Good morning, RVA! Itâs 73 °F, and todayâs highs are back up in the mid 90sâitâs still August out there. Just like the last couple of days we could see some rain later this evening.
Whoa! Big news out of nowhere: GRTC has hired Julie Timm as their new CEO. Timm served as the Director of Development for Nashvilleâs transit agency and had also previously worked for Hampton Roads Transit. I know almost nothing about this person, but am excited to learn more. Honestly, Iâm just glad GRTC finally got the top job filled. Weâre in a critical moment of Richmondâs transit historyâwith tons of momentum from our recent investments in transit infrastructure paired with a group of elected leaders that value public transportation. Weâve continued to make transit progress in the region for the last year or so despite the lack of permanent leadership at GRTC and thatâs stressful! With new leadership, though, Iâm excited to see what we can do. Also, (and maybe also stressful) Timm has an immediate hire to make: GRTCâs Director of Planning, Garland Williams, recently left to take a job as the director of Charlottesville Area Transit. P.S. GRTCâs Director of Communications points out that Richmondâs bus company now has a female CEO, a female COO, and four female directors.
Speaking of transit, hereâs an ultra true comic by @shannonprints on Instagram about a brutal fact of bus life: Shade is so, so important.
After months of waiting and looking, I have found the parking study PDF. The important graph, to me at least, is on page 11. It shows that throughout the entire city thereâs an over abundance of off-street parking, and, additionally, on-street parking is under used in most neighborhoodsâeven Downtown. As for its recommendations, Iâm not really sure what to make of some of them. The meatiest one, ârevise the zoning ordinance as it applies to parking requirements,â where youâd expect to find things like âimplement parking maximumsâ or at least âget rid of parking minimumsâ is frustratingly vague. The study also recommends getting rid of free parking through some pilot programs, creating parking benefit districts, and launching a shared parking program. I need to talk to a few folks who are smarter than me so I can catch the studyâs actual vibe, but Iâm at least glad it finally exists.
The Richmond Times-Dispatchâs Justin Mattingly has an update on the Richmond Public Schools rezoning process. Iâve written about the contentious Fox-Cary elementary school pairing before, but must have missed the discussion around possibly pairing Northsideâs Holton, Ginter Park, and Obama (probably because I was to busy doing absolutely nothing at the beach for two weeks). Iâm kind of amazed at how the parent reaction to this Northside pairing (at least what they chose to print in the paper) is somewhere between chill and excited. You can check out maps of the new options over on Cropperâs site, and you can see the full calendar of public meetings here.
Iâm glad someone else saw last nightâs epic-looking skies and were able to snag a picture of it. Spooky or soothing? You decide!
This reminds me of the present day story of a small town in Wisconsin selling their figurative souls to build an enormous FoxConn plant. Scary, city-altering stuff.
âThat section that GM took for building the plant was the most diverse section in the whole area,â Olechowski said. âThere were Latino people, Appalachian folks, Native Americans, black people, Polish people, Russian people, all kinds of folks, and they all got along beautifully. And thatâs the greatest crime of all. The whole damn thing was just wiped out as if it were debris. As if it were not an organic living, breathing, pulsating, caring human community. For people who were lower-middle class, working class or in poverty, to them it was a great place to be, and it was about to be destroyed by a corporation.â
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