Good morning, RVA! Itâs 48 °F, and yesterdayâs weather was weird. Today, though, you can expect highs near 60 °F throughout most of the day, and you donât need to worry about 45mph gusts of wind ripping down your flags or pushing you off your bike. In summary: Cooler and less apocalyptic.
Â
As of today, Richmond, Henrico, and Chesterfieldâs COVID-19 community levelsâthat new metric from the CDCâare all âlowâ (aka green, aka live-your-life level). The case rates per 100,00 people over the last seven days for each locality are 105, 104, and 107, respectively. The pollen count, however, is pretty high and will surely induce some coronanxieties in allergy sufferers across the region. I also think you should read this column from Governor Youngkin in the Danville Register & Bee about his views and plans to continue to increase the vaccination rate among Virginiaâs unvaccinatedâespecially those in the south and southwest parts of the commonwealth. Itâs very personal freedom, anti-mandate, anti-government blah, blah, blah, but itâs pro-vaccine and miles away from the governor of Floridaâs plan to actively recommend against vaccinating children.
Â
Chris Suarez, who I guess covers the education beat for the Richmond Times-Dispatch now that Kenya Hunterâs gone, reports on last nightâs RPS school board meeting. The big news for Fox Elementary families: Starting March 21st, Fox students will temporarily head over to First Baptist Church on Monument Avenue for in-person school. @KidsFirstRPS live tweeted the meeting if you want to dig in to the Boardâs other agenda items. I havenât read through the whole thing yet, but I still havenât seen any sort of comment from the Board on the Mayorâs budget which is shocking to me. I anticipated a slew of medium posts, twitter threads, and interviews in the paper!
Â
The RTDâs Ali Rockett and Reed Williams have the details and follow-up reporting from Sunday nightâs fatal police shooting in Fulton. Sounds like a terrifying situation with officers firing at an armed person in the direction of an occupied home. Rocket and Reed also report that police took about 20 minutes to initially arrive at the scene and that the Cityâs 911 system did not answer a nearby neighborâs call.
Â
In interesting Northside news, Jack Jacobs at Richmond BizSense reports that Virginia Rep will buy the massive Scottish Rite Temple on Hermitage and use it as a children- and family-focused theatre and performing arts space. Thatâs such a great part of town with tons of potential, just utterly disconnected by the highway. Within a quick walk or a ride from this location you have: Bryan Park, McArthur Avenue, all the shops on Lakeside, and whatever theoretical thing eventually ends up at the old Azalea Mall site. With some thoughtful planning, I think you could reconnect a lot of these amenities and make moving between them safe and comfortable. Iâm not trying to Small Area Plan everything to death, buuuuutâŚ
Â
Ack! Itâs already Tuesday, and Iâm three days late in writing about this yearâs Richmond Black Restaurant Experience. This week (and any week, really), if youâre planning on eating in, getting take out, or grabbing some food for a meeting consider ordering from one of the 40+ participating Black-owned restaurants. Eileen Mellon at Richmond Magazine talks to some of the founders of the Richmond Black Restaurant Experience, now in its sixth year.
Â
Richard Hayes at RVA Hub reports that the Richmond Falcon Cam is backânow with chirpy bird audio!
Â
Look at this! The AP covers the federal governmentâs push to fund transportation projects that protect the safety of all usersâpeople walking, riding, rolling, or driving. Weâll see how this plays out at the state level, because âsix-lane highway with a four-foot, unprotected bike lane on either sideâ does not make anyone safer and should not qualify as a complete streets project.
Â
In a report submitted to Congress and made public Wednesday, the Department of Transportation says it will aim to prioritize the safety and health of the all the users of todayâs modern roadway, from riders of public transit and electric scooters to Uber rideshare pickups and people delivering goods. Projects such as bike paths and traffic roundabouts, enhanced sidewalks, pedestrian pathways to bus stops and transit lanes will be favored in the distribution of the money.
Â
If youâd like your longread to show up here, go chip in a couple bucks on the olâ Patreon.
Â
A dog sitting outside Union Market patiently waiting for its person.
Â