Good morning, RVA! Itâs 73 °F, and today looks hot and cloudy with maybe some rain here or there. You can expect highs in the 90s, which, while hot, will seem real temperate compared to what tomorrow has in store. Stay cool, and make sure to check on your outdoor plants.
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Yesterday, the FDAâs advisory committee voted to unanimously recommend both the Pfizer and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines for children under the age of five. Step 1: Complete! Now full FDA needs to have their say, then CDCâs advisory committee (which meets on Friday and Saturday), then full CDC, and then, finally, the Virginia Department of Health. Those last two usually happen fairly quickly, and it still looks like the littlest Richmonders will be eligible for a COVID-19 vaccine early next week. Iâm so stoked for the families whoâve been waiting literal years for this. Katelyn Jetelina has a great post answering some common questions folks may haveâspecifically, I think families should read through the answers to âDoes my child actually need the vaccine?â, and âWhich vaccine should my kids get?â The answers to the former is easy: Yes! The number of COVID-19 deaths among kids this young is way, way higher than flu, Hepatitis A, or rotavirus. COVID is no joke, even in babies. The answer to the latter question, though, is a bit more complex, and Jetelina lays out four reasons why her daughters will be getting the Moderna vaccine. Anyway, tap through, read the post, call your pediatrician and ask for their recommendation, and then make a plan to get the littlest kids in your life vaccinated.
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Jenna Portnoy at the Washington Post reports on some really horrible comments made by the Comissioner of the Virginia Department of Health about the role racism plays in public health: âVirginiaâs chief public health officialâŚhas rejected the state-recognized declaration that racism is a public health crisis and downplayed the role of racism in health disparities, leaving some fearful for their jobs.â VDH is my place of employment and this person is, ultimately, my boss, so it puts me in a difficult place about what to write this morning. So instead, let me quote a few things:
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Governor Youngkin turned in his budget amendments last nightâabout three dozen of themâand Michael Martz at the Richmond Times-Dispatch has a nice summary. I donât know enough about how state government works to know what happens next, but the General Assembly will return tomorrow to tackle these changes, some of which seem like complete nonstarters to me.
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Big, red news! 12 hours ago, the GRTC Twitter account posted this teaser of a tweet hinting that details on painting the median-running bus-only lanes red will drop today! Yesssss.
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Big, block news! Trevor Dickerson at RVAHub reports that LEGO will build a factory in Chesterfield Countyâout of cement and stuff, not LEGO bricks, one assumes. I look forward to the day when every local elementary school gets to take a field trip to see how LEGO are made (and hope one of them will invite me along). Exhausting aside: Ned Oliver at Axios Richmond has two fascinating notes about how LEGO went out of their way to distance themselves from Governor Youngkinâs positions on renewable energy and racial equity. Despite whatever the Governor thinks, his backward social and climate policies are increasingly unappealing to business.
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Maymont will host a conversation with Peggy Singlemann, master gardener and author of a lovely column over on VPM, tonight at 6:00 PM. Tickets cost just $10 and will get you some Q&A time with the person responsible (somehow!) for keeping Maymont looking tip-top. I mean, get excited: âPeggy will provide insights into how she and a dedicated army of staff and volunteers have carefully researched and restored the historic gardens and arboretum, while expanding the native species, controlling invasive species and adding pollinator plants.â
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Tonight is the debut of the Northside Farmers Market! Stop by 201 E. Brookland Park Boulevard (behind Richmond Community High School) on Thursdays between 4:30â7:00 PM or on Saturdays from 9:00 AMâ1:00 PM. Iâll tell you what, I love an afternoon/evening market.
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Via /r/rva, hereâs a picture of thousands of mayflies down by the canal. The original poster says itâs âcool,â but now I feel like there are things crawling all over me. Richmond Axiosâs Karri Peifer talked to the Science Museumâs director of education who assures everyone that âMayfly emergence is a good thing. It means we have some healthy waterways for them in our area.â OKKKKKK.
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Whoa, this long article in the Atlantic about the political tension in San Francisco gave me a whole lot to think about. I didnât agree with everything in here and donât know much about whatâs actually going on in SF, but dang I see a lot of myselfâboth good and badâthroughout this article.
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What happened to the man at the Safeway, what happened to Dustin Walkerâthese are parables of a sort of progressive-libertarian nihilism, of the belief that any intervention that has to be imposed on a vulnerable person is so fundamentally flawed and problematic that the best thing to do is nothing at all. Anyone offended by the sight of the suffering is just judging someone whoâs having a mental-health episode, and any liberal who argues that the state can and should take control of someone in the throes of drugs and psychosis is basically a Republican. If and when the vulnerable person dies, that was his choice, and in San Francisco we congratulate ourselves on being very accepting of that choice.
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A sticker I found downtownâeverything is a place for a sticker.
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