Good morning, RVA! Itâs 44 °F, and today looks crisp! You can expect a partly cloudy sky with the extremely fall-like temperatures topping out right around 60 °F. Thingsâll warm up a bit as the week progresses, but, for today, Iâd definitely recommend wrapping up in a couple of layers.
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The Cityâs Planning Commission meets today, and you can check out their full agenda here. Scroll down a bit, and youâll find ORD. 2023â281, which would amend the Cityâs Master Plan (aka Richmond 300) to classify all of Richmondâs public housing neighborhoods as âpriority neighborhoods.â You can look through the entirely new Priority Neighborhoods chapter of the Master Plan in this massive PDF (starting on p. 83) and see some of the next steps for each neighborhood. In addition to the new chapter, a bunch of the Planâs existing goals have been updated to include the new priority neighborhoods. Where Richmond 300 currently suggests developing new parks at ânodesâ (remember, those are interesting places across the city where development can/should/is happening), it would now suggest we develop new parks at ânodes and priority neighborhoods.â Iâve only skimmed through the new chapter and the updated goals, but itâd be cool to have full-throated support for preserving and building more public housing.
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Also related to Richmond 300, the City wants to put together a Cultural Resources Management Plan to âidentify, preserve, and promote stewardship of a communityâs cultural assets and historic resources.â The public portion of this process kicks off tonight with a meeting at 6:00 PM at the Main Library (101 E. Franklin Street), and, because every public process must, there is an accompanying survey that you can fill out. I thought this survey was kind of intense!âwith its interesting Rorschach test of âwhich of the images above show historic buildings, sites, or place,â and, even more intense, âwhich of the buildings, sites, or places above are worthy of protection/preservation.â Yikes! âworthyâ is such loaded language! I also didnât love the zero-sum framing of âdevelopment/density pressureâ as a threat to historic resources and communitiesâI donât think this is an either/or! Like, old stuff is cool, for sure, but also we need to build more housing for people that are alive now.
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Jonathan Spiers at Richmond BizSense has posted the third installment in his spicy series about VCUâs now-failed attempt to redevelop the old Public Safety Building site. My favorite part is definitely when the emails BizSense obtained through FOIA reference BizSenseâs inevitable future reporting. Iâve really enjoyed this seriesâitâs as close as Iâll get to being a fly on the wall during some of Richmondâs most interesting conversations.
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This is pretty neat, via RPS Superintendent Jason Kamras on Twitter: âYou ever wonder if Bombas actually donates a pair of socks for every pair you buy? Well, âŚRPS⊠just received about 10,000 pairs from them to give to students in need. Thank you!â
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Chesterfieldians! Thad Green at the Richmond Times-Dispatch has a rundown of the Countyâs candidates for School Boardâand thereâs a lot of them. Youâll probably recognize Traci Franssen, running in the Matoaca district, from a past GMRVA when she encouraged everyone out there thinking about running for office to get serious and make it happen!
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Anne Helen Petersen writes about millennials getting older (and wiser??) as they all start to approach middle age. I liked this new-to-me concept of being âwashed,â which is artfully described as âYou havenât been to that particular new restaurant yet, but youâve heard itâs nice.â
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Thereâs nothing wrong with feeling older. I like it here; I know a lot of you do, too. But as our generation ages, we have to be vigilant about the ways in which fatigue and fear can blot out even the brightest hopes for a different, more equitable world. Because even if you do find a modicum of security, itâs still not going to feel like enough. Youâll want more, and that wonât feel like enough either. When youâre this conditioned to precarity, no personal safety net is ever robust enough to actually make you feel safe. You need something much more robust: something thatâs built for and supported by, well, everyone.
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Fern (yarrow) gully.
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