Good morning, RVA! Itâs 58 °F, and it rained! The storms have moved through, though, and now weâve got a pleasant fall day ahead of us. Expect highs in the mid 60s, some clouds, and dry weather for at least the next couple of days.
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One quick coronaupdate this morning for iPhone users: iOS 15.1 came out yesterday, and that means you can now store your vaccination card in the Wallet app. Just fill out this form on vaccinate.virginia.gov, and youâll end up with a QR code and a link thatâll automatically load up your information as a fun card in Wallet.app. I think once you get boosted, you can even update it with that information, too. Neat!
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The Richmond Times-Dispatchâs Chris Suarez has the update from last nightâs final City Council meeting on the Mayorâs proposed ARPA spending plan, and it sounds like Council approved the whole shebang. You can find more details on the Cityâs ARPA page, but the big-ticket investments are parks, trails, and community centers; the Affordable Housing Trust Fund; stormwater infrastructure; and a new Healthy Equity Trust Fund. While the full spending plan is approved, this huge bucket of money will be allocated over two years. Someone should definitely set up a spreadsheet or a Trello or something to track progress on all these rad projects. In particular, I canât wait for some of the new trails!
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Whoa there is a lot in this piece from Jessica Nocera in the RTD about how Chesterfield County Public Schools' unnecessary and mostly imaginary battle against Critical Race Theory does in fact have a chilling effect on folks in the County working against systemic racism. Itâs not hard to see how a policy banning CRT-related professional development has already led to the District rejecting a principalâs request to take diversity, equity, and inclusion training from VCU. Not greatâboth scary and embarrassing. Side note: I really love the way Nocera reports this story without a lot of both-sidesism (or as NYU journalism professor Jay Rosen calls it, The View From Nowhere).
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Tonight at 5:00 PM, Councilâs Public Safety Committee will meet and hear recommendations presented by the Civilian Review Board Task Force. As a fun pregame to tonightâs meeting, you can read the Task Forceâs recommendations yourself, one of which is âthat the CRB will have its own department to avoid conflicts of interest; this is aligned with the recommendations of the City Attorneyâs Office. As such, we recommend creating a department or office of âCommunity Oversight and Police Accountabilityâ independent from other City departments or offices.â I donât know a ton about how CRBs should work, but that is exactly why we tasked a taskforce to come up with recommendations! If youâd like to holler at your councilmember in support of the Task Forceâs recommendationsâincluding the creation of an Office of Community Oversight and Police Accountabilityâyou can find the big list of councilmember contact information here. One final note, and Iâll assume that it was not intentional, but it does not seem particularly even-handed to schedule the Richmond Police Department to present on âPolice Staffing and Moraleâ immediately before the CRB Task Force gives their presentation on police accountability.
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Well, I guess itâs official. VPMâs Ben Paviour reports that âThe Virginia Redistricting Commission has missed a final deadline to draw new state legislative maps, kicking the process to the Virginia Supreme Court.â Paviour helpfully lays out the next steps and timeline for the judges to get these maps drawn.
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This coming Thursday, October 28th, the Community Foundation will host a free, online panel focused on Everyday Nonprofit Advocacy. Weâve got a lot of issues to tackle in Richmond, and a ton of them are systemic issues requiring big-time policy changes to make our city a better place to live. Nonprofit advocacy (and regular-person advocacy!) plays a big role in that, and I deeply agree with this bit from the event description: âthe community needs leaders who engage decisions makers well.â
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Maybe systems-change work is too daunting or exhausting to think aboutâthatâs fine! How about this, then: Richmond Public Schools needs volunteers to provide no-contact grocery delivery to RPS families. Thatâs about as finite and concrete of a task as you can get.
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I thought Iâd move this extensive piece from Wyatt Gordon at the Virginia Mercury down to the longread sectionâitâs packed with the impacts of free parking on a city like Richmond. Luckily, at least one of our councilmembers wants to make some incremental changes to the currently broken system.
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âPeople see the language of the resolution and worry Iâm getting rid of parking,â said Addison, âBut eliminating parking minimums just means weâre not putting a burden on business owners and developers to provide and build more parking than they actually need. Parking minimums are a big barrier to housing affordability and people choosing other modes of mobility. Eliminating those outdated calculations on how much parking establishments need gets us closer to a market for shared parking that works better for everybody.â
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Weâd never lost a pig to a grease fire before.
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