Good morning, RVA! Itās 66 Ā°F and rainy. The rain has a decent chance of sticking around through lunch, and then, after that, weāll see cloudy skies with highs around 80 Ā°F. Temperatures continue to climb through the weekend, though nothing like the triple-digit sweatfest from a week agoājust regular-type summer highs in the 90s. Saturday and Sunday mornings both look particularly lovely, so I hope you can find the time to enjoy them (maybe quietly with a warm beverage of your choice).
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VPMās Ian M. Stewart reports that a Portuguese company has signed a $55,000 deal to relaunch Richmondās shuttered bike share system. Well, to make sure Iām getting it right, Stewart says āA company called We Go Share will help relaunch RVA Bike Shareās software for $55,000.ā Relaunching software might not be the same thing as relaunching the entire system, and $55,000 definitely wonāt go very far when it comes to actually running and maintaining a bike share system. Iām excited to hear more. As of this morning, we still donāt have a reopening date for RVA Bike Share, but this definitely does seem like at least a first step in the right direction. Also interesting, the Portuguese company We Go Share, looks to have made a dedicated business out of relaunching abanadoned Bewegen bike share systems.
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Today at 10:00 AM in their hard-to-reach office at the end of Laburnum Avenue, Richmondās Electoral Board will host a special meeting to address that time theyāmaybe illegallyāgot rid of the Cityās satellite early-voting locations. You can find their agenda here, but itās a couple opportunities for public comment, ādiscussion regarding satellite voting locations in the City of Richmond,ā and ādiscussion on Sunday voting.ā Honestly, I feel weirdly optimistic about the Board reversing course and reinstating the two satellite voting locations, one at City Hall and one at the Hickory Hill Community Center. I certainly could be wrong, but the City has already allocated the money for running these locations and the City Attorney is on record questioning the Boardās decision-making. Iām sure weāll hear more this afternoon, so keep an ear out!
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I love the extremely regular and relatable restaurant reviews (although I hesitate to even call them that) from Axios Richmondās Ned Oliver. This week he stopped by Slurp Ramen and The Emerald Lounge, two very different, but adjacent, places in Church Hill from the folks that brought you the Jasper. This little corner of the neighborhood is so different from even five years ago! Walking around a couple weeks back and I had one of the āwhoa this feels like a real cityā moments.
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People deeply love live music, which is something folks tell me passionately over and over again so Iām inclined to believe them. If you are one of those people, tonight from 4:00ā9:00 PM, go check out the inaugural 804 Day down at the 17th Street Market (on August 4th, naturally). You can expect: āA day of 15+ music performances across multiple stages and a hometown celebration of all things Richmond. Music from some of Richmondās most diverse indie talents, with the food, drink, arts, culture, and community energy that makes the 804 thrive.ā Calling Richmond āthe 804ā reminded me that our region has just about run out of 804 phone numbers, and starting February 1st of next year, weāll start to see new phone numbers with a hideous ā686ā area code, certainly a shameful badge for all who are forced to wear it. Anyway, live music, tonight, down at the market, and then if you want to continue to Pump Up the Jams, check out the rest of Richmond Music Week.
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NBCNews reports that both of the Tennessee Justins have won their special elections for that stateās House of Representatives. The Justins (Jones and Pearson) will now officially return to an elected body that voted to expel them for protesting a lack of legislative action on gun violence. The reasoning for those expulsions will still fill you with rage months later: āA bullhorn was used, in violation of rules for the House chamber, and the legislators were gathered in an area on the House floor without being recognized to speak. House leaders at the time called their actions āan insurrection.āā Tennesseeās governor has called a special session for August 21st to address gun violence, or as heās required frame it so his Republican partymates donāt instantly combust, āa special legislative sessionā¦to strengthen public safety and preserve constitutional rights.ā
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This piece in the Atlantic about harmful overtourism in Antarctica reminds me of the Jeff Speck line, āIf you love nature, stay the heck away from it.ā
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But itās also a recordāand a 40 percent jump over 2019ā20, the season before the coronavirus pandemic brought Antarctic travel to a near standstill. And although scientists who visit the continent to study its life and demise have a clear place here, many sightseers bring a whiff of ālast-chance tourismāāa desire to see a place before itās gone, even if that means helping hasten its disappearance. Perversely, the climate change that imperils Antarctica is making the continent easier to visit; melting sea ice has extended the cruising season. Travel companies are scrambling to add capacity. Cruise lines have launched several new ships over the past couple of years. Silverseaās ultra-luxurious Silver Endeavour is being used for āfast-trackā tripsātime-crunched travelers can save a few days by flying directly to Antarctica in business class. Overtourism isnāt a new story. But Antarctica, designated as a global commons, is different from any other place on Earth.
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I love these old, ironā¦coal doors? Is that what they are?
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