Good morning, RVA! Itâs 58 °F, and today weâve got another day on deck with highs in the mid 70s. You probably should expect some rain later this evening and into Saturday morning. Runner-types are gonna get wet, but at least they wonât be wet and cold.
Speaking of runner types, the Monument 10k runs from 7:00 AM to 1:00 PM this coming Saturday. This means youâve got the opportunity to take part (or at least witness) a lot of rad, weird, and very-Richmond thingsâin fact, hereâs a PDF from Sports Backers with every single detail you could want. If youâre trying to get around on Saturday, note that some roads are closedâlike Monument, duhâbut also a handful of streets in the Fan near the starting line. The Pulse will detour up to Leigh Street and skip the VCU/VUU station. The #14, #20, #76, #77, and #78 will all see detours of some sort. If youâre trying to get to the action without driving and parking, I recommend going by bike, but also the #5 bus (PDF) remains undetoured (autocorrect suggests undeterred, which, sure!) and will get you right to Monroe Park. For some background, Tim Pearrell at the Richmond Times-Dispatch talks with Sports Backersâs Jon Lugbill about the last 20 years of the race. Not to be a bummer, but, at some point, weâll probably need to have a conversation about how one of the biggest events in Richmond is focused on (and named after!) a street full of Confederate monuments, right?
Whoa! This seemingly-boring announcement is a big deal, I think! The City will increase the cost of their work-in-street permits and change the structure of the fee to a âpay-by-time format.â Part of the reason itâs so easy to forever close a sidewalk in the City is that the permits cost a flat fee of $20â100. That encouraged folks to close public rights-of-way andâŚjust leave them closed. Seems boring, I know, but this will have a real impact on the Cityâs Vision Zero goals of keeping pedestrians safe. Also, color me interested in what the Mayor means when he says âMore to comeâŚâ
Adam Lockett, writing for RVA Mag, has an op/ed about the importance of preserving the VCU + GRTC pilot program that allows all students, faculty, and staff associated with the University no-cost access to the entire bus system. Iâve read conflicting things about the current, on-going negotiations between VCU and GRTC. Like Lockett, Iâve heard about limiting VCUâs free access to just the Pulse and #5 bus, but also, this quote in the RTD from awhile back seems strong: âVCU and VCU Health remain committed to continuing to fund a cost-effective transportation option that provides our students and employees with access to the entire GRTC system.â Ultimately, I hope VCU does the right thing and keeps the scope of the current partnership while also paying their fair share of the costs to do so.
I still wish the City would have bought Sharpâs Island. Now the new owner, who by all accounts is a nice guy, is making money off of what should be public land by renting it out as an Airbnb. I am, by all accounts, a grumpy old man, but the idea of an outdoorsy Airbnb in the middle of our awesomely-wild, downtown river park system rubs me the wrong way.
This Saturday you can check out the first Richmond Night Market, from 5:00â10:00 PM at the 17th Street Farmers Market. Itâs like a farmers marketâŚAT NIGHT. Expect vendors, music, and artistsâall your typical market stuffâŚBUT AT NIGHT. Also, if youâve been down to the Market lately you may have noticed that people are sittingâno longer on the ground, in tree wells, or on bike racks, but on chairs! And at tables! The folks at The Enrichmond Foundation went and got some chairs and tables, and now you can and definitely should take advantage of the weather and eat your lunch at the the Market. I had a spicy chicken sandwich from Hot Chick (I know, I know, the name is kind of eyerolly) the other day that was đđ.
Neither here nor there, Iâve been enjoying this Lil Nas X song âOld Town Roadâ that was taken off of the Billboard Country charts for not being country enough. That resulted in this remix ft. Bill Ray Cyrus himself and spun off a bunch of other creative things, like this pretty incredible fiddle situation.
Submitted by Patron Amy. Hereâs a depressing (and depressingly common) story about how poverty impacts a fourth grade classroom in a low-income Chicago neighborhood.
Thereâs been a lot of that in North Lawndale. In fact, two-thirds of the schools in this neighborhood over the last decade have either been closed, turned into charter schools, or seen their entire staff replaced, from the principal to the lunch ladies. Penn is hanging on. Itâs like thousands of other schools across the country that operate in this âNo Excusesâ moment, where everyone is on notice. Itâs a typical school in a poor neighborhood. Thatâs why I decided to come here. I wanted to see up close what poverty slings at a school like that. I wanted to better understand the mystery of why so many schools in poor neighborhoods fail to do what we ask of them.
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