff and student perception of cops in schools (aka School Resource Officers aka SROs) may surprise you. The Board will also continue to work through the reopening plan and will discuss âproposals from the City for support of virtual learning.â
The Cityâs Planning Commission will also meet today to consider Richmondâs own Black Lives Matter mural (PAC 2020â002). The mural would stretch across both lanes of Grace Street between 8th and 9th, right in front of St. Paulâs Episcopal Church and the entrance to the Capitol. Each letter would be yellow and 24 feet tall. You can see a rendering in this PDF to get a sense of the scale.
I havenât yet wrapped my head around the General Assemblyâs special session which starts tomorrow, but Mel Leonor at the Richmond Times-Dispatch and Jeremey Lazarus at the Richmond Free Press have some details on what lawmakers hope to accomplish. Theyâve got coronabills and police reform bills to pass, plus probably a bunch of other stuff that seemed like, in the Before Times, it could wait but now maybe shouldnât. I look forward to all of the brilliant GA watchers to spin up their thoughts and opinions over the next couple of days.
Yesssss a 15-story apartment building could pop up on a Monroe Ward surface-level parking lot, Mike Platania at Richmond BizSense reports. Going from zero to 15-stories is a heckuva improvementâitâs an infinity percent increase! The developer specializes in student housing, so Iâm not sure that the larger unitsâsome with four bedroomsâare appropriate for families (which is something Iâd like to see built more often). But, again, 171 places for people to live in a spot that currently just stores cars. Also, 67 parking spaces for 171 units isâŚjust 0.39 spaces per unit. Nice.
I donât know that weâve got what it takesâas a countryâto execute this plan to use cheap, less accurate tests to test the mess out of basically everyone all of the time. We canât even get everyone to wear masks. Still though, this is one possible path forward.
Testing is a non-optional problem. Tests permit us to do the most basic task in disease control: Identify the sick, and separate them from the well. When tests are abundant, they can dispel the fear of contagion that has quieted public life. âThe only thing that makes a difference in the economy is public health, and the only thing that makes a difference in public health is testing,â Simon Johnson, the former chief economist of the International Monetary Fund, told us. Optimistic timelines suggest that vaccines wonât be widely available, in the hundreds of millions of doses, until May or June. There will be a transition period in which doctors and health-care workers are vaccinated, but teachers, letter carriers, and police officers are not. We will need better testing then. But we need it now, too.
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