Good morning, RVA! Itâs 72 °F, and, oof, today looks hot. You can expect nearly triple-digit highs, a chance of storms after lunch, and every reason to stay inside next to a fan. Temperatures drop starting tomorrow, though, and it looks like we have a really pleasant long weekend ahead of us (for those of us who have Monday off). Enjoy it, yâall, and get some rest.
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Fallout continues from the Washington Postâs article about how the Virginia Department of Healthâs Comissioner has ârejected the state-recognized declaration that racism is a public health crisis and downplayed the role of racism in health disparitiesâ. This man is still, ultimately, my boss, so writing about this remains an anxiety-filled task. With that in mind, here are some quotes and links:
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Finally, VPM covers a press conference held by the Richmond and Henrico Health Districts (about other topics entirely) where one of my coworkers said, âIâm speaking for our local values, I canât speak for other localities and central officeâŠBut I can say at the Richmond Henrico Health Districts, we acknowledge that structural and interpersonal racism contributes to health disparities, and we will continue to work to address that.â
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Richmond, Henrico, and Chesterfield, yet again, all remain in the high COVID-19 Community Level. The 7-day average case rate per 100,000 people in each locality respectively is: 247, 256, and 238. The 7-day average of new COVID-19 hospital admissions per 100,000 people is 11.4. This means that everyoneâeveryone!âregardless of vaccination status should be wearing masks in indoor public spaces. This is not going to be forever, I promise. Our current situation feels very plateauy, and, with any luck, we might fall off that plateau next week. But! Until then: Masks indoors, please!
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OK, I am still not smart enough about the process of state government to have a good sense for what will happen with Virginiaâs budget. However, I do feel incrementally smarter after reading this really nice thread The Commonwealth Institute put together explaining what exactly the Governorâs budget amendments do and which ones we should worry about.
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GRTCâs got all the details on the Cityâs plans to finally paint the median-running bus-only lanes red! Painting (or, coating in their words) begins this coming Tuesday, June 21st with the westbound lanes and continues through July 26th. You can, of course, expect disruptions in bus service, stops / stations, and other minor inconveniences as crews knock out this exciting project.
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If youâre looking for a list of Juneteenth events this weekend and beyond, Karen Newton at Style Weekly has you covered.
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Speaking ofâŠlogistical note! Monday is a State holiday (Juneteenth, observed), so Iâll be taking the day off from both life and this email. Should all go well, that day Iâll return from my first ever bikepacking tripâwish me luck! Look for me in your inboxes on Tuesday, and have a great weekend.
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Readers of this email will nod along knowingly to most of this piece. One of the most interesting parts of this article to me, though, was that rate of traffic fatalities per 100,000 people today is almost the same as it was 100 years ago.
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For more than 90 years, there has been a tacit agreement in the US to treat the right to walk as dispensable, and to treat each death in traffic as an individual loss to be grieved privately, behind closed doors. These responses to the dangers of walking and biking have kept deaths among pedestrians and cyclists out of public view. They have promoted a tendency to attribute such deaths to individual failures for which individuals alone â reckless drivers or careless pedestrians â are responsible. But a century ago, judges defended pedestriansâ rights in city streets. The convenience of drivers was no grounds for infringing these rights. Any motorist driving too fast to avoid injuring or killing a pedestrian was regarded as speeding. Deaths to pedestrians, and especially to children, were regarded as intolerable public losses to be publicly grieved by the whole community.
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An incredibly pink calla lillyâno edits, this is straight off the camera! So pink!
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