Good morning, RVA! Itâs 65 °F, and todayâs weather looks a lot like yesterdayâs. Expect highs in the 90s and a chance for thunderstorms later in the day. Stay cool, stay dry, and stay safe.
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As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 611 new positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth and 16 new deaths as a result of the virus. VDH reports 90 new cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 35, Henrico: 29, and Richmond: 26). Since this pandemic began, 1,286 people have died in the Richmond region. The seven-day average of new reported cases across the state sits at 999. Whoa, whatâs this? A barely three-digit seven-day average of new reported cases! The last time that happened was way back on October 20th. This, for some brains-are-weird reason, feels like real progress to me. The number of deaths is still pretty high, though. I know Iâve done the flu-comparison math before, but I think itâs helpful to revisit it. According to the CDC, Virginia had an âinfluenza/pneumoniaâ death rate of 11 per 100,000 people back in 2019. If you take todayâs seven-day average of COVID-19 deaths (14.4), multiply it by 365 (5,256), and then divided it by 85.35 (the stateâs population divided by 100,000), you get 61.58. According to this quick and shoddy math, thatâs a coronadeath rate about 5.6 times higher than that of the 2019 flu. That year, 1,100 people died from âinfluenza/pneumoniaâ, which is about three people per day, if you want to look at it that way.
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Huge vaccine news in the New York Times: âThe Food and Drug Administration is preparing to authorize use of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine in adolescents 12 to 15 years old by early next week.â Dang that was fast! I have no idea how many 12â15 year olds exist in Virginia or in our region, but Iâm sure itâs thousands and thousandsâand Iâm sure many of them are stoked to get vaccinated (including the one I live with). The NYT also says to expect a similar announcement from Moderna soon. Get excited for another, smaller flurry of vaccine news and for some interesting reporting on what adolescent vaccination means for this fallâs school year.
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I havenât yet listened to (or posted to The Boring Show) yesterdayâs two budget sessions, but will do so today. Also, looking at the Cityâs legislative calendar, I see theyâve added another budget session today at 3:00 PM. The Richmond Times-Dispatchâs Chris Suarez did listen in yesterday and reports that Council agreed on raises for all city employees and did it in a way that has support from the Mayorâs administration. Given how employee salary conversations have gone over the past couple weeks with this group, a compromise acceptable by both sides seems like a big win. Other updates from yesterday: The Civilian Review Board will get funded at about $200,000 and the Affordable Housing Trust Find will have to wait until the American Rescue Plan money rolls in. One note about the CRB: I donât know if that $200,000 is funding for half a year or a full year, but neither number is close to the âabout 1% of the police budgetâ number weâd kicked around late last year. For context, RPD has a proposed FY22 budget of $95 million.
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RPSâs school board also met yesterday to discuss, among other things, their recent takeover of school building procurement and construction. This, from the RTDâs Kenya Hunter seems ominous: âStill, Kamras has moved forward to comply with the Boardâs directive, proposing three positions to beef up the school systemâs procurement department, including a director of school construction, a construction project manager, and a construction procurement manager. City Hall already approved the Boardâs budget request prior to the move; itâs unclear from which pot the money to pay for those positions would come.â Emphasis mine and a thing I keep asking to the, like, four other people I know who follow School Board, City Council, and budget season.
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Mike Platania at Richmond BizSense reports on a couple of rezonings yâall might be interested in. I predict that 17th Street between Broad and Dock Street is headed for a dramatic transformation over the next couple of yearsânew development, street redesigns, and potential investment in a big-deal museum are all headed that way.
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I donât know why, but I found this photo essayâby VPMâs Alex Scribnerâfrom the Safe Space market up on Lakeside very soothing. Itâs nice to see people out doing things together in a COVID-responsible way, I think! Also, Iâm super into pickles, so now I need go find some Dayum this is my Jam dills.
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I love this deadpan headline from Kate Masters in the Virginia Mercury: âMore Virginians are foraging for ramps. Many are poisoning themselves by picking the wrong plant..â To summarize, do not eat false hellebore, which, âin the most severe cases, itâs led to hospitalizations, with symptoms including vomiting, cardiac arrhythmias, dangerously low blood pressure and even seizures.â Also fascinating, from the Wikipedia, âThe plant was used by some tribes to elect a new leader. All the candidates would eat the root, and the last to start vomiting would become the new leader.â So, yeah, maybe donât put it in your pasta.
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Northside members of the RPS community, tonight at 6:00 PM you can join a Northside-specific version of the Districtâs Reopen With Love 2.0 conversations. Tap the previous link for call-in info!
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Infrastructure week comes and goes so fast and we never seem to get any infrastructure out of it. This piece in Politico explains that, kind of, but is also just a really interesting look at how infrastructure changed American history.
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Together, twin revolutions in transportation and information (inspired by the U.S. Post Office, which subsidized the delivery of newspapers and magazines, and after 1848, the telegraph) drew disparate communities into closer connection with one another and with an emerging market economy that relied on credit, surplus production and trade. America evolved quickly from an agrarian republic into a capitalist democracy. It was a world that many Americans welcomedâbut which equally as many dreaded and resisted.
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