Good morning, RVA! Itâs 49 °F, and todayâs temperatures will almost reach 80 °F! You can expect similarly warm temperatures for the next four days, and I hope youâll find at least a couple of chances to get out there and enjoy it. Maybe plan a trip to one of Richmondâs parks that youâve never visited and spend an afternoon exploring?
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Iâve got two City Council items to kick off your morning! First, I posted this past Mondayâs budget work session over on the Boring Show for your listening pleasure. Itâs a long one and Iâm only about an hour into it, but the discussion focuses, at least in part, on how the City can become an âemployer of choice.â Itâs really interesting stuff, and I recommend you queue it up at 2x speed next time youâve got three baskets of laundry to fold. Second, Councilâs Land Use, Housing and Transportation committee will meet today (full agenda here) and will consider ORD. 2023â057, which would unprohibit a roundabout at the intersection of Hermitage Road and Laburnum Avenue, repealing one of the most dripping-with-NIMBYism ordinances passed in recent(ish) memory. To be clear, I donât know that a roundabout is the best and safest solution for this massive intersection now that the monument no longer sits in the middle obscuring views from every which way. Iâd probably prefer a protected intersection. However, I think itâs incredibly smart to get the bad 2009 ordinance off the books so that this generation of grumpy neighborsâor maybe even the same grumpy neighbors from 2009 that still live in the areaâcanât use it to oppose whatever the City eventually propose to make this intersection safer for everyone. P.S. The Committee will also have a discussion on âfuture Housing Plan to include Richmond 300 growth nodes with transit corridors and a system similar to Arlingtonâs Revitalization Zones.â Iâm interested and would like to learn more!
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The Richmond Times-Dispatch has the news that Governor Youngkin appointed two high-level officials. David Ress reports that Gerald Lackey, former âvice president of business optimization at GAF, the worldâs largest roofing manufacturer,â will serve as the DMV commissioner. And Anna Bryson reports that Lisa Coons, former chief academic officer of the Tennessee Department of Education, will take over as the new State Superintendent of Public Instruction. I think the latter probably has more opportunity to make headlines than the former, but you never know!
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State Senator Scott Surovell started looking into the Governorâs process for restoring the voting rights of people convicted of a felony. Unfortunately, after hearing back from the Gov, Surovell found that the process is pretty much a black box (Twitter). To quote the Senator: âModern bipartisan evidence-based restorative policy that reduced recidivism is dead & ex-felons can now only have voting rights restored using a secret process with secret criteria in the complete absolute discretion of the Governor of VA - we are back to 1902-era policy in VA.â This is, unfortunately, the Governorâs constitutional prerogative, but, with recent administrations, weâve seen a move towards the âautomatic restoration of rightsâ end of the spectrum. This, having the Governor personally consider each applicant individually, seems like a big step backward.
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Via /r/rva, on this day in 1775, Patrick Henry gave his âGive me liberty or give me death!â speech.
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Mark your calendars! Local pro-housing group RVA YIMBYâYes In My Back Yard, the opposite of NIMBY, Not In My Back Yardâwill host their inaugural meeting this coming Saturday, March 25th from 2:00â4:00 PM at The Barrel Room in Ardent Brewery (3117 W. Moore Street). If youâve spent the last couple of years watching the blank stares of your friends as you yell about Richmondâs housing crisis, maybe stop by on Saturday. You might find your people! You can RSVP, and, if youâd like, sign up for the RVA YIMBY Slack here.
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Iâm not nearly as optimistic as the author of this longread that Trumpâs MAGA people will suffer the same fate as the members of the now-mostly-defunct John Birch Society. Things are just so different today: 60 years ago, the Birchers didnât have complete control over one of the major news networks and facts still existed. I do think you should still give the piece a read though, because, like the author says, this is certainly one possible future for Americaâs current crop of far-right extremists.
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The decline of the John Birch Society is partly a story about political leaders, grassroots activists, and liberal institutions intervening to defend American democracy. But it is also a story of an implosion from within. As the group attracted ever more conspiratorial members, some prone to bigotry and even violence, the society was consumed by internal strife. Some members resigned. Others protested that Birchers werenât anti-Semitic enough. The leadership sometimes tried to police and expel more troublesome individuals, but that process proved fractious and chaotic. By the mid-â60s, âJohn Birchââthe name came from an evangelist turned warrior who had been killed by Chinese Communist forcesâbecame a common epithet. The factors that prevented the society from metastasizing are relevant to a country now struggling to contain election denialism, white supremacy, and political violence.
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If youâd like to suggest a longread to show up here, go chip in a couple bucks on the olâ Patreon.
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Iâm trying to learn the names of all the tools.
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