Good morning, RVA! Itās 63 °F, and temperatures are, once again, right in the upper 70s. Things look absolutely beautiful this morning, but do keep an eye on the sky after lunch for an increasing chance of rain.
Itās Bike to School Day! Just one of the million and one RVA Bike Month events, Bike to School Day is an opportunity for kids to feel the wind in their hair, hear the click of the freewheel, and avoid the quiet aggression of the car drop-off line. Some schools have even coordinated a group bike-to-school rideālike a tiny-sized, adorable Critical Mass. If you choose to drive a car around the City this morning or this afternoon, please, please, please pay attention as there will be a bunch more kids on bikes using our streets. Some of them may be a little wobbly, so give them the space and courtesy they deserve.
Speaking of bikes, check out this great profile of Bike Walk RVAās Brantley Tyndall by David Streever in Style Weekly. Tyndallās planning to ride his bicycle across all of America, which, I dunno yāall, seems pretty far to me. Despite his totally bonkers-yet-epic bike plan, heās a great guy that Iām happy to know. Reading through this piece will give you an idea of how much he cares about the safety of our streets and how hard heās working to make getting around Richmond safer for everyone.
The police officer who yelled inappropriate things to a group of Albert Hill Middle School students has backed out of his promise to publicly apologize. NBC12 has this embarrassing statement from Interim Police Chief Smith: āā¦the officer signed an agreement promising to attend the school assembly but, since then, he has reconsidered that promise and no longer feels he could handle the much larger setting of a school assembly.ā I mean, come on! He swore at children, promised to apologize publicly, and now he canāt āhandleā standing in front of them to do so? Ridiculous. I was really impressed with how RPS and RPD worked together to flip the power dynamic between students and police. But this, this is just garbage and sends a bad message to all RPS students, families, and Richmonders in general.
Micheal Paul Williams talks to Christy Coleman šø, CEO of the American Civil War Museum, about Confederate flags, and she, as always, has something awesome to say. To quote: āA flag on the side of a highway has no contextā¦People will regard them as they understand them historically or experienced them personally ā both as objects of the past and contemporary meaning. Their mere presence isnāt history at all, but rather a statement. The question is, what statement is being made?ā
Finally! Mechelle Hankerson at the Virginia Mercury says Governor Northamās office has decided to hire a āchief equity, diversity, and inclusion officer to guide Gov. Ralph Northam through his remaining time in office.ā Why this took several months and was not the literal first thing they did on the Monday following the Blackface weekend, we will never know. I hope that this new hire can help change some of the hearts and minds throughout the administrationāthereās a lot of work to be done. Even in this article weāve got the Governorās chief of staff shifting blame to Republicans: āHe said the governor, a Democrat, has worked on issues of inequity for a long time, but efforts have usually been āthwarted by the majority.āā Thatās not a good look and absolutely misses the tone I want to hear: apologetic, accepting responsibility for their actions, and working to rebuild trust.
Across the country, Uber and Lyft drivers will strike today ahead of Uberās IPO. I originally learned about this from Del. Lee Carterās Twitter account, where he says: āBecause of the low pay at the General Assembly, Iāve been driving for Lyft on the side to make ends meet. Iām striking on Wednesday with thousands of my fellow rideshare drivers. Donāt cross the picket line. Donāt do it. Donāt cross the picket line. Just donāt.ā Thereās a lot going on in this tweet! First, consider taking the bus today instead of rideshare. Second, what the heck! One of our state delegates drives for Lyft because of the terrible pay at the General Assembly? This isnāt just a state issue either: Our local elected representatives basically work a full-time job for part-time pay, and it dramatically limits who can run for office. And before you start drafting up an ordinance, we areābecause of the Dillion Ruleāprohibited from paying city councilmembers a living wage by the state government.
Virginia is a Dillon Rule state, meaning the City of Richmond canāt do anything unless authorized by the State. Whenever youāre like āwhy doesnāt Richmond just tax XYZ to pay for schools,ā this is the reason. Dillon Rule seems like such a inherent part of life in Virginia that itās hard to imagine it going away, but West Virginia did it! And some politicians in VA want to do it, too!
Proponents of the Home Rule program noted that it gave communities more flexibility in figuring out how to sort out financial challenges. āHuntington was the first to enact the sales tax under Home Rule,ā explained Mayor Steve Williams who spoke in support of the program. āThat wasnāt a proposal that came from the city council or the city administration. That was a suggestion from the general public. We were having Home Rule hearings about occupational taxes. That was controversial as can be, as can be. Everybody came out against it.ā Moving beyond taxes and revenue, Hardy said Home Rule initiatives have allowed cities to tackle problems unique to their communities. For example, he said, Ranson has ordinances in place to deal with feral cats while Morgantown used Home Rule to deal with the problem of burning couches.
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