Good morning, RVA! Itâs 64 °F, and you can expect heat, humidity, and storms today. Highs will top out near 90 °F, and NBC12âs Andrew Freiden says we could see a couple inches of rain burst outta the sky this evening. I think Iâll make a huge jar of ice tea while keeping an eye on the hot, humid, and wet outdoors from the safety of my air conditioned home.
Â
I knew the Pulseâs red lanes would be red, but, whoa theyâre real red. Hereâs a quick video of Mayor Stoney applying the first stretch of coating at the Convention Center westbound stationâin white shoes no less! Bold move!
Â
Yesterday you could have attended a Richmond Connects kick-off meeting, today you can fill out a very quick Richmond Connects survey. The survey is incredibly short, incredibly broad, and asks just one long-answer question: What needs to be improved to make transportation in Richmond safe and easy for everyone? After writing the previous sentence, I submitted âThere is no safe way for pedestrians or people on bikes to cross Chamberlayne near Lombardy.â You can submit as many responses as youâd like, so feel free to brain dump the 600 specific places Richmondâs transportation infrastructure makes you feel unsafe.
Â
Quick correction! Yesterday, I mentioned RES. 2022-R033, which would take some steps toward changing Oregon Hillâs future land use from âNeighborhood Mixed Useâ to âResidential.â Iâd said Planning Commission would take a look, but, actually, it was on Councilâs Land Use, Housing and Transportation committeeâs agenda (the resolution asks Planning Commission to take a look at the land use change). Sorry about that. Either way, this sort of change is a big deal, and this specific change would make future development in Oregon Hill more challengingâdevelopment of things neighborhoods need, like places to buy milk and toilet paper, restaurants, and more weird dead-stuff stores. Oregon Hill should stay Neighborhood Mixed Use, just like other similar neighborhoods in the city: The Fan, Jackson Ward, Carver, the entirety of Church Hill, and parts of Forest Hill (check out page 53 of Richmond 300 for the Future Land Use Map). RES. 2022-R033 sits on Councilâs Consent Agenda for next week, so I imagine this paper will be in front of the Planning Commission, for real this time, soon.
Â
Chris Suarez at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports on some progress for GRTCâs second (I think?) temporary transfer plaza. No new news here, except that construction will begin in September and take about 10 months. Iâd hope to tap through and read a hint or two about a possible permanent solution for transferring buses downtown, but, alas!
Â
RICtoday has a write up on Point 5, a non-alcoholic bottle shop in Carytownâlike bottle of booze but with no alcoholâthat opens this coming Friday. From the piece: âPoint 5 sells many brands that mimic the look, taste, and mouthfeel of wine, gin, beer, rum + whiskey.â Fascinating!
Â
I have listened to the new BeyoncĂ© song, âBREAK MY SOULâ, like, 50 times since yesterday. I recommend you do the same!
Â
Yâall probably know most of whatâs in this Scalawag piece about Governor Youngkinâs chilling effect on education in Virginia. That said, I always think itâs interesting to read national perspectives on whatâs happening in the Commonwealthâespecially from an outlet like Scalawag, that has a mission to work âin solidarity with oppressed communities in the South to disrupt and shift the narratives that keep power and wealth in the hands of the few.â
Â
Virginia is not alone in navigating the vague nature of these laws. According to EdWeek, since January 2021, 42 states have introduced bills that would restrict schools from teaching critical race theory or freely discussing racism, and 17 of those states have passed legislation. Newby-Alexander said itâs not possible to teach American history without talking about horrible, racist things. Although Youngkin says all this oversight is an attempt to make people feel less uncomfortable, he only has one group in mind: white people, especially white parents. Heâs prioritizing politics over teaching real, accurate history, Newby added. âI have real issues with that,â she said. âYouâre telling me that the discomfort of a white person is more important than my discomfort. Thatâs what youâre saying.â
Â
If youâd like your longread to show up here, go chip in a couple bucks on the olâ Patreon.
Â
Scenes from Marlinton, West Virginia.
Â