Good morning, RVA! Itâs 32 °F, and both today and tomorrow look great! You can expect dry skies, highs in the 60s, and the perfect weather for being grateful for the people closest to you. Keep an out for rain rolling through for much of the weekend, though. That totally works for me, because Iâve got a long backlog of horror films I need to work through over Thanksgiving break. Hope you find time to do the same (or find time to do whatever is your horror movie equivalent)!
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Last night at least seven people were killed and five injured in a mass shooting at a Walmart in Chesapeake. The Virginian-Pilot has ongoing coverage. This is the second mass shooting in Virginia in as many weeks.
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120 days ago yesterday, Richmond passed the ordinance authorizing collective bargaining for City employees (ORD. 2022â221). I had written down on my super secret Good Morning, RVA calendar that the City must have hired a âlabor relations administratorâ by now, I think mostly because of this article in VPM. Looking over the text of the ordinance this morning, though, and 1) I again wish I was a lawyer or could at least read lawyer, and 2) I think that the City is not required to hire a labor relations administrator by yesterday, but, because they have not (as far as I know), a different process for addressing labor disputes is now in place. Honestly, Iâd love a general collective bargaining update to sort all this out! Have the five collective bargaining units started to organize? Can they even do so without the labor relations administrator? Are good candidates for that position working their way through the hiring process? Whatâs the haps??
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Beca Duval, writing for RVA Dirt, has, in what I hope will be an ongoing tradition, a great recap of this past Mondayâs RPS School Board meeting. Hot topics Duval covers that youâll almost certainly want to read more about: renaming schools, school zoning, a year-round calendar, and the School Boardâs legal counsel. School Board is justâŚa lotâŚand this kind of long, exhaustive, persistent coverage is what we need to start holding elected officials accountable. For even more School Board coverage, Anna Bryson at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports on the school-name-change piece of the meeting and gets some quotes from a few of the board members.
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Richmond BizSenseâs Mike Platania reports on a newly-approved eight-story apartment building coming to the 200-block of W. Broad Street. Itâs absolutely wild we still have a handful of surface-level parking lots fronting Broad Street smack dab in the middle of Downtown, and itâs great to see these gaps getting filled in. Next up for filling: Grace Street. On Grace between Madison and Foushee, just three blocks, there are seven surface-level parking lots! Think of all the people that could live there instead!
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Ashley Hawkins, executive director of Studio Two Three, has a nice column in Style Weekly about their decision to purchase a building in Manchester. Itâs more a love letter to Richmondâs creative scene than anything else, and a great pre-Thanksgiving read.
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Karri Peifer at Axios Richmond reports that, starting at some point in 2024, new Richmond phone numbers will have a 686 area codeâassuming phones and area codes (and Richmond, I guess) still exist at that distant point in our future. I donât know about you, but I canât wait to old-man the first person I meet with a 686 area code!
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Logistical note! Tomorrow (Thanksgiving) and Friday (officially âThe Day After Thanksgivingâ) are State holidays, so this newsletter will be taking both of those days off. Iâll return to your inboxes on Monday, and I hope over the next four days you find some time to rest, relax, read a PDF or two out of your library, and write a public comment about something you care deeply about.
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Submitted by Patron Sam. I donât have first hand knowledge of what itâs like inside Richmondâs Department of Transportationâprimarily because Richmond does not have a Department of Transportation at all and that works falls to Public Worksâbut this article about Baltimore evoked a lot of Richmond vibes for me. While we have made some progress toward having a cohesive set of priorities for the cityâs transportation network over the last 5â10 years, dang, we still have so far to go.
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It feels good to tell residents that we will work on their problems. Itâs easier to pass a council memberâs email on to the planner who is loosely responsible for that kind of request than it is to tell them we wonât be able to work on that in the immediate future. It seems like the right thing to do to jump to attention when the Mayorâs office calls about something. But its really just kicking the decision down the road. We have amazing employees that will try and bend space and time to make things happen, but there is nothing more demoralizing as an employee than to spend a lot of time working on a project that is supposed to be important, to only see it die on the vine when you hand it off to someone else who was not given the same priorities.
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Time to make the eggnog!
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