Good morning, RVA! Itâs 59 °F, and NBC12âs Andrew Freiden says we havenât seen a morning in the 50s since June 21st. Today you can expect highs in the 80s, mostly sunshine, and a strong pull to take as many meetings or calls or classes outside as possible. Enjoy, and get ready for more of the same over the next couple of days!
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You should read RPS Superintendent Jason Kamrasâs email from last night. First, to see the real and horrible impact gun violence has on our cityâs children and families. Second, to read his thoughts on the current efforts by School Board to scrap-and-rewrite the Districtâs curriculum. Here are three points he brings up that address a handful of concerns Iâve heard floating around and mentioned during various public comment periods: â1) Curricula are the floor, not the ceiling. Teachers are free to make adjustments to the curricula as necessary to meet the unique needs of their students. 2) No RPS teacher will be disciplined for making adjustments that they feel are necessary to meet the needs of their students. 3) Curricula are living things. They need to continue to evolve based on student and teacher needs. RPS is committed to that process.ââemphasis his.
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Pulitzer Prize Winner Michael Paul Williams write about that same gun violence and how RRHAâs new CEO, Steven Nesmith, has a hard and complicated job: âAnd this is part of what separates Nesmithâs job from that of other real estate developers. To be successful, he must not only replace the aging bricks and mortar of RRHAâs housing stock. He must foster a sense of security among tenants beset by gun violence and chronic economic and housing insecurity.â Nesmith, who grew up in a public housing neighborhood in Philly, already seems pretty involved in the communityâdespite not officially starting until October.
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OK! The Cityâs legislative website has updated, and here, for your records, are the newly-introduced papers Iâve got my eye on:
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Iâve dropped all of these into my legislation tracker Trello board, if youâre interested.
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As foretold, there are already a couple Diamond District public meetings on the books for folksâlike you!âto learn more about RVA Diamond Partners LLC and their plans to redevelop the entire area around the Diamond. The first of those meetings takes place tonight at 6:00 PM at the Bon Secours Training Center (2401 W. Leigh Street). You can attend in person or join on Teams. The City also has a telephone town hall scheduled for this coming Tuesday, September 20th. Also, hereâs a better project summary than the 1-pager I linked to yesterdayâthis oneâs four pagesâand Jonathan Spiers at Richmond BizSense has some more details from yesterdayâs press conference. Make sure you scroll down to the âProject phases detailedâ section, because everything in Phase 1 sounds pretty great?
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Grace Toddâs September gardening column is out in RVA Mag! These two sentences really capture my annual attempts at vegetable gardening: âI distribute sage and time-tested advice and then I completely ignore it to see what I can get away with or whether I can fine-tune something for my particular microclimate. I also frequently test the limits of benign neglect, bad scheduling, or shoddy follow-through.â Tap through for a report card on Toddâs 2022 Garden Season and some thoughts on how trees are just the best.
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Intense and good thoughts on the purpose of public school in America.
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This was an outright rejection of Mannâs ideal that Americans should be educated at public schools that serve everyone. And the mark of that rejection remains to this day. Throughout the South, white children attend private schools that began as so-called segregation academies during the civil rights era, while many Black children attend the hollowed-out public schools that white students left behind. And elsewhere the pattern is repeated â in fact, schools in the Northeast are among the most segregated in the country. The movement Friedman and Buchanan encouraged lives on. Opposition to public education, and the promotion of alternatives like vouchers and for-profit schools, has attracted Catholics long devoted to parochial schools, evangelical Christians and other religious groups, cultural conservatives, corporate capitalists and libertarians. Today they are joined by the millionaires and billionaires who see K-12 education as another sector ripe for disruption. In other words, the core constituencies of todayâs Republican Party, otherwise seemingly so disparate, unite over this one issue. Their shared agenda is to privatize and defund schools.
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An AI-generated image of an âarchitectural rendering of a futuristic baseball stadium on Arthur Ashe Boulevard in Richmond, VA.â
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