Good morning, RVA! Itâs 73 °F, and today looks cloudy with a chance for a little bit of rain this morning. You can expect highs in the mid 80s, and donât forget to keep checking in on your outside plantsâitâs been a while since weâve had a good soaking!
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VPMâs Ian M. Stewart asks: âWhat would it take to permanently close Carytown to cars?â The answer, which he doesnât really get around to, is a bucketful of political will. Weâd need strong support from the 1st, 2nd, and 5th district councilmembers, the mayor (so they could make it a priority for City staff), and a lot of residents (especially business owners). I think we have some of that citizen support right now, but we would have to really work to nail down the support from elected officials. Not impossible, certainly, but a lot of work.
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Richmondâs Department of Parks and Recreation has closed the pedestrian bridge over the train tracks to Texas Beach. From the announcement: âDuring a recent inspection of park-maintained bridges, the pedestrian bridge that leads to Texas Beach was found to be structurally unsafe for public use. The bridge will be closed effective immediately.â NBC12 reports that while there is $2 million of federal funding to fix the bridge, there is, at this point, no timeline for repairs or a replacement. Huge bummer! Texas Beach is such a great and easy river spot, and, with the bridge closed, Iâm not sure thereâs now a safe (and legal) way to get there. I hope Parks & Rec can repair or replace the bridge quickly and that people will give them some grace during the process.
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Reminder: City Councilâs Organizational Development committee meets today and will consider the ranked-choice voting paper (ORD. 2022â119). If you havenât yet taken the opportunity to reach out to your councilmember (and their liaison!) in support of this ordinance, youâve still got time this morning. You can find all of their contact information here. Also, while weâre talking City government, the Planning Commission will meet today with a couple interesting items on their agenda, but probably the most interesting to me is a presentation on the proposed zoning ordinance rewrite. A rewrite of the zoning ordinance is exciting stuff (if youâre into zonings and rezonings) and would let us codify a lot of the zoning-related suggestions in Richmond 300âin fact, rewriting the zoning ordinance is itself one of Richmond 300âs six âbig moves." Itâs a big move and a big project to tackleâsomething that would take a few years to finish given the proper amount of community engagementâand Iâm excited to see the Cityâs plan for getting started.
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Big sigh, NASA scrubbed their Artemis I launch over this past weekendâthis time because of a hydrogen fuel leak. Theyâll roll the big rocket back into a hanger somewhere and try again later. When later? Probably not until the end of this month at the earliest. If youâre interested, you can see a neat calendar of all the upcoming launch windows and read through a list of constraints that define a successful windowâlike that the Orion spacecraft needs to splash down off the coast of San Diego during the day so recovery personnel can see it and snatch it out of the ocean. Cool stuff!
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Iâm still thinking and reading about Jacksonâs drinking-water crisis (while Baltimore had their own, much smaller water situation over the long weekend). Youâll definitely want to read this local piece from Mississippi Todayâit gets into a lot of the history that led up to thousands of city residents stuck not only without clean drinking water but just flat out left with no water at all.
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Academics who have studied government water systems recommend they regionalize in order to spread costs among struggling cities and more affluent suburbs. Thereâs just one recurring hitch to securing such an agreement: âRacism makes all of this so much harder,â Teodoro said. âThese would be hard problems, but we could solve them if it wasnât for racism.â The history of racial conflict, Teodoro explained, creates a scenario where Black residents of the city fear losing control of their services to the same people who have systematically oppressed them. And white residents of the suburbs, who chalk the cityâs problems up to incompetence, donât feel responsible to help. In the Jackson metro, not only is regionalization a tough sell, there are examples of the opposite happening. West Rankin Utility Authority recently splintered off to build its own wastewater treatment facility to become independent from Jacksonâs Savannah Street Wastewater Treatment Plant.Â
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Donât put trash in the plants.
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