Good morning, RVA! Itâs 39 °F, but, after this morning begins a stretch of beautiful weather. Today you can expect sunny highs in the mid 70s and even warmer temperatures over the next five days. With overnight lows in the mid 50s for the next bunch of days, I think it might be a good time to get some plants in the ground!
Richmondâs Interim Police Chief Rick Edwards has launched a new policy to provide âCritical Incident Briefingsâ to the public after every fatal officer-involved shooting. These briefings will include video and photographic evidenceâbody-worn cameras, surveillance footage, and crime scene photographyâand will be âreleased to the public within two weeks of the incident(s), unless the Chief determines that a delay is needed to address investigative, prosecutorial, or privacy concerns.â This seems good, and I continue to be impressed with the tone coming out of Interim Chief Edwardâs RPD. Of course, it hasnât been that long since Edwards took over, and heâs yet to come up against an extremely public test of his leadershipâbut maybe thatâs of his own doing. I mean, so far at least, he hasnât set up an entire press conference to lie about a mass shooting plot. NBC12 reports that Edwards has officially applied to be the actual police chief, so thereâs a chance that weâll see more of him in the future.
Yesterday, City Council announced that theyâve appointed Laura K. Drewry as the new Richmond City Attorney. Drewry is an internal hire, and has worked with the Attorneyâs office since 2006. I know absolutely nothing about her but am really interested to catch her vibe once sheâs forced to make that first public decision on a complex and stressful topic. Lucky for her, weâre in a much better place than we were a while back when it comes to the relationships between the Mayor and City Council. I donât see them getting into a disagreement that requires the Attorney to resolve (at least not in the immediate future). If I did have to guess where Drewery will need to weigh in, Iâd probably pick some future School Board dramaâsomething to do with the Arthur Ashe Center or building new schools, places where the division of authority between the Board and Council gets a bit fuzzy. Not a place Iâd want to find myself, but congrats and good luck!
As expected, yesterday City Council declared a housing crisis by passing RES. 2023-R019. Not a ton of new things happen now that the resolution has passed, but it is something advocates can point to when working for other more concrete policies. Also, I canât stop thinking about this.
Karen Newton at Style Weekly has a nice profile of Leland Melvin, UR graduate, NFL alum, and a real, live astronaut. Definitely a person that should inspire you about whatâs possible, but maybe donât compare yourself to him directly, because, dang.
Axios Richmond pointed me to this story about Buckingham Countyâs Republican-controlled Electoral Board harassing the countyâs registrar to the point where that entire office up and quit. From the article: âThe four departures left residents without a functioning registrarâs office; there was no way to register to vote or certify candidate paperwork, at least temporarily.â This terrifies me because, technically, the Board didnât break any laws and thereâs no real recourse available to the citizens of Buckingham County. The Republican members of the board just acted like a bunch of inane jerks and, as a result, critical public servants resigned leaving the government in a nonfunctional state. This sort of thing is happening in local and state government agencies across the commonwealthâparty-nominated Republicans are intentionally and successfully breaking the bones of our governmental structures. Itâs bad, bad stuff.
Last night, the Nashville Council unanimously voted to reappoint Rep. Justin Jones after the Tennessee General Assembly expelled him for leading a protest against gun violence. The other member expelled by Republicans, Rep. Justin Pearson, could be reappointed by the Shelby County Board of Commissioners tomorrow.
I love stories about people who solve gamblingâespecially when itâs through a mix of weird brain skills and brute-force practice.
Then there was the win rate. Tosaâs crew didnât hit the right number on every spin, but they did as often as not, in streaks that defied logic: eight in a row, or 10, or 13. Even with a dozen chips on the table at a total cost of ÂŁ1,200 (about $2,200 at the time), the 35:1 payout meant they could more than double their money. Security staff watched nervously as their chip stack grew ever higher. Tosa and the Serbian, who did most of the gambling while their female companion ordered drinks, had started out with ÂŁ30,000 and ÂŁ60,000 worth of chips, respectively, and in no time both had broken six figures. Then they started to increase their bets, risking as much as ÂŁ15,000 on a single spin. It was almost as if they could see the future.
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A classic bar bathroom.