Good morning, RVA! Itâs 38 °F, and today looks chilly with highs topping out around 50 °F sometime later this afternoon. You can also expect the sun to come out and, with any luck, dry up all of yesterdayâs soggy rain. Look forward to more of the sameâwith maybe some more cloudsâfor the rest of the week.
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City Council meets today for their first real, full meeting of 2023, and you can find the agenda here. Itâs a pretty full agendaâ31 total itemsâbut all of them live on the Consent portion. I canât remember the last time Iâve seen an empty Regular Agenda. Also Council-related, check out this overview of the Cityâs budget put together by Steve Skinner, City Councilâs public information officer. Itâs filled with lots of neat facts to tide you over until we officially kick off this yearâs budget seasonâwhich should be sometime soon with the superintendentâs presentation of needs to the RPS School Board. Of course, last year, getting the School Board to actually approve their budget so the Mayor could introduce his budget, was a whole situation. Iâm looking forward to less situations this year, to be honest!
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Megan Pauly at VPM has a good explainer on Governor Youngkinâs newest plan to defund public schools, this time through a program heâs calling âeducation savings accounts.â Hereâs just a couple of the quotes from the experts Pauly talked to: âVoucher programs [like the education savings accounts] give money to private schools and private education providers that can discriminate, and pick and choose which students they want to admit, pick and choose whether theyâre going to discipline students for things like their sexual orientation, and pick and choose whether theyâre going to offer things like special education to students who need itâ and âChad Stewart, Virginia Education Associationâs policy analyst, points out that the funds families could receive through an ESA account would cover a fraction of the cost of most private schools in the state.â and âRob Shand, a professor of education policy at American University, has studied voucher programs in other states and said they tend to most greatly benefit more affluent families.â So whatever blah-blah-blah you may hear about this or similar programs, remember that the consistent goal of this administrationâand Republicans nationwideâis the systematic dismantling of our public schools. I still donât think Virginiaâs Senate has even the smallest interest in this sort of thing (although someone did remind me that itâs difficult to predict what Sen. Morrissey will do with any given bill).
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Early voting for Virginiaâs 4th Congressional Districtâaka the seat Sen. Jennifer McClellan is running forâstarted this past Friday. You can stop by your local registrarâs office to cast your ballot at any point from now until the Saturday before the election (February 18th). Sen. McClellan has put together a nice timeline of all the various voting dates leading up to her election if you need a handy reference.
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Local Internet Person Taber has a really neat video he took of Ethan Hawke running through Jackson Ward while filming Raymond and Ray that he then synced up with the actual scene from the movie. I think this is GMRVAâs first Mastodon link!
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I have to link to this every time it comes up on /r/rva: Who has the best fries in RVA? I eat a lot of Cobra Cabanaâs fries and certainly love them, but, ever since Greenleafâs Pool Room closed, Iâm still looking for my new favorite.
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Last week Matthew Yglesias wrote about public transitâs twin goals of ridership and coverage. If you were a transit planner and you decided to focus on ridership, youâd put as much service on the busiest streets to encourage as many folks to ride as possible. If you wanted to focus on coverage, youâd send service squiggling out into the nooks and crannies of neighborhoods, making sure as many folks as possible had access to at least some sort of service. With limited transit budgets, these goals are often in conflict and communities need to decide where on the ridership-coverage spectrum they want to live. Yglesias argues for always prioritizing ridership, and, in a lot of ways heâs not wrong. But not in every way! Stay tuned because tomorrow, Iâll link to transit planner Jarrett Walkerâs response (you may remember Walker from Richmondâs bus system redesign a couple years back).
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But Iâm a columnist and Iâm here to say that itâs a shame that so many cities spend non-trivial sums of money on bus systems that few people ride. Even if the transit agencies had clear mandates to prioritize increasing ridership, they would of course make mistakes â nobodyâs judgment is flawless and the United States of America does not have a culture of strong and successful transit agencies. But every agencyâs existing personnel are good enough at their jobs to see that some pro-ridership changes are being left on the table due to considerations like âI donât want to get yelled at at a community meeting.â Telling agencies to prioritize ridership would result in ridership going up, and over time, it would also create an agency culture focused on improving ridership and learning what strategies do and do not work.
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Eastbound morning commute is intense.
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