Good morning, RVA! Itâs 30 °F, and today looks warmer and, thankfully, less windy than yesterday. You can expect highs in the mid 50s and the start of a nice little warm streakâtemperatures tomorrow and Friday will end up in the mid 60s!
Â
OK! I got Councilâs budget work session from this past Monday up on the Boring Show and you can listen here. I think if youâre only planning on listening to one single budget session (gasp! scoff!), this is the one I would pick for you. CAO Lincoln Saunders put together a really nice presentation overviewing both the operating and capital budgets and did a great job of explaining the Mayorâs priority investments. One graphic which caught the praise of several councilmembers was this one breaking the operating budget down into percentages and representing it as âcents out of every dollar.â So, for example, out of every dollar in the Cityâs budget, $0.23 goes towards education, $0.20 goes towards public safety, $.04 towards recreation and culture, and so on. I also heard tell of a âBudget in Briefâ document that I want to get my hands on and add to my PDF library. As for notable topics, I think the discussions on assessments, gun violence, and housing are worth a listen. Especially the latter, as the CAO explains why the Mayor decided to fund affordable housing outside of the Affordable Housing Trust Fund (mostly due to restrictions on how ARPA dollars can be spent). Iâd love some smart housing person to dig into this new funding plan from the City and let us all know their thoughts and feelings. Jahd Khalil at VPM details a few of the open questions. Anyway, the budget is important stuff and listening to this work session while you do the dishes or fold the laundry will make you a better citizenâplus, at 2x speed itâll only take you about an hour to get through!
Â
Richmond BizSenseâs Mike Platania reports that City Council has given final final for real approval to a new restaurant in Byrd Park on the corner of Idlewood and Stafford. This is great news, because the folks behind the new spot (who also run New York Deli) have worked to bring a restaurant to that location for literal years! Because a restaurant is not an allowed use under the buildingâs current zoning, City Council had to pass an entire ordinance just for this one single property via its Special Use Permit process. That process gives incredible power to, as Platania puts it, a âhandful of local residents opposed to the projectâ, who, with a little organizing, can completely derail or delay something that probably should be allowed by right. The amount of SUPs on Councilâs agenda each and every week is why zoning is so important and why the Cityâs rewrite of its zoning ordinance is such a huge deal. With the rewrite, weâve got the opportunity to start mixing our neighborhood uses togetherâresidential right next to retail! Itâs how the rest of the world does it, and I bet if folks take a second to think of their favorite places, they are almost certainly neighborhoods where you can walk across the street to something coolâsomething like a chill corner cafe!
Â
Pulitzer Prize Winner Michael Paul Williams writes about a school-name switcheroo pulled by the Hanover County School Board. That County will soon consolidate Henry Clay and John M. Gandy elementary schools, and, back in 2018, the plan was to consolidate the name, too, to just âJohn M. Gandy.â It was an important decision, because, as MPW writes, the original Gandy âopened in 1950 to accommodate Black Hanover County students during a school segregation era that was long on âseparateâ but short on âequalââŠThe school â named for a longtime Virginia State University president â was the first in Hanover to provide Black students with central heating and indoor plumbing.â Now the Hanoverâs School Board will backtrack on their decision and establish a committee to make naming recommendations for the new consolidated school. To quote MPW again: âHanover has become the place where consensus goes to die.â
Â
Tonight, at 6:00 PM, the Community Foundation for a Greater Richmond and the University of Richmond are hosting a virtual panel exploring âimportant insights and possible action steps around regional planning for our port and highways, as well as local projects to improve bus routes and bike lanes.â Of course, my actions steps for highways would be âspend less money on highways,â but the other stuff sounds interesting. Panelists include folks from the City, Henrico County, GRTC, Bike Walk RVA, and a reporterâI think youâll recognize a lot of the names! The event is free, but you should register online to get the Zoom link.
Â
I found a blog about punctuation, and it is lovely.
Â
Like most towns that host a cenÂturÂies-old uniÂversity, St AnÂdrews boasts and/âor sufÂfers eye-waÂterÂing housÂing costs, sticky-floored bars beÂloved by stuÂdents and loathed by locÂals, and at least one quirky, ageÂless bookÂshop that looks like it has esÂcaped from a Terry PratchÂett novel. CamÂbridge has The Haunted BookÂshop; OxÂford has St Philipâs Books; EdÂinÂburgh has ArmÂchair Books. We came across a fantÂastic exÂample in St AnÂdrews in the form of J&G Innes on South Street, one of the townâs main shopÂping streetsâŠBut at least as inÂterÂestÂing as the shopâs comÂmerÂcial and arÂchiÂtecÂtural hisÂtory is this sign above the door: âHere stood the house of BAILIE BELL, who, beÂfore 1744, was an eager co-worker with AlÂexÂanÂder Wilson, the father of ScotÂtish type-foundÂing, and JOHN BAINE in whose type-foundry in PhilÂadelphia the first $ sign was cast in 1797.â
Â
If youâd like to suggest a longread to show up here, go chip in a couple bucks on the olâ Patreon.
Â
Iâm mad about how the State ruined an entire block of Broad Street and doesnât even really care.
Â