Good morning, RVA! Itâs 38 °F, and, with highs in the mid 40s, today looks appropriately chilly. Thereâs a teensy chance of rain, but the forecast looks generally dry from now until next week.
Equality Virginia says that the Virginia Values Act (SB 868) passed the Senate again last night and will now officially head to the Governorâs desk. This bill adds sexual orientation and gender identity as protected classes and gives folks a way to take legal action if they are discriminated against. Itâs so rad to see concrete results of Virginiaâs 2018 election so rapidly. We voted, the New Democratic Majority legislated, and now peopleâs lives in Virginia will be better.
As the Hanover County School Board refuses to rename their schools named after White supremacists, the Hanover County Board of Supervisors has to pick up the legal tab. C. Suarez Rojas at the Richmond Times-Dispatch says that yesterday the Board voted to transfer $75,000 from a contingency fund to cover the costs of an ongoing lawsuit đ¸. Richmond and Henrico have both renamed schools, and it wasâŚtotally fine. The world did not end, and weâsomehow, somewayâhave not forgotten that the Civil War or Harry F. Byrd existed. Hanover will end up renaming these schools eventually, and every penny spent dragging their feet is a penny spent looking super racist. Itâs not a conservative use of money, Iâll tell you that.
A new 75-unit apartment building in Manchester, at Ninth & Porter Streets, will have 78 parking spaces says Mike Platania at Richmond BizSense. Boooo! That spot is a single block from a 15-minute bus line, an extremely short bike ride to the T-Pot Bridge, and a brief walk into the rest of Manchester (assuming you make it across Commerce without getting killed). If the private market isnât forcing developers to build fewer parking spaces, Iâd love to see City Council roll up their sleeves and pass some parking maximums near frequent transit lines. We did see less than 0.5 parking spaces per unit as part of the 12-story building at Broad & Lombardy, which is great, but the Pulse is not the only Good Bus. Weâve got other, high-frequency routes that need dense, transit-oriented development nearby, too!
Jack Jacobs, also at Richmond BizSense, has the details on the completion of the Virginia War Memorialâs new expansionâin memory of Virginian lives lost in âthe Global War on Terrorism & Beyond.â I hadnât really thought about how changes in the way we wage war also change the way we memorialize the dead. Check out the new space, which promises to have a commanding view of the river, this Saturday when the Memorial will host a Dedication Day & Grand Opening at 10:00 AM.
Whatâs the best cannoli in town? Or, do we even have a good cannoli? This thread on /r/rva has only a couple of suggestions, which bums me out. Surely more than two places in Richmond have a cannoli worth cramming in your mouth?
This quick review of a couple of housing studies at the New York Times shows that making sure everyone has an affordable place to live is complex. I think my takeaway is that weâve got to keep building (like the recently-approved 12-story building at Broad & Lombardy) while working on policies to increase affordable housing (like inclusionary zoning).
She finds in New York that new buildings do attract more restaurants and cafes nearby. But she concludes that any effect those amenities have pushing up local rents is swamped by the power of new supply to push rents down. On net, she finds, for every 10 percent increase in housing supply, rents for properties within 500 feet drop by 1 percent, relative to other high-demand areas. Those benefits appear to be going to tenants in high-end and midrange buildings nearby. Presumably, their landlords see new competition and adjust their own rents accordingly. But Ms. Li finds that new housing has no effect on rents more than 500 feet away, and it doesnât appear to affect rents for lower-end units nearby (those landlords probably donât see new luxury towers as direct competition).
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