Good morning, RVA! Itās 69 °F, and today you can expect highs in the mid 80s with a chance for a bit of rain here or there this morning and later in the evening. The coming week looks a bit warmer than the lastābut still not oppressively hot. Iām looking forward to it!
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WTVRās Tyler Lane reports that the RPS School Board will āhold an emergency meeting to discuss a ādevastating decrease to student achievementā and potential division leadership changes.ā Itās been clear for a while now that School Boardās five-member voting bloc wants to get rid of the Superintendent, and maybe this week theyāll use a drop in SOL scores due to a generational pandemic that disrupted the entire world to do so. Does it matter to the Board that scores everywhere are still below pre-pandemic levels? Even in can-do-no-wrong Henrico where just 61% of students passed their math SOL? Does it matter that Black and Economically Disadvantaged students in Richmond saw a smaller drop in scores than they did statewide? To quote Thad Williamson from the aforelinked piece, āBut this observation also shows that systemwide decline in test scores, understood in context, is not clear and compelling evidence of systemic educational failure in RPS. Rather, the decline in test scores speaks to the earthquake that shook the entire educational landscape, an earthquake that will take years of focused effort to recover from.ā No, probably none of this critical context matters to the five-member voting bloc. Itād be a horrible mistake for the Board to fire the Superintendent, of courseātheyāve already forced out much of his leadership team, leaving, I think, literally no one to take the reins heading into the school year (which starts a week from today). And after the Boardās open displays of hostility to the superintendent, blatant lack of trust in their own staff, and frequent gaslighting of the public, I donāt have a lot of hope for finding a high-quality replacement candidate.
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Also from Tyler Lane, a quick check-in on the Cityās gun buyback program, which hosted its first event this past weekend. The event ended early due to āoverwhelming response,ā which seems good. Iām excited to see some chartsandgraphs around what kind of guns folks brought in.
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Just when you thought I was done writing about the Three Zoning Changes, Iām back with a public engagement survey for you to fill out! Honestly, this is a challenging survey since itās entirely short-answer and kind of requires respondents to know a bit about each proposed changeāIām not even sure what to write in some of these boxes and Iāve read most of the PDFs! It reminds me a lot of an article from StrongTownsāMost Public Engagement Is Worth Than Worthlessāwhich says, āWe should only consult with residents when they are the ones that can best answer the question at hand. But in those moments, they should be treated as the experts they are.ā I donāt know about you, but I donāt really have any expertise or answers for how to āensure compliance and enforcement of STRs in the city.ā That said, hereās my extremely quick and lazy guide to filling out this survey: The residency requirement for short-term rentals (aka STRs aka Airbnbs) is important to preserve housing stock as, you know, housing; parking minimums are bad for a whole host of reasons but they make doing business in the city more expensive; and accessory dwelling units are great and we should make it as easy as possible for folks to build them.
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Todayās fun distraction: This Twitter thread of fun data visualizations about changes in the top-grossing movies over the last 40-some years. If you feel like, lately, the biggest blockbusters are just an endless stream of comic-book movie sequels, youāre not wrong! āIn 1981, just 16% of the Top-25 movies were sequels, spinoffs, or remakes. In 2019, 80% were.ā
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I havenāt started season two of Reservation Dogs yet, but I absolutely loved the first season. This piece, which gets deep into media depiction of Indian culture, is worth reading between seasons (light spoilers throughout)!
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Thereās a spirit like that in Reservation Dogs, a sly giddiness. Stifled by the ways of their elders and the limited opportunities of rez life, the four kids dream of escaping to a freer, more exciting future. They navigate standard-issue teen dramaāa driverās test, a turf battle with a rival neighborhood crewābut they also face the very specific challenges of being young Indians who must decide what their own commitment to community will be. Over time, they are repeatedly pulled apart and thrust back together, and their goal of leaving the reservation becomes more complicated as they discover that their connection to home is deeper than theyād thought. Watching Reservation Dogs, I realized that this was a show like Iād never seen before: a show that was about me and my life, that was somehow made for me. And by me, I mean us. And by us, I mean Indians.
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If youād like your longread to show up here, go chip in a couple bucks on the olā Patreon.
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Another moment of silence for Jonah.
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