Good morning, RVA! Itās 72 °F, and things have started to cool down just the littlest bit today. NBC12ās Andrew Freiden says you should bring an umbrella with you, should you venture outside, as we could see sporadic slow-moving storms this afternoon. Various plants in my backyard would really appreciate a good, slow-moving storm right about now.
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The New York Times reports a possible Not So Fast on President Bidenās plan to roll out booster shots to the general public in the coming days. Specifically, it sounds like next week we may only get Pfizer boosters for āolder Americans and others who are particularly vulnerable to serious illness.ā I mean, a couple weeks back when Biden was like āAnd lo! Boosters shall flood the land on September 20th!ā it did kind of feel like he was out ahead of the science a little bit. Since then, the NYT says weāve had dueling studies released, with one in The New England Journal of Medicine saying boosters are great and one in The Lancet saying ācurrent evidence does notā¦appear to show a need for boosting in the general population.ā I donāt know how much the FDAās advisory committee particularly cares about what the president wants, his previous proclamations, or his proposed booster timeline, but weāll learn more when they meet on Friday.
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Is this a first? The Free Lance-Star via the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports that Fredericksburg City Public Schools will require all student-athletes to be vaccinated by November 8th. I donāt think Iāve heard of any other student vaccine mandates in our region but could easily have missed something given everything else thatās going on. Student vaccine mandates make a ton of sense to me, and I wouldnāt be surprised if we saw similarāor even expandedāmandates pop up around town as school districts do whatever they can to keep school buildings open to in-person instruction.
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Richmond City Councilās Finance and Economic Development committee meets today, and will consider ORD. 2021ā235. Due to state legislation, the City must pass this ordinance each year to prevent its real estate tax from automatically plummeting 10.75% to $1.071. Should Council fail to pass the ordinance, it would mean an instaloss of $44 million dollars because of some Republican or suburban legislatorās fever dream of a tax-free dystopia where we all drill our own wells, pave our own streets, and administer our own vaccines during a pandemic. Anyway, these types of ordinances usually have broad support on City Council and pass without commentāIām just salty about it.
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Job alert! RVA Rapid Transit, a local public transit advocacy nonprofit and my former place of employ, is looking to hire a new executive director. Do you deeply love public transit and want to do the work of expanding its reach and access? Do you want to run a nonprofit doing this very thing?? Well, youāve got until October 1st to apply!
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If you wish to yell at the TV, tonight at 7:00 PM you can cut on the first of two gubernatorial debates. CBS or the Appalachian School of Lawās YouTube are your best bets to watch live.
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Could we have fewer sewage spills into the river? WTVR reports that a sewage truck, something I did not know existed before now, overturned down by Brownās Island spilling 200 gallons of sewage āonto the roadway and pathways to the James River.ā Gross.
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From RPS Superintendent Kamrasās email last night: āTo all who observe Yom Kippur, I wish you a meaningful and easy fast. On a personal note, as someone of the Jewish faith who observes this holiday, Iāll add that itās traditional to seek forgiveness on Yom Kippur. And so Iāll conclude tonight by asking for your forgiveness for any ways Iāve missed the mark as RPS Superintendent and for anything Iāve done or said over the past year that may have negatively impacted you. I sincerely apologize.ā This guy! I donāt think Iāve ever seen anything like this from any local leader before, and, given his past words and actions, I truly believe him. It feels good to read authentic thingsāespecially apologies!āfrom folks running our city.
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This essay about kitchen design starts in one place, ends up in another, and is packed with great sentences.
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There are cooling drawers too. The drawers are mostly built into kitchen islands. Although itās increasingly common for the ultra-rich to have them installed in bathrooms for temperature controlled face creams. āMost people put four ā or possibly sixā cooling cubbies in the kitchen. What are all these drawers filled with? Mostly drinks. Likeā¦so many drinks. Thatās mostly what fills the second fridge too. The rich enjoy a cooled bottled beverage. The article doesnāt dig into whether the chilled bathroom drawers hold drinks too. But I bet thereās some bottled water in there. Filtered through the crystal caves of an untouched island before being bottled in artisanal plastic, or whatever.
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Name that hillside!
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