Good morning, RVA! Itâs 53 °F, and was that not a perfect weekend? Expect more of the same today with highs in the mid 80s, lots of sunshine, and not too much humidity. Storms move in midweek, though, so get out there and enjoy today and tomorrow!
Â
Whoa, big news: Seattleâs Sound Transit will hire GRTCâs Julie Timm as their next CEO. Sound Transit runs Seattleâs regional rail, light rail, and express buses, and, no shade intended, is a huge step up from GRTC. I mean, itâs Seattle! One of Americaâs few transit cities! So, while Iâm incredibly nervous about what this means for Richmondâs tiny regional transit systemâespecially as GRTCâs entire governance model has just shiftedâIâm pretty stoked for Julie Timm.
Â
Iâve got three interesting City Council updates for you this morning! First, Councilâs Organizational Development committee will consider the rank-choice voting ordinance (ORD. 2022â119). Remember, OrgDev is made up of all nine councilmembers, so todayâs discussion should give you a pretty good sense of where the full Council would vote on this paper if forced to do so today. Second, OrgDev will also hear a presentation on a Fiscal Efficiency Review requested by Council a while back. This is a big document (104 pages), and I havenât had the time to read through the whole thing, but, flipping through the executive summary and a couple thing stood out! 14 years ago, when we first started electing mayors in Richmond, I would have never guessed that âstrong city financialsâ would be one of our Cityâs strengths, and that âthe current city charter does not enable the Mayor-Council form of governmentâ would be one of our weaknesses. Weâll see how Council intends to act on this document which is full of interesting suggestions. Finally, Planning Commission will meet today and consider ORD. 2022â157, which would allocate money to improving the site of an African burying ground at 1305 N. 5th Street and connect it into the larger work of memorializing Devilâs Half Acre. Iâve written about this piece of land before; itâs currently home to a billboard and an abandoned building.
Â
Axios Richmondâs Kari Peifer pulled together median rent prices from a handful of Richmond neighborhoods (using CoStar data), and, dang! I know I am an old person who can remember back to when rent one block off of Carytown was $600, but $1,650 for an apartment in Scottâs Addition seems bananas.
Â
Ian M. Stewart at VPM has a good piece about the bike races in Bryan Park, which have been going on for literal decades. Scroll down and check out the video to see what it feels like to whip around Bryan Park at 30mph on a bike. Too intense for me, but Iâm glad it exists!
Â
From Doug Allen on Twitter: âThere are many great Amtrak vistas in VA but the A-Line over the James might be the best.â On this beautiful morning, take 30 seconds and watch this beautiful video.
Â
P.S. Today is the sixth anniversary of the end of RVANews, or, to put it another way, the sixth anniversary of the start of this newsletter as a standalone thing. At this point, I wonder if more subscribers of this email have never heard of RVANews than not! Anyway, local news is critically important to a city, yet near impossible to make into a sustainable business (at least in the way Iâd do local news). So this morning, if you have a favorite local journalist or news outlet, take the opportunity to support them financially however you canâwhether thatâs subscribing, donating, joining a patreon, whatever. Without local reporting, itâs hard to know whatâs going on and even harder to know how to advocate for change.
Â
Wired reviewed the 1972 moon buggyâlike, in last weekâs issueâand Iâm not sure why! As you can probably tell, Iâm getting way into humanityâs reinvigorated plans to return folks to the moon, so this was a well-timed read for me.
Â
The frenetic pace of gear releases means it is inevitable that WIRED cannot get to all of them in a timely fashion. But if they are important, rest assured, we will catch up eventually. Yes, some may take a little longer to materialize than others, however, at 50 years late, this review is, I admit, pushing loyal readersâ patience. Yet, as this is an appraisal of such an iconic EV, none other than NASAâs Lunar Roving Vehicle, or LRV (more popularly known as the moon buggy), I hope youâll forgive the tardiness.Â
Â
If youâd like your longread to show up here, go chip in a couple bucks on the olâ Patreon.
Â
A magnolia flowerâone of the best flowers!
Â