Good morning, RVA! Itās 53 °F, and today looks wonderful with highs in the mid 70s and plenty of sunshine. The weather wonderfulness should continue straight on through the weekend, too. Enjoy!
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What a rollercoaster of emotions for booster shots over the last couple of days! To recap: The FDA recommended Pfizer booster shots six months after the second dose for people older than 65, people at high risk for severe COVID-19, and frontline workers. Then, yesterday evening, a CDC advisory committee recommended Pfizer boosters for people older than 65 and people at high risk for severe COVID-19āleaving out frontline workers and creating a gap between the FDA recommendations and their own decision. At some point early this morning (this New York Times piece was updated at 2:40 AM), the director of the CDC overruled that recommendation and brought their official, final (for now) guidance in line with the FDAās by adding back in frontline workers. While the NYT wants to blame politics for the turbulent decision making process, and Iām sure Bidenās public announcement of Boosters By September 20th didnāt help things, having the FDA and CDC publicly disagree about who should get booster doses would have ultimately (and further) eroded trust in the entire COVID-19 vaccine situation. At the time of writing, Iād imagine our state and local health officials are 1) asleep, and 2) still working through the details of the middle-of-the-night announcement. That means: If youāre newly eligible for a booster, donāt rush out to get one today expecting a smooth and consistent experience. Remember, your existing two doses still provide a ton of protection against COVID-19! Now that we have an initial framework for Pfizer boosters, I imagine Moderna will follow suit in the coming weeks.
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Meg Schiffres at VPM has a long look at the community-built space around Marcus-David Peters Circle, what the Stateās Department of General Services did with signage and memorials that remained in the circle after that horrible fencing went up, and what happens next. I think a lot of the frustration about the Stateās handling of this spaceāaside from the fencing which literally keeps the public out of a space that the public themselves reclaimed and reimaginedācomes from the lack of a visible process to remake the circle. The longer nothing happens, the more it feels like the plan is to return MDP circle to a sun-baked, shadeless, circle of grass. I donāt think anyone wants that, so letās get some public meetings going! Or at least a survey, we all love surveys!
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The Richmond Times-Dispatchās Mel Leonor has the update on Virginiaās Redistricting Commission, and it is, once again, stressful. From the piece: āThe possibility that the stateās new legislative maps might include fewer districts ā not more ā where people of color can sway the outcome of an election is the source of heated tension within the stateās redistricting commission. Greta Harris, co-chair of Virginiaās new commission, said Thursday that āit feels morally corruptā that the panel has not coalesced around a set of guidelines for when and how to draw the new districts.ā And this group only has until October 10th to settle on new maps to present for a vote at the General Assembly! Just 16 days from now! Stressful.
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Want to lease a LEED Platinum, net-zero energy building on the Northside that at one time was used to repair electric trolleys and is also on the Brook Road bike lane? Jonathan Spiers at Richmond BizSense has all the details on what could be your next very cool office.
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If youāre looking, Iāve got two art-themed ways for you to spend this beautiful weekend! First, head down to Brownās Island and take in the newly-unveiled Emancipation and Freedom Monument. If you do get to wandering, remember the Pipeline and its adjacent trails are still closed. Second, the VMFA has a new Ansel Adams exhibit opening today, which seems like a big deal. The RTDās Coleen Curran has some more details on that, if, for some reason, you need convincing.
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Lots of great / hard-to-read sentences in this piece about gentrification. As per always: We need to build more housing everywhere.
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As a byproduct of this segregation, things which appear new and are visible are treated with immediate suspicion and hostility. People are understandably hostile to an influx of money that they see coinciding with displacement, even if they canāt accurately identify the individuals responsible for this inequity (as was the case with the misdirected tech bus protests). The major capital influx of high income employees bidding up existing housingābecause no housing was built where they workāis much harder to attack than a hip coffee shop or a condo. While these problems would be mitigated through an abundance of housing which is a failure of government, companies whose white-collar jobs consist exclusively of highly educated whites and Asians, and whose lowly paid jobs consist of everybody else, ultimately bring much of this resentment onto themselves.
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