Good morning, RVA! Itâs 62 °F, and how good was yesterdayâs weather?? So good! Today, you can expect more of the same, maybe a bit warmer, and maybe a bit more sunshine. Get out there and enjoy it.
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Yesterday, I asked if anyone had a good explainer on the new Climate Bill (aka the Inflation Reduction Act), and reader Lori sent me this video by Hank Green, one of my favorite YouTubers/internet people. Itâs about 20 minutes long, totally worth it, and will give you a good sense for how this bill invests almost $400 billion into reducing the United Stateâs carbon emissions and mitigating the impacts of climate change. I also love that this video gets the tone exactly right: This bill is a huge dealâone that seemed impossible just a month ago. That Congress could figure out how to get it passed gives me a sense of climate-hope that I didnât think Iâd feelâŚfor awhileâŚmaybe even in my lifetime. Thatâs cynical, but, hey, the last six years have been tough and cynicism-inducing. We needed a win!
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VPMâs Ben Paviour has a quick Lab School update, which includes a map of all the college and universities that have expressed interest in starting their own Lab School. Itâs a lot of colleges and universities all across Virginiaâlike, most of them! Lawmakers are now trying to figure out if private institutions, like Liberty University, are eligible for this (public) funding to start their own Kâ12 public school. Paviour also links to this PDF of the official Lab School guidelines from the Virginia Board of Education, which is a medium interesting read. Eric Kolenich at the Richmond Times-Dispatch has more and reports that the first Lab Schools âcould begin recruiting teachers and students as early as February and open in time for the 2023â24 school yearâ. Seems rushed to me. Also, who knows how this will impact the teacher shortages facing almost every single public school district in the commonwealth. I think I have a lot of questions about how this effort wonât further divert resources away from the public school system that the State refuses to fund at an appropriate level.
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Henry Graff at NBC12 reports on the continual crashes on Semmes Avenue. Tap through to see the remains of a car strewn across a bike laneâscary stuff. 5th District Councilmember Lynch has a good quote at the bottom of the piece: âWe need to look at solutions to narrow the road because that is really the only solvent to curtail this type of speeding behavior.â First, itâs really wonderful to finally have elected officials talking about making actual, physical changes to infrastructure to improve the safety of our roads. In fact, I think weâve got at least three councilmembers now who realize we canât thoughts-and-prayers-and-paint our way to safer streets. Second, barrels and barricades would do the job and do it on the cheap!
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Yesterday, RVA Bike Share announced a second station on the Southsideâthis one at Carter Jones Park! I think this brings us to 22 functioning stations, with seven more indedicated as âplannedâ on the map. 29 is still less than the 40 promised years ago, but this is certainly steady and welcome progress. I think I might even be considering turning back on my annual membershipâŚ
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Heads up! VCU students start moving into dorms today and continue to do so through Saturday. If youâve got to move through campus, expect wide-eyed students, anxiety-filled families, and illegally parked U-Hauls. While all of that makes navigating our streets and sidewalks a bit of a black-and-gold obstacle course, ultimately, itâs charming, and the return of students brings a lot of life back into townâI love it. Welcome back, Rams!
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Submitted by Patrons Emily and Val. Occasionally you read something and you can tell the writer and their editor were having just the best time. This review of Jared Kushnerâs new book is one of those piece and worth readingâprobably orders of magnitude more so than the book itself.
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âBreaking Historyâ is an earnest and soulless â Kushner looks like a mannequin, and he writes like one â and peculiarly selective appraisal of Donald J. Trumpâs term in office. Kushner almost entirely ignores the chaos, the alienation of allies, the breaking of laws and norms, the flirtations with dictators, the comprehensive loss of Americaâs moral leadership, and so on, ad infinitum, to speak about his boyish tinkering (the âmechanicâ) with issues he was interested in. This book is like a tour of a once majestic 18th-century wooden house, now burned to its foundations, that focuses solely on, and rejoices in, whatâs left amid the ashes: the two singed bathtubs, the gravel driveway and the mailbox. Kushnerâs fealty to Trump remains absolute. Reading this book reminded me of watching a cat lick a dogâs eye goo.
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Capital Trail corn corridor.
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