Good morning, RVA! Itâs 61 °F, and weâve got anotherâif slightly warmerâpleasant day ahead of us. Expect highs in the upper 80s and few clouds here and there.
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While it only updates on Fridays and Richmond and Henrico public schools have not yet returned to in-person instruction, itâs probably worth taking a look at VDHâs Outbreaks By Selected Exposure Settings dashboard. As of this past Friday, Richmond, Henrico, and Chesterfield all posted exactly one ongoing outbreak in a public Kâ12 settingâand, remember, Chesterfieldâs school year started back on August 24th. Weâll check back in this coming Monday to see how, if at all, things have changed.
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The City sent out a press release on Saturday notifying the public that theyâll close a bunch of roads around the Lee Monument beginning tonight at 6:00 PM through 6:00 PM on Saturday. This means the work on taking down the Lee monument starts this evening! Mel Leonor at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports that fencing goes up tonight, the statue comes down on Wednesday morning, and plaques come off Thursday while crews replace a time capsule in the plinth. I have so many questions about what exactly theyâll take down, what theyâll leave up, and what the next steps are for MDP Circle and the entirety of Monument Avenue. Honestly, now would be a good time for the Reimagining Monument Avenue folks to start kicking things off (whatever those things may be).
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Over the weekend, Mark Robinson, also at the RTD, reports on some of the human-scale impact RRHAâs 10,000-person ban list had. To quote a pretty much worst-case scenario from the article, âFor Green, who is Black, the ban had cascading consequences. He was arrested a second time when police saw him sitting on his sisterâs porch about six months after he was initially barred. His presence there put her at risk of eviction for violating the terms of her lease. When he could no longer stay with her and get to school easily, he dropped out and never earned his diploma.â Recently, RRHA has trimmed the list, added a process to automatically remove folks after three years, and clarified how people end up on the list in the first place. Definitely all improvements, but as RRHA board member Barrett Hardiman says, âItâs light years better than it had been, but thereâs an opportunity to do even better.â
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Hey! Do you live in the city and want to serve on a board or committee? Itâs, as the boards and committees website says, a great way to âplay an active role in the governance of your city.â Applications for all sorts of boards and committees are due on a rolling basis, and the next due date is September 15th. Some interesting vacancies that could be filled by you or yours: a 1st District resident for the Advisory Board of Recreation and Parks, a person with a disability or a person who cares for someone with a disability for the Aging and Disabilities Advisory Board, two someones for the Planning Commission, one someone for the Safe and Healthy Streets Commission, a member of âthe faculty of a design or arts division of a local college or universityâ for the Urban Design Committee, and three openings on the Urban Forestry Commission. Incumbents will fill some of these slotsâespecially on higher-profile groups like the Planning Commissionâbut if youâre interested you should definitely apply. Itâs good practice and will get your name in the system.
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Via /r/rva, a marijuana plant thrown out in a recycling supercan in some city alley. First, what a strange new world we live in! Second, I learned a lot about how (and why) to properly dispose of a marijuana plant from the comments.
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Have you started back up a hobby from the long ago? Or maybe picked up a new hobby since the pandemic started?
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But I was rusty â very rusty â and Iâd been classically trained, which meant I was more comfortable reading music than just jamming. After a few painful renditions of âI Wanna Hold Your Hand,â I gave up, and the piano sat, mostly untouched, in the corner of my office for the next couple of years. Besides, I was too busy to take up an actual hobby; the idea of having a hobby â something I did just for the enjoyment it brought me â seemed almost confusing. You mean to say that I could do things that werenât some kind of side hustle or attempt at social media clout? I could do something that was ⌠just for me?
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Hey, guy.
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