Good morning, RVA! Itâs 76 °F, and summery weather continues. Today you can expect highs in the upper 80s, some clouds, but probably no real chance of rain. Spend some time today on a proch, deck, or patio.
Yesterday, Mayor Stoney announced that he would introduce legislation banning firearms in city parks and city buildings. This is, of course, not something thatâs currently allowed by state law, but the Mayorâs ordinance is intended to take effect should the General Assembly deign to grant localities the tiniest modicum of authority to address gun violence in municipal spaces. Iâm into this! Iâm double into this quote from the Mayor, too: âEvery Richmonder and every Virginian deserves to feel safe. Commonwealth residents have had enough of the spineless leadership on this issue from some of our state lawmakers. If they are unwilling to act, they should move out of the way.â As Iâve said previously in this space, Iâm looking for clever, creative, and bold local solutions to (most) state Republicansâ forever-support of gun violence. The Mayorâs ordinance does not âsolveâ gun violence, but it is definitely not nothing. The text of the ordinance has not hit the Cityâs website yet, but when it does Iâll make sure to link to the PDF. The General Assembly will reconvene for a special session on gun violence on July 9th.
Emily Thomason has an excellent piece up on Streets Cred about the southern terminus of the Lombardy Street bike lane and how it vomits folks out directly into a stack of parked cars. This makes for a stressful and dangerous merge that I do on the regular while casting withering glares over my shoulder at drivers attempting to squeeze between me and oncoming traffic. I will do this very thing today, in fact. Wish me luck, I guess!
The Science Museum of Virginia has put out a call for proposals for an âoriginal, large-scale iconic exterior artwork reflecting the theme of science and the Museumâs mission.â Theyâve got a million dollar budget, so make your pitch awesome and epic (but bound by a 50â x 50â x 40â space, so not too, too epic). Applications are due in October, but theyâll post answers to folksâ questions later in July to help artists tighten their proposals. You can read more details about the project and application process here (PDF).
Sean Gorman at the Richmond Times-Dispatch has a good look at Chesterfieldâs Midlothian Community Special Area Plan đ¸. You can download the 116-page draft plan (PDF) for yourself, if special area plans are your thing. Thereâs some neat stuff in the planâas Gorman says, âthe plan calls for compact, pedestrian-friendly neighborhoods where residents donât need a car to get around.â But, as you could have probably guessed, thereâs a single page about public transit and thatâs mostly just a reminder that a regional transportation plan does, in fact, exists. If youâre a Chesterfield resident, consider emailing the Countyâs planning department and asking for a more thoughtful consideration of what public transit looks like along the Midlothian corridor.
Those regional housing strategy meetings continue tonight with one out in Chesterfield. Spend your evening weighing in on regional housing strategy at Meadowbrook High School (4901 Cogbill Road) from 6:30â8:30 PM, or take this survey from the comfort and relative safety of your own couch.
Yesterday in New York City a Richmond cyclist, Robyn Hightman, was hit and killed by the driver of a delivery truck. On Supermintâs instagram page, you can read some of Hightmanâs application to their ambassador program, which does an excellent job explaining why bikes are important: âMy bicycle established a sense of independence, strengthened my ability to be self sufficient, and provided me with the confidence necessary to advocate for myself, my rights, and my needs in public space.â Robyn was the 12th cyclist killed in New York City in 2019.
Logistical and programming note! There will be no GMRVA podcast this morning, as Iâve gotta bike down to the Greater Washington Partnershipâs Improving Mobility event (see above about that dangerous merge on Lombardy). I guess saying that in this space doesnât help folks who only subscribe to the podcast. Obviously, I didnât think this through super well! If you see a confused podcast subscriber out there today wandering the streets, begging for zoning news like someone lost in a desert searching for waterâŚzonnnning, please, zonnnning newsâŚcan you let them know whatâs up?
The New Yorker talked to a lawyer who has been to the southern border concentration camps and has seen the conditions in which our government is (most likely illegally) holding children. The Texas Tribune has a list of organizations that are mobilizing to help children separated from their parents and asylum seekers at the border. They would love to take your money.
And then we started to pull the children who had been there the longest to find out just how long children are being kept there. Children described to us that theyâve been there for three weeks or longer. And so, immediately from that population that we were trying to triage, they were filthy dirty, there was mucus on their shirts, the shirts were dirty. We saw breast milk on the shirts. There was food on the shirts, and the pants as well. They told us that they were hungry. They told us that some of them had not showered or had not showered until the day or two days before we arrived. Many of them described that they only brushed their teeth once. This facility knew last week that we were coming. The government knew three weeks ago that we were coming
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