Good morning, RVA! Itâs 51 °F, and temperatures have started to creep up a bit. Not that theyâve been unpleasant lately, but, this afternoon, you can expect really pleasant highs closer to 70 °F and maybe a bit more sunshine, too. Keep an eye on the forecast for Friday and Saturday, though, because the chances for rain have steadily increased over the last couple of days.
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The Virginia Mercuryâs Meghan McIntyre reports on the ongoing process of Medicaid unwinding, which, in case you forgot: âFor the past three years, anyone who was enrolled in Medicaid was allowed to keep their coverage regardless of whether or not they still met eligibility requirements like income level.â Now, in a sort of Office Space âwe fixed the glitchâ way, states are going through each enrollee to determine if those enrollees are still eligible. McIntyre reports that, so far, 160,000 Virginia have lost their coverage and, of those, 32% are to âprocedural reasons rather than ineligibility.â 50,000 folks losing access to healthcare because of procedural paperwork sounds horrible to me, but it does sound like the Stateâs Department of Medical Assistance Services has some processes in place to get people reenrolledâand even provide retroactive coverage for some folks who got unnecessarily unwound. If this describes you or yours, you should get in contact with Cover VA.
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Ned Oliver at Axios Richmond has some bananas reporting on the lengths the pro-casino folks are going to get folks out to the polls. Not only are they paying for potential votersâ Uber rides to early voting sites, they are handing out free lunch tickets for Hawkâs BBQ when they get thereââa pork sandwich, two pieces of fried fish or a jumbo kielbasaâall served with a drink and a side of fries or mac and cheese.â A Casino 2.0 spokesperson says, âWeâre celebrating early votingâŚI donât know if itâs that different than giving people water and snacks in line.â OK.
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Jonathan Spiers at Richmond BizSense reports that, with this yearâs Folk Festival wrapped up, construction on the new riverfront amphitheater has started. I use âstartedâ pretty loosely here, as all weâve got to look at is a couple of feet of fencing. But still! Itâs always exciting when a new project kicks off, especially one that has the potential to shift the cityâs vibes a bit. The developers hope to open the new amphitheater in time for the â2025 outdoor concert season,â which, in old-person time, is right around the corner.
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Via /r/rva, which Richmond restaurant has the best combination of truly exceptional food and a cozy, romantic date atmosphere? Both of these criteria are pretty subjective, but, for me these days, it doesnât get any cozier or more delicious than Hot For Pizza. Tap through to the original thread, though, for some moreâI guess youâd call themâŚclassier?ârecommendations.
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Today at 12:00 PM, the City will host their second public meeting about the process to put together a Cultural Resource Management Plan which looks to âacknowledge the role historic preservation currently plays and will continue to play in shaping the cityâs urban form and character.â This meetingâs virtual, so, while reheating leftovers, you can all learn about the tightrope-balance the City hopes to strike between keeping important old stuff around and building a thriving place to live for future Richmonders. Itâs complicated! Regardless of your free time during lunch, you should fill out the (really interesting) related survey if you have not already. It will definitely give you a few things to think about.
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I bought a couch during peak pandemic, and it was nearly impossible to find something made of actual materials and also not hand-crafted by an artisan living a solitary existence deep within an ancient redwood forest. Iâd never thought about how some of yesterdayâs, now-vintage furniture, was, at the time, cheap everyday goods.
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Todayâs cheaper materials and construction go hand-in-hand with the voyage that most new furniture takes across the ocean. The mainstreaming of container shipping in the 1970s âeffectively erased distanceâ as a manufacturing concern, says Christopher Mims, author of âArriving Today: From Factory to Front Door.â âItâs just so mind-bogglingly efficient and cheapâ to transport goods around the world. Labor is cheapest in China and Southeast Asia, so those are the places mega furniture companies tend to make their products. To drive costs down even more, they aim to cram as many of those products into as few containers as they possibly can. The result: âflat-packâ furniture that you, the lucky consumer, get to assemble at home, amid a mess of Allen wrenches and screws.
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You move, you store.
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