Good morning, RVA! Itâs 54 °F, and, today, summerish temperatures return! Expect highs in the 80s this afternoon and for them to stretch on through next week. Are these record highs? Probably! Am I recovering from a fall cold? Yes! Will I still try to get out into the forest on my bicycle despite probably needing to rest? Weâll see!
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Remember last year when the Governor wanted to create permanent tax cuts for the wealthy but didnât have the votes and settled instead for one-time rebates, $200 for individuals and $400 for families? Well, the Department of Taxation has set up a website to check if youâre eligible for those rebates (you gotta create an account first), and says the checks should hit your mailbox before December. The Cynical Part of Me raises an eyebrow at the near-election timing of this launch. The Regular Part of Me knows that the General Assembly just passed its budget a hot second ago and casual-sounding things like âsetting up a website to check if youâre eligibleâ are actually huge projects for already overworked teams. Looking ahead, and given all the press releases I get from Youngkinâs team about the Commonwealthâs surging revenue, Iâd guess those permanent tax cuts for the wealthy will make a return in this coming yearâs budget, too. Just another reason why the November 7th electionâin just 12 days!âis so very important. Make sure youâve got a plan to vote, OK?
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In other state government news, Ben Paviour at VPM reports on the ongoing mess at the Department of Elections and their decision to remove thousands of folks from the voter rolls. Itâs hard to tell whatâs actually going on here, and Iâd argue thatâs probably part of the point. Skip the confusion, and tap straight on through to the Department of Elections website to check your voter registration status right now.
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Also at VPM, Jahd Khalil writes about Republicansâ plans to ban abortion should they win control of the General Assembly next month (see above about voting!). Khalil links to this recent survey by CNUâs Wason Center, which asked potential voters a bunch of questions about their Top Issues heading into this election. Tap through and dig into the data, because itâs fascinating. While folks support a handful of liberal issuesâlike keeping abortion legal, teaching kids about racism in public schools, retail marijuana sales, and not banning booksâtheyâre basically split on whether theyâll vote for a Democrat or a Republican. Pulitzer Prize Winner Michael Paul Williams has more on the survey results, including this bit: âWhen likely voters were asked who they trusted most to make the right decisions for children in K-12 public schools, 81% of respondents trusted teachers âsomewhatâ or âa lotâ â more so than school administrators (67%), local school boards (59%) and state government (55%). Thatâs right: teachers were deemed more trustworthy than the school boards micromanaging education.â Standard caveats apply about how do surveys even work in a world where no one answers their phone, but still, fascinating!
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Itâs not all just state-level elections popping up on ballots, some of us get to vote for local candidates, too. If youâre a Henrico resident cast your web browsers back over to the RTD where Sean Jones has put together a nice overview of the 10 candidates running for the Board of Supervisor.
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Eileen Mellon at Richmond Magazine sat down with Nathan Hughes, a real estate agent whoâs worked with local restauranteurs for decades, to talk about cursed restaurant spots. Hughes tries to explain that actual thingsâlike location, foot traffic, and layoutâprobably contribute more to a restaurantâs success than fake things like curses. Likely story, Hughes!
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Reminder: Breakaway RVA will host their final chill, informative, and fun group bike ride tonight. Meet at Scuffletown Park at 5:45 PM, wheels up at 6:00 PM!
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Tonight, at 6:00 PM, the YWCA host the 27th annual Remember My Name memorial at Cedar Street Baptist Church (2301 Cedar Street). This memorial gives friends, family, and community members a chance to commemorate those who have lost their lives due to domestic violence and intimate partner violence. According to the YWCA, ânearly one-third of all homicides in Virginia are attributed to domestic or intimate partner violence.â You can learn more and register (to help with the headcount) over on the website.
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I loved this essay on nakedness and bodies and how weâre so weird about both. Everyoneâs got a body, and weâve done a lot of really gross societal work to make sure weâve all got thoughts on those bodiesâthe ones that belong to other people, sure, but mostly the one that belongs to us.
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Seeing other naked bodies, though, did not make me feel disrespectful. It was wondrous. The shared ease made being human more palatable. And I soon realized there is nothing exhibitionist about being naked. People look you in the eye; nobody stares at the rest of you. Nothing is new, shocking, revelatory. All the lumps and bumps, moles and birthmarks, scars and stretch marks are on display, and the need to conceal your own drops away. Nakedness, done right, has no ego. There are problems with exposing the body, of course, but there are also problems in cultures that conceal. The more artfully we cover our bodies, the more mystique there is. But the more mystique there is, the greater the desire to own, steal, guard, or violate that alluring, luring, concealed body. The paradox is built in.
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These mushrooms understand dense housing.
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