Good morning, RVA! Itâs 69 °F, and today looks a bit cooler and bit less downpour-y than yesterday. You should still stay on the lookout for some rain later this afternoon, thoughâkeep that umbrella handy.
Â
Megan Pauly at VPM reports on this past Mondayâs RPS School Board meeting and the 5â4 vote to âkeep police in schools for the foreseeable future but with some changes.â You can read through those proposed changed in this single-slide presentation. Out of the list of tweaks, this one seems most substantial to me: âRPD and RPS would develop a diversion program to end arrests on school grounds for any non-violent offenses.â RPD didnât respond to Pauly by deadline if fights were considered ânon-violent offenses,â which seems like a an important clarification because fights account for a big percentage of the arrests in schools. In fact, Pauly says that âin the 2018â2019 and 2019â2020 combined school years, there were nearly 400 student arrests in Richmond schools, the majority over fights and possession of marijuana.â I know itâs complicated, but Iâm not sure that either of those things should end in arrests on school property.
Â
Mark Robinson at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports on the early goings of a really interesting program proposed by the Virginia Poverty Law Center that would âprovide down-payment assistance to households that can demonstrate that they, or their relatives, suffered financial consequences as a result of past practices that disproportionately impacted Black households.â Itâs not like weâve had a dearth of those in the Richmond region over the last couple hundred yearsâand this is not a Richmond-specific problem, of course. The way The Systemâs set up right now, homeownership is one of the primary ways families in American build wealth, and we know that Black families lag significantly behind white families in homeownership rates, and we also know that Black families have accumulated much less wealth than white families. Programs like this attempt to address these financial disparities. Two local legislators, Del. Jeff Bourne and Del. Ghazala Hashmi will carry the related legislation at the General Assembly this coming session. Keep an eye on it!
Â
The Virginia Mercuryâs Ned Oliver has bad news about the horrible fencing around Marcus-David Peters circle: âState officials say they havenât yet decided when or if they will take down the tall, chain-link fence that surrounds the graffiti-covered stone pedestal.â When or if! Thatâs not great language. Also, whenâs the VMFA kicking off Reimagining Monument Avenue process? I keep checking the website but canât find any updates.
Â
Localities sure do love sports tourism and building the facilities to attract that sort of thing. Jack Jacobs at Richmond BizSense reports on Chesterfieldâs plans to build a new ice hockey venue, with visions of youth hockey tournaments dancing in their heads.
Â
Poking around on the New York Times this morning, I came across this article about the debt limit and how Republicans insist on using each and every opportunity to bring this country as close to the brink as possible. Read this absolutely bananas description of what Mitch McConnellâs been up to over the last couple of weeks: âMr. McConnell has said the government must not be allowed to stop paying its debts; he has also said he will not let any Republicans vote to raise the debt limit, while moving to block Democrats from doing so themselves.â If we lived in any other timeline but this, the worst timeline, weâd be shocked to read about behavior like that from a man who represents half of our country. After you finish lamenting the current state of affairs, make sure you tap through and scroll to the bottom of that article for a very helpful âUnderstand the U.S. Debt Ceilingâ sidebarâmost of the world does not live this way!
Â
Finally, hereâs this from the Verge: âOn Tuesday, the McAulliffe campaign launched a series of Facebook, Instagram, and Google search ads highlighting his opponent Glenn Youngkinâs role in the controversial purchase of Taylor Swiftâs master recordings in 2019. The buyout of Swiftâs masters has been a point of bitter contention for the singer and her fans and could be an unexpected liability [for Youngkin] in the upcoming race.â
Â
I enjoyed this explanation of the massive, global Facebook outage from earlier this week. I thought the most interesting part of that whole thing, other than some funny one liners, was the handful of Facebook Live-based public meetings I saw hastily rescheduled to other platforms.
Â
This was the source of yesterdayâs outage. During one of these routine maintenance jobs, a command was issued with the intention to assess the availability of global backbone capacity, which unintentionally took down all the connections in our backbone network, effectively disconnecting Facebook data centers globally. Our systems are designed to audit commands like these to prevent mistakes like this, but a bug in that audit tool prevented it from properly stopping the command. This change caused a complete disconnection of our server connections between our data centers and the internet. And that total loss of connection caused a second issue that made things worse.
Â
If youâd like your longread to show up here, go chip in a couple bucks on the olâ Patreon.
Â