Good morning, RVA! Itâs 53 °F, and weâve got yet another beautiful day queued up. Expect exceedingly temperate highs around 73 °F and just a ton of sun. The weekend looks pretty great, too.
Richmond Police are reporting that Isaiah R. Baker, 27, was shot to death on the 100 block fo W. Hill Street Wednesday afternoon.
I thought the 5th District candidate forum last night went really, really well. We had a great turnout and asked some substantive policy questionsâsomeone from the audience even asked JerâMykeal McCoy a question about the Neighborhood Mixed-Use land use category thatâs being used as part of Richmond 300. McCoy then explained the difference between land use and zoning to the crowd, which I thought was just great. Important: You can read the candidatesâ FULL RESPONSES to our kind of intense questionnaire over on the Richmond Mayorathon website. Weâre still working on getting Chuck Richardsonâs responses. Mamie Taylor and Graham Sturm chose not to participate.
I want to thank Councilmember Kristen Larson for being the only member of City Council to attend last nightâs Education Compact meeting đ¸, according to Justin Mattingly at the Richmond Times-Dispatch. These meetings exist to humanize School Board, City Council, the Mayor, and the Superintendent to each otherâthey otherwise are almost never in the same room together. It just feels like a huge miss to skip out on a scheduled opportunity to spend an hour talking about one of the Cityâs top priorities with the other folks who have the power to actually do something about it. Disappointing.
Over on StreetsCred, I wrote something kind of different about the GRTC Pulse driver who hit and killed a pedestrian. How do we/the City learn from what happened and how do we build a place where someone can make a catastrophic mistake and not die as a result? Iâm not sure, but weâve got so much work left to do.
Yesterday, Mayor Stoney announced that the City of Richmond will recognize Monday as Indigenous Peoplesâ Day. To the federal government, Monday is Columbus Day, but thatâs never been the case here in the City. As youâd expect, the State still recognizes it as Columbus Day, too, but did you know that it is also Yorktown Victory Day?
Mike Bergazzi at WTVR has this charming story about a 300-year-old magnolia tree in Colonial Heights. The tree predates Thomas Jefferson, was around to chill with Lafayette, and looks like itâll be here for at least another couple generations of famous people. Trees!
The RTD continues to run garbage columns from Walter Williams. In 2017 the paper ran this racist and misogynistic column (PDF), apologized, and pledged to reevaluate âWilliamsâ place in our stable of syndicated columnists.â Today, theyâve decide to run a climate change denial piece by Williams, which I think is just so dangerous. In fact, itâs anathema to the very creed the Editorial Board publishes each year, which includes these two core beliefs: âWe believe in truth, facts and objectivityâ and âWe believe in right reason.â Itâs hard to take those seriously when, on the regular, readers see pieces from a garbage charlatan like Williams who writes solely to mislead and misdirect.
The first performance of the Richmond Folks Festivalâprobably the biggest thing we do in town, right?âbegins tonight at 6:00 PM. You can see the full artist schedule here. Remember, if youâre headed out that way you can take the #5 or #87 bus and walk down the hill, or grab a free shuttle at City Stadium. Theyâve also got free bike parking (BYOLock) near 2nd and Byrd Street.
The New York Times has some pretty neat maps and graphs of transportation-related CO2 emission from across America. Since 1990, the Richmond region has seen a 62% increase in emissions from passenger and freight traffic and a 15% increase per person. In fact, the per capita on-road emissions of Richmond are some of the worst in the nation. We can do better! We should think about how we can reduce the amount we depend on drivingâboth individually and as a region. What would it take to get you to drive just 10% less?
Even as the United States has reduced carbon dioxide emissions from its electric grid, largely by switching from coal power to less-polluting natural gas, emissions from transportation have remained stubbornly high. The bulk of those emissions, nearly 60 percent, come from the countryâs 250 million passenger cars, S.U.V.s and pickup trucks, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Freight trucks contribute an additional 23 percent.
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