Good morning, RVA! Itâs 41 °F, and today is probably the warmest day of the week with highs right around 60 °F. We may see some sprinkles here and there, and possibly some real rain this evening, but I say get out there and enjoy the warmer weather this afternoon if you can!
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If you wish, you may read the text of Governor Youngkinâs State of the Commonwealth address or watch a video of it over on WTVRâs YouTube. I havenât tapped through myself because I think itâd just make me angry, and Iâve got a lot more important things to do this morning. For a good selection of some of the in-the-moment Democratic responses, you can scroll back through VAPLANâs Twitter timeline. You can also read David Ressâs summary in the Richmond Times-Dispatch, which contains this salty quote from Senate Majority Leader Dick Saslaw about the likelihood of the Governorâs wishlist making it through the Senate: âThe speech should have started âonce upon a time.ââ P.S. Just a quick reminder that many of the bills youâll read about in the coming days have absolutely zero chance of becoming actual law. In the moment, itâs sometimes hard to know which proposed legislation is a political stunt to improve a legislatorâs election-year resume and which is something to get emotionally invested in. So when you read a headline that fills you with a furious rageâand you will read many!âtake a minute to think about where we are in the bill-becomes-a-law process and, importantly, what Senate Democrats have to say about it.
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Keeping in mind the previous sentence, Roger Chelsey at the Virginia Mercury has a nice column about the Governorâs no-good plan to defund public schools. I liked this bit in particular: âEven if some public schools are failing to educate students, the state should first provide more than the bare minimum of resources before consigning them to the trash heap. The unofficial GOP mantra of âlow taxes above all elseâ has consequences â especially for education.â
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Axios Richmondâs Karri Peifer reports on the proposed regional Tourism Improvement District, which you can read more about on this new website put together by our regional tourism folks. The TID would levy a 2% fee on hotel stays on certain hotels across our region, and then use the money collectedâan estimated $8 millionâto promote the region around the country. Honestly, the graph on the aforelinked website of Richmondâs tourism marketing budget compared to its peer cities makes a pretty compelling case for the new tax. This quote in Peiferâs reporting, though, raises a red flag for me: âTo be competitive, Richmond needs to offer subsidies, such as free parking, to lure big events. And it needs money to do itâŚâ Using the TID money for marketing is one thing, using it to subsidize parking is something else entirely.
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I missed this, but GRTC resumed service at the Pulse Government Center Eastbound Station yesterday! Construction of the General Assemblyâs new digs, parking deck, and secret tunnel under 9th Street have kept bus service from its regular routing for a while now, and itâs nice to see that finally wrapping up. A few stops still remained closed and a few detours remain in effect, but putting the Pulse back together again is a big piece of the Downtown puzzle.
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I think about to-do lists, getting things done, and productivity a ton, so I really enjoyed this thoughtful piece on why itâs so hard to actually do stuff despite the proliferation of helpful tools around us. For me, I donât use to-do apps to increase my capacity, I use them because I want to help my future-self remember what my current-self thinks is important.
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To-do lists are, in the American imagination, a curiously moral type of software. Nobody opens Google Docs or PowerPoint thinking âThis will make me a better person.â But with to-do apps, that ambition is front and center. âEveryone thinks that, with this system, Iâm going to be like the best parent, the best child, the best worker, the most organized, punctual friend,â says Monique Mongeon, a product manager at the book-sales-tracking firm BookNet and a self-admitted serial organizational-app devotee. âWhen you start using something to organize your life, itâs because youâre hoping to improve it in some way. Youâre trying to solve something.â With to-do apps, we are attempting nothing less than to craft a superior version of ourselves. Perhaps it shouldnât be a surprise that when we fail, the moods run so black.
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âHurding turds so you donât have to.â OK, you got me, Advanced Plumbing.
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