Good morning, RVA! Itās 52 °F and cloudy, and thatās about what you get today. You can expect highs to creep up a bit (into the upper 50s) and maybe a little sunshine this morning, but warmish and cloudyish seems to be the situation for the next few days. With any luck, though, a (fingers crossed) lack of actual rain will still give things a chance to dry out. How do people in the Pacific Northwest live like this?? Are they just covered in mold constantly?
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Today the City will host two, fun public meetings. First, the second of three meetings about Those Three Zoning Changes takes place virtually tonight at 6:00 PM. If you want to do some homework before attending, Jonathan Spiersās reporting in Richmond BizSense from yesterday remains the best Iāve read on the proposed changes. If you feel like you already know enough, you can skip the meeting entirely and give a public comment by filling out this quick, one-minute form. Second, and I really dropped the ball on this one, but Richmond Connects, the process to update the Cityās multimodal transportation plan, will host two telephone town halls (the first of which was yesterday, sorry). Worse than that, registration for todayās 12:00 PM event is already closed. But! There is an option to register for āALL City of Richmond Telephone Town Hall Meetingsā? Maybe selecting that option will get you added to todayās meeting, too? Anyway, I mostly mention this to put Richmond Connects back on your radar as we move into 2023 and further into their community engagement process.
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Bleh. The Virginia Mercuryās Charlie Paullin reports that the State Air Pollution Control Board āofficially began the process of withdrawing Virginia from a regional carbon market.ā Questions abound about the legality of Boardās vote, but, regardless of the legal outcomes, we should fully expect the Stateās Republican leadership to continue the strategic dismantling of legislation and policies that reduce the impact of climate change on Virginians. Itās going to take a decade to make back the progress lost over the course of this administrationāon climate and on everything else.
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In this morningās Axios Richmond email, you can read āYoungkinās post-midterm vibe check,ā which lines up pretty well with my current thinking on our Governorās presidential potential. I just donāt think thereās any actual space (or voters) for a guy whose policies are deeply Trumpian but doesnāt vomit them out with a rotten, childish attitude. Floridaās DeSantis offers both at the same time, and I think heād easily crush Virginiaās bevested governor in a primary. I have, of course, been wrong about basically everything since 2016, so take those last few sentences with a grain of salt.
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Peggy Singlemann, formerly Maymontās gardening wizard, has a column in VPM packed full with winter gardening advice. Yes, reader! There are still things to do in your garden in December! Hereās one piece of advice I will definitely follow: āAfter tending to the tools, I take time to review the garden and landscape photos I have taken over the past few months to assess the past growing season, and mentally establish a starting point for next year.ā Iām deeply jealous of Singlemannās slow and steady year-round paceāwhich is what appeals to me most about gardeningāand look forward to doing some serious plant-planning over holiday break.
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This picture via /r/rva has it all: The train bridge, the river, a gentle and cozy mist. We live in a beautiful place.
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Youāll definitely recognize some of these photosābros golfing in the midst of a wildfire is an image Iāll never forgetāand be newly shocked by others. Take a minute and scroll through these images of just some of the impacts of climate change, because staying newly-shocked is important.
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This startling image of husky dogs pulling a sledge through melted ice in north-west Greenland was captured by Steffen Olsen, a scientist with the Danish Meteorological Institute. Olsen and a team of local hunters were collaborating on a project to monitor climate change, ocean conditions and the sea ice in the Inglefield ford. He snapped the photo on his phone during an unsuccessful attempt to retrieve the teamās scientific instruments before the ice melted. āWe had not previously experienced water on the ice this early in the summer,ā he recalls. "The local team working with me said this was beyond anything they had experienced before.'
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I got these really high-quality clothespins for my birthday, and they are my new favorite thing.
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