Good morning, RVA! Itâs 40 °F, and today you can expect weather a lot like yesterdayâhighs around 60 °F, sunshine, and plenty of signs of spring popping up all around. I donât know about you, but my hostas are excited to be alive. Temperatures start to warm up tomorrow and will continue to do so through the end of next week.
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Jahd Khalil at VPM reports on the Cityâs 2022 Office of Community Wealth Building Impact Report, which you can download as PDF and read directly if youâd like. OCWB exists to elevate Richmonders out of poverty and they do so through a handful of interesting initiatives (including a small and nascent basic income program!). Each year theyâre required by City Council to draft a report of what theyâve been up to, and the main takeaway from this year is that poverty fell 1.5%. That probably doesnât seem like a lot, but, as OCWBâs director puts it âitâs been moving in the right direction.â Take a minute and scroll through the actual PDF report though, because there are a lot of interesting stats and tables that are worth your time. Like: Since 2012, poverty among Black and Latino Richmonders has fallen 12% and 48% (?!) respectively.
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Tyler Lane at WTVR continues his reporting on deaths in the Cityâs jail. Since March 2022, five people have died in the jail, with three of them confirmed to be the result of a fentanyl overdose.
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Related, and I expect to be writing a lot more about this in the coming months, yesterday the FDA approved Narcan, a drug that prevents opioid overdoses, for over-the-counter use. If youâre unfamiliar with how Narcan works, I recommend this really excellent video the National Harm Reduction Coalition. You can also get free narcan (and training on how to use it!) through your friendly local health department.
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The Richmond Times-Dispatchâs Charlotte Rene Woods digs into the Governorâs decision to make it harder for people who have been convicted of a felony to have their voting rights restored. Making it harder to vote is part of the official Republican platform these days, so Iâm sure no one is super surprised by the Governorâs quite adjustment to this policy (even though Republican Bob McDonnell took the first steps down Virginiaâs path to a more automatic restoration of rights). The numbers are kind of shocking: âIn his first year, Youngkin restored 4,300 peopleâs rights. Meanwhile Democratic governors, Northam restored more than 126,000 and Terry McAuliffe restored more than 173,000.â At this rate, by the end of his term, Youngkin will have restored rights to just 14% of the people his predecessor did. A handful of legislators in the General Assembly want to remove this authority from the Governor, and rightfully so! Unfortunately, itâd take a constitutional amendment, so donât hold your breath.
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Sarah Vogelsong at the Virginia Mercury has a nice look at where we are in the Commonwealthâs budget process and what happens if the General Assembly canât get their acts together and pass a budget. Luckily, because of the ancient and mysterious way in which Virginia works, last yearâs budget was technically a two-year budget, so thereâs no fear of a government shutdown or anything like that. There are, however, a bunch of new projects and initiatives that would have to wait until the next year for potential fundingâincluding $100 million investment into Richmondâs combined sewer overflow system.
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Yesterday, Penn State announced that theyâd hired away VCU basketball coach Mike Rhoades after he spent the last five seasons with the Rams. Wasting almost no time at all, later that same evening, VCU named Ryan Odom as their new head coach. You might remember Odom from that time he became the first person to ever lead a 16-seed team (UMBC) to a win over a 1-seed (UVA) in the NCAA tournament.
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More AI thoughts! I liked this piece because I think itâs so easy to forget how AI isnât magically immune to inheriting all of humanityâs racism, sexism, and every other ism weâve gotâI mean, itâs trained on the content of the internet!
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But there are other ways this story works too: fears about so-called AIs eventually exceeding their creatorsâ abilities and taking over the world function to obfuscate the very real harm these machines are doing right now, to people that are alive today. We already have ample evidence of the ways that the application of AI and adjacent methods are being used to issue automatic and capricious denials of medical care; to target people for surveillance or arrest; to create content that is racist, sexist, ableist, and so onânot to mention that its penchant for bullshit makes it a highly scalable tool for generating and disseminating disinformation. All of which is to say, so-called AI is yet another tool for accelerating the already-happening efforts of precaritization, austerity, and inequality. But itâs difficult to locate those concernsâor address themâwithin the tale of a new intelligence coming into being.
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Welcome home.
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